Yoga Teacher Burnout is serious. In fact I stopped studying with one of my early yoga teachers when he snapped at a student next to me.
That was before I learned from experience that Yoga Teacher Burnout can be just a phase if handled right away. If a teacher can learn to recognize the early warning signs, they can nip Yoga Teacher Burnout in the bud by taking action on some key areas of their life and teaching.
People become yoga teachers because they fall in love with the practice. Yoga helps us feel complete, able to share meaningful experiences with others and can save our lives. Teaching yoga, for many, becomes an extension of that love affair.
Despite all that yoga goodness, most yoga teachers will not argue that their teaching can become stale and even boring sometimes.
Yoga teachers often are barely making ends meet, or working so many jobs that they don’t have time for their own practice.
Many are on autopilot, running ragged, and wondering if they need to change professions.
They have lost their love of prepping classes, teaching from their heart, and connecting with their students — these are just a few of the signs that they are going through a “Yoga Teacher Burnout” phase.
Warning signs of Yoga Teacher Burnout:
- Gives little or no hands-on adjustments in class.
- Snaps at students when they don’t understand instructions.
- Presentation has become uncharacteristically stern, austere and unsympathetic.
- Seems to be the unhealthiest and most stressed out one in the room, um…even though they are the yoga teacher.
- They don’t practice yoga any more, they just teach it.
- Overly uses sound bites and cosmic flowery language that seems like they pulled it out of thin air (or their butt).
- Gives an adjustment and throws out their back or gets hurt way too easily (because they don’t practice anymore).
- Mis-directs anger and frustration onto innocent bystanders like their kids and/or significant other.
- “Forgets” to get a sub for their classes or subs all of their classes out.
- Grouchy. Snappy. Cranky. Irritable. Crabby. Cantankerous. Prickly. Huffy.
I’ve been there, and I’ve seen it in my colleagues. No yoga teacher is perfect.
To be clear, I’m not talking about those difficult days when we must teach through tough times (loss, divorce, illness, etc…) – everyone must go through that at one time or another. I’m talking about holding up our end of the bargain to model a balanced lifestyle, and use the tools we have at our disposal to get the TLC we need.
The good news is that these warning signs in no way suggest that a teacher is doomed. Being burned out can be wake up call and an opportunity.
These action steps can quickly make Yoga Teacher Burnout disappear:
- Going to local classes taught by other teachers
Looking at the calendar and finding at least 2 classes a week to attend, taught by peers or a favorite teacher, can be just the ticket to feeling nurtured and inspired again. - Social Gatherings
Teachers who hang out with their students every now and then are naturally more connected to their student’s lives and will not surprisingly get more stoked to teach. - Scheduling in down time as though it is a paying gig
Teachers should not wait to see if they have any extra time to do a home practice, get a massage or hike in nature. Scheduling in down time as if it were a gig is the only way to make it happen. - Optimizing teaching schedule
If a teacher has given a class a good 6 months to fill and nothing seems to help, it may be time to find a better time slot. Consider other factors that can cause burn out such as commute, parking, inconvenience to family, etc… - Revisiting basic texts and being studious again
Improving an understanding of yoga philosophy, anatomy or hatha yoga keeps a teacher fresh. Spending 10 minutes day reading up on the subjects that need strengthening is an instant shot in the arm for weary teachers.
With a little focused care, any teacher can re-kindle the enthusiasm of sharing yoga with others and be the best they can be for their students.
Have you noticed any of these warning signs of Yoga Teacher Burnout in your yoga teacher? Got any additional remedies to add that have worked for you? Or do you teach yoga and relate? Leave a comment below, I’d love to hear.





Got Yoga Teacher Burnout? Please read & share w/every #yoga enthusiast you know. This is serious business. http://t.co/ZorpvD5R
RT @Amy_Ippoliti: Got Yoga Teacher Burnout? Please read & share w/every #yoga enthusiast you know. This is serious business. http:// …
Is Your Yoga Teacher Burned Out? Learn These Warning Signs http://t.co/p9zdW8gQ via @Amy_ippoliti
What if you’re a burnt out yoga teacher already doing all these things? Any advice then?
I’d love for other yoga teachers to pitch in their ideas too. (Hint Hint, yoga teachers!) Because I think we all have our own distinct ways of handling getting out of a burned out scenario that works for us differently. What I wrote in the blog may not actually work for everyone, since we are all so different. These were just suggestions.
For me, in addition to the suggestions in the blog, it took actually having enough melt downs to schedule in free time for myself where I was not traveling or teaching as much in order to re-evaluate my life and what direction I wanted to go next. In other words, the hamster wheel approach was not working to gain deeper insight. Unless I forced myself off the wheel, I would just keep spinning. The spinning was keeping me from finding a partner, offering more of what I had to give to the world, and from having a normal life with a garden, friends, family, etc…!
When I was teaching locally in NYC and getting burned out, what actually worked for me really well was doing a daily meditation practice and getting alone time. I found the stimulus of constantly interacting with people, whether they were students or strangers in New York was more intense than I realized, and just those 10-20 minutes of sitting alone worked wonders.
What do you think would work for you?
Dear Amy,
I can relate on all above, as a student and as a teacher. Last year I finished 5 times with blocked back, getting hurt more and more and hardly having time to take care about myself. Not that I was teaching so much, but it was true struggle to move my family from India to Ireland and take care about 3 teenagers, my students and still be good spouse, daughter, friend. During the summer break I felt like not teaching anymore! So I did mostly everything you recommend: teach less now, wake up every morning at 5.30 am to have one hour for meditation and gentle asanas, and I joined the class with amazing local teacher once per week. I am using my sleep time to read at least one yoga sutra, and you are so right…10-20 minutes per day sitting alone works wonders!
Fantastic! Thank you so much for sharing your ideas here. So helpful! And I am so glad it worked for you and you feel better now about teaching! xox
I was just about to post that my meditation practice is really saving me these days. I have cut back on teaching, I spend one day a week doing whatever I want and still I was snapping at my husband and children. When I got back on my meditation seat things got so much better.
Does your Yoga Teacher have Burnout? See the signs. #yoga http://t.co/5jjwz5Jx — by Amy Ippoliti
Is Your Yoga Teacher Burned Out? Learn These Warning Signs http://t.co/ci8rxatF
Great article Amy. I am a teacher and make time every day for a short practice and diving into my yoga philosophy. When the passion is there, the students can see it. Thank you..
Thanks, Judy!
THANK YOU for writing this article! I am a yoga teacher on sabbatical–I actually did reach my breaking point and stepped away. In my time away I have learned that scheduling my own practice is incredibly important, then making it as important as any other meeting/teaching slot I am committed to. I also keep a gratitude journal to remind me why I love the practice, the journey and growth. I find that writing can be just as therapeutic as meditating for me. I am ready to teach again now, but I am in the midst of moving abroad, I know I will step back in front of the classroom stronger, more compassionate and more loving. Thank you Amy!
I love this! I also have a gratitude journal – keeps me very appreciative and motivated! Good luck with the move and thanks for the comment, Nicole!
For my yoga teachs out there – take care of urself! Heres a good article to help juice up your practice (and teaching): http://t.co/dq71TMPX
Boy Amy, you couldn’t have posted this at a better time. I’ve spent the last year taking on as many classes as I can while I’ve kept my 25-30 hour/week day job at a graphic design firm. So I’m teaching 9 classes and working…. and i’m dying here! While I haven’t been nasty to any students yet, I’ve been drained and weepy, and thinking that maybe I need to drop this whole dream of being a full-time teacher. (I don’t feel any good at it anymore!) It makes me sad and I don’t want to give it up. I started it for exactly the reasons you stated. I purchase philosophy books or join meditation groups with yoga friends in the hopes that I’ll re-ignite my passion. But I simply don’t have time to attend the groups or read the books!!! Then I get REALLY down on myself!! Ugh!
I don’t expect you to have a magical answer (although if you do… please share it!) but it felt good to vent at least. Gives me hope that I will make it out of the darkness- and reminds me that darkness is just the other side of the light. (I’ve just gotta hang on till that light shines again!)
Peace,
Peggy
Glad we could be there for you to vent! If you can get off the hamster wheel long enough to re-evaluate your life and get the skills you need to manage time, finances, schedule etc…, that would be my biggest suggestion! It is scary at first to do it and you may take a short term loss, but taking time off to rebuild is a strategic move that sets you up better for the future…worth the loss, worth the risk! xoxox A
I have found it helpful to write down my “dream” schedule on a piece of paper, keeping in mind my most lucrative and favorite teaching slots and also keeping slots open for can’t-miss local classes!
I revisit the piece of paper every few months and commit to making one of the changes.
I love the suggestions for reviving yoga teaching enthusiasm. I would add taking a one week – one month holiday from teaching and in some cases, a break from practicing asana is helpful too. I would also recommend teachers be mindful how much of the yoga practice they actually physically do with their students. Lots of posture demonstration can be exhausting. Other then that, good vata/pitta balancing foods that nourish and satisfy and sleeeeep.
A great article and a subject that really needs to be discussed. I have definitely experienced burnout at times and it’s a very depressing state to be in. Here you are doing something you LOVE and yet you feel exhausted and all out of inspiration. Ironically, often encouraging students to have balance and to give back to themselves while you not taking your own advice. This adds the twisting knife of guilt to the situation. My ‘ladders’ out of this came in the form of personal practice, reconnecting with my teachers and their lessons and finding a community of yoga teachers for when I needed someone to lean on. I’m so grateful for all these things and for the 90 minutes experience which has revolutionized my teaching and practice. xxx
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I teach six days a week as of a few months ago. It really does help to take a class or two a week. Studying helps as well. More recently I decided to take a day to NOT think about yoga and felt great afterwards. Sometimes taking a step back from yoga life is what is needed.
Agreed, Amy!A non-yoga day is so needed. We just recently did the same and what a difference it made!