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Season of Rebirth

3/30/2026

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Spring has a way of reminding us that change doesn’t always happen all at once. It's 70 degrees one day, 30 and snowing the next. Sometimes, the temperature fluctuates dramatically in the course of just one day. Do you wear your down coat or your raincoat or a sweater? Boots or sandals? The shift unfolds slowly, in fits and starts. I'm always excited when I realize that it's still light out when the evening classes are heading home. The air starts to feel different. When we get the odd warm day, it's heavenly to open up the windows and let the stagnant winter air out. Eventually, the ground that was frozen for months transforms into muddy puddles.

Across cultures and traditions, this season carries the symbolism of renewal and rebirth. Easter is one of the most familiar expressions of this theme. While it holds deep meaning in Christian tradition, its imagery—new life, emergence, transformation—resonates broadly as a reflection of the natural cycles unfolding all around us.

In yoga practice, we can approach this time of year in a similar spirit: as an invitation to gently awaken, release what feels heavy, and create space for something new.

According to Ayurveda, yoga’s sister science, spring corresponds with kapha dosha, which is associated with the elements of earth and water. (Earth and water = mud.) Kapha brings qualities like stability, nourishment, and grounding. When we’re in balance, these qualities help us feel supported and steady, but when kapha becomes excessive—as it often can at the end of winter—it can manifest as sluggishness or fatigue, mental fog, resistance to change, or feeling physically or emotionally “stuck.” If you’ve noticed it feeling a little harder to get moving lately, you’re not alone. This is simply the seasonal rhythm of the body responding to the environment.

The good news is that yoga offers simple ways to bring kapha back into balance. Kapha-balancing practices focus on creating movement, warmth, and spaciousness in the body and mind. In class this week, you may notice practices that include:
  • rhythmic, flowing sequences that build gentle heat
  • standing poses that activate the legs and core
  • heart-opening shapes that encourage expansion
  • breathwork that energizes and clears stagnation
These practices aren’t about pushing harder or doing more. Instead, they help us shift from heaviness into vitality—much like the earth itself moving from winter dormancy into spring growth. Each movement becomes a small gesture of awakening.

The symbolism of rebirth isn’t just something that happens once a year or in nature alone. It’s something we can experience in small ways every day. It might look like letting go of an old pattern, starting again after a difficult moment, softening where we’ve been holding tension, or choosing curiosity instead of resistance.
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Our yoga practice reminds us that we don’t have to wait for a perfect moment to begin again. Each breath offers that opportunity. Every inhale creates space. Every exhale allows release. In that sense, the practice itself is an ongoing cycle of renewal.
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Ayurvedic Tips for Spring

3/20/2023

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Happy Spring! Spring is not my favorite season, but I still can’t help but get excited about an end to the long CNY winter. I know Mother Nature is likely to send us a few more reminders of her power, and I know that I can’t pack away the boots or down coat for another couple of months, but there’s a sense of transition in the air nonetheless. The season of renewal is upon us.

Yoga’s sister science, Ayurveda (literally, “the science of life”), is all about living in harmony with nature. So when the seasons shift, there are some shifts we can make, too, to help us adjust. There are only three seasons in Ayurveda, and they coordinate with the three doshas: Vata (made up of air and ether), Pitta (made up of fire and water), and Kapha (made up of earth and water). In the Northern Hemisphere, the cold, wet late winter and spring are considered Kapha season. As the snow melts into the earth, we have lots of water and earth; in other words, mud. It’s a heavy, cold, muddy season.

A basic Ayurvedic principle is that like increases like, and opposites balance. We are always seeking a balanced state of health without an excess of any of the qualities known as gunas.

How we approach balance varies from person to person, because we each have different levels of the three doshas, but this post is to offer some basic Ayurvedic advice that will apply to most people during Kapha season (late winter and spring).


  • Eat more food that is light, dry, and warm to balance the heavy, wet, cold season. Consider things like steamed vegetables and light soups.
  • Eat less heavy and cold foods such as fried foods, dairy, and sweets.
  • In general, favor foods that are pungent and spicy, bitter, and astringent as well as light, dry and warm, and avoid or reduce foods that are sweet, sour, salty, heavy, cold, and oily.
  • Consider adding more play and activity into your lifestyle. The introspective hibernating of winter is ending, and it’s time to become more active. Try a new exercise class or get outside for some walks, bike riding, or hikes.
  • Your yoga can change, too. You may find that your yoga teacher is slowly adding more flow and picking up the pace in your yoga class. If you usually practice yin or restorative, consider a multi-level or flow class.
  • Cooler spring days are ideal for relaxing in the sauna to sweat out any excess moisture and release toxins.
1 Comment

    Dena D. Beratta

    Honored to teach, but always a student.

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