Reprinted from Millenium issue of
Healing Retreats & Spas, January 2000
Interview by Eden Marriott Kennedy

Partners in yoga and in life for the last seventeen years,
Ganga White
and Tracey
Rich are in their studio at the White Lotus Foundation
retreat in Santa Barbara, California, stretching themselves
into a pose they call "suspension bridge."
Grasping each other's wrists, arms straight, legs straight,
angled at the waist, they are slowly dropping back and
finding their balance. Looks easy. But it requires some
patience, and two hours into a photo session with all-day-empty
stomachs, White and Rich are showing us a side of partner
yoga that every couple would understand.
Rich(trying to improve her grip on White's
arms): "You're not doing it right."
White (amusement hiding his shock): "I
invented it!"
Rich(looking at the camera and smiling sweetly):
"We're having a double yoga moment."
Then
again, most couples don't have the benefit of having developed
a style of yoga that has influenced students and teachers
around the world. Double Yoga, first published by Penguin
in 1980, was White's brainchild. "It all came as a flash,"
he says now. "I remember very distinctly when it happened,
I was in Los Angeles, and I put one leg behind my head
and I was leaning back, supporting myself with one hand,
and I thought, wouldn't this be interesting to have someone
next to me doing the same posture?" That was 1977, and
though the idea seemed purely visual at first-White set
up a camera with a timer shot photos of several postures
that he had tried with fellow yogi Ana Forrest. He then
developed more postures with Forrest, had them professionally
shot, and took the pictures to the L.A. Book Fair. An
editor from Viking-Penguin was so moved by the concept
that she quickly took the pictures from White to keep
any other publishing house from stealing him away.
Double yoga has grown into a practical tool, both for
teachers assisting their students and for students supporting
other students in postures they may not yet have mastered.
"Double yoga was never meant to replace a personal, single
yoga practice," says White, "but it can complement a personal
yoga practice and add new dimensions. You can use different
leverages and weights, it lets you bend in ways you maybe
couldn't before, you learn nonverbal communication, literally
to feel each other's energy through where you're touching,
and to adjust and respond equally to your partner. To
stay alert. It teaches you a lot of lessons about relationship."
Rich concurs. "If one person pushes too much, you'll both
fall over," she says. "It can also help you find compassion
for your partner that you might not yet have for yourself."
Neither Tracey nor Ganga insist that practitioners be
of opposite sexes. When done with a partner you're in
relationship with, double yoga can mirror the dynamic
between the two of you; and if one person is tuning out
or being too controlling, yoga can give you a safe place
to address those issues. "The polarity of man and woman
can be fantastic," says White, "but same-sex partners
have their own equally unique energy exchanges and insights."
Breath seems to synchronize to new partners right away,
bringing connection and attunement. First you have to
tune into your own breath and strength, and then you synchronize
with a partner. More metaphor for relationship: each partner
has to find his or her balance before creating a stable
union of two. Yet polarizing the breath, with one partner
breathing in while the other breathes out, can create
a remarkable seesaw interplay of forces, sometimes so
intricate and subtle that "it becomes a tantric practice,"
says Rich. "It's pure alchemy."
White has wondered how much double yoga he actually originated,
and how much might have existed as part of past traditions.
He's talked to yoga scholars and historians but doesn't
see it as having been part of any formal school. He recalls
seeing a film from the '30s or '40s of Krishnamacharya's
school in India, where there seemed to be the beginnings
of a few double postures--two yogis assisting and mirroring
each other. "You could see an idea wanting to birth itself,"
he says. But as yoga students take the idea and develop
it to suit their own needs, double yoga has taken on a
life of its own, away from the author who now spends his
days running teacher trainings and workshops with Rich,
or joining his friend Sting on his West Coast concert
tour.
The photo shoot is over, but the photographer still has
a few frames to burn, and so he asks White and Rich to
tilt their heads together for a classic lovers portrait.
As White puts his forehead near Rich's cheek, he says,
"I think I'm sweating on you." Hugging him closer for
one last double yoga moment, she says, "What's a little
more sweat between friends?"
Reprinted with permission of Healing Retreats and Spa
Magazine, Santa Barbara, California
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a spiral-bound reprint copy of Double
Yoga ($19.95), please refer to the information on
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