Culture Yoga Teacher Jessamyn Stanley Believes White Supremacy Has Polluted Yoga - and It's Time to Talk About It

Article: https://people.com/health/yoga-teacher-and-body-positive-activist-jessamyn-stanley/ Archive: https://archive.md/LxGwW

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Jessamyn Stanley needs you to know what yoga is really about - and it's not the poses.
In her new book Yoke: My Yoga of Self-Acceptance, the yoga instructor and body activist shares reflective personal essays that touch upon everything from racism to the cultural appropriation of American yoga, from consumerism to cannabis.
And while the timing couldn't be better considering the current cultural climate, the idea for the book came to her years ago while she was writing her first book, Every Body Yoga, a guide to developing a yoga practice.
"I realized yoga is a lot more than postures," she tells PEOPLE. "The postures get to be more complicated, not because you're practicing harder gymnastics or physical postures, but because you're practicing emotional and mental and really spiritual postures."

In fact, she says, yoga is not supposed to feel good. Take the example of someone expecting a Zen-like experience from a yoga practice - only to be disappointed. "You're like, 'This is hard. Everyone else seems to know what they're doing. I am not good enough, I shouldn't be doing this, maybe my body is supposed to look different, maybe my life's supposed to be different.' All these feelings start to come up. That's what the postures are leading you towards, is to have that experience."
RELATED: Jessamyn Stanley Found Body Acceptance Through Yoga and Can Help You Do the Same
Stanley has been nurturing this self-awareness in the nearly 10 years since she has been breaking barriers in the yoga world, tackling topics like fat-shaming, her queer Black identity and unattainable beauty standards. In Yoke - which means yoga in Sanskrit - she uses her own life as a a metaphor to further explore the coming together of mind and body, light and the dark, good and the bad - both on and off the mat.

"I wanted to reflect on what it is to practice yoga when we are as a society being forced to reckon with the long, deep, systemic, down-to-the-bone problems. We're being forced to look at things that we've never wanted to look at. And that's all that yoga is, is looking at the things that you don't want to look at. And ultimately, come hell or high water, accepting them."

The book explores the existence of white supremacy and cultural appropriation in American yoga. "I would venture to say that everything in our collective society is rooted in white supremacy. I am sure there are many people who would disagree with that, and honestly I don't care because I believe that and I know it's the case," she says.
"I think that we see it show up in a lot of different ways. In the same way it's everywhere else and it has polluted everything else, it's polluted yoga. It's very much a part of how yoga has spread in America. The popularity of yoga really came down to wealthy white people wanting to learn and explore in a very specific way, and that's why yoga has been so white for so long in America."
RELATED: Alabama Lifts Ban on Yoga in Schools - But Teachers Are Still Forbidden from Saying 'Namaste
Detailing the cultural appropriation in yoga, Stanley says it's "rampant because we are still living in the legacy of colonization."
"The appropriation comes from practitioners who are not South Asian looking at South Asian teachers and saying, 'I need to do exactly what they're doing. I need to practice yoga exactly how they're practicing it.' Yoga as a concept exists in so many cultures. It's literally the basis of so many different things: the idea of acceptance and the yolking together of the light and the dark. But these teachers are just saying, 'Practice yoga.' They're not saying, 'Pretend to be Indian.' They're not saying, 'Steal someone else's ethnic identity.' They're saying, 'Practice the balancing of truth and light within yourself.' "
"I think that when you bring up cultural appropriation in yoga, everyone's butthole clenches because everybody's like, 'Oh s---, I think I might be guilty of this,' or, 'I could be apart of this and that doesn't feel good.' And that's the yoga. That's the hard thing. That's the thing that we're being asked to accept. It doesn't mean you have to sit in space of shame about it; it doesn't mean you're a bad person. It just means that you're a person and you're allowed to be that way."
Stanley talks about coming to terms with her own truth and internalized racism in the essay "White Guilt."
"I see a lot of people point fingers at other people and I definitely started writing that essay because I had a bone to pick with every person that I have met in the yoga world that I felt was being racist," she says. "But by the end of it I realized I don't have s--- to say to anybody else that I don't first need to say to myself - and that is the most important work of all."

Yoke: My Yoga of Self-Acceptance is on sale June 22.
 
In fact, she says, yoga is not supposed to feel good. Take the example of someone expecting a Zen-like experience from a yoga practice - only to be disappointed. "You're like, 'This is hard. Everyone else seems to know what they're doing. I am not good enough, I shouldn't be doing this, maybe my body is supposed to look different, maybe my life's supposed to be different.' All these feelings start to come up. That's what the postures are leading you towards, is to have that experience."
This is more of a self-esteem issue and has absolutely nothing to do with Yoga in general. If you put your mind to it, and it's something you're really committed to, you can do anything you want.

This is basically code for "Everyone should feel like shit and be miserable because I do and I don't want to be the only one that feels this way"
 
"The postures get to be more complicated, not because you're practicing harder gymnastics or physical postures, but because you're practicing emotional and mental and really spiritual postures."
Yoga (and meditation by extension) is all about balance. Your weeble-wobble black ass would cause a earthquake if you so much as leaned one way or the other.

What the fuck? You're telling me that obese land whale is a yoga teacher!
Reminds me of fat gym teachers/coaches. Those who can't do, teach. Or in this bigot blob's case, "preach". 🚬
 
She is kind of right, but not in the way that she thinks. Yoga isn't polluted by white supremacism; it IS white supremacism. Let's look at the sources:

Bhagavad Gita ch2. Verse 48-50 said:
48. Be steadfast in yoga, o Arjuna. Perform you duty and abandon all attachment to success or failure. Such evenness of mind is called Yoga.
49. O Dhananjaya, rid yourself of all fruitive activities by devotional service and surrender fully to that consciousness. Those who want to enjoy the fruits of their work are misers.
50. A man engaged in devotional service rids himself of both good and bad actions even in this life. Therefore strive for Yoga, O Arjuna, which is the art of all work.
So devotional service to god is yoga? Now lets look at what some of the gods see as good stuff to do:

Rig Veda Mandala 1 Hymn 130 Verse 8 said:
8. Indra in battles help his Aryan worshipper, he who hath hundred helps at hand in every fray, in frays that win the light of heaven.
Plaguing the lawless he gave up to Manu's seed the dusky skin;
Blazing, 'twere, he burns each covetous man away, he burns, the tyrannous away.
Rig Veda Mandala 7 Hymn 5 Verse 3 said:
3. For fear of thee forth fled the dark-hued races, scattered abroad, deserting their possessions,
When, glowing, O Vaisvanara, for Puru, thou Agni didst light up and rend their castles.
Rig Veda Mandala 9 Hymn 41 Verse 1-2 said:
1. ACTIVE and bright have they come forth, impetuous in speed like bulls,
Driving the black skin far away.
2. Quelling the riteless Dasyu, may we think upon the bridge of bliss,
Leaving the bridge of woe behind.
Rig Veda Mandala 9 Hymn 73 Verse 5 said:
5. O'er Sire and Mother they have roared in unison bright with the verse of praise, burning up riteless men,
Blowing away with supernatural might from earth and from the heavens the swarthy skin which Indra hates.
So yoga = genocide of niggers
 
She is kind of right, but not in the way that she thinks. Yoga isn't polluted by white supremacism; it IS white supremacism. Let's look at the sources:


So devotional service to god is yoga? Now lets look at what some of the gods see as good stuff to do:





So yoga = genocide of niggers
So the whole concept of the Aryan Race is just "We wuz pajeets an' sheeit?"
 
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So the whole concept of the Aryan Race is just "We wuz pajeets an' sheeit?"
The linguistic concept of aryan means the indo-european invaders of Persia, Afghanistan and India. They left behind their language (and in some of the more isolated mountain valles, their genes) and that's the reason why persian, urdu, pashto and hindi/sanskrit are indo european languages.

The spiritual/philosophical concept of aryan means noble or twice-born, thus one who is initiated in the mysteries of the world according to the common tradition of the Indo European peoples. (Could be buddhist or vedicism or the orphic mysteries or some form of esoteric christianity. Whatever is really perennial and proto indo european.)

ARYAN =/= BLOND w/ BLUE EYES (and a range of skull shapes)
Blond with blue eyes is NORDIC, the ideology that discriminates on that ground is called NORDICISM.

When nazis talk about "the aryan race" they mean those people who were initiated. They have a certain detachment and principledness in them. The Dalai Lama is a an Aryan. Some whore who has blond hair and blue eyes but lets herself get fucked on camera for 20$ will never ever be an aryan.
 
The linguistic concept of aryan means the indo-european invaders of Persia, Afghanistan and India. They left behind their language (and in some of the more isolated mountain valles, their genes) and that's the reason why persian, urdu, pashto and hindi/sanskrit are indo european languages.

The spiritual/philosophical concept of aryan means noble or twice-born, thus one who is initiated in the mysteries of the world according to the common tradition of the Indo European peoples. (Could be buddhist or vedicism or the orphic mysteries or some form of esoteric christianity. Whatever is really perennial and proto indo european.)

ARYAN =/= BLOND w/ BLUE EYES (and a range of skull shapes)
Blond with blue eyes is NORDIC, the ideology that discriminates on that ground is called NORDICISM.

When nazis talk about "the aryan race" they mean those people who were initiated. They have a certain detachment and principledness in them. The Dalai Lama is a an Aryan. Some whore who has blond hair and blue eyes but lets herself get fucked on camera for 20$ will never ever be an aryan.
So, TLDR... we wuz pajeets an' sheeit.
 
Curry Heil!

Nazi autists versus sheboon landwhales. "Culture war" in a nutshell.
 
"I wanted to reflect on what it is to practice yoga when we are as a society being forced to reckon with the long, deep, systemic, down-to-the-bone problems. We're being forced to look at things that we've never wanted to look at. And that's all that yoga is, is looking at the things that you don't want to look at. And ultimately, come hell or high water, accepting them."
Like, perhaps, accepting you are a unhealthy fatso who can't control her diet so shouldn't be in a position of teaching anything, let alone having opinions on race and health?

Maybe start with that one.
 
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