The Shala Daily

YOGA • PHILOSOPHY • LIFE

March 17, 2026
🎙️

Tech Support Tuesday #1 is LIVE!

Welcome to the very first Tech Support Tuesday.

🕉️ KEY CONCEPTS

Svadhyaya
Self-study — the practice of honest observation and inquiry into your own patterns
Drishti
Focused gaze — a technique for training attention and calming the mind
Tapas
Discipline, sustained effort — the heat that transforms through consistent practice
Samskara
Habitual patterns — the grooves worn into the mind by repeated thought and action

Welcome to the very first Tech Support Tuesday. Every week, I pull questions from the yoga and Ashtanga corners of Reddit and answer them on video. Some of these questions I’ve been thinking about for twenty years. Some I’m answering off the cuff. It’s serious business, but we don’t have to be.

This week’s episode covers seven questions. That’s a lot. Future episodes will probably be shorter. But this is the inaugural run, so we’re going big.

Watch the full episode on Descript

🪞 Letting Go of the Need to Be Good

Someone asked what advice I’d give my past self when starting yoga. The answer came fast: stop trying to be good at it. Svadhyaya — self-study — isn’t about proving anything to anyone. It’s about paying attention. The moment you reframe practice from performance to personal development, everything shifts.

🔍 Yoga as a Diagnostic Tool

How do you stop turning yoga into a competitive sport? You start treating it as a diagnostic tool instead. Your practice reveals things — physical limitations, mental patterns, the places where you grip and won’t let go. That’s not a problem. That’s the point. Samskaras — habitual patterns — show up on the mat before they show up anywhere else.

📐 Building a Strong Foundation

Someone wanted to know how to quickly learn the Ashtanga system. There’s no shortcut, but there is a smarter path: understand the underlying structure. The sequences aren’t arbitrary. When you learn why the poses are ordered the way they are, the system stops feeling like a memorization exercise and starts making sense. Wise practice means knowing what you’re doing and why.

🏠 Developing a Home Practice

The home practice question comes up constantly. Everyone wants one. Almost nobody knows how to start. The answer is boring and true: create a dedicated space, show up consistently, and stay curious. You don’t need two hours. You need ten minutes you actually do, not ninety minutes you keep planning to do.

👁️ The Power of Drishti

Drishti — the focused gaze — is one of the most underrated tools in the Ashtanga system. It’s not just about where you look. It’s about training your attention. When your eyes wander, your mind wanders. When your gaze is steady, your mind follows. That’s not mysticism. That’s neuroscience.

⚖️ Structure vs. Dogma

Can you practice Ashtanga without being dogmatic? Yes. In fact, you should. The structure exists to support you, not imprison you. Tapas — discipline — is about sustained effort, not blind obedience. The system gives you a framework. What you do inside that framework is yours.

🔥 Is Yoga Actually Life-Changing?

The honest answer: yes, but not in the way Instagram promises. The changes are subtle at first. You sleep better. Your back hurts less. You notice when you’re holding your breath in traffic. Over time, those small shifts compound into something you can’t ignore. The practice doesn’t change your life overnight. It changes how you show up for it.

That’s Tech Support Tuesday. Bring your questions. I’ll bring the answers. Or at least my best attempt at them.

— MJH

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"The practice doesn't change your life overnight. It changes how you show up for it."

— MJH

The inaugural Tech Support Tuesday — seven questions from Reddit, answered on video. Stop trying to be good at yoga. Start paying attention.

— MJH
Original Article: "Ashtanga Tech Support Episode 1" by Michael Joel Hall, Ashtanga Tech
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