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Yogaland Podcast
How to foster real connection in an online yoga teacher training
Curious about online yoga teacher training? Our latest podcast explores how Jason crafted a seamless and interactive 200-hour program that brings the community together. đ§ââď¸đĽ Whether youâre a teacher or a student, learn how to thrive in an online setting.
Jason shares insights into how he structured the program to address these challenges, including creating a sense of cohort among participants, utilizing small group breakout sessions, and developing methods to help students verbalize their practice experiences.
He also touches on the importance of learning to teach yoga progressively, starting with self-observation and gradually moving to small group instructions.
If you're teacher who's interested in developing your own online yoga teacher training or those considering enrolling in Jasonâs upcoming course, this episode offers valuable insights and practical tips for fostering engagement and developing teaching skills in a virtual environment.
To find out more about the 200-hour training or to register go to: learn.jasonyoga.com/200
If you register before December 15th, 2024 to get $300 off.
For our show notes, go to: yogalandpodcast.com/episode272
More episodes
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Why The Old Model of Yoga Sequencing Doesnât Work Anymore
42:57|On this week's podcast, Jason outlines why the old models of yoga sequencing are no longer effective in today's landscape. To name a few: More people cross-train. Fewer students are walking into studios. ClassPass has changed loyalty. Online platforms have shifted expectations. If you want better student retention, stronger engagement, and a more sustainable yoga teaching career, this conversation is essential.⸝⹠Highlights2:23 Sequencing 2.0 â Whatâs New6:00 The Two Traditional Sequencing Models6:57 The Problem with Fixed Sequences8:07 The Problem with Random Classes13:29 Why Student Retention Is Harder Now20:39 Online Teaching & Retention29:50 ClassPass & (the lack of) Loyalty35:19 The Solution: Monthly Progressions35:33 How to Build Skill Over Time⸝Jason shares why consistency and novelty must coexist, how to use month-long progressions, how to think like an educator, and how we can help students build skills, helping to build student retention. to maintain retention. If youâre serious about becoming a more effective and modern yoga teacher, it's a must-listen!
The Most Important Skill Missing from Yoga Teacher Trainings
34:28|Most yoga teacher trainings prepare you to teach one class at a time.They donât teach you how to build real student progress.Chapters:0:00 Introduction4:04 The hidden gap in yoga teacher training5:50 Why ârandomâ classes stall student progress8:40 The burnout cycle for yoga teachers13:24 The curriculum mindset explained14:40 Monthly arcs, series & workshops27:58 Expanding your teaching careerIn this episode, Jason breaks down the most overlooked skill in modern yoga teacher training: learning how to think like an educator instead of teaching one-off classes.Most 200-hour yoga teacher trainings focus on sequencing individual classes. But students donât learn in 60-minute increments. They need repetition, structure, continuity, and progressive overload to make real progress.Youâll learn:⢠Why random yoga sequencing leads to student plateaus⢠How lack of curriculum causes teacher burnout⢠The difference between novelty and skill development⢠How to design month-long class arcs⢠How to create yoga workshops and special series⢠Why this shift improves student retention and career sustainabilityIf youâre a yoga teacher who wants better student results, stronger retention, and a more sustainable teaching career, this conversation will change how you think about sequencing.Learn more about Yoga Sequencing 2.0 here
Power, Boundaries & Red Flags in Yoga: A Needed Conversation
46:30|In this Yogaland episode, Jason Crandell and I talk candidly about power dynamics in yoga, the potential for abuse of authority, and how students and teachers can protect whatâs most important: trust, safety, consent, and healthy boundaries.Weâre not psychologists or legal experts â but weâve been in the yoga world for decades, and weâve seen how quickly a âteacher-student relationshipâ can become unhealthy when authority, charisma, and vulnerability collide. The goal of this conversation is simple: help more people recognize warning signs early, keep their autonomy intact, and stay connected to yoga in a way thatâs grounded, mature, and safe.Youâll hear us cover: ⢠The most common red flags in teacher-student dynamics ⢠Why critical thinking belongs in yoga spaces ⢠How âone true wayâ teaching can become coercive ⢠Charisma, attachment, and love-bombing in wellness culture ⢠Why discouraging cross-training or other teachers is a problem ⢠How âinner circlesâ and status tiers can create vulnerability ⢠Consent and hands-on adjustments: what students can ask for, and what teachers must respectIf youâve ever felt uncomfortable in a class, confused by a teacherâs intensity, or pressured to stay loyal to one method or community â this episode is for you.
Why Mindfulness Still Matters: Holding Space in Uncertain Times
34:17|In this solo episode, Andrea explores why mindfulness remains a vital practiceâespecially during times of collective stress, uncertainty, and moral overwhelm.Drawing from Buddhist foundations of mindfulness, personal experience, and years of teaching yoga and meditation, Andrea reframes mindfulness not as passivity or âeverythingâs fineâ thinking, but as the practice of witnessingâwith non-judgment and loving awarenessâwhat is actually here.She reflects on:Why mindfulness helps us sit with difficult emotions without becoming overwhelmed by themThe difference between non-judgment and disengagementHow loving awareness transforms mindfulness from a cold observation into an act of careWhy yoga teachersâ ability to âhold spaceâ is both invisible and essentialHow short, accessible mindfulness practices can support nervous system regulation and clarityAndrea also shares three practical ways to integrate mindfulness into daily life, including mindfulness walks, working skillfully with unpleasant moments, and using declarative language as a nervous-system-friendly form of presence and connection.This episode is an invitation to return to the basicsânot as an escape from reality, but as a way to meet it with steadiness, compassion, and care.-----------------You can find shownotes here: yogalandpodcast.com/episode376
How to Demonstrate Yoga Poses Effectively (In-Person & Online)
40:50|Most yoga teachers undervalue how powerful good demonstrations really are. In this episode, we break down how, when, and why to demonstrate yoga poses so students actually learn.Demonstration is one of the most overlookedâand misunderstoodâskills in yoga teaching.In this episode of Yogaland, Jason shares how to demonstrate yoga poses effectively in both in-person and online classes, and why visual communication plays such a crucial role in student learning.Youâll learn: ⢠When yoga teachers should and should not demonstrate ⢠The pros and cons of practicing with the group vs. observing ⢠How demonstration impacts student comprehension and retention ⢠The biggest mistakes teachers make when demonstrating poses ⢠Why orientation and timing matter more than flexibility or strength ⢠How to demonstrate safely without risking injury ⢠Smart strategies for Zoom classes, recorded classes, and live online teaching ⢠How beginner teachers can use demonstration to build confidence and pacingWhether you teach vinyasa, flow, alignment-based yoga, or online classes, this conversation will help you teach more clearly, communicate more effectively, and support student learning without over-explaining or over-demonstrating.This episode is especially helpful for: ⢠Yoga teachers in 200-hour or 300-hour teacher training ⢠New teachers learning pacing and classroom management ⢠Experienced teachers refining their communication skills ⢠Anyone teaching yoga online or on Zoom
6 Anchors Every Yoga Teacher Needs for the Year Ahead
27:16|The start of a new year can feel exciting and overwhelming for yoga teachers. New students, new expectations, new pressure. In this episode of Yogaland, Jason shares six foundational anchors to help you ground your teaching, reconnect with your students, and create classes that are sustainableâfor you and for them.Rather than chasing trends or social media metrics, this conversation focuses on what actually builds strong classes and long-term teaching careers: consistency, kindness, real connection, movement quality, stillness and regeneration, and empowering students to make informed choices in their practice.Whether youâre teaching full classes, building a schedule in the new year, or simply wanting to feel more rooted and confident as a teacher, this episode offers practical perspective you can apply immediatelyâwithout adding more to your plate.⸝Highlights00:00 â Why teachers feel overwhelmed at the start of the year01:29 â Anchor #1: Consistency in tone, sequencing & expectations04:40 â Anchor #2: Kindness, presence & being a good host08:20 â Anchor #3: Real connection vs social media distraction14:49 â Anchor #4: Quality of movement over range of motion21:26 â Anchor #5: Stillness, pranayama & regeneration25:19 â Anchor #6: Empowering students to make educated choices⸝Train to become a yoga teacher with Jason! Our next cohort begins next week, January 13th. Get all the details here: jasonyoga.com/200
Yoga(ish): Holiday rituals, neurodivergent needs & letting people have their feelings
38:25|The holidays can be joyful⌠and also a lotâespecially if youâre introverted, neurodivergent, parenting a neurodivergent kid, or trying to manage family expectations without burning out.In this episode, we share the holiday traditions that actually work for their familyâand the boundaries that make those traditions possible. We talk about front-loading expectations, time boundaries, demand avoidance, and why itâs okay to let other people have their feelings when you donât meet their expectations. Youâll also hear practical strategies for navigating social events (without forcing yourself or your child to âperformâ), plus a few favorite holiday ritualsâfrom cookie baking to Christmas Eve dinner to a Christmas Day zoo trip.If youâve ever felt overwhelmed by holiday gatherings, unsure how to set boundaries with family, or stuck between âbeing flexibleâ and âprotecting your nervous system,â this conversation will help.In this episode: ⢠Holiday boundaries for introverts and neurodivergent families ⢠Why time limits reduce anxiety (and increase participation) ⢠Setting expectations with relatives ahead of gatherings ⢠Demand avoidance, sensory overwhelm, and holiday rituals ⢠How to navigate parties with roles, structure, and exit plans ⢠Letting people be disappointed (without taking it on)
Unexpected Lessons From Yoga in 2025
41:27|As the year winds down, weâre reflecting on the real gifts yoga has given usâbeyond poses and flexibility. In this conversation, we talk about pranayama and nervous-system regulation (including HRV), learning acceptance as our bodies age, how yoga builds discernment around recovery, and what weâre grateful for (including health, community, and the unexpected growth that comes from changing course as parents and professionals).If youâre navigating stress, pain, aging, burnout, or a shifting relationship with practice, this episode is an honest look at what yoga can offer for the long haulâand what weâre ready to let go of as we head into a new year.
The 8 Limbs Made Clear: A Modern, Practical Guide to Patanjaliâs System
18:51|Long before Jason was an anatomy nerd, a sequencing, and a technique nerd, he was a philosophy nerd. In fact, his undergraduate degree is in Philosophy. On this episode, he breaks down Patanjaliâs 8-limbed path through a modern, practical model that finally makes sense -- not as a ladder to climb, but as concentric circles of self-regulation that move from the external to the deeply internal.Weâll explore how yama, niyama, asana, pranayama, pratyahara, dharana, dhyana, and samadhi work together as a system for grounding, clarity, and inner steadiness â and why this perspective is easier to apply in real life than the traditional â8 stepsâ approach.If this brings more clarity to the 8 limbs, please share it with your students or fellow teachers!***A reminder: Jason's 200-Hour Online Yoga Teacher Training is now open for enrollment. The early bird pricing expires Dec. 21st, so enroll before then to lock in your $300 discount. Learn more at jasonyoga.com/200