inclusion

What’s up with pronouns?

Have you looked at our schedule? You’ll find the class time, title, instructor AND the instructor’s pronouns if they wish to share them. You may have wondered “why?” If so, read on…

What’s up with the pronouns?

Very often, people make assumptions about the gender of another person based on the person’s appearance or name. These assumptions aren’t always correct, and the act of making an assumption (even if correct) can unintentionally send a potentially harmful message -- that people have to look a certain way to demonstrate the gender that they are or are not.

Using someone’s correct personal pronouns is a way to respect them and create an inclusive environment, just like using a person’s name can be a way to respect them. Just as it can be offensive or even harassing to make up a nickname for someone and call them that nickname against their will, it can be unintentionally offensive or harassing to guess at someone’s pronouns and refer to them using those pronouns if that is not how that person wants to be known. Or, worse, actively choosing to ignore the pronouns someone has stated that they go by could imply the dehumanizing notion that intersex, transgender, nonbinary, and gender nonconforming people do not or should not exist.

Sharing your pronouns opens the door for others to share with you

So, a great way to create and normalize space for people to share their pronouns is first to share your own. You can do this by saying, for example, “Hi, my name is Farida and I go by the pronoun ‘she’” or “I’m Yoshi and I’m referred to by ‘he/him’ pronouns.”

Sharing your own pronouns is a great idea, but it isn’t requisite. Keep in mind, however, that there is a privilege of appearing in a way that fits both your gender and the pronouns that many people associate with your gender. In other words, if people’s assumptions are correct, never having to name those assumptions begins to normalize the very process of making assumptions (which for others may be incorrect). Thus, sharing pronouns is a great way to disrupt the normalization and privilege of assumption.

Ok - so how does this work in the real world?

First, make sure that you have shared your own pronouns, if you’re comfortable letting them be known. Doing so is the best way to encourage other people to share their pronouns, to help make them more comfortable sharing with you.

If you are meeting someone new one-to-one, you might say something like: “Hi, I’m Akeem, and I go by ‘they’ pronouns. How should I refer to you?We don’t recommend ever forcing people to share their pronouns. However, people could be invited or encouraged to do so. Thank you for doing your part to help create a welcoming space for all!

The information on use of pronouns is inspired and portions pulled with permission from mypronouns.org. Written by Shige Sakurai, a transgender person of color and a social justice leader, university administrator, professor, and consultant with two decades of community and professional experiences. They are the founder of International Pronouns Day and the first person in the U.S. to receive an officially nonbinary, X-marker driver’s license. We are grateful for Sakuri’s commentary and resources and their permissions to reshare some of their thoughtful guidance.

Why we did away with "namaste"

Why we did away with “namaste”

We appreciate “namaste,” in the way it’s actually intended to be used
Namaste is a word derived from Sanskrit. In India, a country of almost a billion and a half people, you’ll hear it used as a greeting perhaps in a temple or towards someone of authority or spiritual leadership. Mind you, there are five different families of language in India, hundreds of dialects. It’s a diverse country with a history of colonization, regional phrasing and variations, with lots to appreciate and social norms to understand. A key takeaway? Namaste is a greeting. That’s the intention of the word.

Party in the USA
Truthfully, namaste is not part of our yogic traditions or lineage. It seems to have been appropriated by the West when yoga was commercialized in the US; we can loosely trace it to California in the 1960s. Now there are shirts, memes, bracelets… something from Indian culture has been taken out of context, hyphenated with vulgar or contradicting words, and slapped on merchandise. "Nama-slay," much? Even your’s truly, Barre & Soul, is guilty of using namaste in a way that was divorced from its Hindi heritage. For that, we are sorry.

Namaste is not part of Barre & Soul classes
We learn. We grow. We help our team to choose different language that’s not appropriative. Even accidental appropriation is not okay. That is why you won’t hear ‘namaste,' at Barre & Soul. Maybe you noticed it went away from our classes, maybe you didn’t. NPR has a great article by Indian journalist Kumari Devarajan, “How ‘Namaste' Flew Away from Us.” Among other insights, Kumari shared the aggregate feedback from South Asians was that hearing namaste during yoga “makes our skin crawl…” Doesn’t that feel hurtful? We’re sorry for perpetuating even a moment of that harm and being insensitive. It makes no sense to use ‘namaste' at the end of class.

We’re grateful for increased awareness and the progressive nature of life. Learning, listening.

The love and light in us, does indeed honor the light in you.
That’s authentic. Your partnership means the world.