Yoga with pythons! Portland’s new wellness craze involves stretching with live snakes Have you ever wondered about yoga with hisses around? Portland has never been shy about unusual wellness trends, including cold plunges in winter rivers, sound baths in converted warehouses, and here it is now, snake yoga. It may sound funny yet horrifying at first, or maybe a live TV show dare. But, how about this dare is happening for real? In Portland, people usually focus on shock value, but it’s slow exposure, mindfulness, with scales, and maybe, for some people, a chance to rethink and dare to fear altogether. This wellness practice highlights how psychological resilience can help you stay grounded when conditions feel unfamiliar, unpredictable, and slightly uncomfortable.

What snake yoga actually looks like

Snake yoga sounds challenging and chaotic, but inside the room, it is surprisingly very calm. Classes are intentionally gentle with no loud music and no heat lamps blasting. To begin with, people arrive early, shoes off, mats down, quiet introductions, and then the snakes.Before the class even starts, participants get to see which reptiles will be involved that day. It reportedly helps ease nerves. The yoga itself is beginner-friendly, think mindful stretching rather than athletic flow, yet the instructor adjusts the pace based on the room.

Snake Yoga safety and consent to keep things safe

One of the biggest questions people ask is about safety. Each participant uses a simple consent system. Yes-or-no tokens are placed near their mat; that sounds basic, but it works. A clear visual cue for handlers. If it’s a no, no snake comes near you without awkward explanations and no pressure. If it’s a yes, staff facilitate the interaction carefully. It removes guessing. And tension. Which matters, especially in a room where fear responses can travel fast. Handlers watch constantly, the body language, breathing for not only humans but reptiles. The snakes involved aren’t random. They’re longer-bodied, docile species like ball pythons and carpet pythons. Smaller snakes don’t take part. Neither do animals that seem stressed or uninterested.Snakes choose where they go. Participants are told to think of themselves as stable surfaces. If a snake climbs on you, it’s because it wants to. And if a snake heads somewhere a person isn’t comfortable with, the staff redirects immediately.

How snake yoga adapts to the reptiles in the room

There’s a playful awareness in how the class is taught. Cobra pose, naturally, gets special attention. The instructor weaves reptile language into the session. Breathing cues with soft hissing exhales. The yoga isn’t rigid, yet the instructor adjusts in real time. If a snake becomes active, the flow shifts. If the room feels tense, things slow down. Each class ends up slightly different.