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069. The Nuances of Accessibility in Yoga15 Dec 202200:34:47

In this final episode of the Accessible Yoga Podcast, Anjali and Jivana discuss: 

  • What does it mean to make yoga accessible?

  • The danger of oversimplifying a yoga practice

  • The importance of reflecting on who we see as “experts” in yoga

  • How caste still influences yoga today 

  •  The nuances of saying “I’m not the teacher for everyone”

  • Accessible Yoga Association’s newest podcast - For the Love of Yoga with Anjali Rao

068. Radical Honesty with Saira Rao02 Dec 202200:17:32

Saira (NOT Sara) Rao grew up in Richmond, Virginia, the daughter of Indian immigrants. For forty years, she wasted her precious time aspiring to be white and accepted by dominant white society, a futile task for anyone not born with white skin. Several years ago, Saira began the painful process of dismantling her own internalized oppression. Saira is a lawyer-by-training, a former congressional candidate, a published novelist and an entrepreneur. Saira is the co-founder of Race2Dinner, the New York Bestselling Co-Author of White Women: Everything You Already Know About Your Own Racism and How To Do Better and the subject and Executive Producer of the documentary Deconstructing Karen.

In this episode, Anjali and Saira discuss:

  • The role of radical honesty in challenging white supremacy
  • How performative activism upholds the status quo
  • How yoga practitioners can actively disrupt racism in yoga spaces
  • The impact of speaking truth to power

Connect with Saira on Twitter or on Instagram @race2dinner @sairasameerarao 

Purchase Saira's book: White Women Everything You Already Know About Your Own Racism and How to Do Better

Watch Saira's documentary: Deconstructing Karen

059. Sharing Power and Finding Individuality Within Community23 May 202200:52:17

In this episode, Amber and Jivana discuss:

  • How Accessible Yoga is often misused to make us fit in rather than to celebrate our differences and individuality
  • How ableism prevents folks from being seen in our classes
  • What’s missing in our contemporary yoga practice
  • How to make yoga classes more equitable
  • Ways to share power with your students
  • How to encourage students to find individuality in community
  • The importance of inner experience vs outer appearance
  • The intention behind trauma-informed teaching
  • Your difference is your superpower
  • Community as a proving ground for getting to know yourself
  • How to find a supportive community as a student
  • Details about the Accessible Yoga Community Celebration May 31st

 

058. Disrupting Anti-Blackness in Communities of Color with Cindu Thomas-George16 May 202200:34:40

Cindu Thomas-George is the Founder and Principal Trainer of Shakti Diversity and Equity Training. As a DEI practitioner, she designs and facilitates professional development experiences that promote equity, inclusion, anti-racism, and intercultural competence. As a nationally recognized speaker, Cindu’s speaking engagements are focused on encouraging cross-racial allyship, disrupting anti-Asian hate, moving beyond color-blindness to color consciousness, disrupting anti-Blackness in communities of color, and creating inclusion for women of color in the workplace. Cindu is also an award winning tenured professor of Communication Studies at the College of Lake County specializing in Intercultural Communication and Public Speaking. In her seventeen years of working as a diversity educator, she has developed a mastery of creating and facilitating impactful learning experiences that equip individuals with the knowledge and skills necessary to be advocates of diversity and agents of change who are empowered to work towards cultivating an inclusive, equitable, and anti-racist society. Her passion and commitment for this work extends beyond her professional life- Cindu actively volunteers and is a co-founder and Board member of Malayalees for Social Justice, co-founder of South Asian Solidarity. Movement, and sits on the advisory board of Orion3. Previously, she was a board member of YWCA Lake County where she helped direct the organization’s racial justice initiatives and programming.

In this episode, Anjali and Cindu discuss:

  • Diversity and heterogeneity in Asian communities
  • Solidarity with Black folks as people of color
  • White adjacency and how to disrupt the model minority myth
  • Relevance and recommendations to start grassroot level social change in the communities of influence.

Connect with Cindu on her website or on Instagram @shaktidiversityandequity

057. Trauma & Yoga with Nityda Gessel30 Apr 202200:47:04

Content warning: disordered eating, sexual trauma

Nityda Gessel (she/her), LCSW, E-RYT, is a mother, licensed somatic psychotherapist, trauma specialist, yoga educator, speaker, author, and heart-centered activist, residing on the unceded land of the Chesepian people, commonly known as Virginia Beach, VA. Nityda has devoted her life to uplifting others, working at the intersection of Eastern spirituality, holistic mental health, and embodied activism. She is the founder of the Trauma-Conscious Yoga Institute, creator of The Trauma-Conscious Yoga Method®, and author of forthcoming Norton book on trauma healing and embodied spirituality.

In this episode, Jivana and Nityda discuss:

  • Her background as a ballet dancer
  • Trauma from being in the dance world
  • How she experienced sexual trauma and started yoga to heal
  • How she integrates yoga as a therapist
  • What she teaches yoga teachers about trauma and their scope of practice
  • People pleasing
  • Yoga as a pathway to liberation
  • Abuse in yoga, and we often are taught to teach in an authoritative way
  • Benefits of trauma conscious yoga
  • Yoga as a spiritual practice - but we lose connection. Trauma healing is also about remembering our truth
  • Systemic trauma intersecting with acute trauma
  • Neuro-biological trauma healing through yoga
  • How do we teach in a trauma conscious way
  • Doing your own work first
  • Not being performative. What do the people in front of you need right now?
     

Connect with Nityda on her website and on Instagram @trauma_conscious_yoga_method

Accessible Yoga School’s Trauma & Yoga Series

056. Yoga Teaching as a Practice19 Apr 202200:57:00

In episode 56, Jivana and Amber discuss practical ways we can embody the yoga teachings’ concepts in the way that we teach. They explore three themes from the yoga teachings (atman, non-attachment, and brahmacharya) and discuss how we can shift our teaching methodology to model these concepts for our students, making them more relevant to their real lives.

In this episode...

  • Amber & Jivana discuss the concept of atman and how we can do more to recognize each students inherent wholeness
  • We are not here to fix or change our students
  • How to create agency in students and encourage them to listen to themselves
  • Using interoception and self-sensing tools to encourage students’ internal guidance
  • How the concept of non-attachment can help us be of service in a more clear way
  • Checking our ego around students doing something different than what we cue
  • Not being attached to students’ health outcomes or practice improvements
  • Recognizing individual students own their practice
  • Shifts in language that help students choose what is best for themselves
  • How to apply brahmacharya to our teaching practice
  • Setting appropriate boundaries with students
  • Scope of practice and ethics in teaching
  • Staying in right relationship with our students
  • Creating a personal code of ethics and scope of practice
055. Collaborating with Neurodivergent & Disabled Folks in Yoga Communities with Laura Sharkey29 Mar 202201:01:21

In episode 55, Amber interviews Laura Sharkey, an autistic meditation teacher and social justice activist. They speak about their experience of ableism and other forms of oppression that are present in many yoga communities, as well as practical tools that non-disabled folks can use to confront bias. We discuss the importance of seeing our disabled community members as whole, capable human beings with agency and choice, and how we can support them in non-ableist ways. We talk about the difficult emotions that arise when we confront unconscious bias and how yoga can support us in building more resilience for difficult conversations or work. Finally, Laura shares some tips on how yoga teachers can make “quiet and still” practices more accessible to neurodiverse students. 

 In this episode:
  • Laura introduces themself and talks about how yoga helped them feel at home in their body for the first time in their 40s
  • We discuss ableism, anti-fat bias, and other forms of oppression present in yoga communities, and how Laura brings a yogic framework to their social justice activism
  • Laura counters the dangerous assumption that someone’s spiritual awareness or dedication to practice can be gauged by how they look or how “healthy” they are, or that yoga can “heal” or “fix” anyone
  • They discuss “cure culture” and the medical model vs social model of disability
  • Laura shares tips on how we can approach and support disabled students in equitable, non-ableist ways
  • We discuss building resilience for the uncomfortable work of confronting bias and how we can better learn to be in relationship to disabled people
  • Laura shares tips for teachers to make quiet and still” practices more accessible to Neurodiverse people, and talks about why “fidgeting” isn’t necessarily a bad thing
  • Finally, they share ways that yoga teachers can help students to experience downregulation even if it doesn’t look “typical”
Resources:
054. The Yoga Sutras with Nischala Joy Devi15 Mar 202200:44:20

NISCHALA JOY DEVI is a masterful teacher and healer. For many years she has been highly respected as an international advocate for her innovative way of expressing Yoga and its subtle uses for spiritual growth and complete healing. Her dynamic delivery and deep inner conviction empower each individual, allowing the teachings to expand beyond boundaries and limitations of any one tradition enabling her to touch people’s hearts. 

She was graced to spend over 25 years as a monastic disciple with the world-renowned Yogiraj Sri Swami Satchidanandaji, receiving his direct guidance and teachings. She also was blessed with teachings from great Yoga masters in US, India and worldwide.

Originally trained in Western medicine, she began to blend western medicine with Yoga, offered her expertise in developing the yoga portion of The Dean Ornish Program for Reversing Heart Disease, and co-founded the award-winning Commonweal Cancer Help Program. Her book The Healing Path of Yoga,” and her Abundant WellBeing Audio Series expresses these teachings. 

With her knowledge of yoga and her experience in assisting those with life-threatening diseases (particularly people with heart disease and cancer), she created Yoga of the Heart®, a training and certification program for Yoga teachers and health professionals designed to adapt Yoga practices to the special needs of that population.

She is now dedicated to bringing the Feminine back into spirituality and the scriptures,
in her book, The Secret Power of Yoga, a woman’s guide to the heart and spirit of the Yoga Sutras and Secret Power of Yoga Audiobook Nautilus Book Silver Award Winner! Understanding the need for more love and compassion in today’s world, The Namaste Effect: Expressing Universal Love through the Chakras, her most recent book, explores a heart-centered way of living through the mystical chakras.

In this episode:

  • Jivana talks about Nischala being one of his first teachers
  • Nischala created the yoga portion of the Dean Ornish Heart Disease Reversal Program, which was the first to integrate yoga in the west. 
  • Nischala’s four books:
  • Nischala discussed founding the IAYT - International Association of Yoga Therapists
  • Her revised edition of The Secret Power of Yoga - a translation of the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali
  • She recently translated the 3rd and 4th Pada (chapters) which are usually not studied because they’re very esoteric
  • She discussed Pada 3, which focused on siddhis (powers)
  • The fourth chapter is the Kaivalya Pada, which is the chapter on Isolation
  • She discusses her work in yoga therapy for people with heart disease and cancer
053. Yoga Revolution Replay with Octavia Raheem08 Mar 202200:38:50

This episode is a replay of a conversation between Jivana Heyman and Octavia Raheem on Jivana's podcast, Yoga Revolution.

This week’s guest, Octavia Raheem, teaches us to slow down, prioritize rest, and honor our varied human experiences. Octavia is a mother, author of "Gather," yoga teacher, and founder of Starshine & Clay Online Yoga and Meditation Studio for Black Women and Women of Color. A deep listener and truth teller, Octavia is a gatherer and space holder for rest and awakening. As a teacher and leader she has the skill of hearing beneath the surface for what isn’t being said, yet needs to. Octavia has more than 15 years of experience and nearly 10,000 hours of leading classes, immersions, and trainings. She guides us toward resonance and connection even when the truths we witness, hear, and encounter vary from our own. Her conversation with Jivana touches on how these truths arise in today’s world, as well as what it means to practice activism as a form of yoga, the importance of mindful space holding and compassionate language, and how simply being is perhaps the most important practice of all.  

Order Octavia's new book "Pause, Rest, Be"

Learn more about Octavia.

Follow Octavia's inspirational Instagram. 

052. Yoga & Self-Care for Women of Color with Maya Breuer28 Feb 202200:39:23

In episode 52, Amber interviews Maya Breuer, yoga teacher, community activist, and Yoga Alliance’s Vice President of Cross-Cultural Advancement. She shares about the work Yoga Alliance is doing for teachers working in marginalized communities as well as her important projects like the Yoga Retreat For Women of Color, Black Yoga Teachers Alliance, and more. Maya talks about the importance of self-care for Black women and how the yoga practice has kept her grounded during challenging times.

In this episode...

  • Maya introduces herself and talks about the work she does with Yoga Alliance as Vice President of Cross-Cultural Advancement
  • Maya shares about Yoga Alliance Foundation’s Teaching for Equity program which offers stipends for yoga teachers working in marginalized communities
  • She talks about the origins of the Yoga Retreat for Women of Color, which has been held since 1999 at Kripalu, as well as what you can expect if you come to the retreat
  • Maya tells her yoga origin story from the 1970s and how rediscovering yoga in the 1980s helped her heal herself and find peace
  • Maya talks about her teachers and how she came to study to become a yoga teacher, followed by how the Black Yoga Teachers Alliance came to be
  • Maya discusses the importance of self-care for Black women as well as how the pandemic has been for her and her practice
  • Maya shares her go-to breathing practice for grounding herself as well as some things that are lighting her up these days

Resources:

051. Navigating Grief & Loss15 Feb 202201:03:24

Content warning: this episode contains discussion of death and grief.

In episode 51, Amber and Jivana talk about how they are each navigating grief and loss in their personal and professional lives. We’ll discuss tools that help us from humor to therapy to our yoga practice. We talk about how concepts from yoga philosophy have helped us reduce suffering and embrace the nature of life as it really is. Amber leads us in a simple movement practice that can be done from a chair. And finally, Jivana reads a short excerpt on grief from his book Yoga Revolution, then leads us in a meditation. 

In this episode...

  • Amber & Jivana check in and catch up
  • We highlight some of the Accessible Yoga programming for the month of February
  • We share some of our favorite resources for navigating grief and caring for our hearts and minds
  • Amber shares how humor helps her cope with grief and loss
  • Jivana reminds us not to judge our “trauma responses” as inherently negative, since sometimes they’re survival tools
  • We discuss how sometimes patterns that have served us when we were younger aren’t needed anymore and how therapy has helped each of them
  • We talk about how picking the right folks for your support system can make a big difference
  • We discuss how the yoga practice helps us stay grounded through grief and loss, and actually embrace life as it is
  • Amber leads a short movement practice that can be done in a chair
  • Jivana reads an excerpt from his book Yoga Revolution and leads us in a short meditation 

Resources:

050. Pranayama & COVID-19 with Robin Rothenberg05 Feb 202200:48:39

The information on this Podcast does not constitute medical or other professional advice and should not be used as a substitute for the medical care and advice of your physician, psychotherapist, or other health care provider.  Please note, the views, information, or opinions expressed during this program are solely those of the individuals involved and do not necessarily represent those of the Accessible Yoga Association, its Board of Directors, and its employees.

Robin Rothenberg, C-IAYT is a long time yoga therapist and yoga researcher. She serves as Chair of the Accreditation Committee for the International Association of Yoga Therapists (IAYT) as well as the Advisory Council. She has presented on lower back pain at SYTAR (Symposium for Yoga Therapy and Research) and is considered one of the foremost experts in the area of yoga therapy for lower back pain. Her ability to speak articulately to the way in which yoga impacts the nervous system, mind and emotions has led to her presenting at both NAMA (National Ayurvedic & Medical Association) and SYTAR on the subjects of anxiety and stress.

For the past three years, Robin has immersed herself in a personal study of the breath, of the ancient teachings on pranayama, and the science of respiratory physiology. The result of this inquiry has her calling for a “Breath Revolution” in the yoga community. Her new book, released in 2020, Restoring Prana: A Guide to Pranayama and Healing Through the Breath, suggests a serious re-evulation of the ‘big breathing’ habit, and a scientifically supported return to the roots of yoga which teach us to retain prana, by minimizing breath while increasing breath suspensions. She is currently researching yoga for long COVID. 

In this episode they discuss:

  • Robin’s interest in prana and pranayama 
  • Common misconceptions and mistakes that yoga teachers make in the area of teaching and practicing pranayama 
  • Importance of CO2 levels in the body
  • Breathing through the nose
  • Keeping the breath slow and close to the body
  • She leads Jivana through a short pranayama practice

Connect with Robin on her website: Essential Yoga Therapy

Robin's books: 

Restoring Prana: A Guide to Pranayama and Healing Through the Breath 

The Svadhyaya Breath Journal

067. Practice Isn’t Meant to “Fix”, It’s Meant to Heal07 Nov 202201:02:50

Teo Drake is an organizer, a teacher, and an artisan who works in wood and steel.

As a queer and trans long-term HIV/AIDS survivor, the practices and philosophies of yoga and Buddhism have been both life-saving and provided the foundation for his organizing and teaching.

He is a co-founder of the Transforming Hearts Collective, a collective dedicated to the spiritual care and liberation of queer and trans people, and has served in leadership in several different organizations in the worlds of HIV/AIDS, LGBTQ advocacy, faith and spirituality, well-being, and anti-oppression, including being a founding member of the Transgender Law Center’s project Positively Trans and serving on the faculty and board of Off the Mat, Into the World.

His writing can be found in the anthology Yoga and Body Image and at the blog Roots Grow the Tree, and his artisan crafts can be found at The Tinkering Gnome

Connect with Teo: www.transformingheartscollective.org | @TeoDrake

This week's episode is a recording of Teo Drake's keynote at the Accessible Yoga Conference Online: Practice Isn’t Meant to “Fix”, It’s Meant to Heal

049. Reflections on COVID and Collective Care19 Jan 202200:48:55

In episode 49,  Amber and Jivana reflect on how constantly changing circumstances surrounding COVID are shaping their personal and professional lives. We’ll discuss how we are each navigating the burnout and hopelessness that many of us are feeling, as well as ways we are responding. We discuss strengthening community bonds, practical tools for navigating anxiety and uncertainty, and Jivana leads us in a simple breath awareness meditation that can be done while wearing a mask. 

In this episode:

  • Amber & Jivana check in and catch up
  • We discuss the parallels Jivana is noticing between the government’s response to the current pandemic and the AIDS epidemic 
  • We explore our current thoughts around individual responsibility and collective care, including how we are interpreting the yoga teachings in this moment
  • We discuss how ableism is continuing to show up in the pandemic and how that connects to yoga
  • How we are navigating constantly changing circumstances with our work
  • How we are coping with our own anxiety in this moment
  • How mask wearing brings awareness to breath
  • Jivana leads us in a short breath awareness meditation that you can do while wearing a mask

 

Resources:

Quotes from this episode:

  • Desmond Tutu “If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor.”
  • “I am often struck by the dangerous narcissism fostered by spiritual rhetoric that pays so much attention to individual self-improvement and so little to the practice of love within the context of community.” - bell hooks
  • Elie Wiesel,”We must always take sides. Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented.”

Links

048. Queer Dharma with Jacoby Ballard04 Jan 202200:40:52

Jacoby Ballard is a social justice educator and yoga teacher in Salt Lake City, Utah known for his playfulness, heart-opening, and commitment to change from the inside out. As a yoga teacher with 20 years of experience, he leads workshops, retreats, teacher trainings, teaches at conferences, and runs the Resonance mentorship program for certified yoga teachers to find their niche and calling. In 2008, Jacoby co-founded Third Root Community Health Center in Brooklyn, to work at the nexus of healing and social justice. Since 2006, Jacoby has taught Queer and Trans Yoga, a space for queer folks to unfurl and cultivate resilience. Jacoby received Yoga Journal’s Game Changer Award in 2014 and Good Karma Award in 2016. Jacoby has taught in schools, hospitals, non profit and business offices, a maximum security prison, a recovery center, a cancer center, LGBT centers, gyms, a veteran’s center, and yoga studios. He leads workshops and trainings around the country on diversity, equity, and inclusion and consults on DEI for yoga and meditation organizations. He is the author of A Queer Dharma: Yoga and Meditations for Liberation, released in 2021. 

In this episode, Jivana and Jacoby discuss:

 

  • What do queer spaces look like in yoga and spirituality?
  • How did Jaocby find his voice in writing this book?
  • What is the role of anger in spiritual practice?
  • How can you release the energy of anger safely?
  • What is the relationship between yoga/dharma and social justice?
  • How do you find equanimity while still fighting for change?
  • How does he feel about having his book out in the world?

 

 

047. Actionable Love with Michelle C. Johnson28 Dec 202100:48:56

Michelle C. Johnson is an author, yoga teacher, social justice activist, licensed clinical social worker and Dismantling Racism trainer. She approaches her life and work from a place of empowerment, embodiment, and integration. With a deep understanding of trauma and the impact that it has on the mind, body, spirit and heart, much of her work focuses on helping people better understand how power and privilege operate in their life. She explores how privilege, power and oppression affects the physical, emotional, mental, spiritual and energy body.

In episode 47, Jivana and Michelle discuss:

  • The 2nd edition of Skill in Action: Radicalizing Your Yoga Practice to Create a Just World
  • The Bhagavad Gita
  • Bringing real world experience into yoga spaces
  • The connection between social justice and yoga
  • Dharma
  • Staying inspired in social justice work
  • Actionable Love
  • Karma Yoga
  • How to take your yoga off the mat
  • Shared humanity
  • How the 2nd edition of Skill in Action offers guidance and tools for what’s happening now
  • Michelle’s next book about healing in community
046. Integrating Yoga Philosophy in Pain Care with Marlysa Sullivan14 Dec 202100:43:45

Marlysa Sullivan is a physiotherapist and yoga therapist with over 15 years of experience working with people suffering with chronic pain conditions. She is the physical therapy coordinator of the empower veterans program which provides an integrative model in working with people with chronic pain at the Veterans Administration. She is an Assistant Professor in Yoga Therapy and Integrative Health Sciences at Maryland University of Integrative Health and holds an adjunct position at Emory University, where she teaches the integration of yoga and mindfulness into physical therapy practice in the DPT program. She is also the author of Understanding Yoga Therapy: Applied Philosophy and Science for Well-being and co-editor of Yoga and Science in Pain Care: Treating the Person in Pain as well as several peer-reviewed articles.

Marlysa has been involved in the professionalization of the field of yoga therapy through the educational standards committee of IAYT, which helped to define the competencies for the field, and in characterizing the yoga therapy workforce through research. Her research interests focus on defining the framework and explanatory model for yoga therapy based on philosophical and neurophysiological perspectives.

In episode 46, Jivana and Marlysa discuss:

  • Marlysa’s book and the way she connects yoga therapy to traditional yoga philosophy concepts
  • Yoga therapy’s evolution in the West
  • Cultural appropriation vs. making the teachings accessible
  • Her research on Polyvagal Theory and the connection to the yoga concept of the gunas
  • Her work with people with chronic pain at the VA (Veteran’s Administration)
  • How to teach yoga to people with chronic pain
  • Focus on agency and empowerment

Connect with Marlysa on her website and purchase her book: Understanding Yoga Therapy: Applied Philosophy and Science for Health and Well-Being.

Yoga Therapy and Polyvagal Theory: The Convergence of Traditional Wisdom and Contemporary Neuroscience for Self-Regulation and Resilience

Jeremy Engles, The Ethics of Oneness: Emerson, Whitman and the Bhagavad Gita



045. Tips for Keeping Students Safer in Yoga Class07 Dec 202100:49:06

In episode 45, Amber and Jivana share tips for keeping students safer in yoga classes. In this episode we’ll explore how the methods we use to teach can contribute to an environment of safety for our community. Amber and Jivana will discuss practical tools they use to help students tap into their personal power and listen to their bodies, rather than striving or competing to keep up with the rest of the class. We’ll talk about strategies for empowering students, how to bring in yoga philosophy and subtle practices to help students connect with their bodies, and we’ll give specific examples of language we use to create a culture of permission and agency for our students. 

In Episode 45:

  • Amber & Jivana discuss their recent injuries and how they are relating to them
  • Resource: Ann Swanson, Science of Yoga book
  • Research on how props don’t automatically make students safer (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6664709/)
  • The way we create the container for a class can help keep students safer
  • We should teach our students what yoga really is (not just advanced asana) 
  • Honoring the wholeness of the yoga practice in our teaching helps people feel included, creates a sense of belonging, avoids cultural appropriation, and more
  • Giving our students agency and personal power helps them find the appropriate place for their practice, rather than encouraging striving or conforming
  • Resource: On agency and personal power - M. Camellia
  • Explicit ways to create safety in class, including what we say out loud, establishing general guidelines & classroom norms
  • How you perceive your role as a teacher, and how to speak on that to redistribute power
  • Examples of specific language cues we can use to create safety and turn students’ attention inward
  • Resource: On language and “verbalize to normalize” - Dianne Bondy
  • What to do when students have conflicting needs
  • Implicit ways of teaching the concept of agency and personal safety include valuing students who practice in a different way
  • Teaching ahimsa and other concepts from yoga philosophy to reinforce this concept
  • Teaching subtle practices, getting the mind involved takes the focus away from physical prowess
  • Learning to listen to the body and cultivate the skill of interoception goes toward giving the student more agency as they understand what’s happening in their bodies
  • How telling students to “stop when you feel pain” is limited when it comes to students with chronic pain or nervous system conditions 
  • Teaching this way is not just about making practices more physically gentle, it’s about getting to a more subtle level of experience by energetically working with the breath
  • Resource: Matthew Sanford's DVD - Beyond Disability
  • We review some techniques we use to help students recognize their “edge” or work with body sensations to find the edge
  • Why identifying and working with our brain’s negative self-talk loop is important to keeping our students’ focus in the most helpful place
  • How encouraging students to observe their thoughts and embody the witness allows for individual experiences


This episode's supporting organization is Garden of Yoga. Learn more about becoming an Accessible Yoga Ambassador at the individual level or as a supporting organization at accessibleyoga.org/ambassador-program

044. Yoga Revolution30 Nov 202100:40:09

In episode 42, Amber Karnes interviews Jivana Heyman about his upcoming book, Yoga Revolution: Building a Practice of Courage and Compassion. We discuss what a “yoga revolution” means, the relationship between yoga and social justice, the role of self-care in our work, and much more. This interview invites us to take a look at the “why” behind our personal yoga practice and consider possibilities for expanding how we use our yoga in the world on and off the mat.

*Note: Yoga Revolution's publishing date has been pushed back to December 7, 2021.

In Episode 42:

  • Why Jivana chose “Yoga Revolution” for the title of his book and what he means by a yoga revolution
  • What does it mean to build a practice of courage and compassion?
  • What is the relationship between yoga and social justice? 
  • How your inner practice affects your actions in the world (activism) and helps us see humanity and honor wholeness
  • The different traditions in yoga on and off the map and a renewed look at the tradition of yoga as a path of service 
  • How Jivana took inspiration from the Black Lives Matter movement to fuel his current activism
  • What it means to have a “rainbow mind” or a Queer approach to yoga
  • The role of self care in our service / justice work
  • A question we are sitting with this week: What is the goal or focus of your personal practice (enlightenment, less stress, strength & flexibility, physical healing)? How does that show up in your life?

Links from the episode:

043. Yoga in Prison with Bill Brown22 Nov 202100:43:12

In episode 43, Jivana interviews Bill Brown from Prison Yoga Project. 

In this episode, Jivana and Bill discuss:

  • Bill’s background and personal interests
  • How Bill started his yoga practice
  • How Bill ended up volunteering teaching in prison
  • Childhood trauma
  • How trauma is stored in the body
  • What teaching in prison is like
  • Society failing to care for people
  • COVID disrupting Prison Yoga Project’s work
  • The business back end for people who want to teach yoga in prisons
  • Yoga as shamanistic soul retrieval and relationship building
  • Accessible Yoga Training
  • Prison and disenfranchised people
  • Bill’s experience facilitating classes
  • Supporting students with grounding and emotional release
  • Subtlety in yoga practice
  • Hierarchy and empowerment
  • Neuroscience perspective
  • Letting go of fear and moving into love and connection



042. Yoga is Political: Let's Discuss...31 Oct 202100:52:25

In episode 42, we're sharing a recording of Reggie Hubbard's powerful closing keynote from this year's Accessible Yoga Conference online.

There are some within the yoga community that think politics and yoga should not mix. That the purpose of yoga is to escape from the pressures of the outside world and find inner peace.

But yoga at its essence is the refinement of conscious awareness to meet life circumstances with more clarity, courage and compassion. To find inner peace and then engage with the world more fully - serving from that sense of peace.

This talk will explore how to merge yogic practice and civic engagement, as well as why it is important to do so. Reggie will share from his personal experience and teaching practice how yogic practice and civic engagement have become inextricably bound, and how we might better serve our communities, students and society through forming such a union.

Connect with Reggie:

041. Community and Collaboration11 Oct 202100:44:02

In episode 41, Amber and Jivana discuss community building and collaboration. As we gear up for the upcoming Accessible Yoga Conference, community is on our mind. In this episode we’ll talk a little bit about our history with community building including Amber’s time in the hardcore punk scene and Jivana’s AIDS activism. We talk about the “how” of collaboration, things to think about when joining a community, and discuss the benefits and challenges of being in community with others. We’ll also talk about why it’s crucial for community builders to unlearn cultural conditioning and examine unconscious bias. 

In Episode 41:

  • Amber and Jivana each share about their history with community building, including Amber’s time in the hardcore punk scene and Jivana’s AIDS activism 
  • Jivana talks about how the Accessible Yoga Conference was born
  • What “Jivana’s homework” is and why everyone should do it, even if you’re not at the conference
  • The “how” of collaboration - how to reach out or make a request to someone you’d like to collaborate with
  • Why community is about contribution and mutual support and what questions to ask yourself when you’re trying to fit in
  • Using discernment when joining a community 
  • Challenges of being within community community - normalizing abuse or unhealthy dynamics, requires perspective, discernment, and information gathering
  • How Jivana got started building community with yoga and what keeps students coming back
  • What the Accessible Yoga Ambassador program is and how you can get involved
  • Looking at our unconscious bias as community builders and showing up as an ally in community space
  • How mistakes are actually an opportunity for growth

Links: Cheri Clampett’s Therapeutic Yoga Training

040. We’re Back: What We’ve Been Up To & Where We’re Going01 Oct 202100:35:52

In episode 40, we’re back! Amber and Jivana catch up about what they’ve been doing while the podcast has been on break and update you with all the latest of what’s to come. We’ll discuss what Accessible Yoga Association is up to, plus give you a sneak preview of the upcoming Accessible Yoga Conference Online. 

In this episode...

  • Amber & Jivana check in and catch up about the time we’ve been away
  • We discuss some changes to the podcast: it is now part of Accessible Yoga Association’s monthly programming
  • Topic of the podcast correlates to our theme in our monthly programming, for September the theme is Cultural Appropriation in Yoga, October is Conference, November is Yoga in Prisons, December is Yoga for Pain Care. 
  • What the nonprofit has been up to, plus a big thank you to our board and staff
  • All about our Ambassador program, plus a chance to be featured on the podcast
  • We are planning to release episodes twice a month, subscribe wherever you get your podcast
  • Jivana shares about the upcoming Accessible Yoga Conference
  • We’ll hear from some of our Ambassadors about their Conference experiences or aspirations
066. The Audacity of Hope for Yoga11 Oct 202200:47:37

Tejal Patel is a first-generation Indian American yoga teacher, writer, podcaster, and community organizer.

She advocates for yoga through a social justice lens and educates and empowers individuals and groups around the world to do the same.

She accomplishes this with the Tejal Yoga online studio, the abcdyogi global community, and the Yoga is Dead Podcast.

In this live episode, Jivana and Tejal discuss:

  • The Yoga is Dead podcast
  • How to go from having a concern or awareness and turning it into action
  • The importance of service in yoga
  • Taking yoga off your mat
  • Yoga and politics
  • Tejal's opening Accessible Yoga Conference keynote - "The Audacity of Hope for Yoga"

Connect with Tejal: @tejalyoga

Enjoy one free class at Tejal Yoga, now through Dec 31, 2022 Use code: 100PP-AYCTY at tejalyoga.com

Tejal Yoga offers accessible movement and continuing education in a warm online environment. Our knowledgeable South Asian instructors are committed to the authentic and spiritual practice of yoga. Join us for any of these community-focused practices: Meditation: All Beings, Meditation: BIPOC Centered Pranayama & Breath Control Pranayama & Breath Slow Poses & Philosophy, Meditation: On Philosophy, Meditation & Sun Salutations, Restorative Poses & Poetry Readings, Science & Spirituality Satsang, Go Beyond The Asanas

Learn more at tejalyoga.com

 

039. The Connection Between Yoga & Activism15 Jun 202100:35:31

In Episode 39 of the Accessible Yoga Podcast, Amber Karnes sits down with Anjali Rao to discuss the connection between yoga and activism. Anjali Rao is a yoga teacher, social justice activist, multi-cultural training specialist, and a cancer survivor. She is an Indian American immigrant from Bangalore, India. Her work explores yoga philosophy and history integrating marginalized voices using storytelling, imagery and poetry. In this interview, Amber and Anjali discuss the history of activism in yoga, including how yoga philosophy and social justice are connected. For folks who are hesitant to step into the space of activism or call themselves an activist, this interview is for you. Anjali addresses the role of the activist and discusses how we can build capacity for resilience using our practice. Finally, she discusses her new course with the Accessible Yoga Training School, Yoga & Activism: A Blueprint for Collective Transformation, which is open for enrollment now!

In this episode:

  • Anjali introduces herself and talks about her work in the world
  • How are yoga and activism connected historically? What is the lineage of yoga and activism?
  • Yoga Is a container of practices, thoughts, concepts which can build capacity & resilience for activism
  • Yoga helps us be aligned with our deepest dharma
  • Yoga is about expansion of consciousness: what are you using your expanded consciousness to accomplish?
  • How your social location is connected to your dharma
  • Who is an activist? What “counts” as activism?
  • How perfectionism and black-and-white thinking hold us back
  • Rituals and practices that can anchor us in our purpose
  • The importance of community for activists
  • Anjali’s course, Yoga & Activism: A Blueprint for Collective Transformation, which is open for enrollment through June 19
  • A call to action for all of us

Show notes and links can be found at accessibleyogatraining.com.

038. Addressing Transphobia and Creating Affirming Spaces14 Apr 202101:09:34

In Episode 38 Amber Karnes sits down with Tristan Katz and Maygen Nicholson to address a few common transphobic talking points and discuss how we can support our trans and gender expansive community members. Tristan and Maygen are both educators who focus on LGBTQ+ awareness, advocacy, and wellness at the center of their work. In this interview, Tristan and Maygen discuss gender identity, why we should all be invested in dismantling the gender binary, and why representation matters. They debunk many commonly held, harmful narratives about trans and gender non-conforming folks, and talk about action steps for learning and beyond. This conversation invites us to take a deeper dive into understanding gender identity and creating affirming space for our trans siblings.

Note: This conversation was recorded in response to the March 22nd J. Brown yoga podcast interview with Katchie Ananda on the topic of “Gender Spectrum and Biological Sex.” Both J. and Katchie are cisgender individuals. The conversation they shared was rooted in biological exceptionalism, trans* exclusionary feminism, transphobia, homophobia, racism, and tokenization. We found it deeply hurtful and problematic and felt the need to address it publicly to stand in solidarity with our trans* and non-binary siblings.

Get show notes, links to everything we discuss in the podcast, and subscribe here.

037. Transcending Trauma with Yoga07 Apr 202100:54:43

In Episode 37 of the Accessible Yoga Podcast, Jivana Heyman sits down with Zabie Yamasaki, M.Ed., RYT. Zabie is the director of Trauma Informed Programs at UCLA and is the Founder of Transcending Sexual Trauma through Yoga. Zabie has trained thousands of yoga instructors and mental health professionals on trauma-informed teaching and her new book Trauma-Informed Yoga for Survivors of Sexual Assault which is coming out this year. Jivana and Zabie discuss trauma-sensitive teaching practices that benefit every student that comes to our classes. They also discuss the role of the teacher, power dynamics, and walking the line between authenticity and healthy boundaries. This conversation invites us to consider ways we can shift our community spaces to create more safety and opportunities for rest.

Get show notes, links to everything we discuss in the podcast, and subscribe here.

036. Making Yoga Philosophy Straightforward & Accessible31 Mar 202100:52:48

In Episode 36 of the Accessible Yoga Podcast, Jivana Heyman sits down with Daniel Simpson to talk about yoga philosophy and his new book The Truth of Yoga: A Comprehensive Guide to Yoga’s History, Texts, Philosophy, and Practices. Daniel is a former foreign correspondent who has gone on to study and teach yoga, meditation, yoga history, and yoga philosophy at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies, Triyoga, and beyond. Jivana and Daniel discuss many concepts and themes from yoga philosophy including the role of ethics in yoga and how our individual interpretation of the teachings influences how we “live” our yoga. This conversation invites us to consider how we use self-study and practice to either retreat from the world or become a more conscious citizen.

Get show notes, links to everything we discuss in the podcast, and subscribe here.

035. Creativity & Trusting Your Own Voice23 Mar 202100:53:28

In Episode 35 of the Accessible Yoga Podcast, Jivana Heyman sits down with Linda Sparrowe to talk about creativity and finding our voice. The former editor of Yoga International and Yoga Journal magazines, Linda has been teaching, talking and writing about yoga for more than 20 years. She has a long and varied career as a writer, editor, speaker, and mentor in the holistic healing arena, with a special emphasis on women’s health. Jivana and Linda talk about how personal practice can help us find our authentic voice and how they each get into the mood to be creative. This conversation invites us to consider how we use our voice and our yoga practice and how we can trust our authenticity to express what we truly wish to communicate to others.

For show notes and links, visit the Accessible Yoga Podcast page or episode 35 here.

034. Compassionate Leadership & Mentorship for Yoga Yeachers & Business Owners17 Mar 202100:49:59

In Episode 34 of the Accessible Yoga Podcast, Jivana Heyman welcomes Pamela Stokes Eggleston and Amina Naru to talk about compassionate leadership and mentorship for yoga teachers. Pamela and Amina are two yoga service leaders and the co-founders of Retreat To Spirit - a mentorship organization that helps yoga teachers realize their potential, build their businesses according to yogic principles, and learn how to support themselves with their practice on and off the mat. Pamela and Amina share how self-care and mentorship helped foster their yoga careers and talk about connecting to your “why.” Finally, they share details about their upcoming Retreat To Spirit Mentorship course here at the Accessible Yoga Training School, which opens for enrollment next week.

For show notes and links, visit the Accessible Yoga Podcast page or episode 34 here.

033. Moving Yoga Studios Online & Resilience Through Change09 Mar 202100:47:07

In Episode 33, Amber Karnes talks with Anjali Sunita. Anjali is a yoga teacher, writer, Ayurveda practitioner, and the business owner behind Baltimore Yoga Village. In 2021, Anjali completely pivoted the Baltimore Yoga Village business model from two brick and mortar yoga studios to an online wellness ecosystem that platforms individual instructors and practitioners. In this episode, Anjali and I talk about pivoting to an online model during a pandemic, what the new business model is, and how others might consider moving to a more collaborative way of working. We discuss how our mindset around co-creating and co-working within our communities can be supportive rather than competitive. We also explore topics like resilience, failure, and why “starting over” can be a good thing, if we let it.

For show notes and links, visit the Accessible Yoga Podcast page or episode 33 here.

032. From Guru To #MeToo02 Mar 202100:52:51

In Episode 32, Jivana Heyman sits down with Theo Wildcroft. Theo Wildcroft, PhD is a teacher, trainer, writer and scholar working for a more sustainable relationship between our many selves, the communities that hold us, and the world that nourishes us. Her research considers the democratization of yoga and the many different ways yoga communities are responding to concerns about safety in practice. In this episode, Jivana and Theo discuss post lineage yoga, the backlash against her work, and her new book, Post-lineage Yoga – From Guru to #MeToo

This week we explore:

  • A deeper understanding of post lineage yoga
  • How Theo decided to do the research and work she is doing
  • How Theo has navigated backlash for the work she is doing
  • How we can share power within our spaces and classes
  • The importance of empowering students from the beginning 
  • The importance of learning outside of formal structures
  • How Theo does her research
031. Q & A23 Feb 202100:48:02
Hey Episode 31: Q & A

In Episode 31, Amber Karnes and Jivana Heyman sit down to answer questions submitted by our listeners and community. In this episode, we will discuss how the practice can support mental health treatment in a responsible and ethical way, scope of practice, the importance of collaboration in our communities, as well as a question about exploring practice while experiencing vertigo. 

 

This week we explore:

  • How the practice can be used to support mental health treatment in a responsible and ethical way 
  • The importance of understanding scope of practice 
  • How important it is to build collaborative working networks in your community
  • The importance of having clear descriptions for our classes 
  • The importance of destigmatizing mental health support within the wellness and yoga communities 
  • The importance of giving power back to students in our class spaces
  • How to explore the practice during vertigo
030. Re-Imaging Our Work16 Feb 202101:00:19
Episode 30: Re-Imaging Our Work 

In Episode 30 Amber Karnes talks with Kelley Palmer. Kelley is a writer, creative, advocate, and yoga teacher who focuses on the service of making wellness spaces equitable, accessible, sustainable, and safe for Black, Indigenous and people of color. In this episode, Kelley and I talk about orienting ourselves toward race equity work in our current moment. We talk about what can happen when we use our imagination to creatively solve problems together, rather than getting stuck in guilt, inaction, or a sense of “it’s always been that way and is impossible to change.” We also talk about developing resilience for staying with the discomfort that conversations about race and equity can bring up. Finally, we chat about Kelley’s upcoming course, Race & Equity in Yoga, and let folks know what they can expect if they join.

This week hear more about:

  • How Kelley developed her upcoming course, Race & Equity: Disruption As A Practice 
  • How the demand for Kelley’s work has shifted in the last 12 months 
  • How Kelley is feeling about her work, the current moment and our ongoing responsibility
  • The importance of understanding the legacy of oppression that has benefited some and made it unsafe for some to exist
  • The importance of knowing we can feel more than one thing at a time
  • How the word unity is being co-opted in this moment
  • How we can reclaim our imagination when thinking about social justice action and solutions
  • How Kelley is shifting to honor what feels like the best use of her energy
  • What to expect in Kelley’s upcoming course, Race & Equity: Disruption As A Practice
065. Yoga & Cancer with Anusha Wijeyakumar30 Sep 202200:40:39

Anusha is the Wellness Consultant for Hoag Hospital, one of the top rated hospitals in the USA where she leads on integrative medicine and implementing mindfulness and meditation practices for maternal mental health programs, early risk assessment for breast & ovarian cancer prevention programs and breast cancer survivorship programs. Anusha is very passionate about her work in STEM and is one of the first people to create a meditation program to be used in clinical research at Hoag Hospital. Anusha is a sought after motivational speaker around the world on the science of mindfulness and meditation and the intersection of wellness and social justice. She has delivered keynotes for health and wellness conferences, Universities, Fortune 500 companies and corporate events across North America and the UK.

Anusha has over 15 years of international senior management experience working for Fortune 50, 100 and 500 global corporations, social justice non-profit organizations & private companies in three continents. She holds a BA, MA, Diploma in Mentoring, Certified Professional Life Coach qualification, Yoga Teacher E-RYT and is a Meditation Practitioner. Anusha is an Adjunct Professor at San Diego State University on the intersection of wellness and social justice, a Contributing Editor at Yoga Journal, the world’s largest Yoga magazine, a Faculty Member with Off The Mat and a community partner with the Yoga and Body Image Coalition. Anusha is also a Teacher and Presenter at Kripalu, North America’s largest Yoga Center and Retreat, Ambassador with Yoga International and an Ambassador with the Food + Wellness Equity Collective.

Women’s health and social justice is at the heart of all that Anusha is involved with. Anusha is on the Medical Advisory Board of the national non profit Living Beyond Breast Cancer and an Advisory Board Member with Yoga Ed, an organization focused on merging science and Yoga and introducing these practices to children and teens in educational settings around the world.

Anusha co-founded the movement Women of Color + Wellness @wocandwellness which is focused on decolonizing wellness and making yoga and wellness more equitable, accessible, and inclusive. Anusha’s first book Meditation with Intention: Quick & Easy Ways to Create Lasting Peace was released in January 2021 by Llewellyn Worldwide.

You can order your copy today HERE.

In this episode, Anjali and Anusha discuss:

  • Insight into Anusha’s path as a consultant for hospitals and institutes integrating research regarding meditation for cancer care and survivorship
  • Dimensions and role of collective care for those going through diagnosis and treatment
  • The importance of disrupting misinformation 
  • Dominant culture, politics, and health care at the intersections
  • How we can support loved ones, colleagues, and friends going through cancer treatment?



029. Yoga & Law Q&A10 Feb 202100:51:25

In this episode, Amber Karnes talks with Cory Sterling of Conscious Counsel. Cory is a yoga teacher, practitioner, author, and an attorney, and he’s here to answer all our legal questions! (Or most of them, probably.) As Cory will tell us in the podcast, law in 2021 means communicating your expectations openly and honestly with heart-leading documents written in plain language. In this episode, we’ll talk about things like waivers, intellectual property, insurance, teaching online, LLCs, and much more.



This week hear more about:

 

  • The importance of using legal documents to clearly and honestly communicate expectations within our yoga spaces
  • The importance of understanding your responsibility to students in your care
  • The importance of understanding “the duty of care” and “the standard of care”
  • The myth that waivers of liability do not protect teachers and studios
  • The difference in responsibility for in person and virtual classes
  • The difference between a waiver and a disclaimer for offering classes on different platforms
  • How to legally create boundaries for consent for touch, assists and adjustments 
  • How to ethically navigate legal issues, complaints and accusations of harm 
  • The importance of finding the right insurance for you
  • How different business structures offer different benefits and protections
  • The difference between being an employee vs. a contractor 
028. Power In Balance02 Feb 202101:05:20
Episode 28: Power In Balance

In Episode 28 Jivana Heyman sits down with Susanna Barkataki. Susanna supports yoga practitioners to lead with equity, diversity and yogic values while growing thriving practices and businesses with confidence. She is founder of Ignite Yoga and Wellness Institute and runs 200/500 Yoga Teacher Training programs. Jivana and Susanna have an in-depth conversation about the philosophy and history of the yoga and social justice movements of India. This conversation explores lessons and takeaways from the traditions, practices, and movements of yoga to bring social justice and advocacy to the forefront of our wellness spaces. 



This week hear more about:

 

  • How Susanna started piecing together her recently released book through, essays, articles, interviewing her family and community
  • How social justice and yoga have always been connected practices for Susanna
  • The importance of seeking social justice and activism as a part of yoga more and more 
  • How important service is in the tradition of yoga 
  • How non-violence and service led social justice movements in India’s fight for liberation
  • How Ghandi and others modeled service and social justice as major part of the traditions of this practice 
  • How Susanna learned about movements and service during her time living in India
  • How ancient texts, like the Yoga Sutras, gives us inspiration for social justice
027. Race & Equity26 Jan 202101:01:46

In Episode 27, Amber Karnes and Jivana Heyman sit down a few days after the attack on the US Capitol to dig into a personal conversation about race and the role they play in upholding white supremacy. They both share how the current events and political climate has impacted them and allowed them to do self study and tune into necessary self care. Amber and Jivana each talk about the importance of investigating how we are each upholding systems of oppression. This intimate conversation is an invitation to be mobilized towards action that supports a sustainable change. 



This week hear more about:

 

  • How the attack on the US Capitol impacted Jivana and Amber
  • How Amber centers care of self to ground and fortify
  • The importance of being intentional with our media consumption
  • The difference they noticed in how peaceful protesters have been treated at the US Capitol in contrast to what unfolded during the attack on the Capitol
  • How Jivana was arrested while protesting at the US Capitol in the 90s
  • Tools for grounding when anxiety, stress and sadness follow current events
  • How support for Q’Anon within yoga communities is harmful 
  • The importance for white people to have uncomfortable conversations about race and injustice
  • The importance of leaning out of guilt and centering action
  • The importance of supporting the folks and organizations already doing the work instead of trying to lead change
  • The importance of looking at your own daily life, community and practices to understand the power and privilege you might hold
026. It Is Time For a Reinterpretation19 Jan 202100:47:56

In Episode 26, Jivana Heyman sits down with Justin Micheal Williams, an author, transformational speaker, and top-20 recording artist who has become a pioneering voice for diversity and inclusion in wellness. Justin Michael immediately opens up and shares about navigating a tough upbringing, self doubt and following his dreams. Justin Michael also talks about meditation as a practice that frees us to feel all of our feelings and emotions. This conversation offers fresh perspectives about meditation and its place in our personal practices, wellness spaces and social justice movements. As a special treat Justin wraps this conversation by offering a guided meditation for us all to enjoy. 

 

This week hear more about:

 

  • How Justin’s upbringing and childhood create a pattern of overachieving
  • How a moment in his dorm room led him to stop looking for fulfillment and happiness outside of himself
  • How navigating the death of his grandmother opened him to following his dreams
  • How we can think about our purpose vs career
  • How perfectionism shows up harmfully in wellness spaces
  • How oppression shows up in wellness spaces
  • The importance of decolonizing our wellness practices
  • The importance of releasing certain misconceptions about meditation
  • The importance of developing practices that allow us to sit with all of our feelings and emotions
  • How meditation can support post traumatic growth
025. Real Stories from The Accessible Yoga Training Online12 Jan 202101:04:50

In Episode 25, Jivana Heyman sits down with four Accessible Yoga teachers to talk about the Accessible Yoga Training, how the training impacted their teaching, and how they are carrying the mission of Accessible Yoga into their work. Natasha Williams-Chaoua, Sarah Nuttridge, Marc Settembrino and Jacquie “Sunny" Barbee each share where they are located, about the work they do, the communities they serve and how taking this training transformed their perspectives of the practice. This conversation gives insight to the benefits of joining our Accessible Yoga Teacher Training as well as some possibilities you might sense for yourself if you further accessibility in your teaching practice. 



This week hear more about:

 

  • How the training shifted their perspectives as a yoga teachers and yoga students
  • How they each came to find the teachings of Accessible Yoga 
  • How to incorporate props into our teaching 
  • Tips for making your classes/offerings more accessible
  • How teaching Accessible Yoga has transformed and inspired them
  • Their collective hopes for more and more teachers to take the Accessible Yoga Training
024. Q & A05 Jan 202100:49:55

In Episode 24, Amber Karnes and Jivana Heyman sit down to answer questions submitted by our listeners and community. First, Jivana and Amber talk about the ways that we can offer accessible classes in the new virtual landscape while taking into consideration the impact of the pandemic on teaching yoga. Jivana shares a list of his favorite texts for studying yoga philosophy, and finally, Amber and Jivana give some tips on how to include philosophy and self-study in your classes. This conversation was an invitation for Amber and Jivana to answer questions from listeners and share some of their favorite learning resources. 




This week we explore:

 

  • How they each feel about the pandemic’s influence on the year and the pending vaccine
  • How to support students with an accessible yoga class in the virtual landscape
  • The importance of having grace and compassion for ourselves as teachers we learn to navigate the virtual teaching spaces
  • The importance of making sure your class descriptions provide clear indications of things like who will be served, the types of movement and what they can expect from the class
  • The importance of asking your students for feedback on the classes you offer as a learning tool
  • The importance of continuing our studies of yoga philosophy
  • How to build time into your class offerings for check ins, talking about the philosophy of this practice and cultivate a community learning space. 
023. Creating Solidarity & Building Community29 Dec 202000:48:56

In Episode 23 Amber Karnes sits down with Karin Carlson, yoga teacher, community advocate, and founder of Return Yoga. Through Return Yoga’s teacher training program and community outreach, Karin and other local teachers work in domestic violence shelters, jails, youth crisis centers, mental health contexts, and substance abuse treatment centers. Karin and Amber jump into a conversation about the ways white folks do harm when they rush to diversify their studios without actually understanding or investigating the problem. Karin shares quite candidly about her experience of charity versus solidarity and the ways it continues to cause harm in under-resourced communities. This conversation invites us all to consider how we build truly authentic communities, sustainable movements for change, and work in solidarity with communities outside of our own.



This week we explore:

 

  • How activism was ignited in her home city of Minneapolis and exposed harm from the local yoga community and a lack of awareness about the role white folks in those spaces should play in community care
  • How harm occurs when we rush to “fix” a problem in a community we are not apart of and do not fully understand the problem and our role to play in coming up with solutions
  • The importance of understanding the difference between solidarity and charity 
  • How the yoga community still focuses on the business of making money instead of equitable solutions and real shifts in culture
  • The importance of learning to sit with discomfort, grief and other strong feelings, especially for white people
  • How the attention once focused on social change have shifted and lost momentum as the pandemic continues
  • The importance of understanding how “whiteness” causes harm to BIPOC communities around this country 
  • How important it is to ask “How can I be of service?” and listen to the answer from the communities we wish to serve
  • How Karin went about creating a community to share this practice with through authenticity and honoring her lineage
  • How Karin developed her “Anti 200 Hour” program
  • How the pandemic is going to permanently shift how yoga and yoga teacher trainings are being offered
  • How Karin has been able to develop community connection in virtual spaces 
022. The Trans Yoga Project22 Dec 202000:49:38

The Trans Yoga Project is a collaborative effort supporting Trans* people's spiritual wellness through community (re)education, advocacy within the yoga and wellIn Episode 22 Jivana Heyman welcomes M Camellia and Puja Singh Titchkosky to learn more about the mission of the Trans Yoga Project.ness industries, community building, and creating guided practices by and for Trans* and non-binary people. M and Puja share deeply about how their collective began their work together and how the shared values of the groups have led to this new project. M and Puja talk about the subtle and overt ways that assumptions and language can make yoga spaces feel unwelcoming, unsafe, and inaccessible. This rich conversation invites us all to investigate how we may be creating harm and inaccessibility for Trans and Non-Binary folks and reminds us of the responsibility we each have to shift, learn and advocate.  

 

This week we explore:

  • How the Trans Yoga Project is cultivating spaces that allow Trans folks to thrive and find access to safe yoga and healing spaces
  • How collaboration created this new project and leads how they work together
  • How language can make yoga and wellness spaces harmful to Trans folks
  • How making assumptions about our students leads to misgendering and other harmful experiences
  • How the layers of assumptions, social conditioning and discrimination make yog and wellness spaces inaccessible 
  • The importance of developing a practice of using and respecting pronouns; yours, others and strangers
  • The importance of examining the unnecessary practice of gendering that happens in our yoga spaces (for ex. Bathrooms, changing rooms, pose cueing)
  • The importance of investigating and engaging gender in our own experience
  • How M leaned into investigating the stories of gender and got a grounded understanding of herself
  • The importance of understanding the expansiveness of gender as a step towards understanding and inclusivity 

This week’s question: 

How are you creating space for gender exploration?

021. Empowering Students Through Mentorship15 Dec 202000:47:22

In Episode 21 Amber Karnes welcomes Francesca Cervero, private yoga teacher and teacher’s mentor. Francesca gives insight into how she built her career and offerings as a teacher and mentor. Amber and Francesca discuss the ways we build trust, depth and understanding for ourselves and our students on the journey of self discovery using the tools of this practice. This conversation holds space for us to examine the ways teachers can empower and educate our students in group and private yoga and wellness spaces. 



This week we explore:

 

  • How Francesca grew her teaching practice and business
  • How Francesca started mentoring other teachers
  • How Francesa created her podcast 
  • How students and teachers can benefit from ongoing private sessions
  • How supporting students can expand our perspectives as teachers
  • How to build a supportive teaching practice to best serve your students
  • How to build a trusting bond with students
  • The importance of inquiry vs aesthetics in teaching physical posture 
  • How to re-imagine progress for ourselves and our students 
  • How to empower and educate students beyond the physical accomplishments often attached to this practice in current yoga culture. 
  • The importance of observing students during practice, instead of practicing alongside them 
  • How Francesca shifted to virtual teaching in response to COVID-19 and how it has impacted/shifted her offerings
020. How Chair Yoga Democratizes Asana Practice08 Dec 202001:04:24

In Episode 20 Amber Karnes and Jivana Heyman sit to talk about chair yoga and how it can be used as a tool to democratize asana practice. We begin with a conversation about how lineage and “guru culture” are shifting as abuse is being revealed. Jivana and Amber also talk about the way dominant culture conflates health and wellness as a basis for a human being’s worth and value. They each share about the ways that this belief keeps folks from understanding the potential of chair yoga and creates more ableism in our yoga spaces. The conversation also talks in depth about how chair yoga can be used to serve folks in diverse bodies who have different needs from the physical practice.

 

This week we explore:

 

  • How the end of “Guru culture” through the revealing of ongoing abuse is shifting yoga culture
  • How we continue to have a collective focus on extreme physical asana 
  • How Amber thinks about her learning lineage in yoga
  • How Jivana thinks about his Guru and lineage
  • How toxic diet culture and dominant culture have influenced who we see as an expert or “yoga celebrity” 
  • How props like chairs are still seen as less than in mainstream yoga spaces
  • How we uphold health as the basis for value in others, on and off of the mat
  • How the sutras talk about our care, feelings and thought about our bodies
  • The importance of creating right relationship with our body and spirit through acceptance
  • How to easy use a chair to make the other limbs of the practice accessible to anyone
  • How the chair can be used as a prop to support postures, making them more accessible

This week’s question: 

What is the right relationship with your body?

064. The Accessible Yoga Podcast LIVE!20 Sep 202200:29:47

The Accessible Yoga Podcast is back for Season 3 with a live podcast recording as a part of the grand opening of the new Accessible Yoga Community!

In this special episode, Jivana and Anjali discuss:

  • The new Accessible Yoga Community
  • How Anjali started practicing asana
  • How yoga intersects with social justice
  • The relationship between yoga and politics
  • Binaries in yoga spaces
  • What to expect during the upcoming season of the Accessible Yoga Podcast



019. Tiny Bits of Joy01 Dec 202000:41:17

In Episode 19 Amber Karnes sits down with Pamela Stokes-Eggleston. Pamela is a published author, stress management consultant, wellness resilience expert, national speaker, and sleep wellness coach. She founded Yoga2Sleep due to her challenges with insomnia and secondary post-traumatic stress. Pamela goes into deep detail about how her own life experiences led her to focus on the connections between yoga, sleep, and supporting veterans and their families. Pamela shares about the importance of tapping into what she calls “tiny bits of joy.” Join Amber and Pamela for this conversation that invites us to each use this practice to serve others. 

 

This week we explore:

 

  • How Pamela created Yoga 2 Sleep and came to this work from her own experience with sleep disorders
  • The importance of sleep for our overall wellness and ability to navigate stress
  • How common it is for folks to navigate sleep disorders
  • How Pamela came to focus on working with veterans
  • How Pamela’s experience as a military spouse brought her back to her yoga practice and led to her being a teacher
  • How Pamela saw yoga serving veterans and their families 
  • How working with veterans taught Pamela about the needs of caregivers and families of wounded veterans
  • How we can build small practices into our daily lives to support our stress and responsibilities
  • How this practice holds the space to embody resilience and strength in a sustainable way
  • The question, “What are you prepared to do?”
018. Run Forward Towards Discomfort Enthusiastically24 Nov 202000:41:38

In Episode 18 Amber Karnes sits down to chat with Kimberly Dark, a writer, professor and teacher who works to reveal the hidden architecture of everyday life so that we can reclaim our power as social creators. Amber and Kimberly talk about the bias present in us all and how to begin unpacking the biases we hold that do harm, especially in regards to bodies and their variations.  Kimberly shares the importance of being open to discomfort as a gateway to embodied learning and culture shifting. Kimberly also talks richly about the ways we can honor our lived experiences and the fullness of who we are. This candid conversation between Amber and Kimberley invites us all to lean heavily into our own discomfort in the service of creating a better world. 

 

This week hear more about:

 

  • How Amber and Kimberly met at a retreat Kimberly offers
  • The importance of learning to accept the presence of bias 
  • The power of unpacking the cultural biases that dehumanize us all
  • How healing spaces can ignore the intersections of identity, bias and accessibility
  • The importance of unpacking the systems of oppression in our lived experiences
  • How to navigate call-ins and critiques of our work with self study and clarity
  • The invitations available in Kimberly’s new book “Fat, Pretty and Soon To Be Old” 
  • How we as teachers can learn from the students who show up in our classes
  • How social change happens over time and not in one moment
  • How the idea of resilience has been commodified and warped
  • How we model humanity for others, like our children and the importance of honoring all of who we are and what we experience
  • Exploring the question “How do you rest?”
017. When We Are Set Upon The Right Path17 Nov 202000:51:26

In episode 17, Jivana Heyman welcomes Lakshmi Nair. Lakshmi Nair is the founder of Satya Yoga Co-op, a BIPOC owned and operated yoga cooperative in Denver, Colorado. Satya Yoga Co-op grew out of a yoga immersion and teacher training for Black & Indigenous People of Color (BIPOC) that Lakshmi has been offering in Denver since 2014. In this interview we learn more about Lakshmi’s journey back to her practice and the creation of this transformative yoga co-op. Lakshmi and Jivana discover that they have been in the same yoga spaces since the late 90s. The exchange between Lakshmi and Jivana gives insight into building sustainable models to make this practice available, accessible and welcoming for all. 

 

This week hear more about:

 

  • How Lakshmi began her work supporting BIPoC in wellness and yoga spaces
  • How growing up in Denver as a POC disconnected her from yoga
  • How living in a more diverse environment provided pathways to healing
  • How yoga was introduced to her as a teen by her father
  • How Lakshmi returned to the practice as an adult
  • Why Lakshmi designed her Trainings with the intention of making it accessible to as many BIPoC folks
  • How the Co-op was created from her desire to support the teachers she was training, instead of sending them into a yoga industry that undervalued them
  • What she learned from other co-ops in her area when creating her Co-op
  • How theCo-Operative is navigating the ramifications Covid-19
  • How the city of Denver is working to tackle equity and access to wellness and yoga
  • How working in collaboration is an important part of making yoga accessible in a sustainable way
016. Stop saying “full expression of the pose” [Making Asana Accessible Part 2]10 Nov 202000:50:29

Episode 16 is the second in a series about making yoga asana accessible for all bodies. In this episode, Amber and Jivana talk about the language we use as yoga teachers. Jivana shares what the yoga Sutras say about the role of asana in our practice and we talk in-depth about investigating and shifting the language we use to communicate in our teaching spaces. Amber talks briefly about her recent Yoga Journal cover issue, including the history of harm the publication has had in yoga and wellness, and the importance of holding these large organizations accountable. This conversation is a rich exchange about the way our words can create belonging and affirm our students or our words can uphold systems of oppression and perpetuate a yoga practice that is inaccessible to most. 



  • How Amber feels about her recently released Yoga Journal Cover and the history of harm the publication has had in yoga and wellness.
  • How the Sutras talk about the physical asana
  • The focus of western yoga culture to center the physical aspects of the practice while ignoring the other parts
  • How being in inquiry within the body empowers us to going into deeper inquiry around our thoughts and feelings
  • How the phrase “full expression of the pose” creates a hierarchy in our yoga classes
  • The importance of investing the language we use to teach this practice
  • The importance of understanding the stories people are holding about using props
  • How we unlearn ableism within our practice spaces and community 
  • How teaching the foundations and intentions of each pose removes hierarchy of physical ability 
  • The importance of giving our students agency and using language that empowers them, honors consent and welcomes folks to honor the bodies they have

 

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