| Ganga
Speaks with Sting About Yoga & His Life Sting
is a long time friend and frequent visitor to White
Lotus. When asked to do an interview with Sting
I was reminded of Krishna’s advice to Arjuna many
years ago. “Whatsoever a great man does, that
others will also do. Whatsoever he sets up as the standard,
that the world follows” ( Bhagavad Gita, VIII.21
) I thought it would be an inspiration for Yoga students
to learn more about this distinguished man and his interest
in the ancient art of living. It is a joy and a great
honor for me to know Sting and his family as friends.
I was first introduced to them in early 1993 by my close
friend Danny Paradise, a leading teacher and world traveling
Yogi-musician. Sting and his wife Trudie came to the
first time to White Lotus in Santa Barbara late one
night after a Ten Summoner’s Tales concert in
Los Angeles to spend a couple of days and to meet some
of my friends visiting from the South American rainforest.
Our friendship grew out of our mutual love of Yoga and
nature.
Most of us are probably familiar with Sting’s
enormous contributions to music. His career started
as a professor of literature in an English girl's school.
He soon changed course to follow his calling in music
and became the leader and principle driving force behind
the celebrated band, The Police. He lead the group from
living in their van and touring the US to the top of
the charts, many Grammies and gold records. The Police
were one of the most influential bands of the seventies
paving the way with a new style of high-energy, cutting
edge music with a message. Sting went on to pursue his
solo career exploring the fusion of many musical styles
and cultures and delivering the message of awakening
and consciousness. He is not only great singer and bass
player but a master songwriter and poet. He is an extraordinary
lyricist who brings insightful political messages of
peace and love.
Too often stars shine in their art but not in their
lives. This is not the case with Sting. He is a sensitive,
highly intelligent person who cares deeply--a real human
being. A great part of his energies have been directed
to what could be called Karma Yoga--service to the world.
He has raised and donated millions of dollars for peace,
the environment and social causes like Amnesty International.
His organization, The Rainforest Foundation, has aided
indigenous peoples and saved millions of acres of forest
in Brazil.
Sting lives with his family about an hour from London
in a beautiful, rural area near Stonehenge. He is the
attentive father of five children and makes his home
in a magnificent castle estate. The area, which is bordered
by the Avon river and one of the last old growth forests
in England, is said to be where King Arthur and his
Knights roamed. It certainly holds powerful feelings
of enchantment and mystery, especially accented when
Sting is seen galloping through the woods on his spirited
steed. (The music video, Ten Summoner’s Tales
was shot there.) The house is a hive of constant activity
hosting a steady stream of extraordinary visitors.
Trudie Styler, Sting’s wife, is a remarkable
and highly creative woman who truly has it all--grace,
beauty, intelligence and compassion. She is an inspiring
and dynamic person with a list of achievements as impressive
as Sting’s. Trudie is a Royal Shakespearean trained
actress, a film maker, the chief fund-raiser and director
of the Rainforest Foundation and an avid Yogini. She
is currently producing, and acting with Sting, in a
feature film suspense-comedy called Gentleman Don’t
Eat Poets. Her poignant, award winning film, Moving
the Mountain, documented the plight of the leaders of
the Tiananmen Square democracy movement. Without government
approval she courageously went into China with director
Michael Apted and a film crew to meet the persecuted
leaders of the movement and record their story. Trudie
is about to receive a major international peace award.
She is the devoted, loving mother of their three children
with a fourth on the way.
Sting and Trudie rely on Yoga to help maintain their
well-being and the high energy pace of their lives.
I have had the opportunity to practice with them in
England, California and New York and I sincerely appreciate
Sting’s willingness to share himself in this interview.
Although Sting feels that he is a novice in Yoga, I
see him as an adept because he not only performs the
asanas with sincerity, grace and elegance, but more
so because in the deeper asana of life he manifests
integrity, insight and compassion. His life is a shining
example of the art of living and loving. And, certainly,
his music chakra is open!
Recently, Sting and I spent time in the sacred lands
of Taos, New Mexico and at his home in Malibu, where
our conversation took place under blue skies with the
surf at our side.
Interview
Ganga: Many people have been inspired by and
interested in your practice of Yoga. Can you tell us
what brought you to Yoga?
Sting: I came to Yoga late in my life.
I’m probably in my fourth year now which would
mean that I started when I was 38 or 39. It‘s
actually my regret that I didn’t begin earlier.
I think I would have been further along the path than
I am now had I started earlier. But then again, perhaps
I wasn’t ready. I have been through various fitness
regimes before, you know. I used to run about five miles
a day and I did aerobics for awhile. I always stayed
fit because I’m a performer and all of those things
help me to perform. But it wasn’t until I met
Danny Paradise, who became my mentor in Yoga, that I
started the practice which I feel I will stay with for
the rest of my life. I would like to. I feel it is a
path that is involved enough to keep developing. It’s
almost like music in a way; there’s no end to
it. I think once you’ve run five miles in a reasonable
time, as you get older, you can either sustain that
time or it gets worse. That’s pretty frustrating.
I think, if anything, one of the most exciting things
about Yoga is that as I get older I seem to get better
at certain parts of the practice, which is very inspiring.
It makes you want to keep going. If anything, it’s
reversing the aging process. I can do things with my
body now that I wouldn’t even have thought of
doing when I was an athlete, a teenager. So that keeps
me going. This is something I want to keep doing.
Ganga: How did you meet Danny?
Sting: Actually, through my guitarist,
Dominic Miller. Danny is a musician and he met Dominic
playing in a restaurant one day and they ended up playing
together--in Egypt of all places. I was just finishing
the post production on my album, The Soul Cages, when
Dom came in and asked if I would like to learn Yoga
from a friend of his. I really knew nothing about Yoga.
I thought you’d just sit on the floor cross legged
and contemplate your navel. It never really struck me
as something I would be particularly interested in.
I was interested in more aggressive workouts. But Dominic
said, "No, you would be surprised, actually. I’ve
done a little bit and it’s very, very difficult
and physically demanding." I agreed and Danny came
along to the mixing studio at the end of a session and
said he would show me some Yoga. I thought, "I’m
very fit; this will be easy." I have to say that
within twenty minutes he kicked my ass. There was a
big dent in my pride and self esteem that I couldn’t
do the things he was doing. In fact, the more he demonstrated
the more I realized he seemed to be from another planet
in terms of his balance, his strength, his grace. So
I said, "That’s for me. Come to my house
tomorrow. I know someone else who would also be interested
in this--my wife, Trudie." We were both looking
for something else. He turned up the next morning and
we ended up in the garden with the staff all looking
out at the three of us doing these weird postures, but
after that I was hooked. I’ve done it virtually
every day since then. There have been occasional lapses,
but it’s definitely part of my daily life now.
Ganga: Aside from all the health and fitness
benefits, how has it affected your life in other ways?
Sting: One of the first questions
I had about Yoga was that it seemed to take a long time
to do the practice. It took an hour and forty or fifty
minutes, sometimes two hours, to get through the whole
thing. Danny said something to me which at the time
I didn’t believe but which is actually being confirmed.
He said, "If you do this practice you will have
more energy to do your other tasks throughout the day."
Time will expand to accommodate the practice, in other
words. I have to say that that’s true. When I
really do my Yoga in the morning, I have more energy
in the day. I get more done. My mind is more composed.
There are more benefits to it than I would have thought.
They are not just physical, but mental and I am even
coming to believe that they are spiritual. That’s
a development in my thinking. The deeper you get into
Yoga you realize, yes, it is a spiritual practice. But
it’s a journey I’m making. I’m heading
that way. It’s not the first reason I did it.
But I suppose that as I get older and I get more contemplative
the Yoga practice will take that on. Especially the
breathing which is linked very closely to meditation.
Ganga: I know you to be a person who enquires
deeply into yourself and into life. This is a Jnana
Yoga meditation practice called Vichara, enquiry. Do
you see it as such? Has Yoga helped you with this?
Sting: Certainly it introduced me
to a style of meditation. The only meditation I would
have done before would be in the writing of songs. In
the composing of music you have to enter virtually a
trance state to transmit songs. I don’t think
you write songs. They come through you. It’s trusting
that they exist out there and you have to be the transmitter.
For that you need a certain amount of mental purity.
Yoga is just a different route to that same process.
You’re taking something from our higher selves
and putting it to use in normal life, I think. Does
that make sense?
Ganga: Yes. Some musicians I’ve met find
that when they begin meditation, silent meditation,
they actually hear music within. Do you hear inner music?
Sting: I hear music all the time.
Sometimes it drives me totally crazy. [laughs] In absolute
silence I hear music. I hear music, I hear rhythms,
I hear bird song. I live in an aural world. It’s
never totally empty. The Yoga can induce that state.
Ganga: Can you say something about some of
the challenges you face at the moment in your Yoga practice?
Sting: One of the interesting things
is that I am getting to know my body better than I ever
had before and recognizing that certain blockages in
my practice are a result of some kind of psychological
problems. The history of my life is written in my body,
in my muscles. I’m very stiff in my hips. This
is something I never knew before. I thought I was pretty
loose. Some of the postures are so extreme they bring
you up to face what you’ve done to your body.
All those years of running must have taken their toll.
I’m told that stiffness in the gluteus is about
stubbornness--bloody-mindedness. So I’m working
on that! You know, the intention, the long term goal,
is to become completely fluid, completely liquid and
sinuous. As I get older I’d like to be that. I’d
like to have explored the entire range of my body’s
abilities. It’s not that I am afraid of getting
old. I just want to get old in a certain way.
Ganga: Gracefully.
Sting: I want to get old gracefully.
I want to have good posture, I want to be healthy and
I want to be an example to my children. I’m working
on it. I am certainly by no means pretending to be an
adept or anything but a beginner. But really I feel
I’m on a path.
Ganga: You are practicing the Ashtanga Vinyasa
series?
Sting: I think it was useful for me
to be introduced to this series at first because it’s
so militant and it’s kind of macho. It appealed
to my sense of challenge. I like the fact that it’s
very difficult and that it’s tough. That’s
not to say it’s the only practice I’ve been
exposed to in the past four years. I’ve done others
and I’ve learned a lot from them. If anything
it’s a nice pleasant change and relief to do another
series like your own Flow Series. I’ve found it
very useful and beneficial. It explores muscles and
postures I’ve never done before. Again, it’s
limitless. There doesn’t seem to be an end to
it which is exciting.
Ganga: It’s said that you’ve experienced
some joy from some of the esoteric teachings of Tantric
love and sex.
Sting: [laughter] When I learned to
do nauli (churning the stomach muscles) and the bandhas
[Yogic locks], an achievement I was quite proud of,
I also read that it was very good to use these techniques
in sex. They allowed you to control the whole operation
better and make love for longer which I think has beneficial
effects. There’s been a great deal of controversy
caused by exactly how much longer you can go for, so
I don’t want to get into that now! I’m in
enough trouble! [laughter] But there’s definitely
beneficial effects to one’s sexual life. Especially
when you have a good relationship with a good partner.
It has had beneficial effect.
Ganga: Meditation. I know you have journeyed
inwardly. Can you speak about some of the things you’ve
learned and touched--on the interior landscape?
Sting: I think in my life, to a large
extent, I’ve only paid lip service to a spiritual
life. I was brought up as a Catholic and went to church
every week and took the sacraments. I was educated that
way, but it never really touched the core of my being.
As I get older I find that I am unwilling to accept
an existential universe without a God. It doesn’t
actually make logical sense anymore. To me I feel that
there has to be a higher level of compassion, of understanding,
than merely a human one. It’s embodied in all
of us. I just think we have to decode it. The Godhead,
or whatever you want to call it--it’s better not
to give it a name, is encoded in our being. There are
various methods of decoding it and I think that Yoga
is perhaps one of them. Music is another, and meditation,
prayer.
Ganga: I would have to say that knowing you,
Sting, I can sense that you are deeply in touch with
the Sacred and spirit, with manifesting love and compassion
in your life.
Sting: Well, I’m trying to but
it’s never enough really. What I’m facing
at the moment in my spiritual life is the enormity of
that possibility, which I find quite terrifying. I’m
working with that enormity. It’s certainly not
easy. It’s not an easy path. Like Yoga, the spiritual
life is actually very difficult.
Ganga: You’ve connected with some the
teachings of Krishnamurti and Jnana Yoga. You may not
call it this, but you’ve been touched by meditation
on the meaning of death as it informs life. What have
you learned from meditation on death?
Sting: Up ‘till quite recently
I’ve actually thought I was immortal. [laughs]
As ridiculous as that sounds, most young people think
they’re immortal. Particularly when things are
going well, when you’re successful, when you’re
happy and you have a lot of stuff going for you. How
could you possibly die? The bad news is, of course you
can. And the good news too, is that you die. I think
we have to embrace the idea. We have to accept that
it’s as natural as being born, as natural as breathing
out, as breathing in. It’s part of life. Sometimes
I fight against it, as we all do, but acceptance, I
think, is the most positive thing we can do. That doesn’t
mean being miserable or totally obsessed with the idea
to one’s detriment. If anything, I think, the
acceptance of death gives you more of a stake in life,
in living life happily, as it should be lived. Living
for the moment. I’m learning this. Again, I’m
not speaking as someone who has reached satori or anything
else. I’m a student.
Ganga: Before we end do you have anything final
to say to the Yogis of the world?
Sting: It’s interesting to me
how Yoga is becoming incredibly popular. More and more
people seem to be taking it up. I think the time is
right for Yoga. We really are living is a very complex
time--a time of great turmoil and change. The more irrational
of us are worried about the millennium ending--as if
a date would really matter. But it seems to be having
an effect on people’s psyche with all this sort
of madness that is going on. Yoga is a good antidote
to all of that. Yoga will take us out of all this historical
paranoia. It’s a long haul we’re in. It’s
not going to end in 1999.
Ganga: I would say that this is so if we approach
Yoga in a way that frees us from dogma and authoritarianism,
instead of perpetuating it. Yoga doesn’t do that
automatically.
Sting: I think you end up as your
own teacher in Yoga. I think you have to begin with
a teacher, begin with a role model to guide you, but
after a certain point you really are your own teacher,
your own guru. It seems to be self-correcting in many
respects. You need help now and then. But you can do
it on your own. There are also good aspects of doing
Yoga with groups of people. I’ve done a lot of
classes in New York with a large group of people and
the group energy has been very useful. I think there’s
room for both--private exploration and group work, and
work with teachers now and then. I should also point
out that the members of my band do Yoga now. We do at
least an hour and a half of Yoga before every concert
which I think probably increases our cohesion as a group
or as individuals. It certainly keeps us all fit. It’s
not easy being on the road. You have strange hours and
are offered strange food. It’s not the healthiest
occupation. You spend every night up late and you drink
alcohol or whatever. Yoga is a good balancing trick
for all of us.
Ganga: In our meditation gathering last night,
you expressed a realization about love and about applying
it. Is there a chance of capturing a piece of it?
Sting: I think that in deep meditation,
when you really face this enormity of eternity, you
have to trust in something that will sustain you through
that terror, through that fear. I’ve learned to
trust in the power of love. Love for oneself, love for
the people you’re with, your family, your friends.
Love for simplicity, love for the truth. I think that
without love, none of it makes any sense. It all sounds
like a truism, you know. But it is true. Love conquers
all. Amor vinciet onnia.
Ganga: Namaste and thank you Sting.
Sting: Namaste. |