33
may/june 2015
yogajournal.com.au
photos: (top) Kim
sallaway
photography; (below) courtesy of s
eane
corn; (facing page) Kris Dahl
connection and subtle energies, and followed
the work of Caroline Myss and Anodea
Judith. She also travelled throughout India
to study Ashtanga yoga with Sri K. Pattabhi
Jois and spend time with spiritual mentors
at Sri Aurobindo Ashram.
Finding her voice for greater good
Inspired by many diverse teachers, Corn
is renowned for her eclectic approach and
magical way of weaving prayers into her
teachings. It turned out that finding the
courage to share the poetry in her heart
proved to be a leap worth taking.
“When I finally decided to pray and offer
an intention in class, I was scared – what
were people going to think?” she says.
“When I opened my eyes, people seemed
connected to it. That felt authentic in my
heart and I found my voice. I realised I had
ability to hold a transformational space, to
be in touch with something greater than my
small self in that environment. Once class is
over, it dissipates and I am just Seane.”
Considering her commitment to
activism for social and political change,
being “just Seane” is impressive. In 1998,
she established a yoga program at a Los
Angeles shelter for sex trafficked teenage
girls, Children of the Night. Motivated by
this work and her interactions with gay
men during the HIV/AIDS crisis, Corn
became a representative for YouthAIDS in
2004 and was named their national yoga
ambassador the following year. Regardless
of her many accolades, Corn confesses she
wasn’t always a healthy activist.
“I always had issues around injustice,
even as a child; bullying especially triggered
something primal within me,” she says.
“I was passionate, but didn’t know how
to listen, deal with rage or engage. It took
lots of training to learn how to serve in
an effective and mindful way.”
Corn’s journey led to the birth of non-
profit leadership training program Off the
Mat, Into the World (OTM), which she
co-founded in 2007. OTM bridges the gap
between yoga, transformation and social
justice by guiding students on an inward
Busy lady This pic: dancing at
Wanderlust; below: helping out
the Cambodian Children’s Fund. “ I found my voice... I
realised I had ability to be
in touch with something
greater than my small self”
yj43_30-35_FEA seane corne.indd 33 31/03/2015 8:48 am