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experiencelifemag.com
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Real Alignment
Simran Sethi traveled the globe looking for ways to combine her passion for sustainability with her talent for storytelling.
By Laine Bergeson |
May 2007 |
Most of us have struggled at one time or another to
connect our personal values with our professional career. Sometimes that
struggle motivates us to bring more of our values to our present job; sometimes
it inspires us to look for a more fulfilling line of work. For Simran Sethi, the
quest led her across continents, in and out of yoga studios and business school,
and through a lively mix of vocations. Sethi, 36, cohosts the Sundance
Channel’s new environmental documentary series The Green and writes and anchors
all of the news and radio segments for the popular New York–based online
environmental magazine TreeHugger (www.treehugger.com). She has also offered
her eco-expertise on The Oprah Winfrey Show and The Martha Stewart Show and has
doggedly pursued a career path that would feed — and perhaps fuse — her passions
for environmental and social justice, sustainable economics, and holistic
health. “I really care about having a better understanding of how we function
and how people’s social environments affect their lives,” says German-born
Sethi, who was raised in Winston-Salem, N.C. Sethi enjoyed a stint as an MTV
News production assistant while studying sociology and women’s studies at
Smith College in Northampton, Mass. But when MTV offered her a job after she
graduated, she declined and headed to Italy for graduate studies in Italian
language and culture. Later, she journeyed to northern India, where she has
“loads of family.” Along the way, however, she realized that she missed the art
of storytelling and soon found herself back in television. “MTV offered me
something juicy — associate producing Hate Rock, a documentary on the rise of
neo-Nazism in popular music,” she says. She had worked there for about a year
when they asked her to be a producer and reporter for Singapore-based MTV Asia
News, and she jumped at the chance. Sethi quickly rose to a news anchor
position. Then, when MTV Asia splintered into separate channels in early 1995,
the network asked her to create and lead the MTV India news division, and she
moved to Bombay, India. But Sethi wanted to be closer to her immediate
family, so in 1999, she moved back to New York City. Looking for challenges
outside of TV, she found a job at the New York Open Center, the country’s
largest urban holistic healing center. She spent nine months studying to be a
prana yoga teacher. She later discovered Kundalini yoga. “There was something
about the integration of breathing and meditation in Kundalini yoga that really
spoke to me at the time, and I wanted to learn more,” Sethi recalls. She
embarked on another nine-month teacher’s training course, followed by a master’s
course taught by Yogi Bhajan, who brought Kundalini yoga to the West. After her
studies, she returned to India to study pranayama, yogic philosophy, meditation
and alignment. While there, however, she realized once again that she wanted
something that more fully integrated her interests. The sustainable
management MBA program at the Presidio School of Management in San Francisco,
Calif., provided just the balance she was seeking. “I think that was one of
the best decisions I ever made in terms of really realigning what I want to do
with what I actually do,” she says. The program, from which she graduated with
distinction in 2005, helped her connect with futurist and ethical business
advocate Hazel Henderson, who hired Sethi to host a 13-episode PBS series called
Ethical Markets. The show was a perfect fit for Sethi’s interests and talents —
but it was cancelled after its first season. “I think we were just a little
too early, frankly,” she says. Despite the show’s demise, Sethi’s career had
finally come full circle: She had found a way to fuse her interests, talents and
passion for storytelling. And she believes people are now ready for the
stories she wants to tell. “The world is much more invested in environmentalism
today,” says Sethi, who coauthored with Henderson Ethical Markets: Growing the
Green Economy (Chelsea Green, 2007). “Time magazine is now devoting a weekly
column to environmental issues. Al Gore [and his Oscar-winning documentary
An Inconvenient Truth] has galvanized people around an issue in a way that
hasn’t been done since the civil rights movement. Businesses now recognize that
sustainable practices make good business sense and good management sense.”
After all, environmentalism is no longer only for quirky ecotopians or
die-hard liberals, she notes. “Environmentalism is open to interpretation like
never before. While I can focus on organic food, food miles and compact
fluorescent light bulbs, another person may be more concerned with biking or
promoting hybrids.” Which means there are more opportunities for Sethi to
meld her values and her vocation. “Now I don’t have to pigeonhole,” she says.
“I’m able to fuse the things I love.” Laine Bergeson is a senior editor with
Experience Life.
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Real Alignment
Simran Sethi traveled the globe looking for ways to combine her passion for sustainability with her talent for storytelling.
By Laine Bergeson | Coverage Department, May 2007 |
Most of us have struggled at one time or another to
connect our personal values with our professional career. Sometimes that
struggle motivates us to bring more of our values to our present job; sometimes
it inspires us to look for a more fulfilling line of work. For Simran Sethi, the
quest led her across continents, in and out of yoga studios and business school,
and through a lively mix of vocations. Sethi, 36, cohosts the Sundance
Channel’s new environmental documentary series The Green and writes and anchors
all of the news and radio segments for the popular New York–based online
environmental magazine TreeHugger (www.treehugger.com). She has also offered
her eco-expertise on The Oprah Winfrey Show and The Martha Stewart Show and has
doggedly pursued a career path that would feed — and perhaps fuse — her passions
for environmental and social justice, sustainable economics, and holistic
health. “I really care about having a better understanding of how we function
and how people’s social environments affect their lives,” says German-born
Sethi, who was raised in Winston-Salem, N.C. Sethi enjoyed a stint as an MTV
News production assistant while studying sociology and women’s studies at
Smith College in Northampton, Mass. But when MTV offered her a job after she
graduated, she declined and headed to Italy for graduate studies in Italian
language and culture. Later, she journeyed to northern India, where she has
“loads of family.” Along the way, however, she realized that she missed the art
of storytelling and soon found herself back in television. “MTV offered me
something juicy — associate producing Hate Rock, a documentary on the rise of
neo-Nazism in popular music,” she says. She had worked there for about a year
when they asked her to be a producer and reporter for Singapore-based MTV Asia
News, and she jumped at the chance. Sethi quickly rose to a news anchor
position. Then, when MTV Asia splintered into separate channels in early 1995,
the network asked her to create and lead the MTV India news division, and she
moved to Bombay, India. But Sethi wanted to be closer to her immediate
family, so in 1999, she moved back to New York City. Looking for challenges
outside of TV, she found a job at the New York Open Center, the country’s
largest urban holistic healing center. She spent nine months studying to be a
prana yoga teacher. She later discovered Kundalini yoga. “There was something
about the integration of breathing and meditation in Kundalini yoga that really
spoke to me at the time, and I wanted to learn more,” Sethi recalls. She
embarked on another nine-month teacher’s training course, followed by a master’s
course taught by Yogi Bhajan, who brought Kundalini yoga to the West. After her
studies, she returned to India to study pranayama, yogic philosophy, meditation
and alignment. While there, however, she realized once again that she wanted
something that more fully integrated her interests. The sustainable
management MBA program at the Presidio School of Management in San Francisco,
Calif., provided just the balance she was seeking. “I think that was one of
the best decisions I ever made in terms of really realigning what I want to do
with what I actually do,” she says. The program, from which she graduated with
distinction in 2005, helped her connect with futurist and ethical business
advocate Hazel Henderson, who hired Sethi to host a 13-episode PBS series called
Ethical Markets. The show was a perfect fit for Sethi’s interests and talents —
but it was cancelled after its first season. “I think we were just a little
too early, frankly,” she says. Despite the show’s demise, Sethi’s career had
finally come full circle: She had found a way to fuse her interests, talents and
passion for storytelling. And she believes people are now ready for the
stories she wants to tell. “The world is much more invested in environmentalism
today,” says Sethi, who coauthored with Henderson Ethical Markets: Growing the
Green Economy (Chelsea Green, 2007). “Time magazine is now devoting a weekly
column to environmental issues. Al Gore [and his Oscar-winning documentary
An Inconvenient Truth] has galvanized people around an issue in a way that
hasn’t been done since the civil rights movement. Businesses now recognize that
sustainable practices make good business sense and good management sense.”
After all, environmentalism is no longer only for quirky ecotopians or
die-hard liberals, she notes. “Environmentalism is open to interpretation like
never before. While I can focus on organic food, food miles and compact
fluorescent light bulbs, another person may be more concerned with biking or
promoting hybrids.” Which means there are more opportunities for Sethi to
meld her values and her vocation. “Now I don’t have to pigeonhole,” she says.
“I’m able to fuse the things I love.” Laine Bergeson is a senior editor with
Experience Life.
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