When Yoga Teaching Method Gets Confused With Anatomical Principles (EP.394)

When Yoga Teaching Method Gets Confused With Anatomical Principles (EP.394)

From Conversations for Yoga Teachers by Karen Fabian

March 9, 2026 · 41 min · Episode 394

About this episode

This episode discusses the confusion between yoga teaching methods and anatomical principles, emphasizing the importance of understanding evidence-based anatomy.

In this episode, I’m tackling a common source of confusion in the yoga industry: when teaching methods get mistaken for anatomical/movement principles. Many yoga teachers hear cues or “rules” about certain poses — things like “don’t put your foot on the side of your knee in Tree Pose” or “you shouldn’t square your hips in Warrior 1 because that forces the hips into an uncomfortable position.” But often these statements aren’t well grounded in anatomy or movement science. Instead, they reflect a particular teacher’s style, preference, or interpretation of how a pose should be taught. Or, they might simply reflect a lack of anatomical knowledge on the part of the teacher. In this episode, I share why it’s important to distinguish between evidence-based anatomy principles and teaching methodology, and why asking “why?” is one of the most powerful tools a teacher can use when evaluating cues and alignment advice. If you’ve ever heard conflicting guidance about poses and wondered what’s actually true, this episode will help you think about anatomy, movement, and cueing with more clarity and confidence. In the episode, I also speak about how I worked with a yoga teacher to help her get…

People in this episode

Host: Karen Fabian

Topics covered

  • yoga teaching methods
  • anatomical principles
  • movement science
  • cueing
  • alignment advice

Keywords

  • yoga
  • anatomy
  • movement
  • cueing
  • alignment
  • teaching methods
  • conflicting guidance

Mentioned in this episode

Organizations: Accelerator Program, barebonesyoga

More episodes of Conversations for Yoga Teachers

Explore listener stats, chart rankings, contacts and more on the Conversations for Yoga Teachers podcast page.