6 episodes

Host Jeffry Farrell has nearly 25 years of experience teaching private one-to-one yoga sessions. He has worked with people of all ages, abilities, and backgrounds, some of them over a period of more than 20 years.

Jeffry is an expert at guiding yoga students towards claiming a personal yoga practice. His approach cultivates loyalty and liberation in the heart of the yoga student.

Join us as we talk about his best practices on a practical level, his unique approach to yoga, and what he learned from years of study with his own yoga mentor, the Amazing Kumar Pallana.

Yoga One to One with Jeffry Farrell Jeffry Farrell

    • Business

Host Jeffry Farrell has nearly 25 years of experience teaching private one-to-one yoga sessions. He has worked with people of all ages, abilities, and backgrounds, some of them over a period of more than 20 years.

Jeffry is an expert at guiding yoga students towards claiming a personal yoga practice. His approach cultivates loyalty and liberation in the heart of the yoga student.

Join us as we talk about his best practices on a practical level, his unique approach to yoga, and what he learned from years of study with his own yoga mentor, the Amazing Kumar Pallana.

    The Private Yoga Teacher and the Response to Pain.

    The Private Yoga Teacher and the Response to Pain.

    In this episode, we discuss how to respond when a student comes into the session with pain or an injury. Or what happens when the teacher experiences pain and injury.

    We'd love to hear what you think! What did you get out of this episode? What else would you like us to talk about? Email jeff@jeffrykfarrell.com, or go to http://www.yogaonetoone.com and click the "contact" link.

    Below is not a full transcript, but a recap of the conversation:

    Injury, pain, tears, weaknesses, limitations, failures are all part of what we will address. It's inevitable.

    Injury is humbling.

    Pain is an honest teacher. With pain, we've entered a land that is a healing territory. A land of empathy. An opportunity to learn. It teaches us.

    To experience pain is an invitation to a path of humility.

    To be humble is to take time. To take an honest look at oneself. A time for self-examination. Svadaya. We see our own limitations, and our abilities, dreams, desires. We can develop a respect for who we are. It leads to a greater understanding of our own identity, and acceptance of our own nature. Our own dignity. When you have that awareness, nobody can take it away from you. These injuries lead us back to stillness. When you're going through injury, you do experience a range of emotions. Not necessarily reactive to that event. Sometimes the emotions are not separate from the event. They lie deep within us and the injuries give us the opportunities to recognize that and perhaps to let them go. To truly make changes within ourselves. And if we can work with that understanding for ourselves, that's what we want to take in our work with other people. Because an injury is physical, but the yoga practices observe us as physical, emotional, mental, soul beings. The patterns in each of those levels become present to us in our injury.

    If we address it on that level, with patience, and a kind of abiding understanding that lets yourself feel what you're feeling, that's when real change and healing can occur.

    Some people connect pain with pity. And there are people who completely deny it and go the other direction. And we have to be conscious of what this person is going through, and we want to bring them to a present-moment focus. Because sometimes a diagnosis becomes wrapped up in a person's identity. It is this sense of identification will illness, disease, diagnosis that is in itself a serious problem. We are not those things. We are not truly limited by those things.

    Sometimes healing does not mean that you get better on a physical level necessarily. But it does mean that you can make an adjustment on some profound level in your life.
    When someone comes in with pain, illness, injury, a diagnosis, etc., you want to come to a present-moment focus with them. You and them together. It involves trust. While you don't want them to complain about it, you do want them to know that you are interested in what they are experiencing. Invite them to share with you. And we invite them to take a breath and release. Not to deny their experience, but to let it be less grasped. To let go of their expectations, their to-do list, the rest of their day or week or season. Remind them that those programs run in their minds and we invite them to let that go. Let that go and be present. So we begin to loosen some of that identification with suffering. Suffering and pain are not the same. Pain is inevitable. The suffering is sometimes inevitable. We invite the observation of pain, but not the anticipation of it. We invite the recognition of presence. When we begin to self-examine and find further connections with our pain, it's amazing how the suffering becomes present and we begin to unlock it. We can begin to unlock the emotional content. The mental content and the future concern. It's important for the yoga teacher to release judgement, heighten discernment, and cultivate curiosity.

    • 43 min
    Vision for a Private Yoga Teaching Practice Part One: Biomechanical Modalities

    Vision for a Private Yoga Teaching Practice Part One: Biomechanical Modalities

    About this episode: Jeff discusses various biomechanical modalities adjacent to yoga, whose influence can be an important factor in the cultivation of the vision of a yoga teaching practice, particularly in the one-to-one setting.

    Recorded in the backyard on a rainy day.

    Links mentioned:

    www.yogaonetoone.com

    Your Yoga Consultation Cheat Sheet

    More links in the body of the show notes.

    OVERVIEW/SUMMARY:

    Most yoga teacher training programs focus on teaching in the group setting.

    Over the past couple of decades, the number of yoga practitioners has exploded to now 40 million people, and so have yoga teacher training programs, in response.

    The old-fashioned way, however, was for one yoga teacher to teach one student at a time.

    This began to change when Sri Rama Krishna directed Vivakananda and others to take the yoga practices into the world, which led to yoga being introduced to the West.

    B.K.S. Iyengar and Swami Yogananda had a tremendous impact on yoga practices in the United States over the past century.

    How can a teacher come out of a yoga teacher training, which may have focused on group classes, and prepare themselves specifically to teach in the one-to-one setting?

    Open your mind to, not only other lineages of yoga than the one you have trained in, but in other biomechanical modalities that may be adjacent to the yoga practice. This is part of claiming your own practice and keeping the beginner’s mind.

    Additional modalities may include Pilates, the Alexander Technique, the Trager Approach, Feldenkrais, energy practices, and others. The private yoga teacher will benefit from personal experience with these modalities to expand their toolkit for working with students with a variety of needs, backgrounds, and abilities.

    How does the yoga teacher begin to discern what modalities might be valuable in their teaching practice? They must implement these modalities in their own personal practice and test their value that way. A teacher should not bring to a student what they have not experienced themselves.

    In addition to the modalities listed above, biomechanical pioneers/pioneering ideas of the 20th century worth investigating:

    Ida Rolf (developer of the Rolfing technique).

    Upledger Institute (craniosacral practices)

    Muscle activation techniques

    Doug Keller

    Thomas Myers (Anatomy Trains)

    Erik Dalton

    Dr. Timothy McCall

    Dr. John Sarno

    The Bates Eye Method

    Related disciplines of body/voice and speech/movement/dance instruction are valuable, such as:

    Kristin Linklater

    Cicely Berry


    Voice and the actor : Berry, Cicely : Free Download, Borrow, and Streami...
    Includes index


    These alternate modalities can open the door to the more subtle aspects of the yoga practice.

    The most important component of the private yoga teaching practice, however, is loving your students.

    Seek beyond your own confirmation biases, remain curious, challenge what you know.

    Work directly with massage therapists, physical therapists, and chiropractors. Learn what works and what doesn’t. Integrate your experience.

    On a practical level, your connection with these other practitioners can develop into networks that can serve your students, yourself, and these other practitioners through referrals.

    To sum up: have a beginner’s mind, seek beyond your confirmation bias, remain curious, be grounded, engage in daily practice (awareness, discipline, self examination grounded in biomechanics), connect with practitioners of other modalities and experience them, communicate in terms of the biomechanics and allow that to integrate into more subtle, deeper, broader practices.

    • 35 min
    How to Conduct Your First Yoga Consultation Session

    How to Conduct Your First Yoga Consultation Session

    About this episode: Jeff discusses the journey of the yoga student, and he gives practical tips for structuring phone inquiries and initial consultation sessions designed to convert the curious to the committed.

    Recorded in the backyard. You’ll hear the dogs.

    Links mentioned:

    www.yogaonetoone.com

    Your Yoga Consultation Cheat Sheet

    Yoga Gems by Georg Feuerstein

    Yoga, Youth, and Reincarnation by Jess Stearn

    OVERVIEW/SUMMARY:

    We talk about how the Teacher/Student dynamic shapes the student’s journey. Our aim is for the yoga teacher/listener to walk away with tools and insights to establish - with clarity - the arc of that journey, using guiding principles that give the teacher and students a firm foundation that holds true, despite the wildly unpredictable nature of life.

    The ultimate destination of a private yoga student’s journey is for them to reach a point where they claim their own personal practice.

    Because the yoga practice doesn’t fit into neat little boxes, the yoga teacher benefits from principles and systems that can guide them as they work to serve individuals with greatly varying needs. This allows them to be confident in their teaching, but also in the progress of the student. Not just physically, but in the larger development that the yoga addresses.

    Jeffry then goes through the details of how he approaches an inquiry, when someone calls him asking about private yoga sessions. He talks about the importance of listening carefully, and about using that phone call as an opportunity to determine whether you are even the right teacher for that person.

    Jeffry uses the inquiry call to establish some baseline understandings, then if appropriate, he schedules a brief, complimentary consultation session.

    The consultation session is an opportunity for the yoga teacher to observe and listen to the student. You can get a sense of their needs, and establish a rapport. Jeffry goes into great detail about the process of listening and responding to the student as they are.

    The consultation includes a discussion of the practicalities of the practice, such as payment rates and policies, scheduling, etc. It also includes a very simple mat practice, in which the aim is for the teacher and the student to observe micromovements, the alignment of the spine, and subtleties that form the baseline of the practice. Jeffry details a sample practice, which ultimately brings the student to a point of stillness.

    This session is also a great opportunity to dispel any myths or misunderstandings about the yoga practice that the student may have come in with, or discuss particular styles of yoga.

    Jeff emphasizes the importance of the yoga teacher to stay up-to-date with regard to developments in our understanding of functional anatomy.

    We wrap up with a discussion of the concept of a Good Understanding, where Jeff learned it, and how he implements it - and why we don’t use contracts.

    • 54 min
    The Teacher-Student Dynamic

    The Teacher-Student Dynamic

    The Teacher/Student dynamic

    Recorded in the backyard. You’ll hear the dogs.

    Links mentioned:

    www.yogaonetoone.com

    Your Yoga Consultation Cheat Sheet

    Holy Madness by Georg Feuerstein

    Yoga, Youth, and Reincarnation by Jess Stearn

    OVERVIEW:

    Jeff observes three types of yoga student: the purist, the consumer, and the explorer. Usually, any given yoga student is a blend of these three types.



    The Purist is interested in the texts, the lineage of yoga, the entire range of spiritual pursuits and physical pursuits. Can be powerful, but has its dangers. They often view their teacher as a Guru, someone whose opinion has authority and gravity. A student who views their teacher as their guru must be prepared to be their disciple.



    The Consumer often doesn’t really have a teacher. They look for deals, do yoga at several different studios, may prefer to pay attention to yoga fashion, yoga accessories, etc. Regardless of how they pursue the practice, the practice will start working on them anyway. They tend to be independent, which means in some ways that they may be available to greater liberations. But they need a teacher.



    The Explorer has, over time a capacity for friendship with their yoga mentor, a real exchange of life and learning together. These students are often secure in their foundations in the world (generally speaking). They recognize yoga as a set of disciplines, as a set of tools that have practical value. There is a humility and a receptivity that can call out the best in the yoga teacher.



    The lines between these types of students blur a bit. It’s not black and white. And they may shift with time, and with your experience with each other. These shifts were exemplified in Jeff’s relationship with Kumar over the decades of their friendship.



    Jeff discusses the student’s interest in and availability to learn the biomechanics of the practice, as well as the capacity for self-examination.

    We talk about Georg Feuerstein’s book Holy Madness, which talks about the complicated history of yoga gurus. We talk specifically about Sai Baba and the Kripalu Yoga Center in New York.

    Jeff discusses how important the application of the Yamas and the Niyamas is in order for the yoga teacher to protect the dynamic between themselves and their students.

    Jeff talks about his own dynamic with his students, and how the most important thing is to bring the yoga student to the point of stillness and recognition of their breath.

    We wrap up the conversation with readings from Yoga, Youth, and Reincarnation by Jess Stearn

    • 37 min
    Qualities of a One to One Yoga Teacher

    Qualities of a One to One Yoga Teacher

    In this episode we explore the personal qualities necessary for a one-to-one yoga teacher to grow in their teaching practice and better serve their students. The dogs interrupt the podcast. If you have questions, or topics you’d like Jeff to cover in a future podcast episode, go to http://www.yogaonetoone.com and click the “contact” button to send us an email.

    • 27 min
    The Why

    The Why

    Jeffry talks about what has kept him in the one-to-one yoga session setting for almost 25 years, and what distinguishes that from group classes. Donna mentions bacon.

    • 7 min

Top Podcasts In Business

The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett
DOAC
HBR On Leadership
Harvard Business Review
Think Fast, Talk Smart: Communication Techniques
Stanford GSB
Money Majlis
Suvo Sarkar
مدرسة الاستثمار
تريندز بودكاست
سوالف بزنس مع مشهور الدبيان
ثمانية/ thmanyah