12 Days of Handstands

Community Funded Online Training Program

About This Program

YogaSlackers 12 Days of Handstands is here to help you train handstands wherever you are, supported by a fun, dedicated online community around the world.

Below you’ll find this month’s training program. We update this page during the last days of each month, so if you want a heads-up when the new plan drops, join our newsletter.

For extra accountability (and a lot more encouragement), we also recommend joining our Facebook group to connect with other handstanders sharing the journey.

If you’d like to support this project, you can contribute $10 to $20 monthly, or with a one-time contribution via PayPal or Venmo. Your support helps us keep creating training plans, filming new videos, and offering feedback to the community.

And if you want something more tailored, ask us about personalized training programs, built around your goals and shareable with up to two friends who are working toward similar outcomes.

TRAINING PROGRAM

Crow Pose: A Pathway Toward Stronger Handstands | 12 Days of Handstands | April 2026

As I prepare for my classes at the Catskill Yoga Festival this July, I have been thinking a lot about how one practice supports another. slackline yoga, acroyoga, yoga, and handstands are not separate worlds to me. They are all connected.

Arm balances on the ground can become much more accessible when we improve our balance, body awareness, and confidence through slacklining or acroyoga. At the same time, the shapes and drills we use for handstands can directly support and strengthen our yoga practice.

My yoga practice changed immensely when I started practicing acro and slacklining. It became stronger, more balanced, and more inquisitive because I began looking at it through a different lens. I started asking myself: How should I practice this pose so I can do it on a slackline?

crow

That mental process allowed me to dive deeper into the poses I was practicing on the mat and to break them down in a way that helped me find their inner structure.

In a similar way, when I practiced slackline yoga, I began wondering how I could practice to improve my acro and yoga practice. How I can use the line to make this pose easier in terms of effort, balance, and overall understanding.

And I have never stopped asking those questions!

Show me a new way to move, and I will ask the same thing. Now that we have been practicing a lot of kiteboarding, it is the same process. How can this new form of movement benefit my other movement practices? And how can I modify my other practices to support this one?

I think this is a natural process – as Yoga is not only about shapes or techniques –  its aim is to quiet the mind, cultivate awareness, and help us return to a greater sense of connection within ourselves and with the world around us.

In a way, I am always looking for that union in everything I practice. Because it reminds me to find that same sense of union when I am not practicing too.

TRAINING SCHEDULE

So for April, I want to offer a different kind of challenge. Instead of practicing 12 days this month, I want to encourage you to practice every day, in a yoga way, whatever that may mean to you.

Your daily practice:

That is it!

Through this process, I want you to notice how these traditional yoga poses support your handstand journey. While they all share the obvious commonality of being hand balances or inversions, each one highlights something different. Your job this month is to explore those differences and discover what each pose has to teach you.

You can scale it however you need. You might do 10 seconds of each and build up over the month. You might choose just one of the four each day and hold it for 1 minute. But the real goal is simple:

Practice daily.

Why? Because if you are truly practicing yoga with the intention of finding union, then you can practice every day. 1 to 5 minutes is enough. Not all yoga practices need to be 90 minutes long! All it takes is a moment to stop, breathe, and reconnect.

Keep it approachable. Keep it consistent. And let the small daily effort add up.

Join us in New York

If you want to hear more of my reasoning, sequencing, and cueing for these practices, come train with us at the Catskill Yoga Festival.

Additional Downloads

Recommended Tools

Practice your handstands on a wood board, hard carpet, or a thin yoga mat. This will help you absorb some of the pressure created on your hands while handstanding, without creating too much instability.

Avoid practicing on soft surfaces –  such as thick carpets, puzzle mats or thick yoga mats – as the instability created by them can put your joints in compromised positions.

Nothing fancy is needed. I use a homemade 1/2 in (3.81 cm) plywood board.

 

Clear out some space around a wall or pillar in your home. Make sure to clear up enough space to create a safe fall zone in case you fall in any direction.

Remember to use your thin yoga mat or handstand board during your wall training drills.

We use yoga blocks to help us maintain proper forearm alignment. If you don’t have any, think outside the block and experiment using water bottles, books or boxes.

You will need to time the length of your handstands. It can be done with a friend and a chronometer or by trimming a video. 

Here are a few of our favorite apps to time our handstands: M Stopwatch, Handstand Quest, and Seconds.

Handstand training like any other training stresses your body. Take time after each training session and between training days to massage your body.

We recommend Armaid and RAD rollers. Check out our resource page for discount codes for both.

Slackline Gear

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