3/5 Racquel-MarΓa S. 1 year ago on Google
This
place
used
to
be
so
awesome,
but
in
trying
to
appeal
to
a
wider
audience,
they've
lost
a
lot
of
the
essence
of
Bikram
yoga.
They're
down
to
only
two
90-minute
classes
per
week,
and
they've
become
much
less
professional
and
meditative.
They've
had
a
lot
of
turnover
of
instructors
and
some
of
the
newer
ones
seem
less
focused
on
creating
a
true
Bikram-style
environment
(Oh,
Matt,
I
miss
you
SO
much!!).
I
go
to
Bikram
for
the
meditation--the
challenge
forces
me
to
focus
all
of
my
attention
on
the
instructor's
voice
and
the
postures,
and
I
rely
on
them
being
the
same
each
time.
The
instructors
now
go
off
script
a
lot
more
and
allow
students
to
hurry
through
the
postures
rather
than
being
present
in
the
moment
and
waiting
for
the
instructor's
cues.
In
today's
class,
someone
(rudely!)
asked
to
have
the
fans
turned
on
and,
rather
than
suggesting
they
just
step
out,
the
instructor
actually
stopped
to
accommodate
them.
We
then
ended
up
having
less
time
and
so
did
one
of
the
postures
only
once.
Because
of
this
one
rude
person,
everyone
else
had
to
have
their
concentration
interrupted.
I
get
that
the
instructor
was
trying
to
be
nice,
but
indulging
this
person
took
away
from
everyone
else's
meditative
practice.
Bikram
OKC
seems
to
have
forgotten
about
the
focused,
meditative
aspects
of
Bikram
in
favor
of
being
more
like
every
other
yoga
studio,
which
is
disappointing.
I
drive
a
fair
distance
to
go
here,
and
it's
worth
it
to
be
able
to
practice
Bikram
yoga.
If
I
wanted
just
everyday
"hot
yoga"
(which
is
what
they
seem
to
be
aspiring
to),
I
could
go
to
a
studio
closer
to
home.
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