ADVERTISEMENT
Attached to it was an old delivery truck he used to haul Matt’s block straps and sound equipment to outdoor classes in the park. The place hadn’t turned much profit in the last decade. The equipment was outdated, the heating system unreliable, and the parking lot needed repaving.
My family dismissed it immediately. “That old thing,” my father said over dinner the next evening. “It’s barely worth the land it sits on.
My mother nodded. Dylan shrugged and changed the subject. I didn’t argue.
I simply took the keys and drove to the studio the following weekend. The door creaked when I unlocked it. Dust floated in the sunlight.
The mirrors were streaked. The walls needed paint. And the truck in the back lot had a flat tire.
But the space felt solid. It felt like something that could be fixed, something that could belong to me. I started small.
First, I cleaned. I scrubbed the floors until the wood shone again. I washed the mirrors with vinegar and newspaper until they reflected clearly.
I patched cracks in the walls with spackle and painted the entire interior a soft sage green. The truck took more time. I replaced the tire, changed the oil, and had the brakes checked.
Every expense came from my savings account, the one I had built quietly since high school. I didn’t ask my parents for help. I didn’t tell them how many nights I worked late at the office, then drove straight to the studio to sand baseboards until my hands blistered.
Learning to run classes was harder. I had taken yoga sporadically in college, but teaching was different. I enrolled in an online certification course and practiced sequences in the empty room until my voice stopped shaking.
Word spread slowly through local Facebook groups and the community bulletin board at the library. The truck became my lifeline. I loaded it with rolled mats, bolsters, and a portable speaker.
Continue reading…
ADVERTISEMENT