By:Michelle Margaret
As
everyone in the developed world knows, yoga is fast-growing part of mainstream
American culture. According to Yoga Journal’s 2012 Market Study:
20.4
million Americans practice yoga, compared to 15.8 million from the previous
2008 study, an increase of 29 percent.
The
ample teachings that fall under the umbrella of “yoga” are widely available via
books, DVDs, gyms, studios, online classes, videos and websites. And people are
paying a lot to learn yoga and look good doing it.
Practitioners
spend $10.3 billion a year on yoga classes and products, including equipment,
clothing, vacations, and media. The previous estimate from the 2008 study was
$5.7 billion.
According
to the study, over half of American yogis have practiced for three years or
less. About half consider themselves to be intermediate to advanced. Most come
to yoga for the flexibility—closely followed by conditioning, stress
relief, improvement of overall health and physical fitness.
Who
am I to be a spokesperson for “Real Yoga”?
Just
a woman who’s been practicing for twenty years and teaching for twelve.
There
are 37,000 Registered Yoga Teachers (RYT) through Yoga Alliance, and
I’m not one of them. I belong to no official lineage, but I have studied and
practiced hatha, raja and karma yoga for many years.
If
you think this makes me a self-righteous yoga b*tch, so be it. Let me state the
obvious: the views expressed in this article are my opinions. My hope is that
they will resonate with readers and “real” yogis everywhere.
There’s
no wrong way to come to yoga. People who start with the physical only may or
may not evolve their practice to encompass the spiritual. However…Is All
Yoga Created Equal? No. Without mindfulness, meditation, compassion and ethics,
yoga is not yoga. I used to think that the trouble with yoga was its
Americanization, its being watered down and modified and marketed in the West. All
I wanted to do was escape to India. Find peace and quiet and
enlightenment in the Himalayas. In 2008, I went to India and discovered
that peace and quiet and enlightenment are just as rare and precious there as
they are anywhere. I used to think that the trouble with yoga was the
popularity of Bikram. Copyrighted sequences, stiff
competition, word-by-word scripted classes. And the heat, my God, the heat! I
used to think that the trouble with yoga stemmed from Yoga Journal with
its Photoshopped-to-perfection bendy white female models on its glossy cover
and inside hawking prohibitively pricey and exclusive exotic retreats catering
to the rich and restless. I used to think that the trouble with yoga was brands
like Lululemon who sell ridiculously expensive
translucent yoga pants and color coordinated tops. And yoga socks. You don’t
need socks to do yoga! I used to
think that the trouble with yoga was its New Agey factor.
I would delineate between real, authentic yoga versus pseudoyoga. Yes, clearly
the trouble with yoga was its superficiality. But then I had to let that go. I
had to remember that yoga is not yoga when materialism, ego and attachment are
blocking the way. Yoga is not yoga when you are beating yourself up on the
inside, bashing your mind and body for being less capable than you wish you
were. The real trouble with yoga is that once you start, you cannot go
back. Or else!—your muscles will tighten, your mind will cloud and
your soul will weep. The more you practice, the more you have to keep
practicing. Once you reach a certain turning point, you simply will not
quit. What starts out as a few minutes or an hour a day will evolve into
“daily life practice,” morning, noon and night.
One
day, your may find that your practice has transformed from stretching,
breathing and meditating into compassionate action, active listening, mindful
speech and modeling kindness and presence to everyone in your sphere of
influence. I leave you with an important addendum to the Yoga
Schmoga Sutra:
1.
Real Yogis have flexible, balanced
and strong bodies and minds.
2.
Real Yogis are mindful.
3.
Real Yogis are humble and imperfect.
4.
Real Yogis are nonviolent,
compassionate and kind.
5.
Real Yoga takes practice.
6.
Real Yoga is service.
7.
Real Yoga is teaching by example.
8.
Real Yoga is attainable and should
be available to every human being on this planet.
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