Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 5

Yoga Teaching and Money: A

Conversation with​ ​Mark


Whitwell

Interviewer: can be anyone

Mark Whitwell​ has been teaching yoga around the world for many decades, after first
meeting his teachers Tirumali Krishnamacharya and his son TKV Desikachar in
Chennai in 1973.​ ​Mark Whitwell​ is one of the few yoga teachers who has refused to
commercialise the practice, never turning away anyone who cannot afford a training.
The editor of and contributor to Desikachar’s classic book “The Heart of Yoga,”​ ​Mark
Whitwell​ is the founder of the Heart of Yoga Foundation, which has sponsored yoga
education for thousands of people who would otherwise not be able to access it. A
hippy at heart,​ M
​ ark Whitwell​ successfully uses a Robin Hood “pay what you can”
model for his online teachings, and is interested in making sure each individual is
able to get their own personal practice of yoga as intimacy with life, in the way that is
right for them, making the teacher redundant.​ ​Mark Whitwell​ has been an outspoken
voice against the commercialisation of yoga in the west, and the loss of the richness
of the Indian tradition, yet gentle and humorously encouraging western practitioners
to look into the full depth and spectrum of yoga, before medicalising it and trying to
improve on a practice that has not yet been grasped. And yet he is also a critic of
right-wing Indian movements that would seek to claim yoga as a purely hindu
nationalist practice and the intolerant mythistories produced by such movements.
After encircling the globe for decades, teaching in scores of countries,​ ​Mark Whitwell
lives in remote rural Fiji with his partner, where he can be found playing the sitar,
eating papaya, and chatting with the global heart of yoga sangha online. Anyone is
welcome to come and learn the basic principles of yoga with​ ​Mark Whitwell.​
Q: In my fear of being tarred with the same brush as the language “special
discount, on now, two spots left!” commodification, I tend to charge nothing
for my classes. What is going on here?
Mark Whitwell​: I like that. Uncompromising. Krishnamacharya’s instruction was that
yoga is not commercial activity. Yoga is caring for each other in local community.
Yoga is the force of mother nature’s nurturing transmitted one person to another.
Caring and giving the tools of healing and self-empowerment in the way that is right
for each person. Now, any one who is capable of being a teacher will want to do it
anyway, and earning money from it is entirely secondary to that first motive, which is
that you care for people. So I think it’s very good that we establish this, that the first
principle is to care for people, and we are willing to teach yoga for nothing. If people
have nothing, they pay nothing, or perhaps they bring two carrots out of the garden
or something. But other people will understand what you’re doing, and perhaps have
income from the major secular cashflows of this world, and they might like to bring
along a thousand dollars one day, because they see what you’re doing.
Q: Do you think, though, that being ​willing​ to teach for nothing is different
from ​insisting​ on teaching for nothing in the belief that money is bad or tainted
or to be avoided.
Mark Whitwell​: The ideals of conventional spirituality and religion is to go beyond
desire, beyond the apparent need for money. But there’s no going beyond that,
everybody needs it, it’s the basic currency, the basic transmission of energy between
people. We need money for survival, it’s how the world works. People have
developed language to avoid saying money, like energy exchange, or words like
“offering” to obscure that what they are doing is very much a transaction. If
something is an offering then nothing is expected in return.
I think we should talk money. And its fine to say to somebody, “You can have this for
nothing, if you’ve got no money, that’s ok, you can come anyway. But if you’ve got
some money, then that would be good to make a contribution, so we can do this
work in the world. When you talk about money, talk about money.
I often say to people, keep your day job. Don’t leap into relying on fulltime yoga
teaching to survive. Gurdjieff used to say, do your spiritual life with your full frontal
into the world, and make your money with your left back foot. You know, work your
money out somehow., Be practical. We have to be practical.

Q: I know that what I’m teaching isn’t really yoga, but I need to do what is
popular to survive financially. No one ever told me that being a yoga teacher
would be a constant financial struggle that would force me to just cater to
existing tastes and consumer demand. I need to pay my rent so I have to teach
gymnastics!
Mark Whitwell​: I know it’s hard, it’s just that we shouldn’t oblige yoga to keep us in
house and car and mortgage and everything else. Getting the kids to school. I mean
that’s hard. If that is our circumstance, then fair enough, do your best, but also
understand that when money becomes a priority of your motive to teach, it’s not
good. It creates a vulnerability to having to perform to the conventional expectations
of yoga, where you have to do what’s popular to survive financially.
Let’s be clear, we are teaching each person how to do their yoga that is right for
them, free of any dependence on a book, a video, a class, a teacher present. Giving
them the principles where their own breath becomes the guiding principle of how to
do their own practice. And the paradox is that yoga was always something that was
done in the sanctuary of your home, the temple of your own body, the heart’s temple.
A personal matter. We need to be trying to put ourselves out of a job. The current
situation is as ridiculous as if a Hindu person had to go down to a local puja studio
three times a week, and pay them to do a puja. It’s something personal, something
prior to all transactions and monetisation. We have been forced to return to home
practice in the pandemic, and this is a good thing. This is what we are doing as yoga
teachers, giving people their own home practice.

Q: If I’m a teacher and I have to teach gymnastics in order to pay my rent, how
do I get out of that?
Mark Whitwell​: Be assertive in your local environment and yoga studio about what
you are teaching. “This is what I teach, this is what I want you to know”. Be in the
room, be with the group and teach what you know. And if don’t want to do that, you
feel you can’t do that, then that’s alright, teach some duplication of patterns, but be
honest with yourself about what you’re doing, and I expect you will gradually feel
moved to share something more. We have this opportunity to bring these principles
from the wisdom tradition into what has been popularized, the patterns. People doing
the popular styles and derivates deserve to have these principles included in their
practice. There doesn’t need to be any conflict or criticism. If this yoga has gone into
you, if you understand it with the authority of your own intimate experience as life
itself, that the body loves its breath, the inhale loves the exhale, strength loves to
receive, you know. If you know that, then teach that with some sort of assertiveness,
with the authority of your experience. That’s the yoga teacher. With your own unique
voice. Your yoga, not somebody else’s yoga. And what makes it yours is not the
shapes, not the sequences. It’s the feeling they are done with. Your intimacy with
life. Your participation in life.
Q: And so as a teacher, if I notice that I am in fact trying to get something from
people, whether its approval or love or money or whatever, that it’s not really a
clean gift, should I stop teaching? If I’m still looking for something from
others, that it’s not ‘no strings attached.’
Mark Whitwell​: Well, it’s a great question. It depends if you can simply witness that
and understand it as the momentum of social patterning. That you intend to be free
of. If that clarity of intention is there, and you can abide as reality itself, compassion
itself, for yourself and your student, and not identify as that pattern, then, well ok.
You don’t have to be some kind of perfect saint to share yoga. Don’t wait until you
are pure and perfect. But you do need that touchstone through your own practice
with the fact that you are reality, not those patterns. You know in Yoga there is no
such thing as yoga, there is no such thing. There is ​asmita ​or association. And if
you’re associated with an idea of a person trying to get rid of their ego, that’s your
association. And you can go on in that identity and thought structure. There is this
understanding that all there is is reality, the cosmos arising as the whole body and all
its vast relationships and interdependence. And you live that, and now teach yoga.
There is no process. It’s just understanding. As long as there is that samskara of
separate object and you as the separate knower, the subject, to the imagined
separate object, if that continues as a habit of thought activity and identification with
that presumption, which by the way the body becomes like vehicle of pain relative to
that presumption. So you notice all that and at some point you just go F*****. So
what do you do? You practice, you do the yogas of participation in reality itself, and
that doesn’t even have to be accompanied by this philosophical understanding that
we just mentioned. The yogas done accurately as they came from the tradition, as
Krishnamacharya bought them through and rescued them, if you do that practice, it
is your direct embrace of reality itself, which is nurturing force, and in time those
presumptions disappear out of your system.
Q: So how about “​Mark Whitwell​ TM Yoga.”
Mark Whitwell​: No, not that. Forget it. [Laughs]

Know More about​ ​Mark Whitwell​;-

Twitter:-​ ​https://twitter.com/markwhitwell

Facebook:-​ ​https://www.facebook.com/yogaofheart/

LinkedIn:-​ ​https://www.linkedin.com/in/mark-whitwell-0057322/

Instagram:-​ ​https://www.instagram.com/markwhitwell/?hl=en

You might also like