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Bikram / Hot Yoga

Bikram Yoga (or Hot Yoga) is a practice of 26 postures and 2 breathing exercises performed in a room heated to 40°C with 40% humidity. Heat promotes flexibility, detoxification through sweating, and intense cardiovascular work.

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Bikram / Hot Yoga

Overview

Bikram Yoga, created by Bikram Choudhury in the 1970s, consists of 26 Hatha Yoga postures and 2 breathing exercises in a room heated to 40°C (105°F) with 40% humidity, for exactly 90 minutes. Heat increases flexibility, cardiovascular load (comparable to jogging), and promotes detoxification through sweating (1-1.5 liters per session). Many studios now practice "Hot Yoga" without official Bikram affiliation.

Core Principles

  • Controlled heat: 40°C, 40% humidity for deeper stretching
  • Fixed 26-posture sequence: each posture prepares the next
  • Dialogue teaching: verbal instruction only, no demonstration
  • Extreme mental focus: forced moving meditation
  • Hydration: minimum 2 liters before class

Main Indications

  • Weight loss (500-700 calories/session)
  • Flexibility improvement
  • Chronic joint pain
  • Cardiovascular conditioning
  • Stress management through intense effort

Session Structure

90 minutes: standing pranayama, 13 standing postures, rest, 13 floor postures, Kapalbhati breathing, final Savasana.

Variations

Hot Vinyasa (35-38°C, fluid sequences), Hot Power Yoga, Moksha/Modo (eco-friendly), "26 and 2" (unaffiliated Bikram sequence), reduced-heat beginner options.

Contraindications

  • Pregnancy (fetal hyperthermia risk)
  • Cardiovascular problems
  • Hypotension, vasovagal history
  • Multiple sclerosis
  • Epilepsy
  • Renal insufficiency
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