I just spent a week in Sedona at yoga teacher training with
Barron Baptiste.
Why? I’m a
commitment for growth. I want to
teach. I want to live big, be awesome,
and not hold back in life.
The heart of this training is all about inquiry. You dig deep and get real about where
you are and where you want to be in life.
What are you afraid of? What
are you hiding from? Where are you
stuck? What’s missing in your
life? If you really take on these questions honestly, it’s a painfully
beautiful unearthing and opening up of your heart and soul that leaves you
perfectly empty, yet full of life’s richness and possibility.
Wait, that says nothing about teaching yoga, right? Yes, you learn Baptiste sequence, flow,
and technique. You practice
teaching, and you break down essential cues and language. My teacher “tool
belt” is full of great new ways to help students land in their bodies, expand
their strength and deepen their practice.
But that’s kind of the side-dish of this journey. The meat & potatoes (or eggs and
avocado, as it were) was all about transformation, and I both experienced it
and witnessed it on many levels that week.
My life is in transition. This training helped me open up and release pain, face my
fears, and let go of knowing what my future will look like. By letting go and being empty, you make
room for grace. Now, this moment,
is all any of us really have. I
recognized where in my life I’m not being present. I’ve got some work to do, and I’m facing my fears head
on.
It feels good.
Practice. Yoga
is a practice, and we had plenty of it in Sedona. The sweat and exhaustion of Barron’s kick-your-asana
practice created a real physical sense of being present in my body. It released stuck energy and left me
feeling strong and powerful. After
Thursday’s practice, I think I felt every… single… cell in my body.
It. Was. Awesome.
The really cool thing about transformation is that it’s like
throwing a pebble into a lake.
One
life is changed and ca-plunk… the ripple in the water begins, and keeps
spreading out, touching lives as it expands outward. I met so many amazing people from all around the world. I learned that while we all have
different life experiences, we can all relate to the same emotions of the human
experience. It was an honor to be
a part of Sedona Level 1, 2012. I
can only imagine the kind of ripple effect that will grow out of this group.
P.S. So are you. Go be awesomer.