What Makes A Yoga Teacher An Expert & Why You Want Your Teacher To Be One + Fall Yoga Teacher Training!

In most professions, there are experts, and there are practitioners. The same is true in the field of yoga and Pilates teaching. But, what's the difference between an expert and a practitioner? It's taken me years to understand the answer to this question, and I really only came to understand it through direct experience over a twenty-year period of time. 

Sara bringing massage techniques into a specialty yoga workshop.

Sara bringing massage techniques into a specialty yoga workshop.

1.) A key quality of expertise is a whole lot of experience over time. In yoga and Pilates that means teaching thousands of classes and thousands of clients. It means talking to and supporting clients at various stages of life, during pregnancy, or after a baby, after a recent surgery or injury, during a period of depression or increased stress, while managing a chronic or terminal illness, while training for a marathon or trying to improve their tennis game or weight lifting goals. In working for years with clients with various needs, I learned experientially which poses helped with which issues, which modifications served the most, and when to take extra precautions during a pose or movement.

 

2.) A second key quality of an expert yoga or Pilates teacher is understanding the why of each pose, movement, or breathing technique. Every pose and movement in a class should have a functional purpose that clients can take off the mat and into their daily lives so that they are moving throughout their day with awareness of their bodies and using their energy efficiently. Otherwise, why are we doing what we do? 

I'll give you an example of this from my Mommy & Me class this week. The first movement I asked the mamas to do was squats. Why? Because squatting to pick your baby every day, many times over, is the best way to improve your posture, prevent back injury, and build strength in the largest, most efficient muscles of the body, the gluts, and quads. I didn't just ask them to do squats for the sake of doing squats. I asked them to do squats because they need to be practicing that movement off that mat and throughout their day with baby. In addition, I asked them to inhale as they squat and exhale as they lift up. The diaphragm and the pelvic floor work together, so on the exhale, when the diaphragm lifts, so does the pelvic floor—engaging the pelvic floor (exhaling) while lifting facilitates more core stability for mama.

 

3.) Having a broader understanding of health and wellness through the lens of additional education in fields such as physical therapy, acupuncture, nutrition, social work, psychotherapy, massage therapy, chiropractic, nursing, and more, allows a yoga or Pilates teacher to bring a well-rounded approach and additional expertise to their teaching. Often teachers with additional education end up being experts in yoga and Pilates because they work with special populations like pregnant women, women post-pregnancy, elderly clients, clients with chronic illness or recent surgery or injury. They are bringing their expertise in another field of wellness into their classes with these clients. For example, in my prenatal classes, I also share my expertise and experience as a birth doula and prenatal massage therapist with my clients.

Dr. Megan Brown brings her knowledge of PT into her prenatal classes!

Dr. Megan Brown brings her knowledge of PT into her prenatal classes!

One of the things that has always set Mind the Mat apart is that we strive to offer specialty classes for clients during all stages of life, taught by experts who understand how to work with specific groups of clients. Many of the teachers we hire are trained at Mind the Mat through our 200 Hour Yoga Teacher Training Program. In this program, my business partner, Dr. Megan Brown P.T., teaches anatomy and biomechanics in a fun and accessible way.

 

I teach about how to work with pregnant women and women post-pregnancy in regular yoga classes based on what is changing in the body during these periods of a woman's life.  

 

Debora Jackson, a lead teacher in our training program, teaches about how to incorporate poses specific for the season and time of day when creating a yoga class, which are important factors in the larger wellness system from which yoga comes, called Ayurveda. For example, some postures and breathing techniques are important for summer classes because they are cooling for the body, whereas others are warming and more appropriate during cooler weather.  

 

Sam Chase, who teaches yogic history and philosophy, is an expert on applying the ancient principles of yoga to a modern lifestyle.

Therapeutic Yoga for those with injuries, limited range of motion, and chronic conditions.

Therapeutic Yoga for those with injuries, limited range of motion, and chronic conditions.

Start your journey to become an expert yoga teacher.  Check out Mind the Mat's 200 Hour Yoga Teacher Training starting Fall 2021.  

 

Take all 200 hours or dip your toe into a deeper understanding of yoga with our 30 Hour Foundations of Yoga.

 

Do you have questions or want to find out more about this training? 

Sign up for the Virtual Q & A on August 18 at 7:45p with Director of Teacher Training Caroline Deitch.

 

Interested in Mind the Mat's Specialty Workshops taught by expert instructors? 

Yoga for Osteoporosis with Marianne Meyers on August 21 & September 18

Yin Yoga with Mallory Thornton on August 22

Introduction to Arm Balances & Inversions with Kevin Castillo on August 28

Childbirth Intensive with Carol Wyman, RN on August 28

Happy Hips and Back with Caroline Deitch on August 29

Myofascial Release with Olivia Sheldon on September 11

Women's Self Defense with Olivia Sheldon on October 16

 

Also, check out Mind the Mat's Specialty 6-week Series Programs taught by expert instructors:

Prenatal Yoga & Pilates

Post-pregnancy Fitness

Therapeutic Yoga

 

Here's our extensive schedule weekly schedule of classes in yoga, Pilates & Barre!

Sara VanderGoot

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Co-Owner | Mind the Mat Pilates & Yoga

Sara VanderGoot, CMT, e-RYT 200, RYT 500, is Co-founder of Mind the Mat Pilates and Yoga and Director of Mind the Mat Yoga Alliance certified teacher training program. Sara is an experienced Registered Yoga instructor with Yoga Alliance. She studied Interdisciplinary Yoga with Don and Amba Stapleton in Nosara, Costa Rica and at Kripalu Center for Yoga and Health. Sara is Nationally Certified in Therapeutic Massage and Bodywork, licensed by the Virginia Board of Nursing. Sara has been practicing massage therapy, including specialties Prenatal Massage, Postpartum Massage, Deep Tissue Massage and Thai Yoga Massage, in Del Ray, Alexandria for over 15 years and a yoga instructor for 7 years. At Mind the Mat she specializes in Prenatal Yoga, Postpartum Core Yoga, Mommy and Me Core Yoga, Partners Yoga, and Hot Flow Yoga. Sara frequently acts as a birth companion for many of her clients, doing massage and yoga during labor and delivery to facilitate comfort during both medicated and unmedicated births. Before becoming a massage therapist and yoga instructor, she was a lawyer in the Washington D.C. area and found that the healing practices of massage and yoga brought a balance to her life that she had been searching for.

Mind the Mat Pilates & Yoga was founded in 2008 by Megan Brown, Doctor of Physical Therapy and Polestar Certified Practitioner of Pilates for Rehabilitation and Sara VanderGoot, Nationally Certified Massage Therapist and Registered Yoga Teacher (e-RYT 200, RYT 500). In their private practices as physical therapist and massage therapist respectively Megan and Sara observed that many of their clients were coming in with similar needs: relief for neck and shoulder tension and low back pain as well as a desire for more flexibility in hips and legs, stability in joints, and core strength.

Together Megan and Sara carefully crafted a curriculum of Pilates and yoga classes to address needs for clients who are pregnant, postpartum, have injuries or limitations, who are new to Pilates and yoga, and for those who are advanced students and are looking for an extra challenge.

www.mindthemat.com     

2214 Mount Vernon Avenue

Alexandria, VA 22301

703.683.2228

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