🗡️ How to Start Your Sword Yoga Practice: 10 Tips for Beginners
By Sabina
Apr 28, 2025
Performing a Kung Fu Sword grading in front of Shaolin masters.
WeaponUP's sword yoga method blends vinyasa yoga with the kung fu and tai chi sword. Combining the core strengths of each of these practices has led to a fusion that looks and feels empowering, fun and maybe even a little intimidating!
Thats why I want to let you know that this practice is completely accessible to all bodies - whether you’re a seasoned practitioner of other art forms or haven't moved in a way you would have liked for a while. Here are ten essential tips to guide your journey to sword yoga bad a**ery:
1. Embrace the Beginner’s Mindset
BEGIN. Thats the first step. Approach WeaponUP with curiosity and openness. It’s natural to feel challenged or weary initially, but remember that every expert was once a beginner. One of my favourite quotes is by the Chinese philosopher Lao Tzu and it sums up this first tip pretty perfectly. "The journey of a thousand miles begins with a simple step". So start!
2. Prioritise Consistency Over Intensity
Like most people, when I get motivated to start something I think I have to go ALL IN! I need the latest gear, the latest gadgets, the best outfits and I have to do it at least an hour a day or more! This obviously causes fatigue and exhaustion and usually if I approach things this way I just give up before I even start. Focus on tiny goals at first. Just stepping on the mat for regular practice, even if brief, builds muscle memory and deepens your connection to the movements. Aim for short, consistent sessions rather than sporadic intense workouts. Don't overwhelm yourself before you even start!
3. Start and End With the Basics
Strong foundations build strong warriors. This is the "Wax on Wax Off" theory. Focus on fundamental stances and movements before progressing into more dynamic flows. In WeaponUP’s Ten Days to Sword Mastery program, we guide you step-by-step through sword basics, including the positioning of your upper and lower body in key stances like Horse Stance. You’ll learn how each detail builds power, balance, and control. Shaolin Monks will train basics like Horse Stance for years even if they "have learned it". Some suggest that you practice just this stance everyday for six months and nothing else before moving on.
4. Listen to Your Body
Your body will speak to you — honor it. If a movement feels off, modify or pause. Sword Yoga is about building resilience, not forcing perfection. This is where WeaponUP differs quite strongly from traditional aspects of Kung Fu and Vinyasa Yoga. We want the WeaponUP practice to fit our body, not the other way around. This doesn't mean don't attempt things because you have the mis-conception that "you can't do it". It just means to listen to your body if the hurt just doesn't feel right.
5. Integrate "Victorious Breath" Into Your Movements
Victorious Breath or Ocean Breath is your secret weapon. Also known as Ujjayi breath, this is a yoga breathing technique where air is inhaled and exhaled through the nose while slightly constricting the back of the throat. This constriction creates a hissing or whispering sound, often described as resembling the sound of the ocean. We leverage this technique throughout the WeaponUP practice to get us deeper into our stances, our strikes and to increase our mindfulness.
6. Use Modifications, Not Props
At WeaponUP, the sword itself is your greatest tool. Instead of external props, we want you to leverage posture modifications that help build the strength and flexibility needed to fully express each movement over time. While many yoga traditions offer the use of props as a way to ease into the practice, my personal experience with this has always been that one never progresses if they continue using props over and over again. You can't know when you are able to go deeper if you immediately go for your props - because it becomes a habit! This is why I am a big fan of modifications for your practice rather than resorting to props. Trust yourself, you are building real capability with every practice.
7. Always Warm Up First
Before you move into your sword sequences, or even the basics take a few minutes to warm up. Gentle stretching, some quick jumping jacks or the tried and true sun salutations will set the stage for a safe, powerful practice. Personally I like to start all my practices with three to five Sun Salutation A to get me warm and ready. But this doesn't have to be the case for you, anything that gets you slightly heated up will work - even some light jumping.
8. Train with the WeaponUP Online Studio
Guidance matters — and that’s why the WeaponUP Online Studio exists. As the only Sword Yoga fusion platform in the world, WeaponUP gives you classes, structured programs, beginner-friendly series, and tutorials you can follow anytime, anywhere. You’re not practicing alone — you’re part of a growing movement.
9. Stay Hydrated and Light Before Practice
Drink water and fuel lightly before your session. I personally prefer to not have eaten anything before practice, however every "body" is different. So listen to that and fuel yourself accordingly.
10. Celebrate Progress, Not Perfection
The true motto of WeaponUP is "practice makes progress". The more you celebrate that idea the more you will be able to continue coming back to the mat. You will not achieve perfection on day two or even day two hundred and thats okay, but you will progress. WeaponUP is not about chasing perfection — it’s about showing up, leveling up, and becoming stronger inside and out. Also learning some awesome moves along the way.