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If you’ve noticed your energy levels crashing or found yourself dreading a class you once loved to teach, you’re not alone. Burnout is a very real experience, especially in service-based professions like yoga. I’ve navigated these feelings myself and seen them in other yoga teachers. Today, let’s explore what burnout in yoga teaching looks like, why it happens, and how we can find our way back to balance—both on and off the mat.


What Exactly Is Burnout?

Burnout is a state of chronic physical and emotional exhaustion, often caused by long-term stress or overwork. For yoga teachers, burnout can show up as:

  1. Lack of Enthusiasm: Feeling disconnected from your teaching or resentful of your class schedule.
  2. Physical Fatigue: Persistent tiredness, even after adequate rest.
  3. Emotional Exhaustion: Quick irritation, frustration, or emotional numbness around students or colleagues.
  4. Questioning Your Purpose: Wondering if you’re even making a difference or if yoga is your true calling anymore.

These signals are our body’s and mind’s way of waving the red flag. Spotting them early can help you avoid bigger health consequences down the road.


Why Does Burnout Happen to Yoga Teachers?

  1. High Emotional Output: Yoga isn’t just a workout; it’s often an emotional and spiritual practice. Teachers hold space for students’ physical and emotional well-being, and that can lead to emotional fatigue.
  2. Scheduling Demands: Teaching multiple classes across different studios (often with early mornings or late nights) leaves minimal downtime for self-care.
  3. Financial Pressures: Many yoga teachers juggle multiple gigs to make ends meet, leading to an intense cycle of teaching and traveling.
  4. Personal Practice Takes a Backseat: Ironically, the more you teach, the less time you might have for your own practice, which is crucial for maintaining mental and physical health.

Burnout in yoga teachers - a real thing.

The Impact of Burnout on Service Professionals

Burnout isn’t limited to yoga teachers. It’s prevalent in healthcare workers, educators, therapists, and anyone whose job involves caring or catering to others. It often manifests in similar ways:

  • Drained emotions and empathy fatigue
  • Feeling undervalued or overwhelmed
  • Physical ailments like headaches, digestive issues, or chronic aches

Signs Your Yoga Teacher (or You) Might Be Burnt Out

  • Sudden Increase in Cancelled Classes: If your once-reliable teacher is canceling classes more frequently, they might be at their limit.
  • Low Energy During Class: They seem distant, or you sense a heavy vibe that’s different from their usual, energetic teaching style.
  • Limited Student Interaction: Minimal post-class discussions, rushed goodbyes, or no time for Q&A could signal emotional or mental exhaustion.
  • Frequent Complaints About Work: Ongoing comments about feeling tired, stressed, or overwhelmed are signs something deeper is going on.

10 Steps to Recover From Yoga Teacher Burnout

  1. Acknowledge the Burnout
    Before meaningful change can happen, recognize you’re experiencing burnout. Denial only prolongs exhaustion, so give yourself permission to say, “I need a break.” This self-awareness is the crucial first step in beating burnout.
  2. Re-evaluate Your Teaching Load
    Teaching multiple classes or workshops back-to-back can be overwhelming. Take a close look at your schedule and consider cutting back, even briefly. Fewer, more focused classes often lead to higher-quality sessions—and a healthier you.
  3. Carve Out Personal Practice Time
    One of the fastest ways to reignite passion is to reconnect with your own practice. Dedicate specific days and times to roll out your mat without the pressure of teaching. This revitalizes your mind, body, and spirit.
  4. Set Firm Boundaries
    Whether it’s saying “no” to extra subbing or deciding not to answer studio emails after a certain hour, boundaries safeguard your energy. Setting clear limits keeps work responsibilities from spilling over into your personal time.
  5. Prioritize Restorative Yoga & Meditation
    When you’re burnt out, gentle and restorative practices can be a lifeline. Yin yoga, yoga nidra, or even short daily meditations help reset your nervous system and rebuild emotional resilience.
  6. Seek Peer Support
    Don’t go it alone. Reach out to fellow yoga teachers or join a support group. Sharing experiences and advice with peers validates your struggles and offers new perspectives on stress management.
  7. Invest in Continuing Education
    Enrolling in advanced yoga trainings or workshops can reignite your excitement for teaching. Fresh knowledge, techniques, or mentorship can rekindle the passion you felt when you first stepped into the studio.
  8. Explore Alternative Revenue Streams
    Financial stress is a major contributor to teacher burnout. Think about offering online classes, private sessions, or workshops to diversify income. Reducing monetary worries helps you focus on teaching with integrity and joy.
  9. Practice Self-Care Beyond the Mat
    True self-care goes beyond asana practice. Incorporate activities like nature walks, creative hobbies, journaling, or spa days. Find what nourishes you outside of yoga and schedule it in—because you deserve it.
  10. Revisit Your “Why”
    Burnout often blurs your original passion. Reflect on why you started teaching: Was it to build a like-minded community? Share the transformative power of yoga? Clarifying that initial spark helps realign your goals and reignite motivation.

Where We Go From Here

Remember that teaching yoga is a noble calling, but it can also become draining if we ignore our own self-care. The moment you realize burnout might be knocking on your door is the moment to pause, reevaluate, and prioritize holistic well-being. By recognizing the early warning signs and taking intentional steps—like boundary setting, self-care, and supportive dialogues—we can keep the love of yoga alive in our teaching.


Final Thoughts and Next Steps

  • If you suspect you or another teacher is battling burnout, offer empathy. It’s more common than you think and not a personal failing.
  • Make time for gentle practices that nourish your body, mind, and soul.
  • When in doubt, remember: The best yoga classes are taught from a place of authenticity and replenishment, not obligation.

Thank you for reading! I hope this post helps you recognize burnout, address it early, and remain the vibrant, present teacher you’re meant to be.

If you want to hear my personal story of coping with burnout. Listen here on the Let’s Talk Yoga podcast.

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