‘Never too late’ is a saying we’re all familiar with, but how many of us take it to heart and follow our passion?
Aggie MacKenzie has done just that. Known to many through the TV series How Clean Is Your House?, she now teaches yoga too – having taken up the practice when she was 50 years old.
Aggie qualified as a yoga teacher in July 2017 and has been running ‘isolation yoga’ classes online throughout lockdown.
She believes everyone can have a go at yoga to a certain degree. One of her friends, who is 80 this year, does a one-to-one session with her every week and Aggie describes her as “a total inspiration”.
Explaining her own reasons for taking up yoga, Aggie says: “I turned 50 and I thought: ‘I need to start doing some form of exercise really. I can’t just rely on my body just to kind of fall apart.’ I’ve always done a bit of cycling, but I thought I needed to do something else.”
The more she practised yoga, the more she enjoyed it.
“I used to do it once a week and then it got to be twice a week and then I realised that if I was going away on holiday I’d take a tape with me and do it every day. And then it got to the stage when I was doing it every day and feeling that I missed it if I wasn’t,” she says.
“And it’s not about the spiritual side or anything like that. It’s more about really keeping it flexible and strong and just working with what I can do with my own body really. It’s been such a lovely discovery.”
この記事は Let's Talk の August 2020 版に掲載されています。
7 日間の Magzter GOLD 無料トライアルを開始して、何千もの厳選されたプレミアム ストーリー、9,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスしてください。
すでに購読者です ? サインイン
この記事は Let's Talk の August 2020 版に掲載されています。
7 日間の Magzter GOLD 無料トライアルを開始して、何千もの厳選されたプレミアム ストーリー、9,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスしてください。
すでに購読者です? サインイン
STOP ME AND BUY ONE: Nigel's on the way with his 1981 Bedford
It’s something we all recall with delight. “Mum, it’s the ice cream man!” Let’s Talk’s motoring man David Clayton meets someone happy to be the owner of a Bedford ice cream van. Bring on the Strawberry Mivvis, choc ices and 99s ...
Beautiful Hill: Normandy Origin For A Name Meaning
Let’s Talk’s surnames expert Derek Palgrave, from Suffolk, researches three more of our readers’ names, the first of which probably stems from the geographical presence of a beautiful hill.
Words of wisdom about a hobby so many of us love
Let’s Talk’s gardening expert Charlotte Philcox has been trawling through some books to find words of wisdom from so many people about gardening and farming. Here she shares just a few.
Vicki remains so positive despite missing her panto
For actress Vicki Michelle, Christmas usually means performing in panto. But, due the coronavirus pandemic, this year will be different. Vicki speaks to Rachel Banham about her plans for the festive season, her outlook on life and her fond memories of filming in East Anglia.
Two centuries on Thomas would be DELIGHTED WITH HIS SUCCESS
He was a man without sight but with such vision. Derek James remembers Thomas Tawell who died 200 years ago.
TURNING 50
Here at Let’s Talk we recognise that our magazine is targeted at those aged 50 and older. So we hope we are always fair to our readers and to the older generation in general. But it seems many believe other media and businesses do not treat older people in the best way.
THE CHASE COULD BE ON FOR a Norfolk home for Bradley Walsh
He is one of the most popular celebrities on television at the moment. He’s a comedian, singer, actor, personality and probably the best quiz show host doing the rounds. David Clayton looks back to when Bradley Walsh came to Cromer.
The calendar is rolling around to the WINTER SOLSTICE
Claire Manion, of Norfolk-based Broadsky Astrology, looks at how we have always honoured the winter solstice, our shortest day.
PEACE, GOODWILL AND PROSPERITY must surely follow
In view of such uncertainty hanging over the rest of this year – and possibly well beyond – it was hard to come up with a suitable offering for December in his usual style, says Keith Skipper. So, he has decided to settle for a festive story set in 1951, that he wrote some time ago.
Friends
Readers of our short stories don’t have to have long memories to recall work by Anne Maxwell, who had a previous short story entry published in the summer.