[quote=InnerAthlete;6077]“Yes” and “very much”, respectively.
While it’s not the point (since cultivating a relationship around sports, athletics, and competition is not the cultivation one pursues when selecting a guru with the hopes of releasing kundalini, reaching samadhi, or bringing divinity into matter) I’ll entertain it for that very value.
In all of the levels of basketball in which I was involved, nearly every coach resented another’s interference to one degree or another. It did not matter if the interferer was Dr. James Naismith (the inventor of basketball) or Michael Lowenstein (some child’s father).
This was especially true at the NBA level where many of the top players had personal coaches, trainers, or fitness consultants. Often those folks were “friends” and did not really posses a level of expertise to be anything but meddlesome.
This sort of thing created all sorts of problems, many of which we, in yoga, can easily dismiss as sludge of the Ego.
Coming back around to my bracketed comment in the first paragraph I will cite from my own experience. Bob Knight, the controversial collegiate coach is a master teacher. And I studied his teaching methods first hand. That was a very valuable year for me. However…if one examines Coach Knight’s life, how he lives, one might not care to emulate that. And it is this very thing that guides us in selecting a guru (or yoga teacher). It is not whether they levitate or can do a pose on their thumbs. It is how they live their lives and thus bring yoga into matter, into the real world to actually have an effect on the world as we know it.
So while I have a relationship with Coach Knight and he will always be a master teacher he is not the person who I would have guide me on a quest to narrow the distance between my soul (Self) and my outward expression (self).
But again, it is [I]my[/I] nature, this fabric woven between my teacher and me. And it is my ethic and my loyalty and my commitment. It is the relationship I have chosen and the surrender I have accepted. It may not be so for all or for others.[/quote]
But, InnerAthlete, if all the top athletes do it, then it seems it’s not quite so verboten after all. Maybe gurus are not as possessive as basketball
coaches?