This 11-year-old may be the youngest yoga instructor in the United States
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When 11-year-old Tabay Atkins isn't at school or building elaborate Lego creations, he's a popular yoga instructor, teaching classes three days a week in San Clemente, California.
When he was 6, his mother, Sahel Anvarinejad, enrolled in a yoga teacher training program. She had just completed chemotherapy for non-Hodgkin lymphoma (she is now cancer-free), and her son was there "every step of the way," she told ABC News. "He saw how it changed me. I was lighter. I didn't have the heaviness that cancer brings." When Atkins finished the fifth grade last year, he was given a choice to either visit Europe or take a 200-hour yoga instructor course — he picked yoga, and was the youngest person to ever complete his program.
Anvarinejad owns her own yoga studio, Care4Yoga, and Atkins' classes are donation only, with proceeds going to charities helping kids with cancer. "I care about people and a lot of people really like taking my classes," he told ABC News. When he grows up, he'd like to open several yoga studios, and right now, he's busy training his dad, former NFL player Larry Atkins (he's now "a lot more flexible"), as well as his classmates. "It's really awesome," he said. "Some of the boys at first when I tell them they should try yoga, they say no because they think it's for girls, but yoga was actually created by men, for men." Catherine Garcia
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Catherine Garcia has worked as a senior writer at The Week since 2014. Her writing and reporting have appeared in Entertainment Weekly, The New York Times, Wirecutter, NBC News and "The Book of Jezebel," among others. She's a graduate of the University of Redlands and the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism.
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