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Welcome to Janet's Yoga Blog


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Janet Parachin is a yoga therapist, meditation teacher, Ayurveda wellness consultant, Reiki Master Teacher, and enthusiastic Yoga trainer and practitioner. She teaches at Tulsa Yoga Meditation Center www.tulsayogameditationcenter.com/ Study yoga, meditation and Ayurveda with her in the online classroom Yoga Spirit Online www.yogaspiritonline.com/

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2/3/2025 0 Comments

Listen

We’re continuing our series on “Rules for Yoga, Rules for Living.” If you’re just joining us, please scroll down to see Rules 1 and 2. This week we explore “Listen to your inner teacher,” something we hear a lot in yoga classes but which may need a bit more explanation.

I believe there are three levels of listening: hearing, remembering what we hear, and receiving what we hear and making it our own. Our traditional educational system trains us pretty well in the first two—hearing and remembering. How many times have you dutifully copied down everything your teacher said and wrote on the board, memorized it and then regurgitated it for an exam? Yeah, we've all been there.

But the best type of listening goes a step further—we receive what we hear and make it our own. It becomes a part of our being and it informs how we live our lives. We’ve all done this too when our teacher talked about something that really piqued our interest, such as an exotic animal, an exciting historical event, a curious philosophical concept, or a career we just knew we would be well suited for. This type of listening goes pretty deep because it touches something inside of us that helps us to know ourselves better. It sets our life on a trajectory that may surprise us, but also feels right at the same time. When this happens, we have come into relationship with our own Inner Teacher.

In yoga, the inner teacher is like intuition, an inner knowing of what is best for us. When a yoga teacher instructs us to move this way or that and we feel uncertainty inside, this may very well be our inner teacher saying, “not so fast, buddy.” When the yoga teacher talks of compassion and love, karma and consequences or struggle and triumph, we may also have an inner knowing that this is True, even if we have no philosophical background in the Vedic tradition.

So how do you get to know your own inner teacher?
•    Honor your intuition by trusting your gut more.
•    Spend time in meditation to get to know your inner landscape, especially your uncertainties and fears.
•    Know what you love and what you do well and make space for these things in your life every day.
•    Practice yoga with teachers, with other students and by yourself too so that the gifts of the tradition can build and bring blessings to your life now and into the future
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