America’s Next Top Yoga Teacher: A Reality TV Pitch

As yoga goes digital, attractiveness is key. A google search of ‘yoga images’ yields hundreds of toned bods, sunsets and long hair. Likewise, Instagram invokes airbrushed perfection made to look effortless. No one is wearing torn-up sweats to sell lifestyle brands. ‘You’d better be photogenic if you’re going to be a teacher on the Internet,’ Popper warned.” ~ “The New Rules of Yoga: Everyone’s a Teacher, So You’d Better Be Pretty,” The Observer, May 19, 2017

Welcome to America’s Next Top Yoga Teacher, Where we discover and create America’s hottest yoga teacher one Insta heart at a time. Think “America’s Next Top Model” meets “the Bachelor” meets “GOT Season 1”  meets “Naked and Afraid

Only one winner can get the most likes, and she is– “America’s Next Top Yoga Teacher”
An all-female cast of women of all shapes, sizes and backgrounds (but all skinny attractive girls no older than 27), armed with nothing but photogenic bodies and smartphone thumbs battle in various head to head challenges to discover which one can handstand at sunset, pretzel cliffside at dawn and instapost Rumi on her way to the most likes and thus the title of “Top Teacher.”

The contestants will compete in weekly photo shoot challenges which will involve executing a fancy yoga pose (or any yoga-ish looking pose on a beach, mountain or in a national park) and coupling it with the perfect meaninglessly meaningful and thus insta-inspirational caption.

Episode 1: Find Your Voice:  

The Top Teachers* will work with a social media consultant and PR mogul to come up with the perfect words to pair with their airbrushed photos, such as: any famous quote ever, mis-attributed famous quotes, Taylor Swift song titles, made-up famous quotes, anything ever uttered by a writer or artist, or unintelligible sentences of inspiration created by combining any of the following words, with or without grammatical structure: bliss, surrender, detox, authentic, truth, conscious, radiance, vibrance, yummy, journey, chia pudding. Or, just quote Rumi. Because no words better share who you really are than words written by some other guy back in the 13th century.

Episodes 2-5: Exploration of authentic yoga, which is always done “with” something:

  • Yoga with dogs, kittens, goats, horses, beer, in snow, on a five-lane highway, on a five-lane highway in snow, by dangerous cliffs, or in a beautiful park on a cement bench in a flowing yellow skirt

    Photo by Dustin Ellison Design & Photography www.dustinellison.com

    Photo by Dustin Ellison Design & Photography www.dustinellison.com

  • yoga with someone else’s cute toddler
  • yoga with a chandelier you are hanging from: (“Be a lamp” ~Rumi)
  • yoga with a baby on one breast, nursing while also petting a dog and holding a plate of dinner
  • yoga with a plunger about to fix the toilet
  • a photogenic gluten free vegan juice concoction recipe, maybe slathered all over a contestant in tree pose (so what if she’s actually a Paleo meatatarian)

Episode 6: Down Dog Despacito  This challenge will stretch the girls to share stories of growth, redemption and overcoming personal hardship–for example, one contestant may post about how in eagle pose she remembered the childhood loss of a beloved pet bird. Accompanying quote: “#Despacito #imlikeabird

Episode 7: “The Mirror of Yoga: Makeover week” Congrats! You’ve made it to makeover week with L’Oréal Paris. The contestants’ journey brings them to this place where each becomes who she really is: an alternative, better, edited version of herself online.

The yoginis find that perfectly marketable look: (beachy yoga hair, rockstar short mohawk yoga hair or trendy subdued braided updo yoga hair, a partnering with a lifestyle yoga brand, the creation of her own custom essential oil blend, a sponsorship from a bikini or yoga shorts designer, and a complete, total, relentless positive attitude.

#findyourauthenticself

Episode 8: Certified Social Media: This week contestants become legit yoga teachers! You know what that means:  Each girl will receive her own custom incorrect Sanskrit(ish) tattoo, as well as her own honorary “yoga(ish)” name/ IG handle; for example, “Klesha Carmichael, Devi Dara, Sara Samadhi, Shanti Cassidy and “Yoga Girl No. 587662.51/2.”

Episode 9: Savasana Photo Bomb: This week each aspiring Top Teacher will pose amidst a sea of people laying down in savasana or final rest. While they play dead, you sit serenely at the helm, giving them life: taking a non-selfie selfie of you overlooking their vulnerable bodies, fingers entwined around your ANTYTyogadesigns™ Mala beads as you look down or up as if you have no idea you are taking a photo of yourself even though “EVERYONE KNOWS YOU POSED FOR THAT.”**. Never mind that no one here consented to this photo or that you didn’t even teach this class and quite frankly, you are trespassing–  it’s about inspiring people ok? #soblessed  #yogateacher #fakeittillyoumakeit #itsallaboutyou

Episode 10: Handstand Elimination
: Look, we can edit the photo to make it look like you are doing a handstand unassisted but this week shit gets real: anyone who cannot do a handstand gets kicked off (the show and Instagram). #handstandmeansyoureforreal
Of course, whoever gets the most likes on social media wins for that given week.

In the weekly “namastay-or-namagotstogo” ceremony the contestants will wear gauzy white dresses over pristine white bikini tops and tiny yoga shorts. The contestants least liked online will have the chance to “yoga post for your life” busting out a crazy pose or Rumi quote to win. Finally, one contestant will be sent home to internet obscurity to the tune of “please pack up your smartphone and go.” The successful contestants will “namastay” receiving a beautiful mala bead necklace, bachelor rose style, custom designed by ANTYTyogadesigns™ to signify their continuing social media journeys (and to be worn in all future posts in perpetuity per page 187, paragraph 3, fn.7 of the cast contract). #thewoundistheplacewherethelightenters

 

Episode 11 Finale: Insta India!. The contestants who make it far enough by getting liked online enough will travel to India for a special handstand photo shoot at various holy sites and temples and with real live Indian people (contestant should always take selfies next to Indian people and make the peace sign with fingers as gesture of respect); accommodations of course will be at a Five Star hotel. Any elephants used will be totally fake to avoid upsetting vegans and because gross!


Judges will be an assortment of famous people who do yoga at least on social media or are famous for being famous and also doing yoga on social media, along with a social media expert in getting likes on Instagram and an expert on having one’s photo taken while wearing little clothing and posing.
Prizes: Headlining your own online Yoga Teacher Training Program and DVD series, teaching gigs at the biggest yoga festivals, representation by the premier yoga talent management company, AsteyaAsF Agency, and an instant gazillion Instagram followers, primarily robots.


*No yoga teaching or even yoga experience required, though natural flexibility and ability to walk on your hands helps — and looking good in a bikini is a must. Contestants will have a grueling schedule of daily workouts with a personal trainer, followed by sessions with a handstand specialist, former Olympic gymnastics coach Bela Karolyi and a contortionist from Cirque de Soleil. Required reading includes the biggest FB and Instagram accounts.

Oh, and RYT status for all contestants will be taken care of online and by submitting a check for fifty bucks to the Real Yoga Alliance. 

Namaste 



**quote credit to Lisa Pierce Yoga.

DO NOT KICK TIM MILLER IN THE FACE: Tim Miller & Tacos, Labor Day 2017

For the record, I didn’t kick Tim Miller in the face, though whether that’s due to luck, my silent prayers of “DO NOT KICK TIM IN THE FACE” or Tim’s time-earned dodging abilities, I do not know.

I didn’t have a margarita the night before, either, like I did before Labor Day practice with David Keil (though there may have been a few sips of wine).

I’m getting ahead of myself.

I’m talking above about my exit from karandavasana, or should I say from the forearm stand that ideally follows that pose in that idyllic dream of correct kick-ass vinyasa (not kick teacher), and my entrance into Califnornia this Labor Day weekend (without margaritas).

I got here courtesy of “make the best of having family in town for almost two f*cking weeks” sanity planning, landing in SanIMG_0675 Diego at the tail end of the holiday weekend with no children, no dogs, no laundry, no lunches to pack, no dinners to make, no enthralling “just two more bites of broccoli and then you can have dessert” conversations, no top chef competition to get breakfast and the kid together for school, no barking but stinking cute puppy, no schedule and no dishes — but with my attractive husband and, it turns out, this unexpected opportunity to practice with none other than Tim Miller. 

The margarita (and tacos) can wait. There’s a moon day coming.

I don’t know what to do with myself besides sleep like the dead and head to Mysore in the morning. 

But I admit I thought twice, that is, back and forth neurotically about it. I’m accustomed to home self practice, so being in a Mysore room, particularly one I don’t know, is different, especially when I’ve been injured and/or had shit thrown in my face for the past six months and haven’t done both legs behind my head in almost a week (out of fear of injury though not actual injury). But I’m afraid. Not so much of my body, which truthfully feels alright, but of not belonging, not fitting in; but this unease is made worse by feeling like I might not be at my physical best. Oh, and ashtanga angst aside, let’s not forget that this weekend is a rare mini-escape and I don’t want to make my husband revolve his life around yoga.

But even he agrees: 

IMG_0655It’s Tim f*cking Miller. 

I enter the room with nothing but a towel and a host of nerves. I needn’t have brought the latter, but as for the towel, I could have used three. I’m sweating Mysore, India style in this humidity so by Surya Namaskar I forget the Chitta entourage I walked in with. The room, alive with breath that I know, carries me away from the few days before, the stress of a job interview, my parents in town, the demands of a new school schedule and puppy, an anxiety bender of a week of life just a bit too “Lifey.” (thanks Ann Lamott for that word.) The forgiving, supportive energy radiating from everyone in this room floats hugs me along with the humidity: I’m in the real-life embrace of the words I’ve heard from Ashtangis all over who are prone to exclaiming, with a dreamy practice bliss look In their eyes, “oh I just love Tim!”

It’s gray outside but inside it’s ashtanga blue skies. 

I do some primary but move into second. It’s typically the thing (even for me) to stick with primary in a new place after travel, but it was just a one-hour flight and goddamn it, arrest me: I need some freakin’ backbends.

The yoga police, it seems, take Labor Day off. Or maybe they don’t operate on Miller time. A Friendly neighbor confirms this as she jumps in for a Supra vadrasana assist. “Would you like some help?” she asks with a smile. 

God, yes!

Speaking of help, enter my karandavasana moment. Enter Tim. Yes, it is this perilous, potential crazy landing sucky moment that Tim Miller first comes into my dance space. I recall my first led second with Sharath, the whisper scream of my teacher Sammy (“do it again, and stay there!”) which, by act of will I managed to do, on my forearms, until sharath lifted me back up into pincha (thankfully, I did not kick him in the face either).

“Should I try again?” I ask Tim like an idiot when I fail to balance in pincha after landing this freakin pose. You see- 

I don’t know how to find the line unless I get there myself. 

Indeed I’ve never held this Post- Karanda forearm balance, I confess with no small degree of embarrassment when again I can’t quite find it, though it feels closer. Tim gives me a “ya win some ya lose some” shrug. The inner perfectionist in me feels defeated for a minute, but then I remember:

It’s not failure; it’s part of the whole thing we do, which isn’t a thing, because it’s alive: it happens and then it doesn’t. And then it does, and maybe it happens in a different way for you, and among the benefits of the deceptively rigid, take no prisoners correct vinyasa system is this ample room for fluid, flawless imperfection — failure does not exist here — where landing Karanda or falling out of uttitha hasta padangustasana is the same so long as your mind is out of the game and your breath is in it. The room carries me through the rest of practice, that breath carries me, this feeling that I’m lovingly caught in a web of all time, of everyone who has ever taught me, everyone who has ever practiced with me. I feel that transition out of karandavasana in my future.

i won’t be alone when I find it.

“Immersion, to be so present that for the moment, there’s nothing between us and life. I learned his from my father, who’s now gone, who was a master woodworker….when I was a little boy, he would make these incredibly detailed to-scale models of ships from the 1800s….I discovered by watching him, it felt that when he was that devoted he was in the moment of everyone who’d ever built a boat, and that is the reward for immersion, oneness.”

~Mark Nepo, Magic Lessons podcast with Elizabeth Gilbert, episode 204. 

From the way the assistant reminds me of my time practicing with Mary Taylor and the Karanda assist takes me back to Sharath and when Tim does my final dips he takes me to the crown of my head in that same way Keith, my teacher in DC, did, and from the smile of the person offering me help in Supta vadrasana, and then there’s a rattle and hum in this room, the way Tim sits down and examines my headstand from every angle, declaring “you’re crooked!” that reminds me of the enthusiasm of David Garrigues and Sammy Brown and something about practicing with someone like Tim  — who touches such a deep piece of this lineage —

I feel immersed and connected to this love of practiceNot alone.

I am in the moment of everyone who’s ever done a sun salutation, and for that matter everyone who’s ever been in that present moment of whatever it is that brings a person alive and “in conversation with the sanctity of life.”

It’s hard to believe, and man I should kick myself for even thinking I might not come, as Tim looks at me before my final backbend and says, almost with feigned sarcasm, 

“so, knees? Or thighs?” 

I can do this by myself but when he brings me there with both hands catching at the same time (something I cannot do): i feel it.

David Garrigues has written that true yoga is discovered alone. It strikes me: maybe that discovery

is this connection.

Even if it means kicking a teacher in the face.