My spiritual practice is one that asks me to wake up to the world as it is.
My spiritual practice asks me to be strong enough to see the truth about our society and understand my place in it. My spiritual practice values equity for all people and has a deep reverence for our inherent interdependence as a species.
My spiritual practice has always understood that I am not free until all people are free.
The evolution of this path led me to anti-racism work. As I began to see how living in a White Supremacist culture has infected everything I understand about myself and our world I was led to the work of dismantling the White Supremacy that is inside me, as the very important first step in dismantling White Supremacy out in the world.
As I continued to walk down this path I ran face first into a wall. As a white woman teaching yoga is there any way to do that without appropriating and stealing from a culture that is not my own?
I don’t have an answer for that question. From my perspective, as a person committed to creating and supporting a better world for all people, it seems important that I get used to the discomfort that comes from living in the questions.
Many of you are sitting with these questions as well, and I appreciate you reaching out to me to ask for support on this path. In my role as a mentor I am committed to holding space for difficult conversations and asking (hopefully) thoughtful questions.
We are so so lucky to have Susanna Barkataki joining us on The Mentor Sessions today to bring her lived experience, wisdom and expertise to these questions.
Susanna Barkataki helps yoga teachers, studios, nonprofits and businesses become leaders in equity, diversity and yogic values so they can embody thriving yoga leadership with integrity and she has worked in teaching and social justice for two decades.
In this episode you’ll hear:
Why the yoga world so badly need to hear Susanna’s message of diversity and inclusion A breakdown of the language often used in conversations like this. We’ll define: Decolonization Cultural appropriation Diversity Inclusion Dominant Culture And accessibility specifically as it relates to yoga spaces The main difference between honoring yoga and appropriating yoga A conversation about how to update the movement practice and include learnings from modern movement science while still honoring the original teachings What members of the dominant culture can do to transform our society91: Legal Protections For Yoga Teachers with Cory Sterling
90: Super Practical Answers To All Your Yoga-Tech Questions with Alex Haley
89: An Update On Online Teaching + A Deep Dive Into The Camera On/Camera Off Debate
88: How Not To Teach Yoga with Tori Lunden
87: The Nuances Of Trauma-Informed Yoga with Sangeeta Vallabhan
86: What It REALLY Looks Like to Regress or Progress Movement with Trina Altman
85: The Trans* Yoga Project with M Camellia + River Redwood
84: The Power of Pranayama with Mirabelle D'cunha
83: A Teacher Owned Co-Op with Shamina Rao + Elizabeth Barnett of The Connective
82: The 12 Routines That Saved Me Last Year
81: Yoga In India + Yoga In The West with Arundhati Baitmangalkar
80: An Evidence-Based Approach to Mindful Movement with Jenn Pilotti
79: Embracing Yoga’s Roots, Studentship and Anti-Racism Work with Susanna Barkataki
78: Injuries + Teaching Yoga with Monica Bright
77: Letting Go of Alignment (And What To Teach Instead) with Derek Cook
76: I Opened A Virtual Studio!
75: Where Do We Go From Here? with Amber Karnes + Susanna Barkataki
74: Where Do We Go From Here? with Theo Wildcroft + Matthew Remski
73: Where Do We Go From Here? with Jules Mitchell + Arundhati Baitmangalkar
72: Where Do We Go From Here? With Crystal McCreary + Monica Bright
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