Tracey
Rich co-directs the White Lotus Foundation
with her partner, Ganga White. I am just getting to
know her and thrilled that she will be a teacher at
the Ojai Yoga Crib this year.
Kira: How did you get
from Nashville, TN to Pattabhi Jois in Hawaii?
Tracey: I rode the classical prophecy
of the Iron Bird flying and moved with the dharma
to the West. Already a student, lover and teacher
of yoga, I was fortunate to encounter Pattabhi Jois
on his second visit to the United States and I believe
his first visit to the island of Maui in 1980. In
those days you had to know the first series by heart
in order to join the class. I literally finished my
last day of learning the first series Ashtanga the
day before his arrival and was invited to attend.
Many of today’s great teachers in that lineage
were also there as students and class assistants.
It was an outrageous scene, really exciting and fun.
Eighty to one hundred people (which were big numbers
in those days) gathered in an empty warehouse space
all sweating together under the Hawaiian sun. Pattabhi
spoke no English, except for the words, “thank
you very much”, but his smile and spirit along
with his beautiful wife, Ama, moved the energy of
that time. The entire island felt like an ashram for
a while with so many people exuberant and high on
yoga that year.
Ganga and I later presented Pattabhi Jois in his
first Los Angeles class at our then Center for Yoga
in about 1985 and hosted him again in Santa Barbara
at our White Lotus Retreat in 1987 and ’89,
when no one ever believed Ashtanga would become a
household word. For many reasons 1980 is anchored
in my mind… I moved as far West as one could
go in the United States (and yet seemingly to another
planet, space and time), I studied Ashtanga yoga every
day for two months under the tutelage of Pattabhi
Jois, and it was in that moment in time when still
shimmering with the glow of sweat after class, we
learned John Lennon was dead!
Kira: As a yoga video
star, is there anything unfamiliar or awkward when
you look back and see the old versions of yourself
on film?
Tracey: I think our videos (now
DVD’s) will have a long life. They really met
our goals of creating a class that a student could
use as home practice indefinitely. They are filled
with the kind of direction, breath awareness, and
details that not only teach someone how to do yoga,
but give them the living experience of a personal
practice. Our original Flow Series video was the first
actual “practice” tape available. Most
videos at the time were very staccato and spent all
their time on breakdown and on- screen discussion.
We wanted to create and communicate something that
felt real and valuable. Another way the series excels
is that for years now our DVD’s have been in
hi-def, something our director had the creative insight
to think of and which once again was ahead of the
curve and sets us apart. I know that somebody out
there loves the Total Yoga series because they are
working their way towards their second million in
sales. The greatest repeated compliment we receive
is when someone tells us that they have a book shelf
full of videos or DVD’s, but that they use our
DVD five days a week! That feels fabulous. To work
in the medium of the day and have it really communicate
yoga, since we all know that nothing can truly replace
the learning process that can happen in class with
a teacher.
On the rare occasions I review the DVD’s, I
can find numerous tiny things that have been frozen
on that medium of tape or disc that could infinitely
be tweaked, but all in all I am very pleased with
them and hope they have a long life span.
Kira:I love your way
use of highly visual language to communicate the feeling
of the practice. Do you talk that way all the time
or is it unique to teaching?
Tracey: This is the way I speak,
but in teaching I am conscious of streamlining language
in the hope of getting across what I am seeing and
feeling, and what the yoga has taught me and is teaching
me in the moment. I have found a way of putting my
love of drama and passion, my love of storytelling
and poetry, really my love of words into play, somewhat
like a sculptor would use his hands in moist clay.
Communicating clearly, but with fun and flair, humor
and metaphor are some of my loves, and the desire
to be understood is high priority of mine. I was once
dubbed the “poetess of yoga” and I like
that very much. I need order for my own brain which
leads to being a stickler for details which also expresses
itself in my use of language and communication. I
never used to think of myself as a highly visual person
until I had the chance and the charge of creating
beauty out of our once funky little ashram perched
on a mountain side. After a while I realized I was
working at spinning straw into gold to create an oasis
for transformation as a living expression of yoga
and one of the strong modalities was to create the
environment visually. I believe it is working.
Kira: Who were you
heroes as a child? Who are your heroes now?
Tracey: As a child my hero was my
father. He was a bit like a Greek god to me…
larger than life and the sun rose and fell at his
feet. Today my heroes are people who are courageous,
courageous in the areas of love, beauty, truth, compassion
and intelligence; also, life protectors of the planet.
One of those people is Vandana Shiva of the Navdanya
organization who is fighting monster companies like
Monsanto working to hold them accountable for our
loss of biodiversity for their use of genetic engineering
and their manipulation of patenting laws and intellectual
property rights. Sam Harris, who is one of the most
adult persons I can think of…challenging belief
systems, religious and otherwise. Ann Frank is a hero
of mine for her will to live. And yes, still, my father.
Kira: You make the
time to read. What are you reading lately?
Tracey: One of the most potent books
of late still resonating within me is The History
of Love by Nicole Krauss. The book has been translated
into 25 languages so that should tell you something.
I also believe it is a first novel for her. I both
laughed and cried within the first three paragraphs.
Books and writers like this don’t come along
everyday.
Another powerful book is Letter to a Christian
Nation by Sam Harris. It is his 90 page response
to the hate mail he received in regards to his book
entitled, The End of Faith. Letter to
a Christian Nation is an extremely important
book that speaks to some of the key issues of our
time in this war over religion, faith, science and
belief systems. It is pithy, accessible and very adult.
I also have greatly appreciated the work of Joan
Didion in her book The Year of Magical Thinking.
This is the story of her personal journey dealing
with loss and grief. She is an exceptional writer
and chronicler. The book is brave and beneficial for
all who choose to walk with her through this painful
travail.
Kira: What is your
sense of the reasons for the rising popularity of
yoga in this country now?
Tracey: Media, stars, trends, all
these things make yoga more popular these days and
people are now comfortably familiar with yoga. They
have greater and greater access to yoga, it’s
in their gyms, in their children’s schools,
and yoga centers are cropping up in towns that never
used to have even one teacher. But the real reason,
I believe, for the popularity of yoga is the fact
of how beneficial it is. Yoga works on so many levels
and people are finding that out. They realize that
they can stay in shape with yoga and that it can be
challenging. They want to be well and feel better
and they see those results with yoga. They grow tired
of getting injured with certain exercise modalities
and they see that yoga can help heal their backs and
that it is easier on their joints than running. I
also think that people realize you can do yoga at
any age. And in addition, yoga centers are now serving
for the kinds of community centers and places for
connection (inner and outer) that people are seeking.
Kira: What is the edge
in your practice today? More specifically, what are
the details of your current daily life that are requiring
complete awareness and total surrender?
Tracey: The place that is calling
for attention in my life’s daily meditation
right now is in the art of slowing down. I am truly
trying to practice not moving so quickly thru any
task. I have noticed that this area of my life is
demanding me to stop, look and listen. This is a challenge
due to the amount of input we are exposed to on a
daily basis and the amount of output we get caught
up in demanding of ourselves. Listening itself is
also an edge… truly listening and hearing.