I had the opportunity to coach a legendary yoga instructor recently (who will remain nameless). I’ve heard about her classes for decades; they’re demanding, they’re challenging, and everyone who has taken her yoga teacher training has felt as though they were learning at the elbow of a master — because they actually were. (In fact, so well known is she among established yoga teachers that many people have referred to her as “ the yoga teacher’s yoga teacher.”)
I was flattered when she expressed an interest in me listening to the audio files of some of her Nidra classes and giving her my opinion; she had some anxiety about technical issues in her voice recordings (which turned out to be a non-issue), but *I* — as a voice geek — was more interested to hear her in action; what her cadence sounded like; what sort of ambience she created with her voice, and to get a sense of her spoken word mastery.
And mastery it was.
I found a smooth, soothing, almost ethereal tone to her voice: I instantly started to feel myself resigning myself to her instructions. Whatever that intangible quality was: we need to bottle it.
She did, however, fall victim to a common pitfall of a lot of Nidra/meditation instructors: that of a challenge weighing the calmness with a “flatness”; the normal fluctuations in inflection and the rate of speaking being compromised by a monotone. In Nidra and meditation, we always want to create a calm, balanced scenario in which students can “set sail” as it were, and drift off into a heightened consciousness.
There is a danger, however, in falling into a flat monotone in that pursuit of a gentle, calm tone.
Words need to be “lifted out”, emphasized, and given emotional “weight” — even in meditation.
This instructor — while huge impactful and compelling to listen to –needed a little bit of awareness of which words needed to be brought to the fore and given their due. In voiceover, we called it “punching” or “exploiting” the word; terms which are — admittedly — counter to a yogic mindset.
The same principles apply, though. You have heard hundreds of radio or TV spots where the words are being spoken (and it seems to fit into the right timeframe of a commercial, which anyone who works in broadcast knows is all-important) — but the announcer is glossing over key words, which, if “exploited” (better term: emphasized) will cause the listener to perk up their ears and take notice of the word.
It’s not: “The sale is on, but only until Tuesday.” It’s “The sale is *on* (pause for effect) but *only* until Tuesday.” (What? I only have until Tuesday? I’d better get down there!) Those words “sent forward” catch the ear and provide the takeaways for the listener.
Nidra and mediation — while all about the serene and calm environment –still need to create a listening scape that is engaging and interesting.
How?
Be Aware of Monotone
A monotone is alien to our ears, and we almost instantly disengage from a monotone. We all inflect different words in everyday conversation without even thinking about it. Ensure that the normal fluctuations which naturally occur in speech are not sacrificed while creating your relaxing Nidra/meditation journey.
Marry Calmness and Engagement
Think about creating and maintaining a sense of interest and engagement in your voice, while cultivating that calm, restful tone. Is it possible (and preferable) to create those two aesthetics simultaneously.
D emonstrate a Comprehension of the Words
Just like the issue with voiceover talent “glossing” over words, mentioned above, there can be a tendency for Nidra/meditation instructors to focus on reading their script, without really *thinking* about the words they’re imparting. Scripts are fantastic and necessary; try not to read them in an automated way, and see if you can “discover” the words, as if reading them for the first time — and hearing them come out of your mouth for the first time.
“Set Forward” Key Words
In the legendary yoga teacher’s recorded lessons which I audited, there were fantastic words like “journey” “explore” “transcend” and “evolve” — all of which could have been “set forward”, or given their full emphasis. They’re wonderful, powerful words — gifts, actually — which deserve to be given a highlighted treatment — and in doing so, will circumvent the problem of a monotone.
All powerful words, which can convey and elicit practically any human emotion or feeling. Make sure that a relaxation-based teaching maximizes the words and that you feel free to extract as much meaning and motion out the words as you possibly can — while guiding your students into a relaxed state.
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