WHAT TO WEAR TO HOT YOGA

If it’s your first time in a hot yoga studio or you’re turning it up with a heater in a yoga class at home, you might be wondering what to wear to hot yoga. And while your yoga practice accepts you wherever you are with whatever you’re wearing, there are certain types of clothing that will help you have a more streamlined practice and give you freedom to move and flow.

In general, the best outfit to wear to hot yoga is moisture-wicking, lightweight, and doesn’t restrict your movement. Your outfit needs might even be different depending on the type of yoga you’re doing.

Here are a few suggestions on what to look for and our favorite recommendations from Alo Yoga.

PERFORMANCE FABRIC

Look for fabrics that are designed to be moisture-wicking — now’s not the time to grab sweatpants or that heavyweight 100% cotton T-shirt. Your best bet will be tops and bottoms specifically designed with performance or technical fabric to keep the sweat and odor at bay. Features like mesh and cutouts will also keep things ventilated.

Airlift Laser Cut Speedy Bra Tank & Shorts

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Idol Performance Tee

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2. FITTED CLOTHING

While something tight might seem restrictive, in the case of hot yoga, it can be helpful. A sports bra that keeps everything in place and sleeves that don’t flop up, down, and in your face can make your practice less distracting. Trust us — do Downward Dog once in a loose shirt and you’ll understand why. And when it comes to pants, leggings make sure that you’re not tripping or preventing the flow of movement like baggier pants would. Baggy pants can also create a chamber of trapped heat, which can make the room feel even hotter.

Airlift Advantage Racerback Bra

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9-Inch Warrior Compression Short

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3. INSPIRING COLORS

Don’t underestimate the power of color psychology, especially in your practice. If you’re looking for a visual boost to help motivate your practice, aim for colors such as red, orange, or yellow to inspire strength and energy in higher intensity classes. If it’s a more relaxing yoga class in a hot room, look for colors such as green, brown, or blue to inspire stability and peace.

High-Waist Airlift Legging

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Triumph Crewneck Tee

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4. SHORTS VS. LEGGINGS

There are pros and cons to both shorts and leggings in hot yoga, so it’s up to personal preference and the style of class you’re taking. Many hot yoga practitioners love wearing shorts because less fabric means you’ll stay cooler and allow your sweat to do its thing. However, if you do sweat easily, it can create a slippery surface for arm balances like Crow and Side Crow.

Leggings might not keep you as cool, but they will create a stable surface if you decide to try any tricky poses or balances. When you choose lightweight and breathable leggings, it shouldn’t be an issue.

3-Inch High-Waist Airlift Short

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Conquer React Performance Short

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Can Hot Yoga Make You Lose Weight?

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Hot yoga is not for the faint of heart. Classes lasting 60 to 90 minutes in rooms as hot as 105 degrees Fahrenheit are no easy feat. You’ll build muscle, you’ll gain flexibility, you’ll sweat and chances are good that you’ll lose weight. But weight loss and calories burned in hot yoga depend on many factors, only some of which are within your control.

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The type of hot yoga you practice, how hard you work during the class, how many calories you consume and other lifestyle factors play a role in whether you’ll lose weight and just how much weight you’ll lose.

Weight-Loss Basics

First things first: Weight loss and fat loss are two different things. Weight loss refers to a number on the scale; fat loss means losing adipose tissue. You might lose fat mass but gain muscle mass and actually see your weight increase.

Sweating a lot during a workout can lead to water loss, and you might see that reflected on the scale immediately afterwards. But as you rehydrate those pounds will come back.

To lose body fat, you have to burn more calories than you take in through your diet on a regular basis. Lowering your calorie intake and increasing your activity level typically results in fat loss. The more calories you cut out of your diet and burn through exercise, the bigger the deficit and the more fat you’ll shed.

Types of Hot Yoga

When many people think of hot yoga, they think of Bikram yoga, a style of yoga created in the 1970s by Bikram Choudhury. In classes of 90 minutes, students perform a series of 26 postures in a room heated to 105 degrees Fahrenheit. The classes are intense, and Bikram himself refers to the classrooms as “torture chambers.”

But there are many other types of hot yoga. Any type of yoga performed in a heated room could be called “hot” yoga. However, not all these types will elicit the same calorie burn necessary for fat loss.

Baptiste power yoga performed in 90-degree rooms and other types of power yoga practiced in heated rooms keep the body moving throughout the duration of the class and include challenging postures and sequences that get the heart rate up. You’ll burn a significant number of calories in these heated classes. But other classes performed in heated rooms, such as yin or restorative yoga, do not get your heart rate up enough to burn the calories that will result in fat loss.

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Hot yoga vs warm yoga: how much heat can you take?

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Simona Stanton was sure of one thing when she opened her yoga studio in Dubai’s Alserkal ­Avenue: no one who entered a class would hit an overpowering wall of heat. The Prague-born athlete – skiing, tennis and golf are among her passions – first got into yoga three years ago while earning her degree in psychology, and went on to train with California yogi Erica Blitz.

There are two rooms in Stanton’s airy two-storey Shimis Yoga Centre: upstairs is the Greenhouse, which features a living plant wall where students can practise vinyasa, hatha and yin yoga. On the ground floor is the Box. The interior is dark, with strip lighting that glows through the seven chakra colours during class.

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Warm yoga sessions at Shimis are conducted in a darkened room with strip lighting, with the temperature set at 32°C

And while students will leave sweating, it will be ­largely due to their workout rather than the temperature of the room.

The case for warm yoga

That’s because at Shimis, it’s called “warm” yoga, not hot. Infrared panels heat the room to a gentle 32°C, which is a big drop from the 42°C to 45°C ­associated with hot yoga classes. “For me, it was just too hot and overwhelming,” Stanton says. “I would have to go into child’s pose during my practice and rest for a while because my body couldn’t handle it.”

With the temperature lowered, Stanton says students can safely tackle more difficult poses that are off limits in hot yoga, such as inversions. “You can do all the poses,” she says. “At the same time, you get a full workout experience, you sweat and burn a lot of calories.”

The case for hot yoga

Dubai Marina’s Dryp Wellness Centre has a different philosophy on the state of the thermostat. “I love saunas and overall sweating,” says its owner, Natasha Rudatsenko, who also operates the wellness platform Health Nag. “Every time I expose myself to heat, my endorphins and serotonin are through the roof. It’s the best mood booster.”

Metabolism and digestion are the physical processes affected positively by the heat – as are emotional states, she says. “It’s the best habit for great moods,” she says.

Before Rudatsenko found hot yoga, she had hypothyroidism and polycystic ovary syndrome, and was on hormone therapy that threatened to last a lifetime. “Instead, I became very much into hot yoga and stopped my medicine completely three months later,” she says. “My body found a way to normalise my hormones itself, just by reducing my stress levels through active sweat, stimulation of sluggish organs and improved blood circulation.”

Pros and cons of heat exposure

While there are real benefits for the body and mind when exercising in heat, the practice must be approached with caution as human thermoregulation is being challenged, says Dr Nasr Al Jafari, head of DNA Health & Wellness Centre Dubai. “During moderate exercise, your core temperature rises and the additional heat must be moved from the core to the skin,” he says.

“If heat production continues to outpace the rate at which heat can dissipate, the autonomic control of the cardiovascular system – that helps the body to control temperature – becomes impaired.”

I thought I would not survive the heat, but it’s all about hydration and mental strength. Sweating it off, you almost feel coolIf approached properly by easing into the exercise, avoiding coffee and other diuretics before, and properly hydrating before and after, then short-term passive exposure to heat can have synergistic health benefits, says Al Jafari. That’s because the exposure to heat causes a mild hyperthermia, which prompts the body to adapt its hormonal, cardiovascular and immunological systems in order to return to normal, and protect itself from further stressors.

“This is through a phenomenon known as hormesis, a defence response following exposure to a mild stressor, which provides protection from subsequent exposures to more extreme stressors,” he says. The way the body and mind react to this is similar to what happens during moderate to vigorous exercise. The benefits range from improved “cardiovascular and mental health, to athletic endurance and immune function, and may even offer a means to forestall the effects of ageing”, Al Jafari says.

In addition to gradual exposure to warmer yoga temperatures to let the body acclimatise, Al Jafari recommends caution when rehydrating afterwards. “Rehydration should occur using fluids with electrolytes, in order to replenish not just the lost fluid volume but also the salts, as only replacing water could cause imbalances and fluid shifts, leading to complications.

Useful once you get used to it

Ryen Hammond, 28, a social media manager for a communications agency in Dubai, found out about the power of extreme heat the hard way when she started doing hot yoga during college back in the US. “I have actually thrown up after a class,” she says. “That was probably before I was more aware of self-care … drinking enough water before.”

Fast forward and Hammond is now able to do hot or Bikram yoga at Dryp four to five times a week. For her, the 42°C-plus room is an essential part of the workout. The yoga aspect has also proved a tonic for turbulent emotions. “I struggled with anxiety for years and I love this yoga, which often starts with a breathing exercise. I can use those techniques and take them outside the studio,” says Hammond, adding that the intensity of hot yoga also appeals to her husband.

“Sometimes half the class is men,” she says. “I was really surprised. There are golfers, football players, men who’ve been practising for 10 years. It’s a real mix.”

Bijal Soni, 33, founder of influencer marketing agency Hala Social, was a HIIT lover when a former colleague introduced her to hot yoga. “I went for the first time and I was absolutely addicted,” she says. “I thought I would not survive the heat, but it’s all about hydration and mental strength. Sweating it off, you almost feel cool.”

The mental benefits of a hot room, too, are considerable, adds Soni. “This is the only workout when I’ve managed to switch off,” she says. “Because it’s so hot you need to focus.”

Hot yoga in the summer

The UAE’s extreme temperatures are not a factor for these warm or hot-yoga-loving yogis: their practice continues year-round. “There is not much difference between practising in hot summers or at wintertime,” says Rudatsenko. “You may need to be extra-hydrated and stock up on electrolytes. Potassium and magnesium are highly recommended for everyone spending summers in Dubai, as these are the first minerals we lose at light speed on hot days.” Newbies do need to make sure to hydrate properly and stop eating three hours before class starts, she adds.

Although the temperature may change from studio to studio, Stanton says there is one main benefit derived from any yoga practice: “Yoga classes teach you how to breathe properly. Once you are in control of your breath, I believe you’re in control of your life.”

The Bikram controversy

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Controversial yogi Bikram Choudhury seen with actress Carol Lynley at his Beverly Hills studio in 1982. Joan Adlen / Getty Images

Despite having devotees around the world, a cloud has long hung over the term Bikram yoga, particularly after last year’s Netflix documentary Bikram: Yogi, Guru, Predator, which outlines alleged sexual abuse and predatory behaviour by founder Bikram Choudhury.

“It really made me sad, to be honest,” says Bijal Soni. “I was pretty much a brand ambassador for Bikram yoga. So I stopped calling it by the name and just call it hot yoga.” Fellow fan Hammond felt similarly uncomfortable but has kept doing Bikram, reasoning that, as the documentary alleges, Choudhury didn’t actually invent the 90-minute, 26-posture practice, instead taking it from another yogi.

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What Is Hot Yoga For?

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As the temperature drops and the stress of school, darkness, and squeezing back into fall jeans closes in upon us, I’ve been on a streak of showing up to a very (very) warm room to do yoga. It is calming, and exceedingly pleasant. And it has me wondering: Why did we start doing yoga in a hot room? Is this a wellness trend on the level of, say, Peloton or working out in a cold room, that is expensive and gimmicky but perhaps worth embracing nonetheless? Or is the “hot” in hot yoga actually doing something for you?

Hot yoga was invented by Bikram Choudhury, a man from Kolkata, India, with a directive to spread yoga throughout the world and a distaste for shivery rooms. He opened up a studio in San Francisco in the ‘70s, made his name synonymous with the exercise, and gathered followers from Lady Gaga to George Clooney, according to a 2011 GQ profile that dubbed his “cult” both “overheated” and “oversexed.” With a penchant for yelling things like “Miss Teeny Weeny Bikini” (and more explicit) to address students, Clancy Martin writes, Choudhury’s persona made some sense for popularizing his take on yoga in America, where we love a personality shouting at us to move in a certain way.

Choudhury has been embroiled in scandal since allegedly raping a student, and then in turn allegedly harassing his former attorney for trying to look into it (the attorney was awarded $7 million; Bikram has since decamped to Acapulco, Mexico—where he still teaches, according to HuffPost). But there are even more reasons to be frustrated with Bikram yoga besides its founder’s misdeeds: Classes are 90 minutes, they consist of the same tiresome sequence of poses, the room must be outfitted in a specific way. “We refused to put carpet down,” says Ted Grand, who co-owned a couple of Bikram studios in Toronto. “It got us in a lot of trouble.”

Tired of feeling “demonized” by a strict set of brand expectations, he and his business partner Jessica Robertson shed the Bikram name and founded Modo yoga in 2004. One thing they kept was the Bikram method’s call for a hot room—though they did their classes in a slightly less hot room (Bikram calls for 105 degrees Fahrenheit). They also integrated different poses and allowed some classes to be donation-based. By Grand’s estimation, they were the first hot yoga studio that wasn’t under the Bikram brand. Today, they have 75 studios all over the world. (A point of pride: Their first studio in the United States was in north Kentucky because that’s where a teacher who wanted to open one happened to live.) Other hot yoga studios have defected, too, with Manhattan’s first Bikram studio changing its focus and name in 2017 after Choudhury was ordered to pay the $7 million. These days, there are plenty of places to seek out hot yoga divorced from Bikram, including those at the luxury gym Equinox, which has helped slot hot yoga into the world of branded boutique workout classes geared toward rich people.

This turn, for yoga to become an exclusive activity, goes hand in hand with the cultural appropriation of the 2,500-year-old spiritual practice, as yoga teacher and researcher Rina Deshpande explains in Self. “Yoga, a practice based in large part on self-awareness, self-love, and freedom from material trappings, is now mostly depicted with stylish athletic apparel and spun toward white populations.”

Another part of the problem, Deshpande wrote, is that yoga is often understood as a physical activity, which is far from how it started. Yoga teacher Vikram Jeet Singh, grew up in Dehli, India, where “you would go to the park, there would be groups of people practicing yoga there,” he says. “Yoga is breathwork, community-oriented.” It was in the West that yoga “meant movement.” Singh started doing yoga himself in 2006, when he was living in Canada, working at a corporate job, and his then-boss suggested it. After signing up for an intro week of unlimited classes for about $20 (a common deal at yoga studios, and a great thing to take advantage of), he was hooked, eventually training to become a teacher. And even though it looks different than the yoga he saw growing up, he explains how movement can still support yoga as a larger way of existing in the world: “To me, the focus of your physical asana”—or posture—“is to keep your body healthy, and then in space you’re creating, you’re hoping to find some clarity of your mind.” Still, told me he wishes people focused more on the aspects of yoga outside of movements and how well they’re doing them. “There’s better workouts than what can you get in a yoga class,” he adds.

That’s true for even hot yoga, for all its excessive, un-ignorable sweating. As yoga booms in popularity—it’s now a $16 billion industry—researchers like Rachael Nelson at Central Michigan University are working to figure out how the practice fits into the larger world of exercise so that doctors and guidelines can recommend it appropriately. She and her colleagues had 14 participants complete short yoga classes in a hot room, and in a regular room. While heart rate and perceived exertion went up during the hot class, the actual intensity (as measure by a standard called maximal oxygen consumption) wasn’t notably different. Yoga, hot or not, is low-intensity in terms of a workout. That uptick in heart rate in hot yoga comes from your body shifting blood around to keep its core temperature stable (and cool enough). Nelson and colleagues are also working on a larger study to confirm these results.

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