I taught a class the other day, on the
theme of childish playfulness.
I had a room full of yogi’s pulled funny
faces at one another, walked around the room in a forward bend making ‘Beep,
Beep’ noises played bumper cars, blew raspberries and gave themselves
permission to fall when practicing balances.
It wasn’t typical for a class of mine. I
teach Ashtanga Vinyasa, so usually it’s all about breathing big and deep and
getting warm and sweaty, but I had chanced upon a playgroup earlier that day
and had been utterly and profoundly inspired by a child’s ability to be
completely and utterly absorbed by what it was doing. And it made me wonder, just how wonderful it
is to be that young; to find joy and delight in everything as if all of it were
marvelous. To get up and keep on running, keep twirling, keep cart wheeling, no matter how many times
we fall.
So, I asked my class, putting the silliness
aside, to approach their yoga practice with the same presence a child might. To
look for something new and unseen in every posture, every breath and every
moment, even if they’d done it a million times before, to transcend the
qualities of their minds that told them their bodies wouldn’t bend that way and
to leave their adult concerns behind.
It was a fun class, but for me there was
also a lesson in it. For so long I was afraid of letting go of my old life and
falling, for fear of failing. I was afraid I was a terrible yogi and somehow
wasn’t made of the same stuff as a ‘proper’ yoga teacher.
For me Yoga teachers were always the thing
of fantasy – someone else, but not me – mythical creatures, that rode around on
a white Unicorn enlightening all those around her with a simple nod of the head
and a quiet, humble ‘Namaste.’
My initial encounter with yoga was in a gym
where, despite a boisterous kick boxing class next door and the rhythmic thud
of people pounding the treadmill, I found myself in a place of utter calm and
clarity.
From that first moment about 12 years ago
something about yoga sparked my curiosity and I continued to practice on and
off, like most folks. It tended to wane
when work got crazy, which was really when I needed it most.
Then something happened. I started to have
this feeling that I was missing something. That whatever I was doing wasn’t
quite right.
What I was doing was working as a Digital Project
Manager within the advertising industry, building big budget web stuffs – where
I was fulfilling a childhood ambition of working with big brands doing important
things, while trying to look glamorous.
When I first got this – let’s call it an ‘itch’
– I quit my boyfriend. Then I quit my home town. I took off travelling to the
furthest reaches of Tibet, Nepal and Thailand – and that helped for a bit –
when I got back I was determined I need to ‘help’ people and decided the way I
should do it was by working for a charity. This dutifully manifested itself
when I first moved to London and was lucky enough to land a job (still in
advertising) working with Oxfam and NSPCC… I literally thought all my
Christmases had come at once. I threw myself into work and partying and making
the most of everything London had to offer – I soon forgot all about yoga,
unless it was outside a pub on a street corner somewhere in Soho (I’m telling
you… it happened!) and I was on my second bottle red wine. To be honest, I
think I was a bit of an arse. I was certainly pretty far up my own arse, I can
tell you. I had a reputation as a bit of a ‘ball buster’ famed for my ability
to ‘Get shit done, no matter what the cost’ (which probably means I wasn’t
always very nice) and juggle at least 15 projects at once.
Then the ‘itch’ returned! Only it was worse
this time. I ignored it and convinced myself I was happy and everything was
fine. Then I woke up one day and couldn’t move – I mean, literally couldn’t get
out of bed. It was terrifying and I soon realised I was suffering full scale
burn out. I couldn’t go to work, I looked like crap and walking to the corner
shop made me feel like I was going to pass out.
Remember that scene from ‘Eat, Pray, Love’
where Liz Gilbert is in a pile on her bathroom floor, praying for a way out of
her own life? It wasn’t quite like that, but it was close enough that I can
sympathise with the girl.
It’s a long story from that point to this,
but the short version is this - during the subsequent weeks I spent either on
the sofa or in bed I began to question everything, including who I really was.
Slowly but surely I began to realise I
wasn’t all the things I had previously thought I was, or defined myself by, and
bits of my personality and strips of my ego began to fall away – until there
was just me; the me that had always been there and always would be, that could
not be defined by a job, or a postcode, or a salary bracket or a boyfriend.
During this time there was a little voice
inside my head urging me back to yoga and to start meditation. I figured I had
two choices. I either commit myself as insane or I listen to it. Western
medicine didn’t seem to be able to offer me any answers, so I listened… and
thank God I did!
I began to drag my sorry, knackered ass to
yoga once a week, but it soon turned into every day.
Yoga gave me the thing I felt I was
missing. It helped me connect the dots somehow and made me feel more alive than
anything else ever had. Ever could.
Then I began to notice my life change. The
more I did yoga, the more my lifestyle choices altered to favour veggie food,
quieter past times and genuine people and friendships. Meat and booze were now
off the menu and my idea of a late night was being up past 10.30pm, as it
interfered with my ability to rise at 5am to take a bus and two tubes to get to
Mysore practice.
It wasn’t long before the ‘itch’ – this
unidentified longing, this horrible, empty yearning of a missed something – was
replaced by the ‘call.’ And I remember the exact moment it happened.
I came back from yoga class and for some
reason I was sitting starring into my own reflection in the mirror (I’d
probably been trying to squeeze a spot – I was doing a lot of detoxing around
then!). I was looking at my own eyes and as my face faded away, I somehow saw
beyond what I knew as my physical reality and that there was something behind
my eyes that had long since known what was in store. It knew the score.
In an instant I knew there had always been
yoga and that this was somehow intended for me. That it had always been my
highest intention to be drawn to yoga and to learn and experience as much as I
could and then share it with others.
I always say that I didn’t find yoga, but
rather it found me. Once I recognized
it, there was little I could do to ignore it. I needed to become a yoga teacher
and from that point on, it was never a case of if or when, but how am I going
to do this?
2 weeks later I was enrolled on a British
Wheel of Yoga Foundation Course and had booked flights to Thailand, where my
journey thus far would deliver me to my first Teacher Training in Ashtanga
Vinyasa later, that year.
I’d like to say it was smooth sailing from
there on in, but I’ll be frank the next few years were a roller coaster. I
didn’t let go.
200hr Teacher Training was an awe inspiring
and humbling experience. It gave me a fantastic grounding in yoga, but I knew
it wasn’t the end. I became acutely aware that yoga is a subject as vast as the
ocean and that if I dedicated a life time to its study, I would not even hold a
cupful of knowledge, barely a drop!
When I returned to the UK I taught a
little, but I got scared and had spent all my money, so I went running back to
London and advertising with my tail tucked firmly between my legs, because as
hard as it was to go back, it was what I knew.
It wasn’t long though before I was
experiencing the same level of stress, ill health and general sense of
disillusionment. I had been determined to keep up a consistent practice and
teach yoga in my spare time, but the reality was I struggled to fit in my own
practice let along find the time to teach others.
So I arrived back at square one as the
‘itch’ returned. It returned at
approximately 4am when I found myself sleep deprived, after a particularly
testing project, trying to kip down on moth eaten sofa in the corner of a
warehouse, feeling like I might have a heart attack or a nervous breakdown or
both, all in the name of shifting more computer games consoles that I didn’t
give a stuff about.
It was a familiar feeling by now – the
‘itch.’ And it felt like the only thing harder than leaving would be to stay. So,
I dutifully packed a bag, gave notice at work and trekked off to the mother
land to re-connect with yoga and the practice that was my salvation.
I still knew I wanted to teach yoga – that
beneath the fear of not knowing enough or not being good enough – it was my
passion and my calling.
So whilst in India I made a promise to
myself to just try. To take a leap of faith, that would be required to make
this work. To stop thinking and just do it! I rationalized that as much as I
didn’t feel ready to unleash myself on a group of uber-third-series Ashtangis I
had something to share with someone.
The beginners mind is a funny thing, but
it’s important to remember that your students are your greatest teachers and
that you will always be a student first and a teacher second.
I don’t think that I’m the best teacher in
the world, but I’ve managed to side step my own fears and doubts and
insecurities long enough to start giving it all a good go. I know what I know,
because it’s what I have been taught and what I have experienced for myself. Like
anything, theory and study is all very well and good, but the true way to get
better and to learn is through your own experience.
Teaching yoga is something that I do now –
that is my reality, rather than a dream. I find it rewarding think there’s
something rather beautiful about giving something to someone that will
(hopefully) make them feel good.
I’m glad I took the leap. Sometimes, in
life we just have to close our eyes and jump, without knowing where we’re going
to land or that there is something beneath, to catch us. It’s like those
children, from whom I drew so much inspiration that day – we have to keep
running and we have to let ourselves fall, but just because we fall it doesn’t
mean we fail or should stop trying.
If I was to give anyone who was thinking
about becoming a teacher advice – it would be simple;
1.Listen to your heart.
2. Find a decent
course with a recognized, passionate and credible teacher.
3. Practice,
practice, practice.
4. Always remember you are a student first and a teacher
second.
5. Begin! Don’t put off teaching, just start something!
6. Remember
what you’ve learnt, then let go.
Namaste… ;) It feels like I've come a long way!
Now, where did I leave my Unicorn??

Well done, Katherine! And I’m glad your dream of becoming a yoga teacher was fulfilled. I think, as a newbie, your way of letting your students open themselves is admirable. I think they’ve seen your sincerity. Asking them to internalize and play the character of a kid is really effective. Kids are the best students, after all. They are open to learning, and they wouldn’t be embarrassed to do all those poses yoga requires. :)
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