Working in Yoga – Détails, épisodes et analyse

Détails du podcast

Informations techniques et générales issues du flux RSS du podcast.

Working in Yoga

Working in Yoga

Rebecca Sebastian

Business & Entrepreneuriat
Forme & Santé
Société & Culture

Fréquence : 1 épisode/13j. Total Éps: 100

Squarespace

Join yoga studio owner, yoga teacher, yoga therapist, and yoga non-profit founder Rebecca Sebastian for a water cooler discussion of what it is to work in the yoga world.

We will talk about our experiences, good & bad, connect with each other, share tips freely, and tell our stories.

Many years ago a yoga-teacher friend of mine said to me “the one things I don’t like about being a yoga teacher is there’s no water cooler”. And he was right. (thanks James).

So let’s use this podcast as our water cooler. This past year, especially, has been so hard for us. Let’s talk about it. Share our stories, our unique jobs, and a sense of community that we all need.

Want in? Take a listen.

Site
RSS
Apple

Classements récents

Dernières positions dans les classements Apple Podcasts et Spotify.

Apple Podcasts

  • 🇨🇦 Canada - careers

    14/03/2026
    #73
  • 🇬🇧 Grande Bretagne - careers

    04/02/2026
    #80
  • 🇬🇧 Grande Bretagne - careers

    03/02/2026
    #35
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - careers

    18/01/2026
    #67
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - careers

    15/01/2026
    #93
  • 🇬🇧 Grande Bretagne - careers

    02/01/2026
    #66
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - careers

    30/12/2025
    #61
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - careers

    19/10/2025
    #91
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - careers

    18/10/2025
    #50
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - careers

    17/10/2025
    #30

Spotify

    Aucun classement récent disponible



Qualité et score du flux RSS

Évaluation technique de la qualité et de la structure du flux RSS.

See all
Qualité du flux RSS
À améliorer

Score global : 59%


Historique des publications

Répartition mensuelle des publications d'épisodes au fil des années.

Episodes published by month in

Derniers épisodes publiés

Liste des épisodes récents, avec titres, durées et descriptions.

See all

New Profession, Same Old Mistakes? A Researcher's Thoughts with Dr. Steffany Moonaz

Épisode 98

lundi 2 décembre 2024Durée 01:10:34

Are there lessons we can take from other professions?

What is the IAYT doing well? What can they improve upon?

When will I get a vacation?

These are all questions we cover in our chat with Dr. Steffany Moonaz.

KEY TAKEAWAYS

*This point cannot be stressed enough when talking about license within the yoga therapy space.  Just because you have a license **Does not** mean you can necessarily bill insurance.  Let’s uncouple those thoughts, please.  Thanks.

*We can learn a lot from the journey of other professions.  We deep dove into acupuncture with Dr. Moonaz and it is fascinating to hear the stories of professions where there are restrictions about who they can treat, how they can treat, and who supervises the practitioners.  What are your thoughts here?

*Where the IAYT seems to missed the mark is in understanding how people in yoga therapy find their clients through the referral process.  I have said this before, but the amount of LHCPs (licensed health care providers) who have said “I will just get a 200 hour teacher training cert and do what you do, is staggering.  Now I still get referrals from those folks because eventually they realize that isn’t the case–but the fact that I have to explain this to an organization in our industry is wild to me.  That just isn’t how it works for any of us on the ground, taking clients as yoga therapists. 

*Gravitas and money.  Those are the things we want.  

*Steffany said something I really want to emphasize.  We can, as a profession, take the steps needed to become a licensed profession–and then decide not to do it.  But in my opinion, it is WELL WORTH taking the steps to professionalize as a whole.  It benefits us as an industry in the long run.

*We need to give the IAYT credit where credit is due.  The steps taken thus far in the area of self-regulation are significant.  The accreditation process, the credentialing process, continuing education requirements, core competencies, these are all important in the development of yoga therapy as a profession.  No doubt about it.

*How do we distinguish the difference in all of the different services in the yoga marketplace?  This is a huge question, especially in the context of yoga therapy.  What ideas do YOU have?  Email me, rebecca@workinginyoga.com and let me know.

*This is the time where I remind you that the International Association of Yoga Therapists has no legal requirement to advocate for us as professionals.  Their designation is a 501c3, which is a public serving organization.  Just as  a note.

*Just to update you, We still have no official stance from the IAYT as to weather or not the Q designation is stopped completely, now a month later after we recorded.  Just in case you need to know.


RESOURCES

Working In Yoga Website

Working In Yoga Newsletter

Steffany’s Website 

Orgs! What Are They Good For? A Conversation with Leslie Kaminoff

Épisode 96

vendredi 15 novembre 2024Durée 01:03:54

Look. We need to get into it.

To ask all the questions, to unearth all the possibilities, to sit with some uncomfortable answers.

So I asked Leslie Kaminoff to come on, and we did just that.

KEY TAKEAWAYS:

*” Fundamentally it is a governance issue” is my favorite quote about the IAYT issue that is on this entire podcast series.  Because they do have a governance issue, and it is important that we talk about it.  

To reiterate: a 501c3 organization in the United States exists to serve a public function, and a 501c6 org is a business or trade organization that exists to serve its members.  The IAYT is currently the former, not the latter.  

*Medicalizing yoga and yoga therapy comes with a whole host of complications.  And this series on the podcast will cover some of those complications as we go forward into talking about licensure, the medicalization of yoga, and more.

*Yoga is relationships.  This is a quote from this episode of the podcast that I have already used a dozen times since Leslie and I recorded this podcast together a few weeks ago.  Because it is so true.  We are in relationship with ourselves, our students, our colleagues, and our organizations.  It is important that we chose to build the best versions of those relationships that we can so we can all thrive, and also so that yoga and the yoga industry can thrive in this modern world.  

*If you missed it, if there is an offer to write a rebuttal of someone wishes to write a position paper about moving towards licensure in the yoga therapy space.  Please someone take Leslie up on this so I can read both your paper and his response.  I love this kind of stuff.

*Yoga has long taken place within the outskirts of culture.  I have said this a lot, but we came of age in the counter-culture movement of the 90s, and a lot of us really liked it that way.  I include myself in this group.  I don’t know if the 19 year old version of myself that started yoga would have found her way into today’s modern yoga spaces.  I think about that a lot actually, especially in the context of all those gifts that a consistent yoga practice has given me over the last 27 years.  Leslie refers to this with his assertion that yoga has existed very often between the cracks of general culture.  

Comforting or not, that is the reality of what we have been.  And I am interested to see if we keep that trend going forward into the future.


RESOURCES

Working In Yoga Website

Working In Yoga Newsletter

Leslie’s Website


Find Taylor Casey

Preferences and Anatomy. A Discussion with Erin Ehlers.

Épisode 87

lundi 15 juillet 2024Durée 01:05:32

What do we need to actually know about anatomy?

Is sequencing really important?

Are there hard and fast rules about alignment, or is it all just a style preference?

Take a listen to my conversation with Erin Ehlers to find out.

RESOURCES

Working In Yoga Website

Working In Yoga Newsletter

Erin’s Website

SPONSOR

Midwest Yoga Conference

Yoga Teacher Trainings. A Conversation w/ Theo & Harriet of The Yoga Teacher's Survival Guide

Épisode 86

mercredi 26 juin 2024Durée 01:45:26

Yoga Teacher Trainings.

What do we love? What can we do without? What are we missing?

I asked two absolute gems of yoga professionals, Theo Wildcroft and Harriet McAtee to answer that question. They’ve collaborated for their new book The Yoga Teacher’s Survival Guide, and this conversation is a deep dive into what we love and need more of as we train yoga pros.

You’ll want to listen to every minute.

KEY TAKEAWAYS:

*Friendships are important, and professional friendships are a sweet treat in our lives.  Whom have you met in your yoga teaching journey who has become an important part of your life?  If you are missing that aspect of your yoga professional practice make sure you find the time to connect locally or regionally through a workshop, continuing education course, or conference, or festival.  

*PEDAGOGY!!  It is a major theme throughout this series.  We aren’t teaching people best practices for how to teach.  This is a major challenge when you run into yoga teachers who don’t know how to run a room effectively, are unsure how to bring their own thoughts to life in a respectful and appropriate way, and make us look sloppy as a profession.  So please, consider not only what you teach in your yoga classes, but also how and why.

*If you aren’t being responsive to the people in the room whom you are with you, that isn’t teaching.  That is live-action repetition.  Now I think there is a place for that form of yoga performance or facilitation, but a skillful teacher is responding to the people in the room in real time with options, suggestions, and guidance.  This isn’t just yoga teaching, this is true of teaching anything.  YouTube can replace us if all we are is repetition.  However, if we can answer the call of our students, even if they all have different needs, that is the best of teaching.  

*Accountability discussions are critical to how we operate within our industry space. Not only should we hold ourselves accountable, but we should also hold the institutions that represent us accountable.  We all get better if we own what we need to improve upon and look to our community to help shift in the right direction.

*Yoga exists in the world, and as a result can be used to reinforce oppressive systems like hetero-normative patriarchy, white supremacy, and capitalism.  Our investment in deconstructing those systems for *ourselves first* is our primary action not to be part of this challenge.

*Yoga = Union or Yoga is a liberation practice are two “lost in translation” ideas within our modern yoga space.  Liberation from life is different than liberation from the landlord, (unfortunately, if you ask me but whatever).   

*How can you draw in more subtlety and simplicity to your teaching?  That is a question we can all ask ourselves.  If you normally teach 25 or 30 poses in a class, what does a class look like if you only teach 12 but discuss nuance and experience within that frame?  How can you still teach “yoga” if you aren’t so reliant on the constant movement of quick-paced asana?

*Language matters.  How we speak about our poses, our body experiences, somatic movement, and the words we use to make people feel comfortable and interested in their bodies and brains is important to consider. Ask yourself If they make sense, if they are welcoming, and–and this one is one we don’t talk about a lot, if they are clear and easy to understand and process for others.

RESOURCES

Working In Yoga Website

Working In Yoga Newsletter

Buy The Book

Harriett’s Website

Theo’s Website

SPONSOR

Sunlight Streams Blog

Sunlight Apothecary

Protecting Your Relationships. A Legal Chat with Cory Sterling

Épisode 85

lundi 17 juin 2024Durée 55:16

So many of the tasks we consider to be difficult in business are just building, maintaining, and creating boundaries around our relationships.

Our marketing is a relationship with the people who follow us.

Our managing is relationship building with our teams & colleagues.

And the law helps us create boundaries around our relationships.

This week on the podcast Cory Sterling talks about things we should think about, legally speaking, when we talk about both retreats and yoga teacher training programs.

RESOURCES

Working In Yoga Website

Working In Yoga Newsletter

Cory’s Website

SPONSOR

Sunlight Streams Blog

Sunlight Apothecary

Hosting Sacred Experiences. A Conversation with Ransom Hare & The Himalayan Institute

Épisode 84

lundi 20 mai 2024Durée 57:26

There is something special when we take folks out of their own lives and to a new place.

This week on the podcast I got the chance to talk with The Himalayan Institute’s Ransom Hare, who runs their retreat program, and we had the best time chatting.

Ransom talks to us about what they do to get alleviate all those travel worries and jitters that folks have when they travel, what our role is in their experience, and so much more.

KEY TAKEAWAYS

*When traveling, you are creating an experience for your students who come with you.  So thinking about how you build that for folks who are traveling with you is key.  As Ransom said, the Himalayan Institute utilizes tech before their trips to get through the awkward conversations that happen with folks where they don’t get to know each other, and this is just one of many ways you can do this.  It could be encouraging people to write everyone else a letter, meeting online, or having some “get to know you” questions passed around before the trip.  

*I love that the HI uses online platforms to connect people who are coming together for a travel experience.  This is so innovative, and I think we can all take note of this idea and find our own version of it for travel and conference experiences we are creating.

*Energy exchange is something I talk about a lot in real life when I am chatting with people about business.  In an ideal world, we are putting in the same amount of energy as our clients & students–so we put in effort to get them into our business and on our retreats, and they meet us with your financial resources, time, and effort.  Keep this in mind when you are doing “customer service” in experiences.  Have you put in the appropriate amount of effort to match your clients or students?  Is the reverse true?  

*Figuring out how to manage tension is a big topic in yoga, business, travel, social justice, and other spaces.  How are you able to be the calm and manage your own tension in times when your students are feeling frustrated or ill at ease?  This is something I actually think we don’t train for enough–can we respond to our clients, students, and co-workers with calm and ease; or is our habit to offset our tension to make other people feel badly?  


RESOURCES

Working In Yoga Website

Working In Yoga Newsletter

Himayalan Institute’s Website

SPONSOR

Sunlight Streams Blog

Sunlight Apothecary

Event Planning Secrets. A Conversation with Amy Zellmer

Épisode 83

mercredi 8 mai 2024Durée 54:08

Have you ever been curious about presenting at a conference?

Wanted to know what event planners are looking for, want you to know, and what to steer clear of?

Amy Zellmer, conference coordinator and owner of Midwest Yoga + Life Magazine answers all this and more.

KEY TAKEAWAYS:

*The best part of event planning is that you get to hang out with other people who have the same job that you do.  This is one of my favorite things about conferences and festivals.  

*Themes are useful, especially if you are trying to curate a specific kind of experience for people  While having a theme is not required, it does help with decision-making.  

*If you are the organizer visualize how the flow of the event is going to go, and then reverse engineer how to get there.  You need to know your target audience, how they are going to move in the space, and what kinds of vendors you will have–if any, and where they will be set up.. 

*Want to present at a conference?  Here are the best tips: make sure you completely fill out the forms, and bring a little bit of yourself to the application too–details are important.  Organizers are looking for creative folks who are bringing something different than what they would normally see at a typical studio event.

*Put something personal in your bio, because that makes people feel like they know you a little bit better.  

*Being a participant in the event that you are teaching in also makes a big difference.  If you are introverted like I am, I totally understand if you are flinching right now–but conferences are the time to interact and connect.  When you go home, have your heavy blankets and dark room ready–you will have fun chatting and participating all weekend long, I promise.

*And finally, Pitching for magazines are similar to pitching for conferences.  Follow the instructions, have a catchy pitch, and meet your deadlines.  The thing is this: if you are easy to work with there is a huge advantage for the event coordinators.  You’ll get asked back, and that’s the goal.


RESOURCES

RESOURCES

Working In Yoga Website

Working In Yoga Newsletter

Amy’s Website

SPONSOR

Sunlight Streams Blog

Sunlight Apothecary

Can We Get A Vacation? A Chat With Heather Horrell

Épisode 82

lundi 29 avril 2024Durée 59:08

Admit it, you’ve probably at least thought once or twice about taking your yoga students on a retreat.

Where would you go?

Costa Rica? Puerto Rico? California? Italy?

Maybe somewhere closer for you like a state park or nature sanctuary.

This week we chat with travel expert Heather Horrell about what it takes to organize wellness travel, what trends she is seeing, and so much more.

KEY TAKEAWAYS:

*Wellness travel is booming right now, and looks to be for the foreseeable future.  If travel is a part of your business plan or career dreams, consider really diving into what that dream might look like in reality.

*The guilt about selling this ideal of the epitome of wellness while also not being a part of it anymore is something I think is a huge issue within our industry. “You are selling something you no longer are” is something that Heather said that really resonated with me.

To me this is akin to hearing spiritual leaders describe a crisis of faith.  And it is totally normal.  See out guidance or take a break if you can and need to.

*Studios are great places to foster wellness travel and community.  I know so many studios that have retreats, within their country and internationally, as a part of their offerings.

*Being more local is going to be a trend this season, and I suspect for the next couple of years.  If you are conscious of folks’ pocketbooks and the accessibility of travel for most people, I understand that–Heather and I both agree that this is a big discussion.  But seeing if you can host events that are more easily accessible by car or train is a good option, and also having discounted rates, sponsored spots, and other opportunities for discounted rates (like volunteer spots) are great ways to make your adventures more accessible to lots of people.  

*Creating experiences is another theme throughout this series.  In the last of this series I talk with the lead for the travel team from the Himalayan Institute, which has had a long history of travel tourism as an organization.  If this topic interests you, take notes from our guests this season, Heather, Amy and Ransom about how you can create experiences for your own community.

*Finally, start small!  You don’t need to book that trip to Costa Rica right away, you can take a trip to a Botanical Garden near you, that cute little tourist town an hour away, or rent some cabins in the woods for the night.  There are so many ways you can create community and connection while traveling, and you don’t need to go far.


RESOURCES

Working In Yoga Website

Working In Yoga Newsletter

Heather’s Facebook Group

Heather’s Website

SPONSOR

Sunlight Streams Blog

Sunlight Apothecary

That's A Perfect Wrap. What We Learned, And What's Next.

Épisode 81

mercredi 10 avril 2024Durée 37:00

8 Guests. Tons of words of wisdom. A mini-lesson on white supremacy.

That’s what I call a series.

This episode takes clips from each episode and guides you through the small changes, experiences, and big-picture ideas that made this series so special.

A huge thanks to all of my guests: Dr. Shyam Ranganathan, Ann Swanson, Colin Hall, Daniel Simpson, Steff Gallante, Pooja Virani, Tristan Katz, and Colice Sanders.

Y’all are the coolest people I know.

RESOURCES

Working In Yoga Website

Working In Yoga Newsletter

SPONSOR

Sunlight Streams Blog

Sunlight Apothecary

EXTRAS

White Supremacy Culture website

Can You Be The Perfect Activist? A Learning Conversation w/ Colice Sanders

Épisode 80

lundi 25 mars 2024Durée 01:15:26

I had a question that was bothering me.

From episode one of this series (w/ Dr. Shyam Ranganathan) I have been asking and chatting about how we are holding our own activist and change-maker selves to perfectionist standards.

So decided to end this series with an expert here to answer that question.

Enter Colice Sanders to the chat. The covers so much about the history of white supremacy, why it matters, and brings up new things for us all to think about.

KEY TAKEAWAYS:

*Langauge matters.  I am a huge fan of defining terms, and Colice is too.  Making sure you are precise in your definitions and terms can help communicate, clarify, and overall understanding.  Colice defines a lot of terms for us in this podcast, so take note and use those terms wisely.

*White supremacy and white culture is something we rarely talk about.  It manifests in our culture in things like individualism vs. collectivism, perfectionism, hoarding of power, and other ways.  Colice goes over the whole list, and take a listen back and take notes.

*Awareness.  We are aware.  This is one of my favorite points she brings up.  Often we justify being unkind to people, especially online, for the sake of awareness.  Consider that awareness isn’t the issue, but our lack of focused and impactful action especially in our communities that is where we are truly missing the mark.

*Using perfectionism to police each other in yoga and social justice space is just the worst.  If you have ever felt guilty or shamed for how you show up remember two things.  1. They aren’t the cops.  And even if they are we don’t talk to cops.  2. Perhaps someone said something that you do need to think about, so don’t dismiss all critique out of hand, but take a few moments to separate what you need to learn from what made you feel bad.  

You are not a bad person if you are learning, and the fact that you are learning also doesn’t give other people carte blanche to shame you into submission about your thoughts and feelings.  Both of those things can be true at the same time.

*Colice’s example about social-justice-focused tourism and missionary work was so spot-on.  We do this sort of travel and tourism in the yoga space, so let’s rethink our “good intentions” and consider giving people a meaning and purpose that extends beyond doing one thing for a short period and then going back to our regular lives.  We can support people locally, be environmentally conscious at home, and support folks who are unhoused in our communities all the time–and yoga spaces can become hubs for those things to happen.

*Moral superiority seeps into a lot of our lives.  How have *you* felt morally superior in ways that have been detrimental to your health and life?  I have said 100 times this season that I love to be right, which is moral superiority’s younger cousin.  It is worth a moment’s thought about what makes you feel superior—food? Movement? Spiritual calm? As good as any of those things can be, they can also take a turn into making us feel better than other people in a way that harms and doesn’t help.

RESOURCES

Working In Yoga Website

Working In Yoga Newsletter

Colice’s Website

White Supremacy Culture website

SPONSOR

Sunlight Streams Blog

Sunlight Apothecary


Podcasts Similaires Basées sur le Contenu

Découvrez des podcasts liées à Working in Yoga. Explorez des podcasts avec des thèmes, sujets, et formats similaires. Ces similarités sont calculées grâce à des données tangibles, pas d'extrapolations !
The Informed Life
Financial Feminist
Young and Profiting with Hala Taha
Side Hustle Pro
The Spiritual Hustler
Collective Impact Forum
We Are For Good Podcast - The Podcast for Nonprofits
Weird Finance
Cultivating H.E.R. Space: Uplifting Conversations for the Black Woman
She's So Lucky
© My Podcast Data