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Return Yoga
YOGA IS NOT A BUSINESS.
Studio culture can be alienating, expensive, exclusive, privileged. Superficial. Return Yoga brings it out of the studio. I train other teachers to social justice awareness, community engagement, and trauma sensitive standards not usually part of a training curricula. Return is a not-for-profit who's mission is three-fold:
to teach the skills of yoga and meditation to under served communities,
to collaborate service opportunities and qualified yoga teachers, and
to offer high quality yoga teaching at a real life cost.
Meet Karin
Rebel yogi Teaching
a deeper practice
Karin Lynn Carlson (she/her) ups the ante on yoga conversations and offers yoga teachings that honor yoga tradition. She’s committed to disrupting the co-option of the practices of Black, Indigenous and WoC for white wellness and spirituality. She is unraveling the dominant narrative both in her own body and in wider yoga culture.
Yoga isn’t a business. Yoga is a tool for personal and social revolution; studio culture and the white wellness industry have broken its heart.
Karin (like you put the car in the garage) lives on unceded Lakota and Anishanabeg territory, North Minneapolis.
Mentorship
YOU ARE NOT ALONE
Teachers and serious practioners of yoga often feel lost in the wind.
There are inherent difficulties and paradoxes to taking up a contemplative life, an embodied path, not least of which is where do I go once I realize I have so many questions?
It can be a lonely and a doubtful place. Once we realize training only opened a can of worms, and deepening our practice only raised more questions, we start wondering about the tension between 'real life' and 'yoga'. We tend to get dissatisfied with what's on the market. It's hard to find teachers.
I am happy to work with ANYONE who is looking for direction. Zoom is a great tool. I can help you find the next right book or appropriate training. I can help you out with questions about teaching. I am happy to talk about what's coming up in your own practice, your own body, your own experience. You're not alone.
I ask $108 for a 45 minute session. Generally speaking, people like to do these once a month or every six weeks. Together we’ll curate your practice (and if you like, talk about the business and ethics of teaching. All our identities.)
Ethics
In it's modern expression, (postural) yoga can appear to be a personal endevour. That is, we work on ourselves. Typically, yoga is a thing that you go to a studio to do; it is done under the tutilage of a guide; your relationship and the topic of conversations between yourself and this guide will primarily be about the physical feats of a yoga asana practice and the questions that come up along the way.
One could be forgiven, with all this focus on the body, for thinking that yoga is a personal enrichment program. A kind of self-help. Generally speaking, we all come to yoga looking to fix something about ourselves.
Somewhere along the way, we will hit barriers. We might be humbled. We'll realize that we can't, through will power alone, get what we want. We'll also start to realize aspects of our own character we'd not understood before: how we react to difficulty, for example, or what we tend to do with fear.
So even a purely physical practice, in which no text or philosophy or psychology is mentioned, we'll find ourselves in much deeper territory than we'd intended. Yoga asana can be a kind of proving ground: some of us find this depth intriguing and jump in; others of us turn away and find some other way to exercise or deal with our problems.
With it's focus on the body and the physical benefits of yoga asana, the deeper teachings of the yoga tradition are often neglected. They aren't exactly in demand; in a commercial society the customer is always right.
But there are deeper teachings.
In a post (post, post) modern society questions of justice, equality, personal and social liberation are more important than ever. They are also more confusing and overwhelming than ever before. So many people turn to a yoga tradition because traditional places of ethics and morality no longer speak to us: we come to a yoga studio because we're running away from a church. And yet we're concerned about meaning: it can't all be relative, or it's every man for himself. There is such enormous suffering, and through global connections we are more aware of suffering than ever before. Without morals, life boils down to cruelty.
Without hope, humanity rots.
Yoga's clarity of ethics have appealed to me from the very beginning. Understanding them and studying them in greater depth has been the work of my entire teaching career. As the world spins deeper into turmoil and individuals are more and more aware of how they can't get away from social troubles, teaching yoga as ethics fills a profound need.
Neuroscience
MIND IS BODY
Yoga has always been about consciousness. States of mind. The places in which we get tangled or triggered and the capacity a human mind has for healing, for creativity, and for love.
This isn't dogma. It isn't snake oil. It's science.
We have the capacity to work directly with consciousness and the brain through such things as breath, movement, and sensory awareness training. You cannot separate the body from the mind. We all have wounds. We all have the building blocks of resilience.
Asana
MOVEMENT IS REVELATION
Yogic movement - as I understand it - is not accomplishment or dependent on any kind of 'mobility' or strength. Yogic movement is an inquiry. It is a process of discovering our own hearts, minds, hangups and habituated reactionary patterns.
Movement is revelation. I've never paid attention in this way before. I've never felt these kinds of things before. I didn't realize the way I feel - about myself, about the world, all of the time - could change.
Through movement we can feel our own self. The soul, what have you.
We watch our emotions and stories and terrors flit and flicker through experience, through the muscle, across the senses. As we watch, we begin to know: in our bones: in the pulse: in the gut:
our feelings are not so entrenched as we thought they were. It is possible to let go. We can feel more than we ever believed we could feel. Through movement we see how our lives live on in the flesh; a story of our uniqueness, a riddle of our characters, an invitation to change.
We fall into an openness in which our history is not the end of the story, but the beginning of a new story. Movement is revelation. Movement is grace. Movement is the long needed liberation from our petty and ancient and societal suffering. This is profound. Movement is a reclamation of our curves, our wounds, our sadness, our pride and our vulnerability. Movement is an expression. A reclamation of our voice and of our time. Movement is the embodiment of our sweeter emotions, a dance we accept, a bow to everything.
Anatomy
become literate in your body
The body is a terrible and a beautiful thing. When a relatively innocuous practice of yoga began to change everything about who I was, I got curious: why did movement so effect my mood, and why did my body seem to have such direct influence on my character? What was happening to me?
Standard yoga teacher training doesn't talk about the human body or anatomy in much detail (it can't, at 200 hours. It's not med school). Everything I've learned about the body I learned after training.
I've worked with leaders in the fields of yoga anatomy, trauma studies, functional movement, fascial lines, adapting yoga asana and reading bodies. Along the way I've figured out that I can't answer most questions we have about the body; we can only stand back in wonder.
And I've learned that this learning itself is enough, even without final answers: exploring the body changes the way we look at everything. Coming to know the body even provokes changes in the brain, opening us to empathy, courage, and an ability to tolerate unknowing.
This is a beauty. To realize that even though we will die, even without ultimate answers to soul or suffering or disease, we can come to be literate in our bones, our fibers, and comfortable in our own skin.
Pranayama
BREATH-CENTERED TEACHINGS
Breath is the threshold. It is the threshold between man and nature, the bridge between body and mind. Breath is the thing in us that most closely mirrors the nervous system: it catches or accelerates, is restricted or inhibited, it seethes or settles. It is one of the few things in the body and in life that can be both: voluntary and involuntary.
Therefore, if we want access to awareness, attention, underlying states of mood and character, breath is the door.
Yoga teachers tend to talk about breath a lot, but rarely teach it. I don't care what postures you can do - if it isn't related to the breath I'm not sure it's yoga.
Transformation
BECOME MORE ALIVE
It's only on the most superficial level that yoga is 'about' the body in an exercise context, or even about stress reduction, though those are popular and wholly appropriate places to begin. Nor can we say, exactly, that yoga is a kind of spirituality or religion. It isn't concerned with gods or theologies. It's only concern is humanity.
There is nothing so deeply revolutionary, so kind and yet so moving, as being concerned with our own humanity. As exploring the cave of our own heart.
This is a process of becoming more and more our selves. More and more tacitly alive.
Ancient Lineage
How does an oral tradition express itself in modernity? (Intimately, over time). How does an ancient practice, traditionally handed down from mentor to student, find relevance in a post-modern society? (by changing your life). How do we find personal meaning in something so old and abstract and strange? (by connecting ourselves to the source, directly).
I try to teach the things alluded to but never arrived at in classes: chant, philosophy, the vocabulary and teachings of the sages, yogic psychology and subtle body awareness. These are direct routes to personal transformation. This is the stuff that actually works you over and leaves you wide open in wonder.
Teachers & Inspirations
These are my teachers and folks I have trained with in various ways over the years, with no hierarchy implied. In my early practice I sought out 'the tradition' in Ashtanga and Iyengar yoga, as well as Ayurveda.
I was also coming to yoga with a background in psychology/counseling/social justice and training as an anthropologist: that led directly to seeking out the neuroscience of trauma, resilience, and recovery. As my practice and understanding evolved, I was drawn to somatic and breath work. I consider myself to be within the Desikachar lineage, and much of my study these days invokes Vedic chant, understanding the intersection of traditional practices and contemporary bodies, resisting oppression while honoring yoga’s deep roots.