HomeNewsTrendsHealthAuthor and yoga guru Ira Trivedi on lockdown yoga, her #MeToo stories, and a dog named Om

Author and yoga guru Ira Trivedi on lockdown yoga, her #MeToo stories, and a dog named Om

Author and yoga guru Ira Trivedi on sexuality in modern India, the #MeToo movement, and why yoga is the best exercise during lockdown.

June 21, 2020 / 10:10 IST
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Neha Kirpal

This International Day of Yoga, well-known yoga expert and bestselling author Ira Trivedi cannot emphasise enough the benefits of practising regular yoga for both adults and children, especially during the coronavirus lockdown.

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“It’s really amazing during the lockdown because one doesn’t need much space. All you need is a yoga mat. For most other activities, you usually need a ground, ball, field, gym or treadmill. It’s very important to strengthen our immune system and respiratory system at this time, and yoga can help achieve both of these for both kids and adults,” says the yoga acharya who won the Devi Award in 2015 for dynamism and innovation, and, the same year, led the first international yoga day celebrations in New Delhi that created the Guinness Book of World Records for the largest yoga class in the world.

Named by BBC among its list of the 100 most influential women in the world, Ira is also the founder of Namami Yoga, a not-for-profit organisation that supports underprivileged children and women in India. Namami Yoga does a lot of free yoga classes in the mornings in various public parks. They started in the Lodi Garden and Nehru Park in Delhi, and have also done some in Gurgaon. According to Ira, the response has been great. “When you do yoga in a public space, even people around you get inspired,” she says.