Showing posts with label yoga. Show all posts
Showing posts with label yoga. Show all posts

Saturday, November 20, 2010

Fright and Flight: Is there a dark side to yoga?


About a year ago, one morning a student arrived reluctantly to class.

She claimed that she had chosen to stop practicing for several months as she found that whenever she practiced that she came away feeling in her words “depressed and out of sorts.”

My response/invitation to her was this: keep practicing. Sharing from my own experience, I related to her what I suspected may be happening within her. Given that our bodies are the canvasses upon which we paint our lives, perhaps her post-practice feelings were as a result of the body releasing untold works of art.

Something resonated because she chose to remain in the class that day. At the end, I acknowledged her courage and willingness to just be with her Self throughout the process. Over time, she became a regular participant in my morning classes.

As practicing yogis and yoginis, we approach our mats in reverence, gracefully. Sometimes we are surprised when unpleasant memories arise during our practice. Without the proper tools to confront and channel in these moments, we may be tempted to run away from them.

The first and most important tool is always available to us; namely the breath. When we are afraid or angry, we may notice that our breathing becomes short and agitated and emanates from the chest, rather than from the base of our abdomens.

It ain’t for nothin’ that whenever we face anger, either within ourselves or another, our innate advice is to take a deep breath and calm down.

This morning, I found myself in precisely the same situation of my student of a year ago.

Since my arrival to the Central African Republic two weeks ago, my meditation and asana practice have been my refuge and my strength. Truth be told, had I not been blessed with the gift of yoga, for a variety of inane reasons, I may have already flipped – perhaps this explains the sublime improvement in my inversions these days?

Heeding to my own advice, rather than sit and ponder my frightful plight, each morning, in spite of some degree of resistance, I have approached the mat, humbly.

The question that arose this morning startled me: is there a dark side to yoga?

For a brief nano-second, my deepest dark inner voice mustered, ‘perhaps you should keep off the mat for a while.’ Immediately though, wisdom shone through and pushed me to keep breathing as I reached up toward the sky in Warrior I.

Here in the remote, forgotten heart of Africa, fear and anger – different sides of the same coin I might add – have arisen within, vengefully.

These issues that have spilled themselves from within and onto the mat have been ‘fast and furious.’ My recurring rhetorical question is: why am I here?

Suffice to say, my initial impressions remain incomplete after two weeks. Usually, I am able to garner a feeling for a place from the moment that I step off the aircraft. Then again, in a place such as this where linear time seems non-existential, equanimity is essential.

Bangui, the country’s capital, is one long main red-dirt road with a few shops selling prohibitively expensive goods by shop owners who are mainly of Lebanese and Turkish extraction.

Characteristic of many developing countries, the polarities are stark. Along “The Strip” is it not uncommon to see an array of luxury vehicles – I’ve even seen a Hummer. Yet right alongside this supposed mark of affluence, prostitution is blatant and accepted as part of the status quo.

As elsewhere, the level of poverty is incomprehensible, silencing almost. To see it creates a twisted, futile validation that perhaps holds the clue as to why I am indeed here. This remains to be seen.

Whereas my time in Sudan taught me patience, I see where my lesson here is one of acceptance. Acceptance though can be conflicting and contradictory because what I note here is one that is laced with numbing apathy.

So in this vision, I’ve accepted that these are the lessons that are forth-coming to a humble student of Life. My duty is to Face them, Embrace them, Accept them and then eventually Release them.

For me, this is the essence of FEAR.

The practice of yoga is not for the weak at heart. In the words of David Life in the film Titans of Yoga “yoga is not for everyone. If you’re completely happy, satisfied and at peace within yourself and your life, then there is no need for yoga.”

At the end of my practice when I bow my head in *Namaste and then I open my eyes and take in the view of the Oubangui River before me and the coast-line of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) just beyond I brim with gratitude for having the courage to approach the mat and to take the practice from it into my heart and out into the world.

For then, the real yoga begins.

*The Divine within me honours the Divine that exists within you.

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Happiness is an inalienable [American] right!


On 15 July, along with one of my dearest friends, I spent the day at Orlando’s Magic Kingdom.

Talk about the perfect way to spend one’s landmark birthday – or any day for that matter, especially if one is tempted to feel ‘down and out’ in the dumps of desperate depression. In short there is no space provided at Walt Disney’s World for the expression of such dark emotions. With the dramas of Mickey and Minnie Mouse, Donald Duck, Snow White and Cinderella to name a few, one’s own stories quickly fade in comparison.


Upon arrival, we were each given a large fluorescent green round pin with balloons that screamed, ‘I’m celebrating.’ Yvonne was given an additional button that said ‘Happy Birthday Yvonne.’ The subsequent result of this second button was that everywhere we went, total strangers, filled with so much love and joy, presented her with greetings of ‘Happy Birthday Yvonne.’


In shops and restaurants, she even received special treatments – like the nine men who serenaded her ‘Happy Birthday’ along with after dinner dessert. And at the bakery where we stopped for afternoon tea, she was presented with the largest chocolate chip cookie I’d ever seen, sealed with a kiss from Mickey Mouse.


The last time that I’d been at Disney World was a very long time ago. In fact, I’d gone with my Dad and one of my childhood memories that remains vividly etched in my mind is the laughter that emanated from my Dad even 30 minutes after we’d descended from our roller coaster ride on Space Mountain.


At the impressionable age of 10, the Magic Kingdom felt divinely real. Thirty odd years later, it was the most surreal experience that two girlfriends could ask for.


As we meandered through the ultimate ‘Fantasy-land,’ I internally mused, ‘when, why, where and how’ do we manage to lose our childhood wonder? I was awash with emotion as I watched a Disney Musical performance with the Magic Kingdom Palace as the backdrop where the over-arching theme was, ‘everything is possible, find the dream inside of you.’ Prior to this, the last time I was reminded of this was during my stay at the Sivananda Ashram in South India, a stark contrast to my present Disney surroundings filled with happy smiley faces, cotton candy and a large overdose of ‘make belief reality.’


Perhaps one of my most memorable rides was on our adventure cruise around the world, ‘It’s a Small World’ [after all]. In awesome wonder I recognized how my adult life has essentially been a mirror reflection of my present little sojourn – from Africa, to Asia, to the Middle East to, South America and to the United States of America, 'land of the brave, home of the free.'


One could easily describe me as a dream weaver and a dream catcher; a gift that enables me to see the connectedness in all things, great and small. While one may not immediately liken my Disney experience to being a yogic one, it certainly felt that way. A roller coaster ride through the crooked mountain provided us with ample opportunity to breathe and evoke sounds by way of screams as we approached the wicked drops that our ride entailed. This literal ride was symbolic of life as I know it – a roller coaster ride filled with peaks and troughs – best approach through breath and living in the moment. Dumbo the Elephant, a seemingly large and harmless creature gave me a moment to pause and honour Ganesh, the ultimate remover of obstacles.


Throughout the park, Disney re-enacted scenes from various aspects of American culture – from the Native American Indians – another spiritual element to the animals of the wild – deer and bears.


As the sun began to set, followed by torrential downpours towards the end of our magically surreal and wonderful day at Disney’s World, and like a child, exhausted in the most exhilarating way from all of the sensory stimulation of the day, I am filled with the gratitude for the love of a lifelong friendship.


Elatedly happy, we departed Disney’s world filled with special memories that will warm our hearts and cheer our souls. Should Darkness choose to make an unannounced visit in the near future, I will draw from my Disney experience, and,

SMILE!