Enlighten Up! The Quest for a Story

“At teacher preview screenings so far there’s always someone who gets angry,” says Kate Churchill, writer, director, and producer of Enlighten Up! A Skeptic’s Journey into the World of Yoga, a yoga documentary that premieres in New York on April 1, 2009.

By teachers, she means yoga teachers.

In 2004, Churchill, a die-hard yogini, chose yoga-skeptic Nick Rosen to go in search of answers to the questions many people ask about yoga: what is yoga? and what can yoga do for me? Kate directs Nick’s quest, selecting places to visit, books to read. The journey becomes an accelerated initiation that progresses from first yoga classes in Manhattan to the homes and ashrams of sages worldwide. Both Kate and Nick wonder: will Nick shed his skepticism?

While there is also a lot of laughter at the teacher screenings, Churchill says, some yoga teachers think the film is superficial. “They think the movie is belittles yoga.”

You just want to say, lighten up folks.

 

Personally, I found the device (skeptic against believer) effective—and probably the best way to make yoga appealing to non-enthusiasts. Still, I wondered why Churchill didn’t make a documentary of herself searching for these gurus?

Churchill, who began making documentaries for TV in 1995, is a long-time yoga practitioner (4x a week under normal conditions, every day under stress). However naively (she says herself), some time before 2004 she wanted to find a truly enlightened being. This yogi would be the last word in yoga and would put her on a direct path to samadhi, or as the Buddhists call it, nirvana: enlightenment.

When the opportunity to make a film arose, she considered it a chance to find that being. The only tiny little teensy-weensy obstacle would be shaping her own quest into a compelling story, while using something — or someone — else as a subject that everyone could relate to.

When Nick Rosen, a 29-year old journalist, agreed to be her guinea pig, and executive producers (who she had met while practicing yoga in Boston) already on board, Churchill began what became a 5-year odyssey.  It wasn’t what she’d bargained for.

I spoke to Churchill on a Friday afternoon, a few days before the April 1, 2009, premiere (see interview following).

For full disclosure, I will say that Nick’s interview with Iyengar, the Indian sage, basically sums up my feeling about yoga (you can get the spiritual benefits from the physical practice; benefits come slowly for some, quickly for others, there is no rush, keep practicing) which gave me a warm fuzzy, feeling inside.

But I also had a few problems with the film. First, why was Kate being such a bitch to Nick? He seemed willing enough and, for a skeptic, pretty reflective. “We’ve been throwing around the word ‘transformation’ a lot,” he says. A reasonable comment. (The yoga world often does toss out big concepts without defining them or even understanding them.) Still, Kate’s not pleased.

I also wondered how any newbie would deal with such a fast-track to the yoga stars. In my first six months of practice, I was just happy I could do chaturanga with a herd of other sweating yogis. Flying around the world to meet the most influential men in yoga today could set the stakes freakishly high for anyone. 

Lastly, I wanted to know more details from Nick himself about how his journey might have affected him—or not—in the long term. The film ended on a weak note. (post script, April 15 Nick writes his commentary on Huffington Post.)

Within the world of yoga documentaries and commentary, Enlighten Up! isn’t as acerbically insightful as Yoga, Inc, John Philps’ 2006 documentary on the entertaining contradictions of the yoga business. It isn’t as earnest as Gita Desai’s 2006 documentary Yoga Unveiled nor as funny as gentle mockeries from The Onion (see below), or McSweeney’s, nor as freakish as some of the stuff on YouTube such as  Kung Fu vs. Yoga.

But I enjoyed it. It was a humanizing look at a couple of impossible questions: What is yoga? We can’t really tell you. How can it work for me? You’ll have to find out for yourself.

 

The Onion Mocks Yoga

© Copyright 2009, Onion, Inc.

9 Responses to “Enlighten Up! The Quest for a Story”


  1. 1 Suzanne

    Great, insightful story! As barely a yoga dabbler, I am attracted to the spiritual aspects of the practice yet largely find myself at a remove from its deeper meanings. (While my yoga teachers at the gym I go to sprinkle spiritual comments into their classes, it’s hard to make sense of them amidst other comments about working on our abs and the general atmosphere of the gym–with its thumping top 40 hits and rows of tvs that always seem to be showing CNN or reality cooking shows.) And so the story behind the documentary really intrigues. I like the idea that the documentarian’s document exceeds her control — and turns the making of the documentary into a sort of Buddhist challenge for the film maker–in which she must let go of her intentions and the desire to control her subject. Fascinating….

  2. 2 Mukesh

    Interesting documentry hopefully its a start of a conversation on yoga.

  3. 3 Robert C

    Your review hit on the head. One of my initial thoughts: Nick was being
    hurled into yoga land on a dangerously fast track. How could he be expected to master poses that take most of years. I have found that happens in some yoga studios, especially gyms, and it’s incredibly irresponsible.
    I also agree that as reflective as he seemed to be during his journeys he didn’t really, or wasnt’ able to express his ultimate transformation, particularly considering that he traveled the globe and met some
    incredible gurus. He was able to endure the physical part of yoga, but the emotional and spiritual elements seemed to be a blank for him. Relating to my own experience, that cleansing process you go through is amazing.
    I remember once going into class all stressed out in re to a relationship I was in. By the time the class ended I had forgotten what it was and when I did remember I was able to absorb it so much better. That connection between
    mind and body escaped him.

    I wasn’t so troubled by the filmmaker’s commentary. I actually found their relationship interesting and there seemed to be growth between them. In a large part I felt that was the story. Nick was an entertaining guy and
    could have a career as an actor.

    The film also failed to mention the demons that are revealed during your practice. All your ’stuff’ comes up, and it can leave you, at times, incredibly sad, but in a good sort of way, and you gain something in the process, self enlightenment.

    The film was well made and very entertaining though, and that’s what brings people into the theater. I commend the filmmaker for tackling this issue and making a lively film too boot.

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