
The 3rd Perspective & Yoga - Bringing
East & West Together (Page 3)
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THE THIRD PERSPECTIVE
The East and West in their opposing viewpoints each express
fundamental truths that are incomplete in themselves. A
synthesis bringing them together into a third point of view
is necessary. This third perspective sees unity
and diversity as two aspects of the same thing, neither
being more real, important, or profound than the other.
In fact, paradoxically, neither wholeness nor separateness
could exist without the other. The one is the many.
The eternal now has within it the products of
the past and the seeds of the future, so past and future
are not illusory, but exist within the now. Being or is-ness
has within it becoming, and becoming
at every instant displays within it what is.
The perspective of the one values merging with
the whole; the perspective of the many values
individuation. The great psychological conflict for people
both in the East and the West is between these two ways
of looking at things. We all want to realize ourselves as
individuals, and yet we want to be in touch with something
more profound than merely ourselves. From the third
perspective individuation and merging are actually
not opposites, but are two poles of a growth process and
are necessary for each other. Surrendering, whether it be
to life, a relationship, or a yoga posture, must be balanced
by the ability to exercise control. Determination is necessary
to counter the mechanical aspects of aging and entropy and
to make the world a better place. Here the potential to
merge and break boundaries comes not from ego-loss, but
from ego strength. For when boundaries break without there
being the strength to form them again, this creates, at
best, a dependent person and, at worst, a truly fragmented
one. To fully individuate, there must be a merging with
something greater than oneself. To be able to merge without
being shattered psychologically, there must be individual
strength.
Another way of creating the synthesis of East and West
is seeing how history is both cyclical and linear at the
same time. Cycles repeat, yet each turn is different, unique.
Still another way of bringing the points of view together
is seeing how the eternal (timelessness) only
displays itself in the field of time, and how each separate
moment is all-ways expressing the eternal.
In my yoga, as well as in my life, the third perspective
has been essential in integrating opposites within myself.
It has brought about one of the most basic joinings necessary
for yoga - the integration between mind and body. Although
we may intellectually agree that the mind and the body are
intimately interconnected, we often emphasize the physical
side of postures because it is more tangible. We tend to
forget that yoga is a truly psycho-physical activity. It
is the mental aspects that involve bringing together seeming
opposites such as control and surrender, goal-seeking and
non-attachment, focus and attention.
The "point of view of the one" does away with
the mind/body split by negating the reality of the body,
calling it illusion, as is all matter. The West
has been battling with this split for at least 2,000 years,
trying to solve the problem intellectually. The point
of view of the many, by giving ultimate reality to
separation, tends to divide not only the external world,
but the individual, too. We think of ourselves as minds
that have or live in bodies. The mind becomes the rider,
in control, while the body is the horse - to be trained
and used. The paradox is that although we identify with
the mind, calling it me, the mind itself is
very materialistic, worshipping tangible accomplishments
such as beauty, youth, or wealth.
The third perspective sees how the mind and
body are both two things and one thing at the same time.
They are two different manifestations of energy whose interplay
creates a total being. This means that in yoga, as in life,
control must shift between them. Thus, the mind will sometimes
control the body by pushing and directing. However, the
mind must allow the body to take control, too, so that movement
and relaxation can come from the inner intelligence of physical
systems and even the cells themselves. On occasion, the
control comes from a third place where one's total being
is effortlessly the director and the directed at the same
time. Yoga involves the aware interplay of these three spaces.
ON YOGA
The mental attitudes you bring to yoga greatly influence
where yoga takes you. The following is a brief description
of how the "third perspective" has influenced
the way I approach doing yoga.
People do yoga for many reasons: to achieve certain mental
states, to control emotions, to retard aging, to generate
energy, or simply to feel better. I know that yoga can and
does bring these as well as other benefits.
The paradox of yoga is that if you are doing yoga solely
for the results it brings, you are not really understanding
what yoga is about. Yoga is in essence transformative -
it can change your whole being in a way that does not come
simply from aiming at results. We usually build habits in
mind and body unconsciously, and although the habits are
sometimes convenient, they all too often constrict us. So,
as we age, this conditioning process limits movement in
the body, and we become tighter.
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