So, Your Teacher Is Going to India

If you are practicing in a traditional ashtanga yoga program, you will inevitably get an announcement that your teacher will be leaving for India to study with his/her teacher for one or two months. It may seem incomprehensible at first. Who takes this amount of time to study yoga? Why do they have to go all the way to India? “What about my practice?,” some students might say. While others may whisper that they too will take a little break.

These regular trips to Mysore, India is a chance for any student (and, in many cases, teachers) to deepen their practice at the source of ashtanga yoga. I have been practicing with my teacher, Sharath Jois, since 2010. This trip will be be my 8th trip (or 9th, I’m not really sure at this point). Over this period I have spent over a year and a half living and practicing in a small suburb in Mysore. And I am looking forward to “going home”– it is my yoga home, where practice takes on a very different quality because I am in the presence of my teacher. There, I will focus on my practice and recharge so that I can continue to do what I love to do, share this rich and transformative practice.

My last trip to Mysore, India was in the summer of 2018. The program was less than a year old, and it was understood, we would take the time off and reconvene after my return. This is one way of managing a mysore trip–everything is put into pause while the teacher goes to study and students either self-practice or don’t practice at all, and the program might loose students and steam in the process.

We are so lucky that we have a chance to do things differently now because the program has evolved and grown. After my last led class tomorrow, I will leave the program to my assistants, Yasmine Seoud, Marwa Saleh and Marwa Osman, three dedicated practitioners who have trained with me, assisted me in the room for over a year, studied the classical yoga text with me and with whom I have had countless conversations about teaching; they have been privy to my ethos and rationale as a teacher, why I choose to do the things that I do for each and every student. They are not me, but I have every confidence that they will take all that abundant knowledge of yoga and distill it into their authentic teaching style. They each teach yoga already and have already covered for me while I was sick or when I have had family emergencies, and have done great holding the space.

So, we enter a new phase in our program, one that I hope will allow the program to grow and prosper beyond the limits of my own small personhood. I will be honest, it is a lonely path being a mysore teacher, to dedicate all your mornings (and, thus, evenings, too) day after day, week after week, month after month, year after year, but it has been a pleasure to create a space where people can feel safe to explore their bodies and to stretch beyond what we think possible. Since 2017, I have poured my life and soul into this program. If you love practicing with me, if you love the yoga community we have built here, if you get something from the experience of coming to our classes, I urge you to continue to come to class, keep your practice juicy, keep your subscriptions going, your participation keeps our program alive.

Starting next week, Monday, December 4, Marwa Osman, Yasmine Seoud and Marwa Saleh (not pictured here) will be holding the space through January 2024. See you at Nūn Center. Monday to Thursdays 7:30-10:30am, Fridays 8:30-10:30am. Want to sample the program? We offer 1 week and 1 month INTRODUCTION packages.

Cairo, The Romance Continues

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Taken at Cairo’s Gezira Club by the late Zeinab Lamloum, a great photographer, devoted ashtanga student and good friend.

There are some places that simply draw us, that holds a place in our hearts and our imaginations, that stirs in us some deep kind of recollection of what it is to be terribly, beautifully human. Since late 2013, that place for me has been Egypt. So, in this year which I’ve dedicated to living more fully, more authentically, making my fourth teaching trip to Cairo feels like a pretty good idea.

Over the last few years, I realize, I have formed an interesting, and ever changing, relationship with the place and its people. My first trip, I subbed for fellow teacher, Egyptian Iman Elsherbiny when she took her own trip to study with our teacher in Mysore, India. That first experience was like stepping into someone else’s life, living in her apartment, teaching her classes, being taken around by her friends. My second trip, I joined forces with Iman to help her open her new yoga space, The Shala in Maadi, during which we did a few retreats together which solidified our own sisterhood; her friends became our friends. The last time, I was teaching workshops and retreats, mostly on my own, I spent practically every weekend away from Cairo, it was beautiful but discombobulating. I started to make my own connections, but it was snippets of a life in a whirlwind.

In a way, over those trips, Egypt and I were having a romance, intense but fleeting, substantial enough that it has kept me wanting more; so risky at times that I wanted to keep myself at a safe distance. Still, the feeling remains, I know that Egypt and I like each other.

It’s been nearly a year and a half since my last meeting with Egypt and I wonder whether we’ll jive or not, whether we can we still top the magic of the first, second, even the third time?! I’m not going to try to think too much or speculate the possibilities. I can’t speak for Egypt, but I know I’ve changed and I have a feeling that in the backdrop of Cairo I will know how much more different I am from the other times I’ve come to visit. I know I have grown there, and I know there is probably more growing to do together.

I have different intentions than previous trips. Instead of seeking adventure, wanting to teach everywhere and spreading myself too thinly, I am concentrating my energy, hoping for a stable two and a half months of teaching and self-study.

This time, I am making Nūn Center in Zamalek my base for two months, while continuing to offer Inner Dance in The Shala in Maadi, where the healing modality grew a steady following by the end of 2014.

Between April 17 and June 10, I will be teaching a Sunday to Thursday Mysore program between 7:30-10am at Nūn Center (pronounced “noon,” Nūn is the symbol for primordial water in Ancient Egypt), along with supplementary weekend workshop classes on Friday mornings that will include “Introduction to Ashtanga Yoga” and various themed explorations paired with the traditionally counted led class. For more information on the Nūn  Ashtanga and Inner Dance offerings, please check out the website http://nuncenter.com. Email or call for bookings and inquiries we@nuncenter.com/+20 122 398 0898.

I will also be facilitating Inner Dance in The Shala in Maadi on Thursday evenings. For information on the Inner Dance schedule please call 01223717729-01222384498 or check out The Shala Facebook Page.

There will surely be more in store, dates are being floated and ideas are brewing. So, please continue to check in for updates.

I can’t say where this romance will take me, but I suspect it’s where I want to be going, deep into the personal work that fuels my own teaching, my hunger for learning, and my love for living. I’m excited to say: Cairo, I’m coming.

For Weekly Mysore Classes & Friday Workshops
Nūn Center
4 Shafik Mansour, Zamalek, Cairo
we@nuncenter.com/+20 122 398 0898

For Thursday Night Inner Dances
The Shala
6, Road 200 (in front of the South Africa Embassy), Maadi, Cairo
01223717729-01222384498