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A student in a hot yoga class in Austin told me she'd been drinking "tons of water" before every session. Turned out "tons" meant thirty-two ounces in the fifteen minutes between parking her car and unrolling her mat. By the third Sun Salutation, she was fighting nausea in every forward fold. She assumed she was out of shape. She was actually waterlogged — the timing was wrong, not the volume.
Yoga hydration is less intuitive than most practitioners realize. Drink too little and your balance degrades, your muscles cramp, and deep stretches feel like they're fighting you. Drink too much — or at the wrong time — and you're dealing with sloshing, bloating, and a distracted practice. The variables shift depending on whether you're doing a gentle restorative session or a ninety-minute Bikram class in a room heated to 105°F.
This guide covers the specific amounts, timing windows, and electrolyte considerations that actually matter — organized by session type so you can adjust based on what you're practicing today, not some generic "drink eight glasses a day" advice.
Why Hydration Affects Your Yoga Practice More Than You Think
Water isn't just fuel. In the context of yoga, it's a performance variable that directly affects three things most practitioners care about: balance, flexibility, and how hard the practice feels.
At just 2% dehydration — which is roughly what you'd experience after skipping water for a few hours on a warm day — proprioception measurably declines. Proprioception is ...
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