Four warrior shapes worked one at a time: three 45-second rounds of Warrior 2 on the left, then the right, then Reverse Warrior on each side, with 20 seconds to breathe between rounds and 45 seconds to change poses between blocks. Including the warmup and cooldown, it runs 15:55.
Staying on one shape for three consecutive rounds is the format’s point — the same stance is in front of you each time, so every round is a chance to refine it rather than relearn it. Front knee drifting inward? Fix it in round two. If three rounds per side is more than your legs are ready for, open it in the editor and drop to two.
Six rounds of 1:00 Sun Salutation A with 0:15 to settle between. One round is one full salutation taken at a steady, breath-led pace — find the rhythm and let each round flow a little smoother than the last.
A short, varied flow to take the body from sleep to ready. Asymmetric on purpose — each shape is held as long as it deserves, and the closing salutation is the longest piece.
Four prep drills rotated for two rounds at 0:40 work, 0:15 release. Neck, shoulders, spine, and hips — the four areas that need to be awake before any flow.
Four standing shapes rotated for three rounds at 0:45 work, 0:20 transition. Warrior 1, warrior 2, side angle, and triangle — moves through the entire standing vocabulary every round.
Five rounds of 2:00 free vinyasa flow with 0:30 in down dog between. Build heat — chaturanga, up dog, down dog, lunge, repeat. Pick the cadence and stay with the breath.
Four standing balances rotated for two rounds at 0:45 a side, 0:15 reset. Pick a focal point on the wall, breathe slow, and accept the wobble — finding the balance is the practice.
Three plank shapes, four rounds each, finished one shape at a time. Group format stacks the holds — by the third round of side plank, the obliques will be talking.
Eight rounds of 0:30 boat pose with 0:30 rest. Lift the chest, point the toes, and keep breathing — the rest matters as much as the hold.
Closing sequence after a flow: long pigeons each side, supine twists, happy baby, and a four-minute savasana to finish. Asymmetric on purpose — savasana is by far the longest hold, as it should be.
Long, passive holds for the hips and inner thighs. Asymmetric on purpose — the closing reclined butterfly runs three minutes, the rest before it the shortest. Settle into each shape, breathe slow, and let the time do the work.