Artikel-Schlagworte: „satya“

Creating Good Karma

Donnerstag, 6. Mai 2010

The other night in class, a student came up and said, “I thought I was coming for a workout and I ended up getting life lessons, too!” Turns out he needed to hear what I was offering in order to understand the way out of a specific struggle he’s been dealing with. Like we say in yoga, when the student is ready… Before we begin our physical poses, I always gather the class for a Karma Talk. This is when I lay out my intentions for the practice and encourage students to set their inner dedication so they can align with it as they move on the mat. My talk that night was about how we all say we want good karma, but we might not realize that the outcome of any situation that is most beneficial to us is also one directly created by us, through the choices we make in each moment. In other words, we don’t just follow our dreams, we make them happen. What we do now, and more specifically, how we do it and from what intention, can either create harmony or discordance with who we really are. Have you ever heard an Om at the beginning of class that sounded like each person chose a different note on purpose, but by the end of class, it’s become united? This happens when we all pay attention not only to the outside but the inside as well; to know ourselves better in that place of sattva , or calm equilibrium. As a teacher, I see so many students straining towards the external look of a pose, going too fast, leaping at the wall in handstand, not breathing mindfully. When our confidence and life’s meaning rests only in the way we look and what others think of us, and our sense of security forever shifts with the things we have (money) or don’t have (money), we have lost sight of one crucial thing: Our core connection. Yogis might call this satya , one’s ultimate truth, or even atman , the soul within us. Other philosophies say it’s hara , a state of living from center, or simply, coming home to oneself. This isn’t accomplished by having one huge, enlightened experience in meditation and then being set for life.  You have to get your hands in the dirt now and do the work it takes to plant those seeds of action so they may come to fruition in their own, often in surprising ways. The beauty of yoga, or the practice of living out loud, is that you don’t have to worry about what kind of flower or tree your seeds will become. If you practice the three steps to transformation–make space, go inside, then take actions that best represent you–then the rest is coming just as it should. How freeing to know we can just spend our time cultivating the courage to dissolve old limiting blocks and stories, listening to the core connection we make with ourselves, and then trusting our inner wisdom enough to follow through with actions that we know are coming from our best self. So, what’s your next core action? Better yet, how will you undertake it with integrity, grace, and without placing the burden of needing to control the outcome on the featherlight power and magic inherent in pure doing for its own sake? Let us know! Core Pose : Siddhasana Side Stretch and Forward Fold Siddhasana pays homage to those who have transcended their external fixations and returned home to a state of calm awareness.  You can make space, listen in, and choose as wisely as a Siddha when you take time to practice from this intention. Come into Siddhasana (Adept’s Pose) with one foot in front of the other. Place your right palm onto the floor to your right, and with a long spine and lifted side waist, reach the left arm over your ear. Bend your right elbow and breathe new space into any constriction you feel around the lungs and chest. If your neck feels uncomfortable, turn your gaze to the floor or right ear to right shoulder and let the head gently drop for a sweet stretch. Take 5 or more breaths, and then switch sides.   After completing both sides, inhale and sit up tall. Exhale and fold forward with palms or forearms on the mat. Take at least one minute here, bringing breath into your back body and releasing past habits and beliefs that block you from accessing your inner wisdom and truth. Then listen to that subtle yet powerful voice within for your next direction.

Excerpt from:
Creating Good Karma

Breaking Through Resistance

Mittwoch, 7. April 2010

This week, I’m preparing to teach at the Yoga Journal Conference in Boston. (I’ll share my experiences with you next week!) This is the first time I’ll be presenting during the main conference, and I’m thrilled by the new direction my teaching is taking. But I didn’t always feel this way.     I spent the majority of my career telling people (and myself) that I had absolutely no desire to become “one of those touring yogis.”   I don’t know if this attitude came out of my belief that it would never happen, and so I thought, why pursue it? Or that I was daunted by the work it would take, so figured, why begin it? Perhaps it’s that I’m a Scorpio and like to hide out under my self-created rocks and write. Who knows?   Regardless of the reason, I was 100 percent sure that the way my life looks now would never be my reality. Then one day, I got the call. Or, rather, I made the call.   I was speaking to someone at Yoga Journal about an unrelated matter, and we began discussing my interest in leading a Friday evening, pre-main conference class at the New York City event. As soon as I was asked to do it, my heart and mind leapt at the chance.   Now, I had no idea I would want to do this, much less really, really want to do it. I was as surprised by my reaction as I was by the 98 beautiful people who showed up to my workshop on the appointed night.   But at the moment of invitation, I clearly saw that my highest satya , or truth, was not that I wanted to live a quiet, hermetic life and never be inconvenienced by travel. It’s that I want to serve and share the healing modality of yoga with as many people as possible. And so my lesser resistance was broken by the simple power of my Dharma uprising.   In the year that followed, I was nearly inundated with offers to present at other conferences and at healing centers and studios. Before I was open to accepting this aspect of my teaching life, very few opportunities appeared. Yet the moment I said yes, they opened to me in the most rewarding and exciting ways. I have now become “one of those touring yogis”– and I’ve never been happier.   As I take this next step along my teaching path, I’m struck by what the simple removal of resistance can do. It also occurs to me that in order to break through the walls we erect that block our life’s path, we can’t just stand by passively and do nothing. We have to meet resistance with Resistance.   I capitalize the word “Resistance” to distinguish between the constructive actions that serve us and that push back against the destructive resistances that don’t serve us. Another name for this is satyagraha , or way of truth. Gandhi made satyagraha the focal point in his life through positive, or nonviolent, Resistance.   In your own life, both on and off the mat, I invite you to look at where you’re hitting up against resistance to what might actually serve you. Kids do this when they refuse to try broccoli. Adults do it when we choose an unhealthy meal over a yoga class or self-criticism over confidence.     Don’t think for a minute that I’m free of the push and pull of limiting behaviors and beliefs. Every one of us experiences the drag of resistance. But as yogis, it’s what we do from there that can either transform us or keep us stuck in the mud.     So the next time you stumble upon a personal roadblock, take an action from satyagraha: Instead of turning to old habits, use your spiritual stubbornness to break through.   I’ll see you on the road!     Core Questions : Where are you meeting resistance? Are you afraid to release your old stories, to adopt healthy habits, or to form nourishing relationships? Most of all, do you exist in a consciousness of lack or thrive in a mindset of abundance? Share your struggles and victories with us. Core Pose : Lakshmi Kick I designed this pose to release old, stagnant energies; tone the lower body; unlock the hips; and literally kick down the doors of inner resistance. It’s named for Lakshmi, goddess of prosperity, abundance, wisdom, and beauty–attributes that can only be achieved through the practice of satyagraha.   Come to the front of your mat, feet slightly apart. Fold forward and plant your fingertips a few inches in front of your toes.   On an inhalation, draw one knee into your chest. Exhale the sound “Ha!” as you mindfully and strongly kick your leg up behind you. The sound not only firms your abdominals to support the kick, it’s a mantra to the Sun as well as to your individual brightness and your possibilities.   Repeat 5-10 times; then switch to the other side. Rest in Child’s Pose when finished.         

Read more: 
Breaking Through Resistance