Towards Calmness In 30 Days

Dance partners with yoga in this unique fitness regimen

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Dance partners with yoga in this unique fitness regimen

It was a leap of faith for Dahlia Sen Oberoi, a well-known Intellectual Property Rights lawyer when she decided to take a break from her hectic work schedule and host of other responsibilities and opted for a hermetic life by enrolling herself in a teacher’s training course at an Ashram in South India.

Her month-long spiritual sojourn driven by the quest to connect with her inner self inspired her to pen down her experiences of discovering yoga, well into her 50s and discover her path to wellness in her debut novel, ‘Ashramed- From Chaos to Calm’ published by Hachette India last month. Once home, she not only continued training and teaching yoga but also took up her love for dancing and turned it into a passion project. She calls this marriage DahliaNritYog- an amalgamation between Indian classical dance, Kathak and yoga and recommends it to be a fun-filled fitness routine for all.

Q. From clocking long hours in the court and hustling hard to meet your career goals, you dived straight into the Ashram life of self-induced isolation that metamorphosed to sort of a ‘spiritual hibernation’ as mentioned in your book. How did the transformation pan out for you?

A. Absolutely, I think a good ending to my story would have been ‘… And then I stopped being a lawyer’. But that didn't happen. After I returned from the Ashram, I immediately jumped right back into the thick of things. It’s not that one has to necessarily mark attendance at an Ashram to achieve a transformational goal but the idea is to slow down and be cognizant of your state of being while learning a new skill that can make a difference in how you live. I spent that one month in the Ashram doing just that.

While doing yoga or any asana, especially a complicated one, channelizing one’s entire focus on the exercise helps in several ways. First, it improves concentration as you stop thinking abo...

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