32
may/june 2015
yogajournal.com.au
Those doing yoga seemed to have better
tools to deal with conflict and be available
to life in a different way, and I wanted a
taste of that – so I tried yoga.
“It made me relaxed, but angels weren’t
singing instantaneously. I sensed the
physical practice was a gateway to
something else, yet that eluded me –
until one day I was smoking a cigarette
after class, and suddenly it didn’t taste
good anymore, didn’t feel good. Then
drugs didn’t feel good, and
meat didn’t feel good.
I organically eliminated
things preventing me
from feeling at
ease in body
and spirit,
including
relationships. After a few years of
processing that way, I was able to say,
‘I have tools, I am happy and yoga actually
works’. Then I heard angels singing.”
The teacher emerges
In 1992, Corn moved to Los Angeles and
landed her dream job as YogaWorks’
receptionist, where she practised
consistently with many esteemed teachers.
It was creator of Power Yoga, Bryan Kest,
who encouraged Corn to complete teacher
training. She then took five 200-hour
trainings back-to-back from 1994 to 1996;
firstly with Erich Schiffmann, then Maty
Ezraty, Lisa Walford and Kest.
“I retained about 10 per cent of the first
one; maybe 30 per cent of the second,” says
Corn, who admits her first three years of
teaching were incredibly challenging.
“By the time I took my fifth one I thought,
‘I’ve got this’. For me, it was like algebra –
if I didn’t understand it on day one, I would
never understand it on day two. I couldn’t
get the mechanics, so I had to really study
until it landed in my body.
“I was miserable for the first year of
teaching, but faked it well. I was young and
insecure, and wanted to make everyone
happy – which is impossible. If more than
eight people looked at me, my peripheral
vision would blacken. I would get dizzy and
lose my train of thought, like stage fright.
I was a hardcore asana teacher, but didn’t
‘OM’ or talk about God. I didn’t say
‘Namaste’ because my accent sounded
ridiculous. I loved yoga so much, and
thought putting my words to it would
minimise my students’ experience.”
Regardless, her popularity rapidly grew
within the yoga community and the media.
“I wasn’t better than half the people in my
teacher training – in fact, I was probably the
worst – but I got opportunities that others
didn’t because I was physically marketable,”
says Corn. “I realised that was a trap if
I bought into it, and that I had to take
advantage of this privilege to help others
have a healthier, happier, abundant life.”
During this period of soul-searching,
Corn became enthralled by mind-body
“ Those doing yoga seemed to have better tools to be available
to life in a different way, and I wanted a taste of that”
yj43_30-35_FEA seane corne.indd 32 31/03/2015 8:48 am