moonlighting yogis

yoga's dramatic rise in popularity has birthed some definite yoga divas and rock stars - along with famous names with celebrity teachers.  but our deepest inspiration comes from people who are just like us — who could BE us … only a few steps ahead on this twisting and arduous journey.  


that's why if you pick up october's issue of yoga journal (and i hope you will!) you'll see my article on moonlighting yogis - a few special teachers from across the country who have otherwise demanding and fulfilling careers, yet STILL choose to teach yoga on the side. 


but what you won't see are the thousands of others - just like them. 

because the five featured are, fortunately for all of us,  not at all unique


there are more … so many more.  behold the new crop of yoga teachers — they’re regular people like you and me and someday i hope, even my daughter.  each of us called and compelled to light the path for generations to come.   


i wanted to take the time to introduce a few others i interviewed while working on the article.  i found their stories each compelling and moving as each is fueled by a passion to change the world.

meet the nurse who puts people back together in the ER room yet makes them whole in the yoga room … the nyc lawyer who changed from a warrior ready for battle to a champion of the vulnerable and innocent … a scientist, bridging the gap between eastern and western medicine ... and the artist who uses her mat as a canvas to paint the life she dreams of.


            Susie Walby


 

 Anusara Artist

"Everybody is their own artist –

we get to decide how we create our world"

Susie Walby, an Anusara teacher in Bozeman, Montana, didn’t have to travel anywhere beyond her own living room to find yoga for the first time.

 “I was just 19 years old when my dad came home one Friday and announced to my mom and me that he had just met the most amazing yoga teacher - and we were all going to yoga on Monday.  Which we did - week after week.  My dad’s hilarious – he’s both an artist and a yogi – which, unsurprisingly, have become my thing too.”

Like her dad, Susie had an innate artistic flair – but, as a young girl, she was shy and didn’t always trust her talent.  Yoga helped her expand her creativity and allowed her to hone in on that intuitiveness that she says, we all have.

"Yoga teaches me to put myself out there.  It’s humbling and nerve racking at the same time but I’ve learned to trust my instinct, to take risks, and not to be afraid of doing my own thing - in my art and in my life.”

Today, Susie’s yoga studio also doubles as an art studio, with both her mat and her canvas taking up residence in the same intimate space. 



Christine Peterson

 


 Ashtanga Scientist

"Sun Salutations can heal anything."

 

After suffering from bouts of anxiety and seasonal depression, and determined not to fix it with a pill – Christine decided it was time to check out what this yoga stuff was all about. 
I didn’t understand all that they were chanting and doing in the beginning, the poses or the names of the poses.  But I knew after the first class - after waking from my first savasana – I felt better. 
I knew right away, there must be a science to yoga
And science is something Christine understands well.  She is now at the J. Craig Venter Institute studying the bacteria that live in the human gut. 

Christine is determined to bridge that gap between the eastern and western medicine in her work as a researcher, but also as a yoga instructor. 

Even my yoga classes focus a lot on core work, emphasizing a strong a vital intestinal tract. Because I’m convinced - all it takes is a few sun salutations each day to keep us all healthy.


Tandy Gustin

 Bikram Nurse

"Whatever I am doing or practicing – I make it what it is."

 

Tandy Gustin doesn’t consider herself a healer, but she does recognize that there are two places in her life where she has the capacity to heal. Though she admits, that more, true healing is happening in the yoga room than in the emergency room.

They come to the trauma unit, tortured and mangled.  My job becomes more damage control.  At least in yoga, you have this opportunity to heal people in a preventative way.

Like many, Tandy came to her yoga mat to cross train.  She remembers the first time she walked into the yoga room and sweated it out with a bunch of regular Joes like herself – not some elite group of super athletes with the “right” clothes on. 

After that first class, Tandy was hooked.  For Tandy, the yoga is now so much more than crosstraining and what you bring in contributes even more than anything else happening in the room:

We get stuck on particulars like it’s too hot, or not hot enough.  We get stuck on “this spot” or “this teacher”  – but boy, yoga sure doesn’t have anything to do with that.  All that just gets in the way.

Remember the practice is all what you make it … and if that isn’t just a parallel for life, I don’t know what is.

 


            ISAURO FERNANDEZ




Ki Power Yoga Lawyer

“Mi nino, yoga te salvo,”  My mom tells me.  

My child, yoga saved you.

 

A competitive fighter both on the mat and in the courtroom transforms into a completely different kind of warrior.  Meet Isauro Fernandez, a New York City lawyer - and accidental yogi.

Isauro started practicing Judo and Tai Kwan Do at the age of six – competing his whole life.  But in 2006, Isauro came home from the International World Championship in Vienna badly battered.  With his left shoulder dislocated (for the third time), he had to question how many more injuries his body could sustain. 

I walked into the bookstore and stared at the self-help section – and Baron Baptiste’s, Journey into Power, literally falls off the shelf.  I thought yoga was just for women – not real men like me.  But on the cover of this book was Baron in crow pose and I thought – I want to be able to do that.

Within that first flow, the first sun B, when Isauro went into the warrior, he felt something stir inside that he could not understand. 

Perhaps a new kind of warrior emerging.  Two months after that first class, Isauro found himself in a teacher training.  Like so many others, he had no intention of teaching – he just wanted to learn more.

The beauty of all this was I didn’t even know what was happening.  Yoga does that.  All I was doing was showing up and being open.

I was not looking for yoga – and I definitely wasn’t looking to teach.  But once I started practicing, and then teaching – I couldn’t stop.  I can’t stop.  I can’t wait to get up and teach and connect.  I always think, if there is just one person who needs to feel and to heal – I want to show up and keep showing up for them.  For the students.

Once upon a time, before Isauro started teaching yoga, he had an busy office with two secretaries.  These days, Isauro fits in his law practice around teaching his own unique style of yoga fused with martial arts – Ki Power Vinyasa.  And continues to learn in the company of his two greatest teachers – his children.

 

 

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