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Namrata Purohit’s Your Body, Your Gym on Bridging the Gap Between Fitness and Real Life

India’s Pilates powerhouse Namrata Purohit returns as an author with her second book, Your Body, Your Gym, shaped by a clear point of view. Fitness, she believes, should work with real life, not demand rigid systems. Drawing from years of training people with unpredictable schedules, injuries, and evolving needs, Purohit reframes the conversation around why most routines fail. It isn’t a lack of discipline, but a lack of adaptability.

Her solution is refreshingly straightforward. Rather than relying on complex programs or external infrastructure, she places the focus back on the body itself. Using bodyweight training and natural movement patterns, her method builds strength, awareness, and resilience over time. The goal is not chasing perfection, but creating a fitness practice that stays consistent, even as life changes.

This way of thinking comes from Purohit’s own journey. She began at sixteen as the youngest Stott Pilates–certified trainer in the world, finding Pilates after a serious injury changed how she saw movement. What began as recovery turned into a lifelong practice, one that taught her to work with her body rather than push it. Over the years, training everyone from athletes and actors to people facing injury and burnout, one thing became clear. When fitness is built around rigid routines, it rarely survives real life

Your Body, Your Gym brings these insights together into a framework designed for real life. It goes beyond workouts to look at how movement connects with nutrition, recovery and rest, and why flexibility is essential for long-term progress. Rather than chasing perfect routines, the book encourages readers to build habits that can hold up even when life gets messy.

Actor Ishaan Khatter, who writes the foreword, describes the book as a guide to reclaiming your body and rediscovering movement as healing. That sentiment is echoed by those who have trained with Namrata Purohit over the years. Sara Ali Khan shares that Namrata taught her to work with her body rather than push it, while Janhvi Kapoor says the experience changed how she sees her body and its capabilities. For Kajol, the shift has been equally empowering, making her feel stronger and more aware of what her body can do.

In a landscape crowded with digital workouts, quick fixes and rigid wellness plans, Purohit’s message feels especially relevant. Fitness, she believes, does not need to be rigid to work. It needs to be thoughtful, adaptable and grounded in real life. By building a practice designed for reality rather than ideal conditions, she is redefining what sustainable fitness can look like.

Published by Penguin Random House India, Your Body Your Gym is available for pre-order on Amazon India.

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