MOVEMENT with PURPOSE, PRACTICE with UNDERSTANDING
Yoga & Pilates classes focused on foundation, safety, and long-term practice with your own body
— Amy Duong, Yoga & Pilates Instructor
+7 years
Teaching Yoga & Pilates experience
+1,330 hours
Professional certifications & Yoga, Pilates training
+500 students
Have trained with Amy on their practice journey
The principles guiding all teaching and class design
Strength to protect the body
Amy believes strength isn’t about straining or enduring, but about protecting joints and spine in daily movement. Lack of strength causes force to concentrate on joints and spine, easily leading to pain and recurring injuries. Strength should be built gradually, with correct muscle groups, not chasing the feeling of “getting tired fast” or “burning more”
Stretch so the body moves correctly
Amy thinks you shouldn’t stretch at any cost. Body sensations like numbness, deep cold in joints, or loss of muscle support often show movement has exceeded the body’s load capacity and is starting to put force on joints or ligaments. Stretch should go with breath and observation, to know when to continue and when to stop.
Brain controls body, not momentum
Amy believes control is the core element for safe and sustainable practice. Lack of control makes movement easily led by momentum or old habits, doing more than necessary without effectiveness. Amy thinks practitioners should be guided to know what they’re doing, which muscles they’re using, and when to stop to be more proactive with their body.
(Not just credentials, but the process of teaching and observing real bodies)
Amy built her teaching method from years of directly teaching classes and observing many different bodies. In that journey, Amy has worked with: people who never exercised and didn’t know where to start, those returning to practice after long breaks, students with back pain, neck and shoulder tension, insomnia, lack of energy, and even those who practiced long but still felt their body “wasn’t right”
Each student group brought a different question, and Amy continuously adjusted her teaching: from focusing on form to focusing on sensation and control, from “being able to do the movement” to understanding why the body reacts that way, from practicing to exhaustion to practicing to stay long-term,…
These observations are the foundation for how Amy designs today’s classes: clear foundation, logical progression, always prioritizing safety – sustainability – maintainability.
Amy continuously learns through professional training courses, advanced workshops, and self-study on movement and breath.
However, for Amy, knowledge only truly has value when tested through real teaching experience and brings clear benefits to students in class.
In nearly 7 years teaching Yoga and over 3 years teaching Pilates, Amy has accompanied nearly 500 students of various ages, physical conditions, and movement levels. This consistent teaching process helped Amy understand that: Each body reacts very differently, and there’s no fixed formula for everyone
200-hour Yoga certification, 300-hour Yoga in India, 300-hour Yoga – Yoga Alliance (USA), 100-hour certification – Vietnam Yoga Federation
Advanced Vinyasa – 30 hours, Advanced Pranayama (Breathing) – 30 hours, Yin Yoga – 50 hours, Pilates Matwork – 3 months, Pilates Reformer – 3 months, Classical Pilates – 3 days
Much of the content Amy shares on the blog is formed from questions, concerns, and experiences in class
👉 You can read more of Amy’s posts here