Yoga-Inspired Ballet Fitness Class Burns Nearly 500 Calories And Gets You Super Fit

This Is What Happens To Your Thighs When Ballet Meets Yoga
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I’ve been doing ballet since I was four years old, and although I may not be as fit as I was when I did a class every day, I can still complete a basic barre with my eyes closed.

In complete contrast, I’d never done a yoga class before Barreasana and had been meaning to try one for some time.

So I thought Barrecore's new yoga-inspired ballet fitness class mash-up would be the perfect way to introduce me to yoga, without stretching me too far outside my comfort zone.

But this is a far cry from “yoga-lite” or even “ballet-lite” as I’d imagined it might be.

Do not be fooled by the candle lit studio or the gentle music. Barreasana is fast, demanding and will make your calf muscles burn – in the best possible way. I could feel my legs shaking and beads of sweat starting to form on my forehead.

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Strike a pose

The class is designed to tone your limbs and tighten your core while leaving your spine feeling lengthened. An hour-long class can burn up to 500 calories.

It begins with a continuous flow of movements which fly through yoga poses such as downward-facing dog, warrior two, child’s pose and upward-facing dog.

Jumping up and down from the floor between each certainly got my heart rate going. Think burpees, but with nice stretches between each.

Although the instructor moved with lightning speed between moves, she darted around the room equally quickly to correct individuals’ posture.

However, complete dance or yoga beginners may struggle to keep up.

The class then moved on to work at the barre. A particularly gruelling section involved standing on demi-pointe (tip toe) and completing a long series of squats.

After that, my legs were visibly shaking when I tried to stand on one leg and extend the other leg backwards without the aid of the barre.

As someone who spent their entire childhood performing arabesques, I was surprised at how difficult the exercise was.

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This is how it should be done

Aside from a short degage section – lifting a pointed foot off the floor about four inches, briefly holding in the air, and replacing – there was surprisingly little ballet content, which I found a little disappointing as a dance fan.

The final savasana - where we laid on the floor while the instructor touched our foreheads with lavender - was ridiculously therapeutic.

I left the studio feeling totally chilled and pretty smug with how hard I'd worked - if a little wobbly.

The next day, my achy 'I sit at a desk all day' back felt more loose than it had in weeks.

I've no doubt that a regular barreasana class would up my fitness and improve my posture, but at £28 for a single 60-minute session, it’s not exactly something I can justify doing every week.

I'd definitely recommend it as a treat though and it has inspired me to go check out other (slightly more affordable) yoga classes.

BarreASANA is now available at available at all Barrecore studios: Chelsea, Mayfair, Wimbledon, Chiswick and Alderley Edge. A 60 minute class is £28, although packages are available. See the Barrecore website for details.

Yoga Poses You Should Do Every Morning
Child's Pose(01 of05)
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Benefits: Calms and relaxes the body, slows the mind and opens the hips.Begin in child’s pose with big toes touching, knees out wide and fingertips reaching forward. Allow the hips to sink down toward the ground, with your forehead on the mat. Take some time to settle in here, perhaps swaying the hips side to side, rolling out the forehead. Take three deep cleansing breaths—big inhale with full expansion of the lungs and slow open mouth exhales—releasing everything out.Photo Credit: ShutterstockClick Here to See More Yoga Poses You Should Do Every Morning
Sun Bird Pose(02 of05)
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Benefits: Activates and strengthens the core, arms, legs and glutes.From table top position, extend the right fingertips forward at shoulder height while extending the left toes back. Keep the hips square, core engaged, with one long line of energy from fingertips to toes. Find three rounds of breath here. For an added challenge: round the spine and draw the elbow in towards the knee then breathe. Inhale lengthen, exhale curl three times. Release into table top and repeat on the opposite side.Photo Credit: Shutterstock
Rabbit Pose(03 of05)
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Benefits: Elongates the spine and opens up and stretches the shoulder blades and upper back.From table top draw the knees together. Tuck the chin towards the chest and bring the crown of the head down to the ground, with forehead touching the knees (or as close as comfortable). Bring the hands behind you and grab the ankles. Exhale out. On the inhale, lift the hips high while pulling on the ankles, creating an opening across the shoulder blades and stretch along the spine, with little to no weight on the crown. Release and slowly roll back up.Photo Credit: ShutterstockClick Here to See More Yoga Poses You Should Do Every Morning
Plank(04 of05)
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Benefits: Activates the core muscles and builds strength throughout the body.Plant the palms, step the feet back into a high plank with shoulders stacked over wrists. Draw the crown forward and the heels back. Tailbone slightly tucks, activating the core muscles. Relax between the shoulder blades. Find three rounds of breath here—full inhalation and slow exhalations. Photo Credit: Shutterstock
Down Dog Pose(05 of05)
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Benefits: Strengthens the shoulders and stretches the hamstrings.Lift the hips high and come to downward facing dog. Peddle out the feet, take deep knee bends, find any movements before settling into your dog. Find an inverted V, with a long flat spine, neck relaxed between the shoulders. Draw the heels down while pressing the shoulders away from the ears. Remain here for three breaths. Click Here to See More Yoga Poses You Should Do Every MorningPhoto Credit: Shutterstock