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In depth
You're ten minutes into a vinyasa flow and your stomach is gurgling loud enough for the person on the next mat to hear. Or maybe you skipped eating entirely, and now your arms are shaking in downward dog — not from effort, but from low blood sugar.
What you eat around your yoga practice shapes everything from your balance and focus to how quickly your muscles recover afterward. Get the timing and food choices right, and your practice feels lighter, steadier, more connected. Get them wrong, and you spend half the class managing discomfort instead of breathing through poses.
This guide covers specific foods, timing windows, and practical meal ideas for before and after yoga — adjusted for different practice intensities and goals.
Why Nutrition Matters for Your Yoga Practice
Yoga asks your body to do things most daily activities don't: sustained holds, deep twists, inversions, controlled breathing. Each of these draws on glycogen stores, requires stable blood sugar, and depends on a gut that isn't working overtime to digest a heavy meal.
The nutritional demands shift based on what type of yoga you practice. A 60-minute restorative class barely elevates your heart rate — your pre-session nutrition matters less here. A 90-minute power vinyasa or Bikram session in a heated room, on the other hand, burns 400–600 calories and depletes electrolytes rapidly. Treating these two the same nutritionally is a common mistake.
A few key connections between food and your practice:
Digestion directly ...
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