While Taylor Swift, with a net worth larger than many small countries, can easily boycott Apple and other distributors that offer free or deeply discounted tunes, not all artists can afford to do that. By standing up for her fellow musicians, Swift swiftly brought Apple around.
If only it were true for the yoga industry.
The fact remains that many yoga studios offer deep, deep discounts on classes and do not pay their teachers for the trial students. I just recently checked into a class in my neighborhood and inquired about the 30 days for $30 deal I saw advertised.
“You can have that deal,” the teacher said. “But I do not get paid for you.” I paid full price.
Now at this point I know a lot of readers are going to write in and say they cannot afford to pay for a full price yoga class, which runs between $12 and $25 in urban areas. And I feel you, downward dogs. Really I do.
But realize that nowhere in the U.S. Constitution does it say that you are entitled to free yoga. You can get free education and have free speech, and perhaps some free medical assistance, but as of yet yoga has not been subsidized by the government.
In fact, your yoga teacher paid between $3,000 and $15,000 for an education to keep you safe, and she most likely does not have good health insurance to take care of herself. So why do students feel entitled to free yoga while the teacher starves?
Furthermore, if you cannot find a free yoga class in the city where you live, honestly, there is something wrong with you. This weekend alone there were more than 25 classes in my town that were $10 or free to celebrate the solstice.
All of which brings me to the yoga studio. With cheap classes and abundant yoga opportunities, not all studios make a million dollars. Some are struggling to pay the rent. This is a very competitive business. Some say this has forced the industry into offering discounted classes.
But the dirty little secret is that they often do not pay their teachers for those students.
Here are some discounts that teachers may not get paid for:
You get the idea. There is actually a studio in my town that does not pay a teacher the per head rate for the first eight students in the room, even if they pay full price! And you know I can’t make this stuff up.
People, it is time for a change. Studios and teachers need to find a way to stimulate business and support each other fairly. But nothing will happen until yoga teachers stand up and say, no more.
Taylor Swift was able to do it on behalf of her fellow musicians. But one yoga teacher cannot do this alone (Believe me, I’ve tried). There are too many teachers willing to work for next to nothing, or for nothing. Teachers need to recognize the worth of their offering.
“We don’t ask you for free I-phones,” Swift wrote to Apple. “Please don’t ask us to provide you with our music for no compensation.” The same should be true for our teaching.
Can I get an Amen, or at least an Om?
By Michelle Marchildon
Michelle Berman Marchildon is a yogi, mother and writer trying to maintain a sense of humor in a hectic world. She’s a longtime, professional, award-winning journalist, author of The Yogi Muse Blog and the memoir, Finding More on the Mat: How I Grew Better, Wiser and Stronger through Yoga. Her book for yoga teachers, Theme Weaver: Connect the Power of Inspiration to Teaching Yoga, has become one of the fastest growing and widely accepted texts for yoga teachers throughout the world.
She’s a Featured Columnist for Elephant Journal and Origin Magazine, a Contributing Editor for Mantra Yoga and Health Magazine, and a contributor under contract to Sports Illustrated. She has also written for Yoga Journal, Teachasana, My Yoga Online and 90 Monkeys. Her wit and dry humor has earned her the title, ‘The Erma Bombeck of the Mat.’ She teaches yoga and raises her family in Denver, Colorado. Her classes are available on www.yogadownload.com and www.yogasteya.com.