GaiaYoga Culture

Our guiding principles

  • Non-Violence - Physical, emotional, and psychic. (this does not mean no hunting or cutting of trees.)

  • Non-Ownership - Respecting everyone’s sovereignty when relating to people (including intimate relationships), the Earth and things

  • Authentic, honest and compassionate communication - Essentially Non-Violent Communication (NVC)

  • Tantra - Resolving polarized energy in relationship to completion, relating holistically

  • Sustainable Lifestyle - At the individual and community level - aka external sustainability -commonly known as permaculture.

  • Effective self-care - Diet, health, self-connection, inner peace, aka internal sustainability.

  • Emotional and psychic integrity and healing - Light on shadow, healing childhood traumas, growing beyond one’s conditioning, healing generational and cultural wounds and patterns.

  • Integrity – Alignment of one’s values, actions, and words, keeping and following through on agreements

  • Interdependence – Community mindedness, consideration of the whole within one’s individual choices

Intentional Community Hawaii, Permaculture, Food Forest
 

GaiaYoga Culture is a thriving, holistically-designed culture that sustainably generates true human freedom.

Cultures are a combination of practices that emerge out of underlying cultural consciousness. We’ve spent over 20 years developing this cultural consciousness and refining our practices. Our prayer is that our community can serve as an inspirational and practical model for sane, sustainable and joyful human life. It’s a massive work in progress. We are attempting to undo generations of trauma and social patterning. It is much harder than we ever imagined!

 
 

Our Culture

GaiaYoga Culture is a vision and practice being pioneered at GaiaYoga Gardens that integrates many teachings into a cohesive consciousness and lifestyle or yoga that supports a person in living from their deepest humanity.

More than an individual practice, it includes developing bonded-human-social-structures (cultures, tribes, clans, and families) that express our true nature as human beings.  GaiaYoga is in many ways the antidote to the predominant culture designed around unchecked capitalism, fantasy, car-and machine-based human settlements, dysfunctional family-systems, emotional illiteracy, fear and oppression of nature, chemical dependence, absence of integrity, and broken relationships.

One of the things we’ve learned from Permaculture is that most problems, especially recurring ones, can be traced to design errors. In other words, if you start out with a bad design, no matter how much energy you put into tweaking it, you’re still going to end up with problems. We think the same is true of lifestyles and cultures. We believe the reason that most of us are stuck in various ways in our lives is due to poor design, not an inherent problem in us as humans.

GaiaYoga is a tool for looking at the structure of our lives, accounting for all of our needs, and starting to make different choices by re-designing our lives for wholeness, sustainability, and total integration.

GaiaYoga goes much broader and deeper than most “yogas,” which primarily address an individuals’ body-mind — supporting inner peace and connection to Spirit.  GaiaYoga is a dynamic and holistic “yoga” that addresses Spirit (realizing, integrating, and enjoying the Divine Masculine and the Divine Feminine), the Self (including the physical, emotional, spiritual, and mental bodies), Community (including the intimate, personal, local, collective, and universal spheres of community), and Earth (developing strategies to sustainably live as an integrated “cell” of The Earth, individually and culturally).

GaiaYoga as a holistic practice is inspired by the cultural and spiritual wisdom of many indigenous cultures in which people lived sustainably for untold generations.  Sadly, these indigenous cultures have mostly “lost their battles” (literally) with the current “beast” that is running the world.  Most of us were raised by this beast and intentionally or not, we continue the pattern.

To change direction and make life work naturally and be sustainable, we require a new vision, teaching and daily practice that can heal and transform our lives and our cultures.  GaiaYoga provides a way to emerge out of the world that we see now and to create something that has the beautiful elements of indigenous cultures and knows how to wield the new power derived from technological and social evolution, without losing touch with our true humanity.  It’s a “take the best and leave the rest” approach.

What does it take for us have the kind of world we want, and be the kind of people we want to be?  How can we grow through the huge pile of compost left by previous generations and find our way to the sunlight? How can we create a full, healthy expression of our individuality and a “container” – a culture, a community – for us to live in?

For this we need a holistic cultural template.  Humans are no different than dolphins, or wolves, or bees, or ants, or giraffes, or apes, or even bananas or bamboo: we are naturally “designed” to live in-and-as a bonded social organism.  Our full human expression is still to live as a unified multi-generational people.  Call it a tribe or community or clan or kin or whatever.

This is a huge aspect of the yoga we all need to practice to create a beautiful, abundant, peaceful and Spirit-filled world.  We need to take the energy of yoga – of unification – and bring it to culture.  This is a big “stretch” for someone who grew up in a city or in the suburbs or in a fragmented and dysfunctional family.  There’s lots of healing, lots of new skills, and lots of buttons to be pushed and worked through.  How can we do it safely, directly and effectively?  This is part of what practicing GaiaYoga offers.

Using GaiaYoga as a “hub,” we integrate particular practices. These are “spokes” in dynamic relationship with each other and they create a strong, balanced “wheel” that rolls well.  GaiaYoga is also like a computer operating system (it works in the background) that’s loaded with the finest programs (teachings).  It integrates Marshall Rosenberg’s Nonviolent Communiation (NVC); Guy Claude Berger’s Instinctive Nutrition; Aajonus Vonderplanitz’ Primal Diet; Re-evaluative Co-counseling (RC); The ManKind Project (MKP); Permaculture, and other sustainable energy and agriculture teachings; Abralut’s Tantric Transmission of the Shivalila Kinship Society; the rich wisdom of The Dagara people as shared by Malidoma and Sobonfu Somé; Saniel Bonder’s Waking Down spiritual teaching and practice; Piankhy’s Integral Science; The Michael Teaching; Taoist and Tantric sexuality teachings; as well an assortment of other new and old teachings and practices that grow sustainable-and-holistic consciousness and culture.

GaiaYoga® is the art and wisdom of living holistically, unifying Spirit, self, community, and Earth.

 

 

We are pioneering this way of life and are looking for people to join us at many levels: 

As interns and students; as long-term residents; as permanent community members; and as cross-community teammates, spreading GaiaYoga and linking GaiaYoga Gardens to other places in the world!

 
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Imagine If You Will…

You wake up on Monday morning and receive a phone call from an old friend who says,

“How ’bout we go fishing today? We haven’t spent time together in months.”

Now, in your old life you’d have to tell him the following bummer story:

“Gee, I’d love to, but I can’t get off work because I’m the only dentist my patients trust to work on them. Also, my SUV’s in the shop, so we couldn’t get out to the lake. And my daughter has a ballet class this afternoon that I have to pick her up from. So I’m booked all day – again.”

But instead, you’ve designed an entirely different life for yourself. In your new life, your old friend doesn’t live across town – he lives with his wife and two children on the same 80-acre piece of land that you, 30 other adults, and 18 children all co-own. So you say to him:

“Hey, that sounds great! Let me call up the other three people in my cooperative dentistry practice and see if they can cover for me. We have a light day today, so I know one of them will say ‘yes.’ How about if we meet at the meditation hall at 9 a.m., sit for half an hour, and then head over to the community pond? Hey, that’ll really work out great because tonight’s my night to make dinner for the community, and I didn’t know what I was going to fix. I’ll make a big sushi dinner from our catch. How’s that sound?”

“Sounds good to me. Do you want to drive so we can bring the fish back easily?”

“Nah, let’s just each take a wheelbarrow. I don’t even wanna deal with the solar-powered golf cart today. Let’s really rough it!”

“Cool. How late can you stay out? Do you have any responsibilities in the garden or with the kids this afternoon?”

“No. Yesterday was my day teaching the pre-teens about the connection between diet and emotional balance, and Wednesday I’m leading a crew in planting the community’s new corn patch. I’m psyched on that. I love being able to have a garden, with all that fresh organic food, and not need to grow it all by myself. Also, did you know that this year we’re going to plant an extra acre to sell at the farmers market to pay for bringing in a Nonviolent Communication specialist to help us with our co-parenting skills?”

“Yeah, I know. I really pushed for that. It’s been so frustrating for me to have us get into conflicts, only to find out later that we were actually in agreement but had just misunderstood each other. I’m glad you reminded me. I’m going to be there Wednesday to help plant that corn.”

“Great. I guess my only other consideration is that I was going to watch my daughter practice ballet with the other kids this afternoon. They’re getting ready for their big performance for the community next month. But I can watch her tomorrow, so I think she’ll be OK with that. Yeah, this sounds great– let’s go fishing. It’ll be a fun way to spend the day together, plus I just love all the quiet out at the pond. I can really feel Spirit out there. So let’s do it! I’ll make those calls and see you there in 45 minutes.”

“Yahoo! I love this life. I’m so glad we made the change 10 years ago. Imagine where’d we be if we hadn’t?”

“Yup, we’re really fortunate, and even more so today from all the work we’ve put into ourselves, this community, the land, and our spiritual practice.”

“You said it. Love you. See you soon.”

What we’re suggesting in this illustration is that we can live in a way that honors our diverse needs as individual, social, terrestrial and spiritual beings. The people in this example were doing that. They had the courage to seriously evaluate their lives and re-design them to provide what they truly desired. They wanted to live sustainable, non-polluting, lifestyles; they also wanted physical and emotional health, happy and well-cared-for children, balanced careers, a full spiritual life, a community of people to share it all with, and a land-base to make it real and grounded. In other words, they saw the need for the integration of Spirit, self, community, and Earth. And they were willing to do the necessary work – including personal and relational growth, acquiring the material resources, and developing practical skills – to make it all happen.

Cultivating this kind of holistic understanding, developing sensitivity to one’s own need for integrated and sustainable culture, and taking the practical steps to bring it into life – that’s what GaiaYoga is all about. It’s a “yoga” (i.e. a practice of unification) for living holistically and sustainably on the Earth.

There are many different ways to practice GaiaYoga – this is just one example. You don’t have to live in the country, co-parent, meditate or be a gardener. It also isn’t about losing control of your life to a group.

What it is about is addressing our core needs for Spirit, self, community and Earth in an integrated and intelligent way. How these needs will be met will vary from person to person and from circumstance to circumstance, but the process that leads us to these different choices will be the same. Through GaiaYoga we can transform fragmented, unsustainable ways of living, step-by-step, into holistic ways of being that are balanced, sustainable and deeply fulfilling. It is possible. So, let’s do it… together!

 

 

Our Story

GaiaYoga Residents Summer 2011

GaiaYoga Residents Summer 2011

GaiaYoga Crew Summer 2016

GaiaYoga Crew Summer 2016

 
GaiaYoga Ohana Winter 2019

GaiaYoga Ohana Winter 2019

GaiaYoga Ohana Spring 2019

GaiaYoga Ohana Spring 2019


GaiaYoga began as the lifework of Ano Tarletz Hanamana.

He walked away from the culture he was born into in the early 1990s when he was in his early 20s. Since then, he’s been healing himself, learning, practicing and teachings skills that support GaiaYoga Consciousness and Culture, as well as unlearning a whole lot, and bringing this vision to life! In 2001, he co-created the GaiaYoga teaching and in 2003 he co-founded GaiaYoga Gardens (GYG). In 2009, he re-founded GYG with Melekai Matson, who he has two children with. And in 2018, after the lava flow that covered Puna and a small part of GYG, the ownership of the land was transferred into a religious non-profit with 6 adult members, setting up the legal structure for a true community of equals to flourish and invite more members into. As beautiful and utopian as all of this sounds, actually stabilizing in this way of being as a community is very challenging and it runs counter to how almost all of us were raised. We are sincere in our efforts, and soberly far from our dreams being fully manifested.

Here is an interview with Ano from November 2024 that expresses some of his personal story, a lot of insight into GaiaYoga as a teaching, and what has made growing this consciousness and culture so worthwhile and challenging…

(Click on photo to watch interview)