Today it is my honour to share with you a delightful piece written by fellow teacher Kyle Thompson. As an instructor, it is key to find points of inspiration in every corner of our lives and this thoughtful article will help you do just that. Enjoy!
Inspiration, Move Me Brightly
How The Grateful Dead Made Me A Better Yoga Teacher
by Kyle Thompson
Earlier this year, the Grateful Dead celebrated their fiftieth anniversary as one of America's most influential rock and roll bands. Around the time of this anniversary and the band's "final" Fare Thee Well shows in Chicago, I began to think a lot about the many ways this band has influenced my life, my yoga, and how I teach. From the Grateful Dead, I have learned several lessons that I feel have made me a better yoga teacher.
Lesson #1: Be Yourself
"You do not want to be considered merely as the best at what you do, you want to be considered the only one who does what you do." - Jerry Garcia
"We (The Grateful Dead) are like licorice. Not everybody likes licorice, but the people who like licorice really like licorice" - Jerry Garcia
The first lesson I have learned from the Grateful Dead is to be myself and to do my own thing. The Grateful Dead have never fit in. Instead of letting this stop them, the Dead embraced their "freak" image. Not only did they find their audience, they largely changed how bands relate to their audience and, as a result, significantly changed the music industry.
After completing my 200 hour teacher training, I, like probably a lot of new yoga teachers, felt quite a bit of pressure to teach a certain way or in a certain style. I somehow thought that if I taught the "perfect" class, I'd make everybody happy and people would love me and flock to my classes.
Needless to say, that didn't happen. It wasn't until after I recognized my own unique gifts as a teacher and embraced my own personal style that my teaching began to take off and grow. I didn't need to teach in any particular way or to fit into any label. Just as it was OK that the Dead was not "really" a rock band, a blues band, or a country band but infused parts of all of these styles into their music, it is absolutely OK that I'm not an Iyengar teacher, an Ashtanga teacher, a Sivananda teacher, or a Kripalu teacher, but I include aspects from each of these traditions into my classes.
I have found that there is a certain type of student who resonates with my style and my yoga. Fortunately, many of these students seem to really like what I do. The main lesson here is to be yourself, do what you do and you will find an audience who loves you for it.