Published February 12, 2026 11:56AM
Practicing yoga together as a couple is an emotional bond. And no one knows this quite as well as those who practice the union of yoga both on and off the mat.
Just as embarking on a shared physical practice calls for a certain brand of balance, maintaining a strong romantic bond requires compassionate compromise. “My teacher always said the word yoga means ‘relationship,’” says Jonah Kest, son of yoga pioneers Johnny and Milla Kest and husband to Ranae Kest. “As with a yoga posture, every relationship requires continuous adjustments.”
Miranda Leeann and Ryan Scott, founders of Acro Buddhas, have spent nearly two decades living their yoga. “When couples move together, soften into listening, and meet challenge with curiosity rather than control, something alchemical unfolds,” they say of their partnership.
Seriously, though, what better way to get real about your practice than seeing it reflected in your love life? We asked four yoga couples from around the world to share how the practice strengthens their relationships. Here’s what their experience teaches us about communication, trust, and finding flow together.
4 Lessons From Yoga That Support Relationships
Four couples share their meet-cutes, mat moments, and more memorable yoga lessons that continue to shape their relationships.
1. Support and Communication Are Crucial

“Growth happens when we choose courage over ‘what if.’ If you’re lucky enough to find someone willing to evolve with you, honor that bond; it’s one of life’s greatest teachers.” –Miranda Leeann and Ryan Scott
Acro Buddhas founders Miranda Leeann and Ryan Scott say most people assume they met at a yoga class or retreat, but their love story actually began in 2007 at a Toronto nightclub rooftop. They each say it was love at first sight, followed by spending every waking moment together. “Days would blur into weeks, and we called this vortex our own little world,” they say. Nearly two decades 18 later, the flying pair confirms they’re still enamored.
Though they both practiced yoga when they met, it was through exploring Acroyoga, introduced six years into their relationship, that they created “a new layer of connection and communication.” The couple quickly discovered that needing to work in tandem while practicing Acroyoga deepened their ability to listen, trust, and move together, lessons that carried into their lives off the mat.
Together they invite other yogis to stay curious about their partners’ passions by founding Acro Buddhas, grounded in the couple’s own conscious choices to grow in sync. “We’ve found balance not by separating our lives,” they explain, “but by aligning around what truly lights us up, together and apart.” They encourage other yoga couples to explore shared practices, including breath, presence, and conscious movement, with a particular focus on Acroyoga and partner work, which they believe has helped them create “a language of trust, play, and non-verbal communication that deepens connection.”
Their joint approach to applying yoga’s teachings to nurturing union is to “let yoga live beyond the mat and into the relationship itself.”
2. There Is Strength in Our Differences

“We have our opinions and views on poses, delivery, and adaptations, but it’s never about ‘right or wrong.’ We don’t fall out about yoga, that would be totally misunderstanding the message of the teachings.” –Finlay Wilson and Alan Lambie
How did two kilt-donning yogis from the Central Belt of Scotland amass a collective following of more than 100,000 on Instagram? Seeing Finlay Wilson and Alan Lambie in action today, it seems inevitable that the two would walk the yogic path as one. Their meet-cute unfolded at a yoga workshop Finlay was leading in Edinburgh shortly after separating from an abusive partner. Around the same time, Lambie’s husband was in palliative care with a brain tumor. “It was like a small universal nudge to put us in front of each other,” says Wilson.
More than a year later, they went on their first date. Lambie began to travel to Edinburgh to see Wilson, bringing his rescue dog, Bond, to spend time in Dundee with Wilson’s own rescue dog, Amaloh. It took a few meetings for their four-legged companions to find peace with each other, yet within six months, Lambie moved to Dundee, and the pair bought a house together. When it was clear he’d found his forever partner, Wilson planned an elaborate proposal on a parade float at DC Pride, with a microphone in hand and a confetti cannon ready to launch when Lambie said, “Yes!”
Yoga has been part of their relationship since day one, with the two describing themselves as “a power duo who practice different yoga styles.” Today, they run the nonprofit studio Heart Space Dundee. Although they talk about yoga every day, they’re also committed to taking breaks from their business and leaving the studio management side alone when they need to decompress. But what they embody in their life’s work is the most meaningful teaching of all: We don’t have to find sameness to achieve unity.
3. Find Alignment, Together

“The teachings are true and pure. The Yamas and Niyamas are powerful; hold true to them. Love is raw and can be a little rough. Give your partner the grace you would have wanted from others.” –Jarrick Browner
When recalling the start of their shared love story, yoga teacher Jeselene Andrade insists that “the beginning is a little up for debate.” But Washington DC-based power yoga instructor Jarrick Browner—better known as “The Floating Yogi“—is crystal clear. “Our love story began during the pandemic.” He remembers the exact time and place—5:00 p.m. at a Flow Yoga class, to be exact. He also recalls that their connection was instant.
In 2017, Andrade moved to DC, thinking she’d stay for just a year, and decided to volunteer at a yoga studio to take free classes. During her shifts, she attended Jarrick’s classes, and the two began sharing moments together afterward. “Somewhere along the way we became a couple,” Andrade recalled, “and when I became pregnant, we both made a conscious decision to take our relationship seriously and commit to building a life together.”
The couple shares updates on their three children’s progress with the Primary Series asanas on social media. “Yoga is a union of the mind, body, and energies, and that’s exactly what a relationship is,” says The Floating Yogi. “Aligning two people who have separate lives on one path. The philosophical aspects of the practice and the Eight Limbs have been a cornerstone for our relationship and our family.”
To make it work long-term, Andrade insists, “Don’t take things personally, especially when you’re working together in a space you’re both deeply passionate about. Emotions can run high, and yoga reminds us to pause, breathe, and respond with awareness rather than reactivity.”
4. Your Relationship Is the Real Practice

“Creating sacred space together is essential, especially at the beginning and end of the day. And listening, really listening without trying to fix or control, is everything.” –Jonah Kest
When Jonah Kest asked now-wife Renae to join him for a yoga class, he recalls an instantaneous connection. The couple’s shared values and wellness-centered lifestyles quickly led them to an aligned journey of traveling the world and reveling in their “shared dharma.” Their individual commitments to providing access to communities that would otherwise not show up for studio classes are deeply ingrained in how they practice seva. Inspired by her father, Renae brings yoga to firefighters, while Jonah focuses on creating opportunities for youth and expanding access to education.
“That’s where our practice turns into purpose,” says Jonah. “We both know our path is our mission, and we’re deeply devoted to it, so work has never really felt like work. Yoga, teaching, and service are woven into our lives.” Jonah notes that over time, when their trips began to revolve around retreats and training, the two had to commit to planning time that wasn’t about output—adventures that inspired while also allowing for intentional reset. “Creating space for both devotion and play has been a big part of our balance,” he says.
That balance is a key element in their relationship. “Renae loves yin and slower, more spacious flows,” says Jonah. “I’m drawn to faster movement and inversions. Somewhere between those two rhythms, we find balance.”
Jonah isn’t above poking fun at himself, thinking of times when all his yoga ideals went “straight out the window.” For example, as he’s teaching about presence and non-reactivity, he’ll catch himself reacting to “something small” and be humbled by the feedback (and the mirror) that relationship provides. “Our relationship is the real practice,” Jonah says. “She sees me clearly, brings me back into awareness, and somehow keeps it light enough that we can laugh about it later.”





