Tripp Talks
I’ve had a (mostly) daily ashtanga yoga practice for over a decade, and like a lot of people who’ve stuck with it that long, my relationship to the practice has evolved. What started as a daily discipline — a way to wrestle my mind and body into shape — has become something steadier, simpler, and a little less precious. I still believe practices can lead to insight, but I’ve grown skeptical of how often spiritual maturity gets confused with athleticism, and how much energy gets spent maintaining hierarchies rather than cultivating humility. I first came across Zoë Ward’s work on Instagram, where her blend of wit, criticism, and candor immediately stood out. She has a knack for poking at the contradictions in modern Ashtanga — the rigidity, the reverence for authorization, the fetishization of teachers — while still speaking from the perspective of someone who loves the practice deeply. Her art and writing are sharp, skeptical, and genuinely curious in a way that feels rare. This conversation is about what happens after the honeymoon phase of a spiritual discipline — when devotion and discernment start to rub against each other, and you have to decide what still feels alive and what’s just habit. Zoë and I discuss hierarchy, humor, and harm; learning to trust yourself again after outsourcing authority; and what it means to continue practicing when you’ve seen both the beauty and the b******t. At its heart, it’s a conversation about relationship — to teachers, to tradition, and to the parts of ourselves that still get on the mat every morning, hoping to wake up a little more than the day before. In this episode, we cover: * Zoë’s early years in yoga and what drew her from Integral Yoga to Ashtanga. * What it was really like to study in Mysore during the 2000s — and how the culture around “authorization” took shape. * The fine line between discipline and self-punishment, and how love can be a more reliable motivator than rigor. * Why the conflation of spiritual progress with physical ability misses the point. * The role of humor and critique in a tradition that often takes itself too seriously. * Hierarchy, harm, and how good intentions can still create unhealthy power dynamics. * How Zoë’s perspective shifted after stepping away from teaching — and what brought her back. * What it means to practice as a householder, where yoga serves life rather than replaces it. * The tension between devotion and discernment — how to honor a lineage without surrendering your agency. * Why trusting yourself might be the most advanced posture of all. About Zoë: Zoe Ward is a creative and longtime yoga practitioner based in central Virginia. She has studied yoga for more than twenty years, including a decade as a dedicated student of Sharath Jois, followed by another five years as a thoughtful skeptic and nuanced critic of the Ashtanga method through her writing and her Instagram account, @unrulyascetic [https://www.instagram.com/unrulyascetic/]. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit trippjohnson.substack.com [https://trippjohnson.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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