Adoptable puppies bring joy and mental wellness to the LA yoga world
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[August 08, 2024]
By Jorge Garcia
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - For yogis looking for some puppy love to go with
their mindfulness, a yoga class in Los Angeles offers gentle stretching
alongside nine puppies, many of them looking for permanent homes.
As practitioners work through a series of asanas or poses, pups assist
by jumping on the backs of those in "cat-cow" pose and scrambling
underneath the elevated bodies of those in "downward dog."
Laughing Frog Yoga studio said it has been offering puppy yoga since
2019 and that it is still among the few Southern California studios to
do so. Dog wrangler and foster pup mom Julie Mondin said the class
provides many mental health benefits for students, like happiness, joy,
and socialization.
“Puppies bring joy, and puppies also bring a sort of mental, soothing
stableness," said Mondin. "They provide oxytocin, dopamine."
"They're great for humans of every kind. Puppy yoga is fun, it's
wholesome."
Most of the adoptable puppies have been surrendered by owners or are
rescues from shelters, and to date, around 58 puppies have been adopted
through the class. Laughing Frog Yoga also offers goat and kitten yoga,
but nothing compares to the delight generated by puppies.
“I think puppy yoga is better. I think it actually is more connecting
because somebody is playing with a puppy, and the person next to you is
going to start laughing," Mondin said.
"The goats aren't as expressive, but they're really cute goats. But
let's get real. It's about the puppies.”
Puppy yoga instructor Kaia Placa is in charge of leading the pack. From
her experience, signs of emotional fatigue often go unchecked for many
people, so she likes to tailor her class around the fun and joy of each
moment.
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A Yogi and an adoptable puppy share mat at stress-relieving outdoor
Puppy Yoga hosted by Laughing Frog Yoga Studio, in Santa Monica,
California, U.S., August 1, 2024. REUTERS/Jorge Garcia
“When you bring the puppies in, you
bring the outdoors in, you're welcoming the sense of play, ease, and
lightness," said Placa. "And truly, for our mental health, we do
just need to step outside of our regular kind of day-to-day grown-up
lives and just experience a little childlike wonder. It doesn't
always have to be so serious."
Donning leather and hoodies and heavily motivated by treats,
Mondin’s veteran pup crew is led by Gilbert, Frankie and Clover who
help train the new pups with socialization and behavior on the road
to a potential adoption.
For many yoga enthusiasts like Aubrey Ackerman, the aura of zen,
relaxation and body movement becomes secondary as the pups join in
on the fun mid-stretch.
“I think it's impossible to leave a class like this feeling sad or
feeling anxious, so I think it's probably really great,” she said.
But while yogis leave class feeling zen, puppies will be puppies and
accidents do sometimes happen, Mondin said.
"Nothing can go wrong," she said, "even if you get peed on."
(Reporting by Jorge Garcia in Los Angeles; Editing by Mary Milliken
and Matthew Lewis)
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