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You are here: Home / News / A Breath of Fresh Air: There is Room for Everyone in Yoga

A Breath of Fresh Air: There is Room for Everyone in Yoga

January 9, 2026 By Stephani Teran

Soft chatter and laughter fill the January-sun-drenched space and provide a warmth, body and soul, that make lingering easy. An occasional water droplet from the melting snow on the sloped, clear rooftop hits the few remaining yoga mats yet to be rolled up. A rainbow-clad peace flag flies above the landscape fabric floor like a castle banner in a great hall -but this is a banner of inclusion, acceptance, and love and it flies above empty wooden tables that will soon be laden with the seedlings for this year’s crops at Colchester Farm in Plympton. In the center of the room is a tiny powerhouse of blonde hair and energy, Meg Murphy Garfield, doing her favorite thing: Sharing the lessons of yoga and whole health with others.
During the winter months, the large greenhouse at Colchester Farm in Plympton is used for Garfield’s tri-weekly yoga classes which are moved to her outdoor backyard pool at her house in the warmer months. Garfield shares her passion and knowledge with students of all experience levels -from those who can teach yoga themselves to people who are there for their first class. Garfield, herself, was not introduced to yoga until age 50 when she took a class at her local gym in Rochester, NY. What started as a trial class quickly turned into a way of life for Garfield as she found her body and mind transforming for the better as she continued to attend.
Prior to a career in teaching yoga, Garfield was immersed in the world of health and whole foods. She worked for Niblack Foods -a spice and ingredient supplier that put her to work doing nutritional and food research. She applied her passion for healthy eating and food sources to a career as a private chef and also gave weekly demonstrations and instruction at the Rochester, NY Farmers Market. Garfield’s exclaims, “I absolutely loved the farmers market in Rochester, and talking to people about healthy eating and teaching them what I was learning was incredible!”
After establishing herself as a health support chef and yoga enthusiast, Garfield moved to Plymouth, MA. Once there, she was looking for the next big step to take in life and it wasn’t hard for her to identify what she wanted to dedicate her life to: Yoga. Garfield purchased Open Doors Yoga in Plymouth in 2012. Garfield continued to learn and research and teach and watch her life improve drastically in many ways while also helping others find things that worked for them. “Every body is so different,” says Garfield, “I want people to know that yoga is a practice. It becomes YOUR practice -not mine or the person next to you. I can help you make modifications to suit your level and preferences in yoga and in your health, but then it becomes your responsibility.”
Due to the inability to meet in person during the pandemic, Garfield closed the doors of Open Doors Yoga in 2020 and moved her classes to virtual. Now that she has relocated to Plympton, she keeps her in-person classes local at her home and neighboring Colchester Farm thanks to the generosity of farmer Jim Lough. This year, Garfield’s mantra for her classes focuses on the “inner and outer smile” and finding peace and balance of body and soul and building upon last year’s mantra, strength and purpose. When asked what is the most important focus in yoga for anyone at any level, Garfield answers easily, “Breathing. It is all about breathing. If we, as a society, just learned to breathe through things, our world would be so much better.”
Yoga might sound like a complex, out-of-reach thing to some, but Garfield assures that it offers plenty of highly beneficial things for anyone and everyone. “I am 67 this year and I have never felt better,” says Garfield, “I make sure that we move gently while also challenging ourselves so that growth is fluid and natural -not stressful or causing injury. Even if movement is restricted, yoga is about awareness and organic movement. So much of disease happens when things get stagnant and stuck. Yoga can help keep things flowing and helps us listen to our bodies and minds as one.”
Another offering in practicing yoga is the ability to be present. Garfield explains, “Yoga focuses your attention on your body’s abilities at the present moment. It helps develop breath and strength of mind and body. It’s not about what you look like, it is about how you feel.” Unlike many other fitness or dance classes, yoga studios typically don’t have mirrors so people can focus their awareness inward rather than how a pose, or the people around them, looks. Studies have found that those who practiced yoga were more aware of and in harmony with their bodies and overall health than people who didn’t practice yoga. They were also more satisfied with and less critical of their bodies -creating a cycle of positive body image and self-esteem in a society where comparison is king.
In addition to the benefits of mind, Garfield is dedicated to helping her students learn about taking action and responsibility for their own health. “Medicine should not be one size fits all,’ says Garfield. Everyone will respond to varying levels of different things in different ways. I can give you ideas and tell you what worked for me, but it is up to you to learn your body and advocate what works for you.”
Garfield then explains that yoga can effectively stimulate the Vagus nerve, promoting relaxation, reducing stress, and enhancing overall well-being. “The Vagus nerve is the center of our parasympathetic nervous system -helping us regulate and process things. When it is not functioning well, we can be left with stress and health problems that are usually just treated with medication.” Garfield suggests that exploring new ways to support your natural systems, rather than muting or silencing them, could lead to a more permanent improvement than what can be offered in traditional routes of healthcare.
In addition to the seemingly endless benefits of yoga for body and mind, another perk of taking up the practice is that if often plays a role in improving one’s relationship with food. Garfield says, “When you get talking to people around you who also care about and are passionate about health and people’s minds open up to things about what they are putting in and on their bodies. We are lacking so many nutrients and filled with things that don’t work with our bodies’ systems -causing inflammations and dysfunction.”
Our modern-day food culture tends to result in over-fed, malnourished people and the key to fixing that is most likely found in the collective efforts of individuals like Garfield who dare you to ask yourself real, honest questions about what you are doing to help or hinder your body and mind. “I want to help people heal and take care of themselves. My daughter has chronic Lyme and I have spent many years with her on her own health journey to find things that give her relief. I know how overwhelming it can be, but doing nothing is the worst thing you can do,” reflects Garfield.
In addition to yoga, Garfield makes sure her students are well-versed in being able to meditate. “So many people today are just constantly yelling at themselves internally,” Garfield points out, “The negative self-talk is so damaging. Learning to quiet that self-hate and encourage and uplift yourself by being in control of your emotional range is healing. The best decisions are made in the quiet.”
Garfield knows that perhaps the benefits of yoga sound out of reach or strange or for a “certain type” of person -but yoga is really about enhancing the human experience and can be practiced uniquely by everyone no matter the age or interests or condition of health or life status. “The hardest part about starting your journey with yoga…is starting. Walking through the door. But once you have done that,” Garfield smiles, “You are going to feel welcome, and peaceful, and grounded. Yoga is an escape -it is magic, but it is the kind of escape that is educational.”
Garfield knows what it is like to be the newbie -the beginner, and to not know what you are doing for a while. “I did not have any expectations when I started,” she says, “But it began to have such an impact on me that I realized I needed it.” On making yoga a positive personal journey, Garfield suggests applying it as often as possible because you can’t use it if you don’t know it. “You take what you learn and feel with you and it is yours to use in daily life once you leave this space. Being able to find yourself stopping in a stressful situation and saying, ‘What do I see? Hear? Smell? Feel?’ and being able to find that calm and breath instead of settling into fight or flight -that is where health is found. It is not just about being able to get into a difficult pose, or be the most flexible, it is about finding yourself and your sacred space in the world.”
You can’t help but notice as you leave the warm greenhouse and the undeniably positive energy to traipse through the snow back to your car, that you feel different. The connections you made were refreshingly non-digital, the chaos of the world isn’t as loud, and the breath you didn’t realize you were holding beforehand flows easier through you. You start to see for yourself that perhaps yoga IS for everyone, and suddenly next week with sunny, motivating Meg in the toasty greenhouse down a little Plympton country road can’t come fast enough -so you will just have to remember to breathe in and out until then.
Yoga 111 Love Yoga holds classes at Colchester Farm, 90 Brook St., Plympton
Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday 9:30-10:45 a.m.
$20 per class, 20 spots per class max.
Special for Express readers: If you mention this article, you can take your first class for just $5!
Please follow along with Meg Murphy Garfield to see her other teaching locations and classes such as sound bathing.

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