Yoga teaching is more than sequencing postures or offering poetic cues.
It is a responsibility. A privilege. A living practice.
This is the first blog in a four-part series exploring what it truly means to be a yoga teacher in today’s world with a contemporary practice:
Blog 1: The Ethics of a Yoga Teacher — Walking the Talk
Blog 2: Scope of Practice — The Professional Container
Blog 3: The Art of Holding Space — Creating a Physical & Emotional Container
Blog 4: Teacher as Role Model — Influence Beyond the Mat
So let’s get into it.
We begin where all authentic teaching begins: ethics.
As psychiatrist Karl Menninger once said:
“What the teacher is, is more important than what he teaches.”
Ethics matter because, as B.K.S. Iyengar wrote:
“Yoga means union — the union of body with consciousness and consciousness with the soul.”
Asana is only a small fraction of this science.
Yoga reminds us that there is no final arrival. There is no moment where we are “done.” We are lifelong students — evolving, learning, unlearning, and refining. Our practice shifts because we shift. Humility is not optional on this path; it is the doorway to progress.
Walking the talk helps keep us humble and present in our teaching.
Ethics for yoga teachers are not abstract rules. They are lived behaviors. They are how we show up — in the studio, online, in private conversations, and in moments when no one is watching.
Our ethical foundation arises from the Yamas and Niyamas, the first two limbs of yoga. These are not suggestions; they are the ground upon which the entire practice rests.
