Yoga Instructor Training

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danger0us-curves:

yoga-body:

thinspirationxoxo:

PROGRESS.

This is about 14 pounds lost. It’s not much but I can see SOME changes. I still have a long way to go but progress is progress. It’s been about 2 months?

Not much? Next time you go grocery shopping, gather 14 pounds of food and tell me again it’s not much! The transformation is huge :)

Also, who cares about the weight, you LOOK absolutely amazing! Your like a completely different person! Awesome work!

(via beforeandafterfatlosspics)

1,099 notes

boogalooga:

my yoga teacher from my first 200 hour yoga teacher training!
fuckyeahyoga:

this is like adding somewhat of a backbend to an already painful pose. 
(i cant get into a split. so yeah. this one makes my face go like AHAHAHAHAa ahhhhh AHH ok.)

boogalooga:

my yoga teacher from my first 200 hour yoga teacher training!

fuckyeahyoga:

this is like adding somewhat of a backbend to an already painful pose. 

(i cant get into a split. so yeah. this one makes my face go like AHAHAHAHAa ahhhhh AHH ok.)

1,659 notes

historicalmeetups:

Samuel Beckett
Playwright, novelist, and Nobel laureate
meets
André the GiantGargantuan professional wrestling legend
In 1953, fresh off the success of Waiting for Godot, Beckett bought a plot of land near the hamlet of Molien, in the commune of Ussy-sur-Marne, about forty miles northeast of Paris. There he built a cottage for himself with some help from a group of locals, including a Bulgarian-born farmer named Boris Rousimoff. Over the years, Beckett and Rousimoff became friends and would occasionally get together for card games. Rousimoff had a son, André, known as Dédé, who was something of a physical marvel. By the age of 12, André was over six feet tall and weighed 240 pounds. No school bus could hold him, and his family lacked the means to buy a car big enough to schlep him back and forth to school in Ussy-sur-Marne. Enter Boris’ old card-playing buddy Beckett, who owned a truck and was more than willing to pay his friend back for his help with the cottage by giving a lift to his enormous pituitary case of a son on his drives into town. Years later, when recounting his conversations with Beckett (which he did often), André the Giant revealed that they rarely talked about anything besides cricket.

historicalmeetups:

Samuel Beckett

Playwright, novelist, and Nobel laureate

meets

André the Giant
Gargantuan professional wrestling legend

In 1953, fresh off the success of Waiting for Godot, Beckett bought a plot of land near the hamlet of Molien, in the commune of Ussy-sur-Marne, about forty miles northeast of Paris. There he built a cottage for himself with some help from a group of locals, including a Bulgarian-born farmer named Boris Rousimoff. Over the years, Beckett and Rousimoff became friends and would occasionally get together for card games. Rousimoff had a son, André, known as Dédé, who was something of a physical marvel. By the age of 12, André was over six feet tall and weighed 240 pounds. No school bus could hold him, and his family lacked the means to buy a car big enough to schlep him back and forth to school in Ussy-sur-Marne. Enter Boris’ old card-playing buddy Beckett, who owned a truck and was more than willing to pay his friend back for his help with the cottage by giving a lift to his enormous pituitary case of a son on his drives into town. Years later, when recounting his conversations with Beckett (which he did often), André the Giant revealed that they rarely talked about anything besides cricket.

(Source: historicalmeetups)