Sharath Jois

Sharath Jois




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Sharath Jois
Phone +91 9880185500

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Email: shala@sharathyogacentre.com

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Plot No 38-P3 and 39, Hebbal 2nd Phase
Industrial Area Angally Hobli
Srirangapatna Taluk, Mandya District
Karnataka 571606 India

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R. Sharath Jois (Rangaswamy Sharath) was born on 29 September, 1971 in Mysuru, India, is a Yoga teacher. Discover R. Sharath Jois's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 49 years old?

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He is a member of famous with the age 50 years old group.

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His net worth has been growing significantly in 2020-2021. So, how much is R. Sharath Jois worth at the age of 50 years old? R. Sharath Jois’s income source is mostly from being a successful . He is from India. We have estimated R. Sharath Jois's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.
When he was 19 years old, his mother told him that he should begin assisting his grandfather in the yoga shala, as there were many students, and his grandfather was not a young man anymore. From that time, he became Pattabhi Jois’s full-time assistant. It was during these years that Sharath’s devotion to the practice deepened and he began to intuit its transformative power.
In attempts to continue the yoga lineage, he holds a teachers' course in the summer for authorized and certified practitioners to ensure the Ashtanga method is being taught in the spirit of the tradition and with respect to the lineage of yoga gurus who have kept the practice alive - Rama Mohan Bramachari, T. Krishnamacharya, and his grandfather. Jois was honoured at a celebration thrown following the completion of one of the teacher’s courses in 2014. During this course, Sharath reminded his students of the importance of teaching "from the heart".
Following in the spirit of his late grandfather, Jois holds conferences on Saturdays after led classes to discuss important aspects of the practice, theory, and to address any questions or concerns that students may have concerning the practice. Jois reiterates, that to receive full benefits of the practice, one should practice intentionally with the 4 D’s in mind - devotion, dedication, determination, and discipline.
In 2019, Jois rebranded and renamed the K. Pattabhi Jois Ashtanga Yoga Institute (KPJAYI) in Mysore as Sharath Yoga Centre. The same year, he publicly acknowledged his grandfather K. Pattabhi Jois's sexual abuse of pupils, apologising to the students who had experienced this trauma and encouraging them to forgive his grandfather. "It brings me immense pain that I also witnessed him giving improper adjustments", Sharath wrote.
In 2007 when Pattabhi Jois was not in good health and unable to teach any longer, Sharath became director of the Institute. He has steadily grown into his role as director of KPJAYI and as the seniormost authority on the practice, having studied and practiced all six series with his grandfather. His style of teaching and presence in the shala has been described by a senior student as a balance of strictness and compassion.
Jois began traveling internationally with his grandfather in the 1990s to teach Ashtanga yoga. They felt it was imperative to travel and teach an authentic system of yoga in the West where yoga was becoming increasingly popular and being taught in non-traditional ways. In efforts to maintain the integrity and tradition of the practice, he continues to travel and teach worldwide.
R. Sharath Jois (born Rangaswamy Sharath on 29 September 1971) is a teacher, practitioner and lineage holder (paramaguru) of Ashtanga Yoga, in the tradition of his grandfather K. Pattabhi Jois. He is the director of the K. Pattabhi Jois Ashtanga Yoga Institute (KPJAYI) in Mysore, India.
Jois was born on 29 September 1971 in Mysore India to Saraswati Rangaswamy, daughter of K. Pattabhi Jois. Jois was born into a family dedicated to the practice, preservation and teaching of Ashtanga yoga as his grandfather had learned from his teacher, T. Krishnamacharya. Jois, being exposed to yoga since birth, began practicing asanas informally around seven years old and continued non-committally until age 14. At the age of 19, he began formal study of the Ashtanga yoga system with his grandfather and is the lineage holder of Ashtanga yoga today.
Jois' grandfather, K. Pattabhi Jois, began studying yoga with T. Krishnamacharya at the age of 12, in 1927, and continued his formal study with his teacher until 1954. Pattabhi Jois spent more than 70 years of his life dedicated to practicing and teaching Ashtanga yoga. He established the Ashtanga Yoga Research Institute, his first yoga school, in his home in Lakshmipuram in 1948. To accommodate the increasing number of students coming to study, he opened a new school in Gokulam in 2002.
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Conference / Q & A
MAGNOLIA
R. Sharath Jois is a yoga guru from Mysuru, Karnataka. His relentless service to spread the traditional yoga method of Ashtanga yoga has made him a well-known figure around the world. He is respected across the globe for his knowledge of yoga and his dedication to share that knowledge among aspiring yoga students. Sharath Jois was born on September 29, 1971, in Mysuru. Grandson of yoga guru Sri K Pattabhi Jois, he started his yoga lessons at 7 years of age. He took up yoga practice full time when he turned 19. He also began assisting his grandfather who was teaching both Western and Indian students at his home which doubled as his yoga shala in Lakshmipuram. With 30 years of yoga practice and teaching experience, R. Sharath Jois is now considered the foremost authority in the world in Ashtanga yoga. Thousands of students from across 100 countries travel to Mysuru every year in pursuit of yoga lessons from Sharath Jois today. For Sharath Jois’ students, a trip to Mysuru for learning yoga is like an annual pilgrimage they undertake where they are not only given lessons in yoga, pranayama and Sanskrit chanting but a chance to experience the country, Indian culture and traditions. He regularly travels around the world imparting yoga lessons to students. He also trains them to become yoga teachers and most of his students are well-known yoga teachers in their respective countries. Sharath Jois has been instrumental in making yoga popular in some of the Asian countries like Japan and South Korea, South American countries like Chile and Brazil and European countries like Finland where yoga was a new concept till very recently.
India’s gift to the world for healthy living has now been widely adopted We at R2R Media Solutions LLP strongly believe that Yoga is a holistic approach to well-being. Viewed from purely the physical aspect, yoga has proved to be a very powerful set of graded exercises which can be practiced by all – from children to youth and even the elderly. Studies have shown that many psychosomatic disorders can be healed through yoga. It advocates purity of mind, speech and body, contentment, acceptance of others, perseverance, self-study, self-reflection and contemplation of the Supreme Being.
R2R Media Solutions LLP in association with Chandana Bhowmick is very honoured and excited to present Paramaguru R Sharath Jois’ Workshop for the first time in Pune, India. Join us for 4 days of immersion in the traditional Ashtanga method. Experience four guided classes of Primary Series along with one conference where you can ask questions and meet the ‘Living Master of the Ashtanga Yoga’ lineage. Space and spots is very limited, so please make sure to book soon as we expect to sell out very quickly.
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6:30 am – 8:30 am Led Primary / Talk MAGNOLIA
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We are a global and inclusive community, bringing together teachers and students devoted to the practice of Ashtanga yoga, all eight of those limbs – and sharing that love both online and in person, through our audio podcast and in print magazine. Oh yeah, and we even have t-shirts! Here at the Dispatch, we are are dedicated to spreading the message that this yoga is for every body and everyone is welcome. So no matter what brought you, we’re glad you here and hope you’ll stay a while.
It’s early Sunday morning in Mysore and usually the street in front of the KPJAYI shala is crowded with students waiting in the queue – but this is Sharath Jois’ one day off from teaching. That’s not to say I was able to stroll past easily. No, there was a young boy standing in the middle of the road and, as I approached, he held his hand out and cautioned me to stop.
He knitted his eyebrows and looked hard at me. Then with a wave of his hand, he stepped aside and said, “You may now proceed.”
On my way back through, the little boy was still there. But this time, since I’d already proven to him my exceptional mind reading skills, he must’ve concluded I was ready for my next lesson – levitation. He said it was a trick his father taught him. Turns out, this one was tougher. I’d clearly need a few more lessons!
I never asked who his father was, but I didn’t have to. I recognized him as Sharath’s son who walked into our led primary class and climbed up onto his papa’s lap while he taught. There, in between the ekams and the dves you could hear father and son chatting in their native tongue – a language foreign to me. Still, I didn’t need to understand the words to recognize the familiar, comfortable exchanges between parent and child. That’s not something you hear – it’s something you feel.
I enjoyed those random classes when Sharath’s son would visit. India is a long way from home, so I found those playful interruptions welcome and enjoyable. They reminded me that this Guru I had traveled so far to learn from, and who often seems larger-than-life, is also a dad. In other words, he’s human.
Truth is, I don’t know Sharath very well, though I’m not sure how many students do, despite their claims. It further occurs to me that this may be somewhat intentional. Sure, I’ve read many a blog or social media post interpreting his words and behavior, written as if it’s their duty to announce a message from their Guru. But Sharath discourages such storytelling. In fact, I get the feeling, he does his best to teach the yoga without any influence at all, including his own. Of course, this may be a bit of my own story telling …
Yes, I did note some instances of clear preference. For in a place where the Insta-famous practice anonymously in the midst of the ordinary, there was a group that Sharath did notice – the families. Practice times and places in queue are strictly kept by everyone, except parents of young children. Moms and dads are given no set time at all and practice can be taken at their (or rather, their child’s) convenience.
So that being said, Sharath did know who I was, despite the short length of my first visit – but not because he knew anything about Ashtanga Dispatch – or cared, for that matter. He knew me simply as the more and Meghan, as the daughter. In fact, this seemed to please him, for it’s certainly a relationship and language he understands and speaks fluently.
As he spoke, I could feel my daughter beside me, and my eyes filled with emotion – it was as if Sharath was speaking directly to us. Of course, one look at the glistening eyes around the crowded room told us his message resounded in the hearts of many more than just Meghan’s and mine.
My daughter returned to Mysore a month later that year – without me. It was hard for me to leave her, but I had another child at home and a husband that I missed. Besides, I know she’d be in good hands. He’s a dad, I reminded myself.
Sharath offering Meghan photography tips on a hike this past year.
When Sharath saw Meghan, he asked, “Has your mother gone home?” She told him, yes, and he nodded his head. No more was said, because no more was necessary. My time was over and now it was theirs.
This is tradition. And one that begins with family.
*Top photo by Nitesh Batra from Mysore, India.
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