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She finishes a 90-minute hot vinyasa class, feels incredible, and drives home without eating or drinking anything beyond a few sips of water. By evening, she has a dull headache, her shoulders are stiff, and she's ravenously hungry — reaching for whatever's fastest, which turns out to be cereal and crackers. The session was demanding enough to warrant real replenishment. What she gave her body was essentially nothing.
Yoga recovery nutrition doesn't need to be complicated. But it does need to be intentional — and calibrated to what your session actually demanded, not borrowed from a bodybuilding article or ignored entirely because yoga "isn't a real workout."
Why Yoga Requires Its Own Recovery Approach (Not Just Gym Advice Recycled)
Standard post-workout guidance — consume 20–40g protein within 30 minutes, slam a shake, eat a big meal — was developed for resistance training and endurance sports. Those activities primarily damage muscle fibers through concentric and eccentric loading under heavy resistance or sustained high heart rates.
Yoga creates a different physiological demand. Deep stretches and prolonged holds (pigeon pose held for two minutes, for instance) produce micro-tears in connective tissue — fascia, tendons, and ligaments — not just muscle belly. This connective tissue recovers more slowly than muscle and responds better to collagen-supporting nutrients and anti-inflammatory compounds than to the whey-and-creatine approach that dominates gym culture.
Additionally, y...
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