On the 25th of June 2017 I spent a nerve-wracking 6 hours taking my Introductory
Assessment. Three days later I found out that all the hard work, stress and focus had been worth it, as I had passed and was officially an Iyengar yoga teacher.
You get by with a help from your friends
Iāve had loads of support. My husband has had to step into the bedtime breach two evenings a week, as I head out the door to teach my evening classes. He never complains, in fact, he makes a point of asking how the lesson went when
I come home and root about for a snack.
The little group of āguinea pigsā that I taught during my training have stuck with me through thick and thin. They
committed wholeheartedly to being my loyal test students, and then, when I passed, insisted that the class carry on, with the difference being that they now paid me. Theyāve been my students for nearly three years now, and I truly feel that we evolve together.
Grateful for the Good Bits
Itās easy to focus on the negative. But, as Mr Iyengar says: āCultivate the positive, abjure the negative.ā Iāve also had teaching successes and some really excellent good bits.
Iāve arrived on time to every lesson Iāve had to teach this year, bar one. Iāve successfully started a new class, which now has a steady core of students.
Iāve taken a student up into headstand for the first time. Iāve seen my students progress and improve, both physically and mentally. Iāve got to the end of the class and felt the peace and stillness in the room during savasana, and been deeply grateful.
Any yoga teacher will tell you that you know when youāve taught a good class. Thereās a sense of intense satisfaction and fulfilment, shared between you and your students. Youāve worked them hard, and theyāve worked hard themselves into the bargain.