Having just passed the milestone thirty-year anniversary of
my long engagement with yoga, many reflections arise pertaining to the swift
passage of time and about the many invaluable gifts that yoga has given me
through several life stages, including adolescence, pregnancy, motherhood and
into middle age.
As my students share their passages with me, I am humbled by
the responsibility to teach this powerful process in ways that are
inspirational, authentic and personally meaningful. I feel especially blessed
to share the timeless tradition of yoga with students of all ages ranging from four to eighty-five
years! In a recent evening class, two teenagers, a twenty-something year old,
and men and women in their thirties, forties and fifties were learning
together. Regardless of age, gender, life stage, profession, physical
capability or intellectual prowess, Iyengar yoga is truly available to all. For
those who stay the course and practise with consistency, a wide range of benefits
are experienced.
My dharma
or path has included the incredible opportunity to share with thousands of
others for over twenty-five years something that has been so important to me.
The YogaBuds for Kids program is now in its seventeenth year; to help facilitate
a child’s maturation process from early childhood to adulthood is a privilege.
Helping to foster meaningful connections between parent and child teaching them
yoga together has been another gift in my teaching career. Guiding a teenager
towards developing greater self-acceptance; supporting a woman through
pregnancy; helping a very stiff man to eventually touch his toes; rejoicing in
someone’s first moments balancing in headstand, or sharing the pain of loss
with an elderly student… Ultimately, the gift that I have been given is sharing
the gift of yoga with others while developing meaningful relationships with
them.
Having just celebrated Thanksgiving, I am reminded that it
is how we use our blessings, not what we say about them that is the true measure
of our thanksgiving. Thus, it is through my commitment to continue to “pay it
forward” to my students – from all walks and of all ages – that I will express
my thanksgiving.
Best of
all is it to preserve everything in a pure, still heart, and let there be for
every pulse a thanksgiving, and for every breath a song. –Konrad von Gesn
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