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Whether as students or teachers (and most of us are at different
times both), we can all benefit by examining our motivations for
teaching and practising, as well as the way in which we fulfil our
responsibilities to each other.
In order to teach to the best of his or her ability the teacher
must strive to be disciplined in several areas of life. The most
obvious form of discipline is a consistent and intelligent practice.
Naturally, one passes through periods of intense effort, while at
other times practising for even thirty minutes is excruciatingly
difficult. Yet, over the long run, a teacher must be practising.
The commitment to practice creates an inner integrity that cannot
be faked and that the students can easily detect. In addition, one
does not lack the courage necessary to ask for intense effort and
physical progress of the students if one has undertaken similar personal
challenges.
Another, more
subtle aspect of discipline involves the continual harmonisation
of the other
parts of ones life. How can one
teach others about inner peace if ones family, household, business,
or relationships are always in chaos? This facet of discipline requires
that one attend to other commitments with consciousness. It may mean
going to bed early to be rested to teach when one would prefer to
stay out late or organising the childrens dinner and bedtime
so that they will have a minimum of disruption when one leaves for
an evening class. Teaching should not be allowed to become a source
of agitation to others or an escape from a chaotic life.
The disciplines
of sustained awareness and continual self-examination are also
needed to scrutinise
ones attachment to the role of
teacher: it is too easy to perceive oneself as the omniscient superior
who bestows the favour of knowledge upon the student while most teachers
would change at this.
Remember that you are the teacher, not the teaching. Yoga is the
teaching.
Extreme attitude,
it can spring up in subtle ways. For example, how do your students
relate
to you before and after class? Do they
put you up on a pedestal? Do you encourage it? Teachers should act
in a way that earns their pupils respect, but should avoid
assuming an aloof manner that creates distance. Such remoteness often
signals a blind refusal to allow oneself, as teacher, to be subjected
to a loving but clear scrutiny that reveals ones humanness.
A humble attitude toward the art of yoga helps to dissolve this form
of arrogance and encourages qualities of openness, integrity, and
acceptance.
During my first trip to Pune to study at the Institute, I arrived
early one day for class and observed Mr Iyengar. He was doing asanas
I had only seen in books, but I was even more fascinated by the fact
that he was actually practising in front of all of his students.
Until this time I had only seen yoga teachers up on stages who told
everyone else what to do. In observing Mr Iyengar concentrate and
exert himself, I did not lose my respect for him. On the contrary,
my respect deepened as I witnessed his profound integrity. Yoga itself
absorbed him, not his position as a teacher. This quality we can
all strive to emulate.
I taught my first yoga class before I met Mr Iyengar. At the start
of class, I was sitting in Padmasana at the front while the students
were lying in Savasana. Worried about what I would teach for a whole
hour, I remembered to shut my eyes and take several long breaths.
As I did this, I received a strong image of my teacher standing behind
me, and of her teacher standing behind her, and so on, back in time,
teacher after teacher, into eternity. Suddenly I understood that
I was not doing anything at all; I was just passing on a message
that had been given to me by my teacher, which she had received from
her teacher, and so on. I was not so important. I relaxed and began
the class, never to worry about teaching again. As long as I remember
that I am only a messenger, I feel guided and supported in the work.
Remember that you are the teacher, not the teaching. Yoga is the
teaching.
One of the important ways that the message of yoga is conveyed is
through touch, another area in which teachers need to observe their
actions. Touching directly defines a specific area where the student
needs to come to life. But how you touch says as much as where you
touch. It is my firm conviction that touching should be done to bring
the asana out of, not to impose it upon, the student. Inside each
person lies the ability to do the pose. I feel best about an adjustment
when I am acting as a guide, helping the person to express the beauty
of yoga in his or her own way.
One way teachers
can inspire students to establish a solid practice is to find a
way to help
even the very limited student enjoy the
asana. If the student feels the personal reward of the pose, he or
she will be drawn to it. ( It is the rare student who will persistently
attempt asanas he or she suffers in or dislikes.) When teaching or
practising, think, How can I help alleviate the suffering of
this pose? Bringing ease and lightness to the asana while maintaining
its precision is one of the most engrossing challenges of teaching
and practising.
The student, like the teacher, needs to practice faithfully. The
teacher dedicates time and effort in preparing for class and teaching;
to receive the maximum benefit, the student must make the same commitment.
Of course, life events may interrupt a steady practice.
One may go for
days or even weeks without a solid session. But eventually the
disciple
of regular practice must be established if yoga is to
affect one on the deepest level. Mr Iyengar repeats his simple but
profound advice again and again, and that is, Practice.
Only through
practice can the understanding come. And from understanding comes
insight,
from insight, wisdom, and from experience this endlessly
evolving process for oneself, it cannot be apprehended through any
means other than practice. Part of the teachers job is to inspire
the student to begin and maintain a regular practice, but the students
task is to take that energy of inspiration and transform it into
the reality of action.
Another of the
students responsibilities is the maintenance
of observation and discrimination. During a class, the student should
remain watchful of the instructions and note how they are affecting
him or her personally. Is this adjustment right for me? Do
I understand the intent of the words? Would it be correct to
apply this principle of movement to other people, or is this meant
only for my body? Am I practising in such a way as to harm myself?
Is coming out of this pose now the result of listening with intelligence
to the body, or is it just giving up? Students need to develop
a healthy scepticism. The best students are able to hear with the
heart, to try the suggestions of the teacher with sincerity, and,
most importantly, to keep that which is valuable and drop, for the
moment at least, that which does not compute.
All of us, students and teachers alike, benefit from creating an
atmosphere of understanding and openness, forgiveness in times of
difficulty, and love in our practice and teaching. For if our practice
of yoga does not, in the end, help us to love ourselves our students,
our teachers. our family and friends, the world, it has fallen short
of its potential.
Love is the highest motivation a teacher can have: love of yoga,
love of teaching, and love for the students. Likewise, students can
practice for no better reason than loving the art, and wanting to
share that love with others by living a whole life. Love is the catalyst
that in the end dissolves the separate roles of student and teacher.
Each learns from the other, and inspires the other, as both teacher
and student, through their practice, travel the same path.
Copyright Judith Lasater. Published with permission of the author.
Judith Lasater is the author of Relax and Renew and Living your
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