The Evolution of an Ashtanga Teacher

The Evolution of an Ashtanga Teacher Introduction Change and iteration? I’m good with those. I started out verbose—talking too much, explaining every little thing. Then I swung the pendulum toward the stereotypical Ashtanga script: minimal instruction, no props, traditional cues only. But ultimately, I came back to being real. The journey wasn’t a straight line. I had poor mentorship modeling early on in my Ashtanga career. It took a while to trust myself—to teach from what I knew to be true, not just what I was shown. I. The Early Years: Strict Adherence to Tradition In the early years of teaching, I thought I needed to model exactly what had been handed down to me. That meant ditching props—even though I had used them before…

Balancing the Scales: Subjectivity versus Objectivity in Ashtanga Yoga Practitioner Development

Balancing the Scales: Subjectivity versus Objectivity in Ashtanga Yoga Practitioner Development

Introduction There’s a certain push-and-pull that lives at the heart of every serious Ashtanga practice. On one side, there’s the deeply personal, lived experience—the hum of your own breath, the way your body feels in Kapotasana today compared to last Tuesday, the private territory only you can navigate. On the other side, there’s the mirror held up by the outside world—your teacher’s keen eye, the lineage’s standards, the unblinking honesty of a video replay. Neither side holds the whole truth. Our inner compass is essential; it keeps the practice from becoming hollow repetition. At the same time, relying solely on our inner sense can keep us circling our own blind spots. The real magic happens in the meeting place between the two—when our subjective, felt…

Three Radical Shifts as You Grow in Yoga

Three Radical Shifts as You Grow in Yoga There’s a moment—somewhere between your second Utkatasana and your fourth sun salutation—when you realize yoga is working on more than just your hamstrings. Sure, you came to class for the promise of better posture or to finally get your feet behind your head without causing orthopedic concern. But then something… shifts. Maybe it’s the way you start to breathe when someone cuts you off in traffic. Maybe it’s the fact that you now notice your jaw clenching before your jaw files for emancipation. These shifts aren’t random. They unfold through what I’ve come to see as three radical, interconnected layers of transformation: goal setting, energetic awareness, and intuitive integration. And spoiler alert: none of these involve getting…

Body Awareness and Alignment in Yoga Teaching

The Art of Saying It So They Actually Feel It If you’ve ever stood in front of a room full of yogis and said something like “engage your core,” only to be met with blank stares or wildly different interpretations (someone holds their breath, another tenses their shoulders, and one person just clenches their jaw), then congratulations — you’re a yoga teacher. Welcome to the high-wire act that is teaching alignment and body awareness: one part science, one part poetry, and one part trying not to scream, “No, not like that!” Because here’s the truth: precise, embodied instruction isn’t just about keeping students from face-planting in bakasana. It’s about helping them access their own felt sense of the pose — safely, effectively, and (if we’re…

Decolonizing Yoga Practice

Honoring Roots, Dismantling Barriers Yoga is a practice of liberation — of body, mind, and spirit. But when we look closely at the modern global yoga scene, especially in the West, we find a paradox: a practice rooted in freedom that is often taught, consumed, and structured within systems of oppression, exclusion, and commodification. To decolonize yoga is not to reject tradition, nor is it to Westernize or secularize it further. Rather, decolonizing yoga means taking a deep, honest look at the power dynamics, cultural appropriations, and hierarchical structures that have shaped modern yoga — and actively working to shift them. It’s a call to return yoga to its essence: a path of liberation, unity, and transformation. I. Understanding the Colonial Context of Modern Yoga…

Creating Safe Spaces for Practice

“Creating safe spaces isn’t about perfection – it’s about consistent commitment to embodying the respect we claim to value.” Introduction: The Sacred Vulnerability of Practice Every time someone steps on a yoga mat, they bring their entire being with them — heart, body, history, hope. And in the world of Ashtanga Yoga, with its intense repetition and often intimate shala environments, this vulnerability is amplified. But let’s be honest — “safe space” is one of those buzzwords that can sound fabulous on a poster but fall flat on the floor next to your sweaty Manduka. The truth? Safety isn’t a marketing slogan. It’s a living, breathing system. Creating truly safe practice spaces requires more than good vibes and “namaste” energy. It calls for embodied respect,…