Hali Tsotetsi

4 Things I wish I knew before I joined an abusive yoga community.

Image from Unsplash

Image from Unsplash

One of the most liberating times of my life has come, a yoga community that I used to be a part of has been exposed. Before I get to the exposé part, let me start from the beginning. My consistent yoga practice started when I was 20 at a donation-based yoga studio near NYU where a friend took me. At the time, I had broken off an engagement to an older Italian man who had abusive tendencies towards me. Looking back, I can connect the dots because they often say that until we fully heal from abusive situations, we will replace one for the other. 

Although I was in therapy too, there was something about that yoga studio that was magical and I wanted to be a part of it forever. I began to practice yoga almost everyday there and was so grateful. I loved it so much that when they opened their other location, I went and tried hot yoga for the first ever in my life. I felt renewed. A lot of my internal transformation came from this place and because of that, I felt a sense of debt and gratitude. 

In 2012, I decided to go back to school to become a school teacher and I expressed this to a yoga teacher of mine. He replied, ‘Why not teach yoga? People act like kids in the hot room.’ After thinking about it and calculating, I decided to do it, I put down my money to become a yoga teacher and felt like my life was about to change. Little did I know how much it would change. 

It’s been 7 years since I taught my first yoga class and it seems like forever ago that I graduated and became a yoga teacher but some of the pain still remains. I went through a manipulative training that used mind control tactics to depreciate my self-worth as a human-being so that once I started teaching, I would put up with anything and it worked. When I started teaching, I was broken and lost. As a result, I took a break from teaching because I felt like I was being a hypocrite. How could I preach wellness when I was the opposite. I was clearly unwell. 

Here are 4 things I wish I knew before I joined an abusive yoga community: 

1. Those who abuse you know what they are doing more than you might realize. 

I was a 24 year-old New Yorker when I signed up for this training. And, just like most New Yorkers, I hated being told what to do. I thought I knew it all and was not interested in humbling myself. I was going to be a yoga teacher at all costs and no one could stop me. From the day of orientation till graduation, everything felt off. The only thing that felt genuine were the connections that I made with my peers, some are still my closest friends after all these years. 

One incident that stood out to me was when I had to co-teach with a male teacher after I had revealed my issues with men in an inner circle during the training. The male teacher degraded me and told me I did a terrible job and was not fit to be a teacher. I am all for truth being spoken and am willing to work on what I need to but he didn’t tell me what I could work on; he just wrote me off. My intuition told me that he had been told to make me feel uncomfortable about teaching so that I would not be able to teach right away after graduation and that I would need to work for it. 

With this in mind, I asked other graduates if their co-teaching experience went well and most told me that similar situations had occurred to them. I understood clearly that this was to manipulate us into group thinking and silencing one another.

2. It’s not in your mind. 

During my almost ten years of practicing and teaching for that studio, I would notice some odd behavior. But I would brush it off and put it in the ‘I am crazy, it didn’t happen’ category. Even though I knew I wasn’t crazy. Something that was very prevalent in that community and in most yoga is/was sexual harassment. I was targeted by the same teacher who had suggested that I become a teacher. I thought he saw something in me and we could have a mentor/student relationship until he put his hand down my bra during a class and was disappointed that he saw me as a piece of meat. I also understood that he needed healing and that I should stay away from him as much as possible after I told him to stay away from me. 

I would notice this particular teacher treating women differently and intentionally targeting us during class but I thought it was in my mind. Once I accepted what was going on, I was aware of the truth and inner-workings of this yoga studio. It was heartbreaking but I had to accept it to heal from it. 

3. Take care of yourself. 

Proof of loyalty to them was being overworked and always ‘happy’ about what was going on at the studio; whether we actually were or not was irrelevant. After teaching for them on-and-off for 3 years, I decided to leave because I was so exhausted and I actually ended up moving to Los Angeles. 

My first month in Los Angeles, I had memories of being there and how happy I was to begin with and then how I was emotionally abused as a teacher and apprentice. The pain was so overwhelming but I had to sit with it. I felt myself recreating what had happened and victimizing myself. It was challenging but what got me through is the light side of being in that community: being able to teach, the friends, the lessons and the transformation that occurred. Dealing with that community taught me that if happiness requires self-sacrifice, it is not worth it because the two cannot co-exist in wellness. 

4. Abusive situations highlight what we need to work on. 

Just like most of us, I grew up in a conditional love atmosphere. If I did what was expected of me, I would be loved. If I didn’t, I would be ignored and unloved- this is emotional abuse. I have been healing from this dynamic for the past few years and noticed a trend as I began my healing process, I kept recreating the cycle of abuse that I had encountered as a child. Scenarios of silence, secrets and weaponization to ‘keep me in my place’. 

I did so with jobs, relationships and friendships until I freed myself of my subconscious conditioning and accepting that I am worthy of health and kindness. In basic psychology, the idea of recreating scenarios that leave us vulnerable in order to heal them is a very real one because ultimately, we want to heal. I learned clearly that my healing was not going to take place if I kept lying to myself and being amongst/ in communities that silence me, manipulate me and use my weaknesses against me. Nothing good will come if I surround myself amongst people who want to break me because I am not meant to be broken; I am meant to be whole. 

If you are experiencing abuse or harassment, please seek professional help. 

Check our our online courses for elevation and motivation. 

What inspired Mind•Body•Connection? W/ Hali Tsotetsi

CEO and FOUNDER of Mind•Body•Connection.

CEO and FOUNDER of Mind•Body•Connection.

BiologiqueLife just launched a wellness service directory that connects wellness professionals, wellness studios and clientele interested in wellness services. 


We are so proud of this venture. And, would like to share more about this endeavour with you. Our team asked The Founder and CEO, Hali Tsotetsi some questions about Mind•Body•Connection


1. What inspired this concept? 

Well, I have been teaching yoga for almost seven years and although wellness (as an industry) makes money, most people who choose this professional route are struggling. It’s almost as though we are being punished for doing good in The World. 


I wanted to shift this perspective and create a platform that supports people who are creating health for themselves and others. 


2. What’s behind the name? 

We always talk about the connection between mind&body in this industry but very few embody it. I believe that this is because the wellness industry is separate; however, we should be united. Someone’s wellbeing can thrive if they take care of all aspects of their health; not just practice yoga, not just go to a chiropractor... But, a combination of what that person needs to be at their best. 


3. Who is Mind•Body•Connection for?

From a professional standpoint, it is for someone who is a wellness practitioner who believes that they deserve to make money and sustain a career off of creating health for themselves and others. Many of us (in wellness) are not treated well, paid enough or don’t even believe that we are worthy of making the same as someone who works a traditional office job. However, Mind•Body•Connection is here to debunk that. If you believe that you are worthy, invest in yourself first. Don’t wait for others to invest in you, first! 


From a client perspective, it is for the person who believes that preventative health will help them live a more full and happy life. Everyday, more and more science reveals to us that taking care of yourself is number one. If we take care of ourselves, we are better off - in the long run. 


4. What’s your vision for Mind•Body•Connection? 

To build a platform where millions of people around The World can connect because they share a commonality. And, that is to see the world in a better state of being. A World where practicing yoga is just as important as your daily coffee, where visiting a holistic practitioner supports seeing your modern doctor and where people who work in wellness are taken as seriously as a technician, engineer or even a lawyer.

‘My life is like a quilt: everything that I thread is a part of a bigger picture.’

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Hali Tsotetsi is theEditor-in- Chief and Founder of BiologiqueLife. She has been teaching yoga since 2013. Born in New York and raised in South Africa and England, Hali now lives and teaches in Los Angeles.


1. What style of yoga do you teach?


I teach Vinyasa, Traditional Hot Yoga and Yin.


2. What is your intention behind teaching?


To be authentic and spread that authenticity, whatever it may look like.


3. Who are your mentors in yoga?


I had a few mentors when I was living in New York who used to teach at Yoga To The People, one of them owned the Brooklyn studio. As I have progressed a teacher and lost contact of some of my mentors because of life and how it progresses, I have only recently made peace with the fact that some of them won’t be in my life anymore. So, right now, I don’t have a yoga mentor but instead of searching for my mentor outside of myself, I will look within. Like Pattabhi K. Jois famously said, ‘All is coming’, and I believe that about everything. If you stay on the right path, are genuine, stay uplifted and authentic, all is coming. It’s only a matter of time.


4. What have they taught you?


I have learnt so many things from former mentors. One being that I don’t have to like everyone. I took a teacher-training from Jared McCann in January, 2016 and it was internally transformative. He put emphasis on being authentic which I used to struggle with. His guidance has helped me on my path of being genuine.


5. Please mention a book that you have read about yoga that has had a positive impact on you?


So many. One on particular is ‘Myths of The Asanas’ by Alanna Kaivalya.

6. What lesson are you currently learning in your Asana practice?


I’m currently learning two lessons right now; Patience and Trust.


I used to be so good at trusting until I became jaded by New York City. I lived in New York for ten years as an adult. Towards the end, I had gone through some of the toughest and almost inhumane experiences that anyone could ever go through. It led me down a path of distrust, particularly towards myself and men. Right now, my practice is reminding me that there is a bigger picture and allowing is better than forcing my outcome. Looking back, God and The Universe have always known what was best for me. When I lie in Savasana, I try to surrender myself to that notion.


7. How often do you practice?


Almost everyday.


8. How do you implement the other 7 limbs of yoga into your life other than Asana?


As a true Aquarius, I am not the best at following rules. Rules scare me actually. So, the niyamas&yamas are not my forte. I like to live by karma. That my life is like a quilt: everything that I thread is a part of a bigger picture. So, I ask myself, what do I want that picture to look like?


I also practice Dharana  (meditation) twice a day for at least an hour-a-day.


9. Why is being present so important to you?


Because life is happening right now. I have always been an overly driven person. In fact, anyone who knows me well, knows that I am always on-the-go and working a lot. Recently, I decided to be more present than I had been because the future does not exist without presence. I have always looked to the future for happiness and now, I want to look to now for anything I want because now is the only moment that it is feasible.


10. How can we keep up with you on social media? What is your IG handle and/ FB name?


My IG is @halitsotetsi