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Ages 8 to 12
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Yoga for focus, with Super Yogi Eyesfeel calm, steady and ready

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Ages 8 to 12Fun-firstCalm and steady
Yoga for Focus for Kids for children at Anand Yoga Centre, Kolathur

Yoga for focus uses gentle gaze games and a few steadying poses to help children feel calmer and more settled before they sit down to study. At Anand Yoga Centre in Kolathur we teach playful Super Yogi Eyes, where children softly fix their eyes on a dot, alongside poses like Tree and Chair. Many children find this helps them feel ready to learn. It is a supportive habit and not a cure, and it never promises better grades.

Super Yogi Eyes (gentle gaze games)

Soft gazing, called drishti, gives the eyes and mind one calm thing to rest on.

The sticker dot

Pop a small sticker on the wall at eye level and let your child softly rest their gaze on it for a few slow breaths. No staring hard, just a gentle, relaxed look.

Candle gaze (pretend flame)

Hold up a fingertip or a drawn flame and gaze at it softly, blinking whenever needed. A calming way to give a busy mind a quiet spot to settle.

Nose-tip peek

Look gently down towards the tip of the nose for a breath or two, then relax the eyes. Children find this one a little funny, which keeps it light.

Steadying poses before homework

A few balancing and grounding shapes to feel settled before opening a book.

Tree pose (Vrksasana)

Standing tall and balancing on one leg asks for soft focus, which many children find settling. Wobbling is welcome.

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Eagle pose

Wrapping the arms and crossing the legs is a fun puzzle for the body that gathers a wandering mind.

Chair pose

Sitting back into an invisible chair builds a little strength and a feeling of being grounded and steady.

Seated forward fold

Folding gently forward over the legs is calming and quiet, a soft way to come back to centre before studying.

Try it together

A five-minute ready-to-learn routine

  1. 11. Sit tall and take three slow balloon belly breaths, letting the tummy puff and shrink.
  2. 22. Play Super Yogi Eyes, resting the gaze softly on a sticker dot for a few breaths.
  3. 33. Stand up and find Tree pose on each side, wobbles and all.
  4. 44. Try Chair pose for three slow breaths to feel strong and steady.
  5. 55. Sit again and fold gently forward for a calm, quiet stretch.
  6. 66. Finish with one big breath in and a long breath out, then say 'ready to learn'.
Keeping it safe and happy

This is a gentle, supportive habit that many children find helps them feel calmer and more settled to focus. It is not a treatment and does not promise better grades, and we keep gazing soft, holds short and the whole thing playful.

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Questions

Yoga for Focus for Kids: parents' questions

Does yoga really help children concentrate?
Many children find that a few minutes of gentle yoga and soft gazing helps them feel calmer and more settled, which can make it easier to focus. We frame it honestly as a supportive habit, not a cure or a guarantee. Children differ, so it is best thought of as one helpful tool among many.
Can yoga help with studies?
Yoga will not improve grades or do the studying, and we would never claim that. What it can do is help some children feel calmer and more settled before they begin, so they sit down in a steadier frame of mind. Think of it as a gentle warm-up for the mind, not a shortcut.
What age is this for?
This focus routine suits children from around age eight upwards, when sitting to study becomes part of the day. Our Junior Yogis classes (ages 8 to 12) include these calming, steadying practices.
How often should my child practise?
A short five-minute routine before homework, most days, works better than a long session now and then. Little and often helps it become a comfortable habit. WhatsApp us on +91 86101 62435 to ask about kids classes in Kolathur.

Reviewed by Sailaja Anand, yoga teacher at Anand Yoga Centre, Kolathur. Last updated 2026-06-15.

Help your child feel calm and ready in Kolathur

WhatsApp +91 86101 62435 about Junior Yogis (ages 8 to 12). Small, safe batches with a qualified teacher.

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