What is going on in
that last backbend, then? Why is
everyone so intent on taking ankles?
So I am not an exclusionary author, let me explain. After you do all your jumping around,
your sun salutations, standing postures, and seated (or not so seated)
postures, you do the backbend- upward facing bow. Urdhva Danurasana.
This is performed by lying down, bending the knees, placing the feet
near the bum at hip’s width, placing the palms on the floor beside the ears,
now lifting up so your head comes off the floor and you are on all fours, belly
facing up. Over time, you walk the
hands in closer to the feet.
Someday you “walk walk walk” the hands until you touch the feet, and
someday later, walk up and hold your ankles, balancing freely on the legs while
holding on and looking up towards the backs of your knees.
I’m just holding on
right below the knees these days and balancing in a tentative way most
days. A teacher can help one by
taking the hand for you, up from the ankle and helping you place the hands
higher, one by one. It’s a real
trust exercise, and one the most beautiful gifts about teaching. Not that helping someone do just about
anything scary and seemingly-impossible isn’t awesome. It’s all relative to the individual
what is scary and impossible.
Once the hands are
moved up, then we get the cracks in the spine. We hope they are in the upper back, not the low back. Everybody needs to learn how to keep
the pose in the upper back by keeping the elbows in and lifting the chest. Thing is, you don’t know which end is
up and where your elbows are, and where your feet are, although you are
actually standing on them. And wait- am I breathing? Relaxing?
This year, I
realized I need to look up, really
open my eyes and look. The last thing I wanted to do was watch
my body get bent, but it seems to be a key. Then I can see my left arm is out to lunch, as is the right
foot. Once I have a sense of the
landscape, I can get to the center of things. I am still here.
In this unfamiliar zone, I am still me. Consciousness steps in and begins to marshal the body around
again. That seems to be how I roll
in life. I do better with a little
sense of my environment, a little info on the situation before I charge
ahead. Then Sharath comes and
takes the hands higher still, so I am again groundless, and that’s how this
system works. Find ground, lose
it. Sounds like life, doesn’t
it? Forget, remember.
Doesn’t this all
sound a little, um, extreme? Well,
I’m so careful. So frickin careful with my body. I come out of the Ayurveda center today, where I’ve been oiled
into submission on a wooden table with no pads or pillows, steamed within an
inch of proper hydration, and I’m thinking this is so not a spa. Out on
the street, a rabid rickshaw driver skims by me at break speed. No coddling here. It’s a part of the culture, things are
a little bit rough. It’s tough love,
in the Ayurveda, the yoga, in everything Indian. Westerners would do good to step back a bit from the safety
obsession in yoga classes. I feel
very lucky to have smaller classes, and one-and-one instruction, because I
don’t have to think about how to keep a large group safe. It’s no accident that I teach
Mysore-style Ashtanga. I certainly
had chances to make more money and success in vinyasa.
But ah, I always knew I wouldn’t be
happy. Here, the yoga becomes
specific, effective, and mystic.
Sometimes I watch a student hurt themselves, and I think, well the
yoga’s doing some teaching over there.
Other times I have to pound them into a new habit before they get hurt,
depends on what type of hurt we are talking about here.
Tough love. And I’m getting mine over here this
winter.
Sounds like you're learning a lot. :) Hope to see you when you get back and get in for a mysore session with you.
ReplyDeleteI, too, can't wait until you return.... I've really enjoyed reading your blog these past few months. I'm from W. Mass but haven't yet made it to your shala in Boston. Look for me in April - I want to experience your Mysore room this Spring!
ReplyDeleteThanks ladies. I'm looking forward to getting in the room again. Back March 28. OM
ReplyDelete