Community and Collaboration in Yoga

Lately, I’ve been reflecting deeply on what I long for in my yoga practice and teaching journey: true community and collaboration.

Over the years, I’ve studied with many different teachers, each offering their own gifts and perspectives. Yet, sometimes it feels like there’s a wall between us. I find myself asking: What are we afraid of?

Is it the fear of losing students to another teacher?

If so, I’ve already been there—and I’ve learned to be at peace with it. Students will always seek out the teacher who resonates with them in that season of life. That’s not a loss—it’s part of the practice itself.


What I truly long for is collaboration. The chance to co-create workshops, gatherings, and shared offerings where no single person carries all the responsibility. A space where teachers can come together not to merge into one entity, but to weave our gifts into something greater for our students.

I long to learn from others. Each teacher has wisdom worth sharing. And I long to share what I know, too—not in competition, but in contribution.

There is immense potential within the yoga community to foster healing on a deeper level. But to tap into that, we have to soften our grip on “mine.” My students, my studio, my classes… these words can create division. What if, instead, we embraced the idea of ours?

I don’t pretend to have all the answers, but I know what I’m choosing. I will continue to show up. I will attend other teachers’ classes, support their offerings, and remain open to co-creating. I will keep manifesting this vision of community and working toward it, step by step.

Because yoga is not just about individual practice—it is about connection, union, and the beautiful possibilities that unfold when we come together.

Yog = Union … body, mind, spirit ; human to the Divine; each person to each other and this beautiful earth on which we live.

Togetherness is magical.

Namaste,

Resa

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Mental Health Matters

Yoga Mat or Rug? What Should I Buy?

Yoga for Mental Health: A Path to Emotional Balance and Inner Peace