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I have been an active participant in the yoga industry since the early 2000s, and I have never really understood how brick and mortar yoga studios, especially locally owned ones without corporate backing, made it work.
I’ve been curious about it, and I have seen a few studios run incredibly well and last a long time, but we all know those are the outliers. These spaces are so important for us as teachers and students, and for the wider community as well, but they so often struggle to survive the impact of late stage capitalism.
And that was true even BEFORE the pandemic, when so many of our favorite local businesses closed down. There are not that many yoga studios that have been around for a long time, but we are VERY lucky today to hear from one of my old friends, Deb Flashenberg who has had a thriving locally owned yoga studio in New York City since 2002. AMAZING.
(and if you want to listen to my previous episodes with Deb please check out 31: How To Work With Pregnant Yoga Students and 104: Postnatal Considerations in Asana with Deb Flashenberg)
In this episode you’ll hear:
what the vibes were like back in 2002
what changed in the landscape between 2002 and 2019
how and why Deb and the Prenatal Yoga Center survived COVID
what the “comeback” post-COVID been like
what thoughts and advice Deb has for people thinking about opening up a brick and mortar space now
Learn More From Deb:
Prenatal Yoga Center website
Prenatnal Yoga Center on Instagram
Postnatal Yoga Teacher Training
4.9
149149 ratings
I have been an active participant in the yoga industry since the early 2000s, and I have never really understood how brick and mortar yoga studios, especially locally owned ones without corporate backing, made it work.
I’ve been curious about it, and I have seen a few studios run incredibly well and last a long time, but we all know those are the outliers. These spaces are so important for us as teachers and students, and for the wider community as well, but they so often struggle to survive the impact of late stage capitalism.
And that was true even BEFORE the pandemic, when so many of our favorite local businesses closed down. There are not that many yoga studios that have been around for a long time, but we are VERY lucky today to hear from one of my old friends, Deb Flashenberg who has had a thriving locally owned yoga studio in New York City since 2002. AMAZING.
(and if you want to listen to my previous episodes with Deb please check out 31: How To Work With Pregnant Yoga Students and 104: Postnatal Considerations in Asana with Deb Flashenberg)
In this episode you’ll hear:
what the vibes were like back in 2002
what changed in the landscape between 2002 and 2019
how and why Deb and the Prenatal Yoga Center survived COVID
what the “comeback” post-COVID been like
what thoughts and advice Deb has for people thinking about opening up a brick and mortar space now
Learn More From Deb:
Prenatal Yoga Center website
Prenatnal Yoga Center on Instagram
Postnatal Yoga Teacher Training
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