Yoga studios are ecosystems. Exotic dancers run sophisticated businesses. Ancient texts describe fluids that preserve life force. These things sound unrelated until you zoom out far enough to see the pattern.
This week we explored systems theory—the framework that helps us understand how cranes work, how minds work, how everything interconnects. Once you see it, you can’t unsee it. A yoga studio doesn’t collapse because of one bad decision. It collapses because the whole system got compromised—corporate takeovers, profit motives, the slow erosion of authenticity until nothing real remains.
Meanwhile, exotic dancers have figured out what many yoga teachers haven’t: how to build financial autonomy through diversified income, personal branding, and understanding exactly who they’re serving. They’ve mastered the system they’re working within.
The Hatha Yoga Pradipika talks about bindu—a vital essence you preserve through mudras and bandhas. Sounds esoteric until you realize it’s describing a system too. What you retain versus what you let drain away. What sustains you versus what depletes you.
And then there’s what happens in a room when everyone breathes together. Individual practice creating collective energy. One person’s breakthrough lifting everyone else. Systems within systems.
Everything connects. Everything influences everything else. The question is whether you’re paying attention to how.
