Episodes

  • This episode is a recording of a talk Mark Whitwell gave at the Omega Institute in New York in 2008. He speaks of Reality itself as an intelligent nurturing force, like a mother. Yoga is our direct participation in this nurturing reality, not an effort to achieve some future spiritual goal.

    This episode is a dharmic reset-reminder of yoga as participation in union, merging strength and receptivity just as we came into being ourselves through the union of our parents. Mark encourages listeners to see that any pain or difficult circumstance in life is ultimately healing and rebalancing when embraced fully. The practice of yoga reconnects us to the fact that we are cared for, no matter what arises.

    Quotes:

    - "Looking for God implies God is absent."

    - "The more charming or logical a teacher is, the more they'll delude you into thinking you are less and have to get somewhere."

    - "Spiritual language implies you're not already there and have to attain something."

    - "Relate to the life in people rather than labeling something as evil."

    - "Mother is here. You are utterly cared for."

    - "This pain is healing. My pain is nurturing."

    - "On the mat is my complete intimacy with reality. I can now go off the mat and do it."



    Timestamps:

    4:00 - Discussing reality as nurturing force

    8:00 - Pain as healing

    15:00 - Promising a daily yoga practice

    27:00 - Relating to pain and healing

    38:00 - Reality appearing as you

    58:00 - Closing discussion

  • Welcome back to ā€œGod and Sexā€ book club part 3.

    Mark and Rosalind argue about themes of the book around relationship, love and intimacy.

    Mark goes to the root of things as usual, connecting up the separate self to how relationship chaos plays out, and how yoga intervenes.

    We discuss the longing for a ā€œsoulmateā€ and whether this idea is useful, reflect on the China teacher training, and a few more controversial subjects relating to intimacy.

    Be aware some of these subjects may be connected with painful emotions in ourselves & feel free to reach out any time if you need to.

    Key Topics Covered

    - The presumption of being a separate self as the root of human suffering

    - How religions tend to devalue the body and sexuality

    - Ramanuja's teaching that we need yoga to actualise oneness

    - Participating in the union of opposites through yoga

    - Merging with your experience to understand yourself and life

    - Letting go of ideas like "soulmate" that create impossible expectations

    - How vulgarity and abuse can also be expressions of denying sex

    - Sharing yoga as a way to increase intimacy and improve relationships

    Key quotes:

    - "The hostility and disturbance in the world arises because people are not loving their life."

    - "If the man could learn to love bodily, sexually, then there would be peace."

    - "Consciousness perceiving an object is a single movement ā€” there is no separation."

    - "Once you've tasted actual intimacy, the common patterns of sex finish."

    - "There must be yoga, and there must be the polarity of opposites within and without."

    - "The presumption of being a separate self with problems is an illusion."

    - "You can't use anybody to make you happy."

    Resources

    - God and Sex: Now We Get Both by Mark Whitwell

    - Yoga of Heart by Mark Whitwell

    Timestamps

    [00:00:00] Introduction

    [00:01:00] The problem of separation as the root of suffering

    [00:06:00] Ramanuja's teaching about needing yoga

    [00:11:00] How religion devalues the body and sex

    [00:16:00] Krishnamacharya's example of yoga and family life

    [00:21:00] How modern society still denies sex

    [00:26:00] Merging with your experience through yoga

    [00:31:00] Letting go of the myth of "soulmates"

    [00:36:00] The misery caused by unrealistic expectations

    [00:41:00] The problem with techniques and sacred sexuality

    [00:46:00] The motivation to share these teachings

    [00:51:00] Being cautious about rushing into relationships

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  • This episode explores rekindling our innate connection to nature through yoga and sensing practices. Rosalind has an insightful conversation with her friend Henriette Geber, a yogini with a deep love of the mountains, plants and animals.

    They discuss how yoga helps us become more sensitive, intuit nature's aliveness, and dissolve harmful ways of relating that assume separation. Henriette shares how yoga empowers her natural affinities, from studying art history to living with the German Alps.

    We discuss removing overlays of ideology to intuitively relate directly with the living world.

    Key Topics

    - How yoga cultivates sensitivity to ourselves as nature

    - Dissolving the illusion of separateness from nature ingrained by society

    - Honoring the aliveness and subjectivity of all creatures and systems

    - Henrietteā€™s countercultural move from the mountains to the city and back again

    - Following our natural talents and relationships that emerge through yoga

    Insights

    - Assumptions of nature as passive or dead prevent us from sensing its aliveness

    - Rituals trying to "connect" can reinforce separation if that belief is still there

    - Our bodies intuitively know which plants are healing if we relax our seeking mind

    Quotes

    "Yoga has given me this, that I trust what comes out of me. I think I was very outward oriented, like, how do you do certain things? How am I perceived? Always thinking like, oh, my perception might be really wrong or not even feeling how do I relate from the inside to this and giving me the sensitivity to actually feel how is my relationship to this, how is my sensing of this and then the strength to also act upon it and not be afraid."

    "If you cannot feel your body, you cannot feel the natural world because ultimately it's the same thing. It's totally the same thing."

    ā€œItā€™s always there. It's there. You just need to listen.ā€

    Resources

    - Franz von Stuck's painting "Sin" that Henriette wrote her thesis on

    - The Correction by Amy Mindell, a book referenced

    Timestamps

    [00:00:00] Introduction

    [00:01:00] Henriette's background in the mountains and move to Berlin

    [00:05:00] How yoga enabled tuning into her needs

    [00:10:00] Studies in art history and disconnect from life

    [00:15:00] Henriette's return to the mountains from the city

    [00:20:00] Painting of a woman and snake Henrietta was drawn to

    [00:25:00] Positive symbolism of the snake across cultures

    [00:30:00] Henriette's relationship with animals and plants

    [00:35:00] Accessing intuitive knowledge about medicinal plants

    [00:40:00] Story illustrating the ever-present relationship between humans and nature

    [00:45:00] Rituals reinforcing separation versus assuming connection

    [00:50:00] Being in relationship versus demanding feelings from nature

    [00:55:00] Living creatures acknowledging Henriette

    [01:00:00] Moving to farm not being the happily ever after

    [01:03:00] Closing

  • In this week's episode of the Heart of Yoga Podcast, Mark and Andy Raba explore the world of psychics, seers, shamans and sages.

    As director of the Yoga Education in Schools Charitable Trust in New Zealand, Andy leads initiatives to bring yoga-based health programs to young people in NZ and abroad.With a Master's degree and over a decade of experience fostering literacy in NZ schools, Andrew has extensively published on yoga and meditation and is dedicated to bringing yoga's benefits to students' wellbeing.

    They discuss how to discern truth from charlatanry, the ethics around predicting the future, and why embodiment through yoga is key.

    Mark emphasizes the importance of maintaining autonomy through daily yoga practice rather than seeking escape or solutions from spiritual leaders. He shares perspective on how psychics and seers should serve the community without claiming special powers.

    Mark and Andy also talk about relating to the subtle realm, trauma healing, and keeping ourselves safe from disempowerment on the spiritual path. Tune in for an insightful discussion about navigating the mystical with open eyes and an empowered heart.

    Key Points:

    There are genuine psychics and seers who have special abilities to perceive realms beyond normal perception. However, there are many more charlatans who falsely claim such abilities.

    To discern truth from falsehood, it's important to have your own direct participation and intimacy with reality through yoga practice. This gives you autonomy and empowerment.

    Making predictions about the future is unethical. It implies you don't have access now to deeper knowledge about your life.

    Psychics and seers should be ordinary, humble people, not claiming to be special or different. Their abilities should be used to serve the community, not for ego or profit.

    For people with trauma, the subtle realm can seem an escape. But yoga brings embodiment and healing, not escape. Wake down into the body, don't go up into the subtle.

    The gross tangible world and the subtle intangible world are one, not separate. Through embodiment and intimacy with the tangible, we access the intangible.

    Keep yourself safe from disempowerment by spiritual leaders. With yoga practice for autonomy, you can discern who to learn from without losing yourself.

    Connect with Any Raba :

    Instagram: @_andyraba_

    www.yogainschools.org.nz

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    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/yogaofheart

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    and Instagram https://www.instagram.com/markwhitwell

  • In this episode, Mark interviews Eva about her journey discovering Yoga and music. Eva shares how she was classically trained in cello as a child but hated the competitive pressure. She dropped music for 18 years until finding Yoga, which helped her rediscover enjoyment and presence. A few years into Yoga, Eva spontaneously picked up guitar and started playing purely for pleasure, posting videos online.

    Mark and Eva explore how yoga catalyzed Eva's musical reawakening. Yoga helped Eva let go of striving for perfection and future attainment, and instead play music for the joy of each moment. Eva discusses how Yoga taught her to receive support and gave her courage to be vulnerable sharing imperfect musical videos. She also describes realizing Yoga isn't about achieving a thoughtless state, but being fully immersed in each experience.

    Eva offers an inspirational example of how Yoga provided the foundation to rediscover her musical self by cultivating presence, receptivity and relationship.

    Keypoints:

    [00:03:00] Discovering yoga helped Eva find enjoyment and presence [00:05:00] Yoga was the catalyst that allowed Eva's musical talent to emerge

    [00:08:00] Eva learned to receive support and be vulnerable through Yoga

    [00:12:00] Eva rejected the competitive classical music system as a teen

    [00:18:00] Finding a Yoga teacher who respected Eva as an individual was pivotal

    [00:20:00] Yoga felt like the opposite of Eva's prior athletic yoga experience

    [00:25:00] Eva played music purely for enjoyment rather than future goals

    [00:30:00] Eva had to unlearn criticism and perfectionism around mistakes

    [00:40:00] Simple Yoga helped a depressed musician rediscover her artistry

    [00:50:00] Eva realized Yoga wasn't about achieving a thoughtless state

    Memorable Quotes

    "Yoga as a system should adapt to the individual, not the other way around."

    "It's not to get to the end, to the grand crescendo of the great symphony. It's every note along the way in harmony with every other note."

    "There's no state like that, that I should be striving towards. What I have right now and what I'm doing right now is it."

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    https://www.heartofyoga.com/podcast

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  • In this episode of the Heart of Yoga podcast, Mark has an insightful conversation with his student Irina Esposito about her journey with Yoga.

    The cosmos and everything in the cosmos is obviously a pure intelligence, energy and an intrinsic harmony. In religious language of ancient India it is Shiva Shaktiā€¦ or all that is, and there are no problems. This was Irinaā€™s sudden realization. It hit her ā€œlike a done of bricksā€. This is the realization of an ordinary life of anybody when the Hatha Yoga Tantras are practiced daily, actually, naturally and non obsessively.

    Life is unity, an indivisible condition of no separation, no difference, unique individuation in the context of utter singularity. Thank you Irina for your YĆ“ga realization and sharing this, your self with the world Here.


    Irina shares how the simple daily yoga practice Mark taught her is transformative.
    She began to feel more connected to herself and worry less. The conversation explores pivotal moments of recognition Irina experienced through her practice, as well as how yoga shifted her perspective on body image and food.


    An illuminating part of the talk is when old family patterns came up after a vacation with a parent, showing there are still habitual conditionings even after deep insights. Overall, the episode offers a beautiful glimpse into the power of dedicated yoga practice.

    Timestamps:

    3:55 - They discuss Irina's experience in yoga teacher training with Mark and how she started a daily practice.

    12:55 - Irina talks about how yoga helped her feel more connected to herself and her body.

    28:35 - Irina describes a moment of recognition where she deeply felt that the whole universe is female and male energy.

    38:50 - Irina shares how yoga changed her relationship to food and body image.

    55:15 - Irina talks about going on vacation with her mother after her recognition and how old patterns came up again.

    Quotes:

    "You gave us the simple practice and I just tried to do it every day. And this is so different to the practice I did before."
    "I don't overthink that much. The crown is open and receiving."

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  • In this episode, I'm joined by Joseph Lauricella. We dive into Joseph's journey on The Yoga Bus, making yoga accessible to everyone. It is truly inspiring.

    We talk about the power of yoga for newcomers and the limitations of the popular styles. Joseph shares his motivation behind his book, "Miracle of Body Wisdom," and his vision for authentic yoga education for all.

    We discuss the discipline of writing a book. Also the function of yoga in dealing with anxiety in tough times. We explore how whole body breathing can boost our well-being and making yoga suitable for everyone, regardless of beliefs or body type. We discus the YES program, YĆ“ga Education in Schools. How Yoga isn't just an exercise; it's vital for our future, a subject as vital as any other subject taught in schools, such as mathematics or physics!

    We discuss unity, authenticity, and the healing journey after loss. Joseph shares his personal story of loss and healing, and the positive impact of recent gatherings and upcoming retreats in Mexico. We're all in this together.

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    https://www.heartofyoga.com/podcast

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  • In this episode, we dive deep into Mark's transformative journey to India. Mark shares his personal experiences and first impressions upon arriving in this vibrant and diverse country. He discusses how The Beatles' presence in Rishikesh influenced his interest in Indian wisdom traditions, making it a global phenomenon.

    Mark reflects on the powerful impact of rock music from England and the U.S. on his life, particularly highlighting the musical genius of Ray Davies from The Kinks. He opens up about his initial moments in India, painting a vivid picture of the sights, sounds, and emotions that overwhelmed him.

    We explore the challenges and insights of being a white minority in India, contrasting it with Mark's observations as a part of the white majority in New Zealand. Mark shares his candid thoughts on India's lack of a social welfare system and how survival takes on a unique meaning in this bustling country.

    Throughout our conversation, Mark takes us on a spiritual journey, recounting his encounters with Bhakti Vedanta Swami and the worldwide temple movement initiated through chanting in Hyde Park. We delve into the essence of India's holy cities, bringing to light the blend of spirituality and commerce that characterizes them.

    Mark's trip to India serves as the central narrative, intertwining with various topics such as colonialism and the preservation of authenticity in a rapidly changing world. Mark's personal experiences and insights offer a captivating window into his adventure and the profound impact it had on his life.

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  • Our guest today is our wonderful collaborator in Japan, Minami Takashima.
    Minami is a yogini and heart of YĆ“ga teacher, teaching in the traditions of the hathayoga non dual Tantra. She has written the introduction to the Japanese second edition of Mark Whitwellā€™s YĆ“ga Heart and teaches throughout Japan and the world.

    Born in Sapporo, Japan, she found that early life spiritual awakenings were not really helping with the pain of corporate life and socialization, but were rather making societyā€™s misalignment with natureā€™s flow even more obvious and miserable.
    One day, she came across Markā€™s book Yoga of Heart, and says ā€œthis changed my life completely.ā€ ā€œThereā€™s no steps to be takenā€. ā€œEverything you are seeking to become, you already are.ā€ ā€œYou are the power of the cosmosā€ā€” the book was a great statement of your lifeā€™s actual worth.

    Minami has had victory over the oppressive misogyny of society that restricts women, and men, and all of life. In this victory she understands the difficulties of the usual life, so can be extremely helpful to others going through what she has had to go through herself. In YĆ“ga such a person is called the ā€œAcharyaā€, one who can teach.

    Minami found that traditional heart of Yoga, Hathayoga practice bridges spirituality and tangible reality, allowing our masculine and feminine aspects to find their natural harmony. Knowing herself and her students to be Reality itself (ā€œdivine existenceā€ itsel.) Minami teaches from the authority of her own experience and power. She lives in Japan and New Zealand with her yogi-musician husband Rey.
    Teaching mainly one on one in an intimate, traditional way, Minami serves others to find their innate power, intelligence and beauty.

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  • Clayton Joseph Scott is a singer, songwriter and master Yoga Teacher. Born in Los Angeles, California, he attended Santa Monica High School. Clayton lived most of his life as a street hustling native of Venice Ca. He was raised in the culture of musicians and pioneers of the counter culture.

    Clayton speaks clearly about over coming addiction of every kind. He was in his own words, a gourmet addict, masterful at keeping addictions finely counteracting each so as to hold them in all in place. Untilā€¦. ?


    As a YĆ“ga enthusiast (one of his addictions) for many years Clayton mastered all the popular styles of the yoga industry. In this context he discovered the principles of the modern founder of YĆ“ga, Tirumalai Krishnamacharya and was then able to make sense of it all.


    Claytonā€™s own music career is highlighted by his touring band Brightside. He has a number of notable albums of poetic depth and beauty.


    Albums and EPs include Heavy Rest, More Love, West of Lincoln, Let Go and View from the Moon.

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  • Liliana Lakshmi and her husband Satya are renowned yoga teachers, whose influence extends from India to the Americas, and from Berlin to Bali. Liliana, born into tribal culture of indigenous shamans of Colombia was quickly able to understand the shamanic cultures of ancient India, their yogas of participation and the profound realization of their ancient cultures, both of India and the Americas. Liliana is the hope of humanity, and she will not be exploited by any mere belief systems or point of view. She embraces all life and all cultures in the samyama of truth, the spotlight of absolute reality. Liliana is a bridge for humanity of cultures, ethnicities, of East and West, and of ancient to modern. Mark shares some time with Liliana discussing their time together over the years and their mutual purpose to bring the Yoga of intimacy to the entire world.
    They discussed the lost teaching of the Tantras that flourished for a thousand years prior to the 14th C. Liliana shares her early life in shamanic culture, and her eventual pilgrimages to India and Europe.

    In this episode you will hear...

    ''... I went to to see a doctor and ... I was asking ... how does it look if I want to remove these implants? And I remember ... he would tell me ''but you're a very young woman. You don't want to look like a man''...''

    ''...There is a beautiful tribe in the north and I feel my ancestors land coming from there...they're quite famous because they have the ability to connect through space and time with all the tribes in another parts of the world...''

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  • Ernessa Bergman is a world-travelling Yogini, Mother and Biosynthesis / Somatic Body Psychotherapist who is currently living and working in Tel Aviv, Israel. She reflects on her long friendship with Mark at trainings around the world and her life as a mother and yoga teacher.

    In this episode you will hear...

    '' ...you torture yourself with the insanity of trying to get enlightened or something, or the insanity of trying to get to God. It is completely insane. It creates the separate self that is seeking.''

    ''...In the heart, that's where it says you break your heart, you start to cry because you realize that everything you've been doing up until now, at least mentally ...consciously, has not been putting your attention in the place that can give you more joy..."

    "...This yoga of participation in the given reality, the power of the cosmos that is factually their condit. Just like it happened to you and you pass it on to every kind of person there, and you do it without drama, without theater. You just do it consistently and you just stood your ground. You bloom in your own garden..."

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  • Mark Whitwell interviews Rosalind Atkinson about her life with yoga and realisations. In particular, Mark asks about her academic studies of english literature, especially the mystic poet William Blake, and the relevance of these studies to her life in yoga.

    This episode will be of interest to anyone with a mixed experience in academia or poetry, who is interested in the yogic process of making inspiration relevant to our lives right now.

    We also discuss the last two years of teaching around the world through zoom, and end with a little teaser about a new project, called "Wardrobe Dharma".

    In this episode you will hear...

    ''And I got to the end of this research project ... and I was trying to write a conclusion that summed up what I had learned in the process. And I came across a line by Blake that said something like ... the true faculty of knowledge is experience... And it was a very unsettling phrase to me because I realized in that moment that of everything I'd written about passionately, it wasn't my experience I was writing about Blake's experience.''

    ''I fell straight into the spiritual seekers trap of hungrily seeking experience...for myself...''

    ''It's like if my mind was the king and the body was the peasants of the kingdom. Even if the king ignores the peasants, they're still there. And they're still feeding him. But he's just not acknowledging them... Abusing them, mistreating them, not appreciating their work. ''

    "Blake's poetry speaks in and as that force of life that is beyond the mind. And that's why obviously people from different cultures resonate with it. If it was just culturally constructed, then the English would love Blake the best. But they didn't, they thought he belonged in a straight jacket."

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  • What is natural movement for a human being? In this episode we are graced with the presence of Anne-Tyler, yogini of the Americas and her profound story of evolving movement patterns from the strictures of ballet into the natural forms for a human body. Mark and Anne-Tyler discuss learning to dance from a young age in the UK and developing her skills when moved back to the US, and how it wasn't obvious that ballet is a very unnatural way of movement. They discuss abuse of power in the world of ballet and the feeling of being replaceable at any minute. Tapping into pure beingness sheds a light while still being in the trap. Learning how to breathe. Getting through the stranglehold of thought, seeking and performance. Returning to the truth, returning to the heart, returning to the breath and to nature. Real yoga for real people, not performance, not gymnastics. ''I came here to disrupt patterns''. The breath enables the shedding of layers of old patterns and reveals one's true being. There is no denial or suppression in Yoga. Teaching people how to help themselves. Yoga as an empowerment and embodyment practise.

    Anne-Tyler's teachings and online gatherings are here at www.bloss-om.com or on social media @theecstaticblossom

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  • Mark and his dear friend Patrick collude at the beach in Australia to discuss Patrick's life of Yoga and insight. They unpack the lie of "trying to get there" through Yoga. Get where? We are already here!

    Patrick breaks down the regular Australian conditioning of beer and sport, and relates how one sentence from a partner inspired a quest for change.

    They chart the murky waters of addiction to asana, and transforming it to participation in reality.

    Patrick teaches Yoga and Tai Chi in Australia, Sri Lanka and Fiji, and has been the heart and soul of Fiji teacher trainings for nearly a decade. His teaching is characterised by wisdom, humour and the unexpected.

    Explore Patrick's website at https://www.bodyawareness.com.au

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  • This podcast tells the story of Majaā€™s transition from social activism to Yoga revelation. How Yoga becomes the means to enacting the change we want to see. As Gandhi said.. ā€œbe the change you want to see.ā€

    In this conversation we hear once again the process to become an actual Yoga teacher in real life and community. From Sloviana Majaā€™s background and society has had its own traumas and horrific trials. Life has been difficult.

    Maja speaks of her personal victory in the midst of societal patterning, hostility and despair. As a government public health professional working in the struggles of social policy Maja has been conscientious and ambitious to improve the difficult conditions of the world. She speaks of how her Yoga has enabled her to do this, while transcending conflict with society and in herself.

    Maja speaks of the various vehicles in which she has learned to teach Yoga effectively. At her work in very large groups of colleagues, in smaller intimate circles of friends, and in one-on-one private tuition.

    Maja is the hope of humanity.

  • In this episode we are graced by world-friend & yogini without borders Manisha Lebel. Yoga Teacher, Naturopath, Herbalist & Wisdom Holder.

    Manisha and Rosalind discuss how Manisha's extensive yoga practice, teaching and academic research backgrounds resonated straightaway with the breath principles Mark was passing on.

    We talk about being an outsider, New Zealand colonial patterning, people pleasing (especially as women), and how we can cut through indoctrination and authoritarianism of all kinds and stand in our own ground.

    We cut through the illusions of generational barriers to express our heartfelt gratitude for the friendship of each other.

    ā€œEverything that I have been seeking is where I amā€. Manisha describes experiencing the breath as the central feature in the Heart of Yoga practice, everything else falls away and loses significance. Not a rejection of lifeā€™s roles, but a releasing of projections on oneā€™s self, and an acceptance of reality as it is.

    We discuss the falseness of the mind/body split and how the breath provides the doorway to realization that there is no such split between the heart, mind and body.

    ā€œWhat an opportunity to live before we dieā€. A discussion about the pain that the body goes through during life and how this often makes us disassociate the mind from the body to avoid feeling pain.

    Manisha teaches both private and group sessions in her communities in rural NZ, and she talks about making relationship and breath the centre of every teaching occasion, and how this changes our relationships. And how, exactly?

    We talk about moving away from the commercial Yoga industrial complex, and learning to deal in diverse forms of exchange. Beyond the money economy.

    Manisha also tells the story of how she met Mark for the first time, and the profound effect that meeting had on her.

    We also touch on the resonance of the yoga wisdom with Māori culture.

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    https://www.heartofyoga.com/podcast

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  • How do we make the shift from practitioner to teacher? Who should become a teacher? How do we make sure we don't become "One more monkey" in the yoga industrial complex? How to keep the heart in yoga?

    Mark interviews Andrew about his experience of this process and emergence from the middle-class massage into a life of meaning, play, & subversive subtlety as a practitioner & teacher.

    Andrew talks about his current project offering yoga in high schools for both students and teachers, drawing on his own experience as a disillusioned teenager chafing against the restrictions of school and family.

    They discuss getting free of the search for an intangible distant realm of happiness, or a distant god, and instead coming home to the local and our immediate environment in time and space.

    Mark and Andrew talk about the natural movement to wish to share yoga after feeling the doors it has opened in one's own life, and how this gradually becomes the most important thing in one's life.

    How do we find teaching opportunities? When shoudl we teach? What if no-one is interested? What if they just want stimulating gymnastics?

    Mark and Andy also discuss the resonance between aspects of yoga and of the indigenous Māori culture of Aotearoa / New Zealand.

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  • ''How to find a good yoga teacher? How do you find a teacher that you trust, and can generate a connection with? Not only that, but find a teacher that does not see themselves in a position of power and does not have your monetary value as student in their ā€™businessā€™ as a priority?"

    In this episode Mark and Rosalind talk about this most basic of questions, along with the even more basic questions of why we would even want a yoga teacher, and what that is anyway.

    Some aspects we cover:

    - The origins of yoga as a practice of mutual respect and care for others and the community, without authority and power.

    - the change in student-teacher relationships to power dynamics and business interest as the norm

    - The three qualifications of a good yoga teacher according to Krishnamacharya.

    - Cultism in spiritual practice; how to sense someone who is driven by social hierarchy, power and money.

    - The use of knowledge as a means to create seniority and power in the modern world of spiritual practice. And the contrasting experience had by Mark with his teachers Krishnamacharya and Desikachar.

    - ā€œYoga is not a salvation cultā€. A good teacher should not be promising any method or secret knowledge that will get you to where you think you want to go. Any promises of this nature should be treated with caution as the promise is most likely more of a product to be sold than a spiritual practice.

    - A conversation about the ironic inflexibility of modern yoga, how it pushes people into predefined patterns regardless of the differences between individuals, and how this is a reflection of the patterning seen in modern society.

    - What to look for: the breath as THE central element of asana practice. The unity of body, mind and breath must be present from the first moment of the yoga lesson, yet is often not given precise or any attention in modern yoga teaching.

    - ā€œYou donā€™t do yoga, yoga does youā€. Participating in the flow of life and being in the moment, as opposed to using spiritual practice to try and get somewhere you think you need to go, and how a good teacher can help thwart the latter tendency.

    - Yoga as a method to release the mind from habitual thought. A symptom of modern living that affects most people in negative ways. Yoga can be a way to free yourself of unnecessary thought and be in the world's beauty.

    To find out if we know a good teacher near you, please email [email protected]

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    https://www.heartofyoga.com/podcast

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  • A conversation between Rosalind and Alesha Keen, yogini & important teacher of the UK. Alesha is breaking new ground in England, drawing upon her decades of experience across yoga, psychotherapy, and numerous other modalities from West and East to help individuals "bloom in their own garden."

    In our wide-ranging discussion, she offers us her first-hand yogic perspective on the initiations into embodied wisdom through our life, including the profound gateway into eldership of the menopause.

    Some of the other things we discussed:

    - The need for Yoga to be adapted to our bodies and lives as we ourselves and our needs change

    - Benefits of Yoga one-on-one as opposed to group classes

    - The barriers to Yoga created by its confusion with fashion, gymnastics and exercise, and how it can intersect with our already-pressured body image.

    - The journey with yoga and menopause and how the latter has demanded a refinement in asana and breath

    - How both Yoga and the initiation into wisdom of peri-menopause and menopause call us to slow down and listen to the body...

    - Ageism and loss of intergenerational relationships... looking at some examples of reverence for the "wisdom of years" in non-western cultures.

    - we discuss the unfortunate public perception of yoga as reflected in Ricky Gervais' new show 'Afterlife' and the painful yoga parody in it, and how to work with this

    - The initiation that is motherhood is also woven into our discussion!

    You can find more information about Alesha's work and teaching at www.aleshakeen.com and www.aleshakeenconsciousliving.uk

    Follow this podcast for new episodes here: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Spotify | RSS/XML

    If you feel moved to submit a question for a future episode, you can do so here:

    https://www.heartofyoga.com/podcast

    You can find more from the Heart of Yoga on Facebook, YouTube, and Instagram.