
The 3rd Perspective & Yoga - Bringing
East & West Together (Page 4)
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Tightness in the muscles affects glands, circulation, nerves
- our energy - thus accelerating the body's breakdown. When
the body becomes less flexible and open, it has a direct
effect on the mind and personality. There is no way to stay
the same. Life is change, and change in a person can take
only two directions. You either specific habits become more
rigid and crystallized, more set in your ways, or you continue
to grow, transform, and open up to yourself and the world
you live in. Yoga brings the energy, stamina and flexibility
to move out and meet life totally.
The deeper you get into the body, the deeper you must get
into the nature of the mind that is doing yoga. There comes
a time when you realize that the major limits you face in
yoga do not live in the body, but in the mind's resistance's.
We all, at least intellectually, value growth, often without
realizing that growth involves change, which means dying
to old ways of being. Our attachment to the pleasures and
comforts we have secured creates unconscious resistance
to change, a resistance that must be made conscious and
worked with. Not to do this greatly limits your yoga. In
fact, most breakthroughs in yoga are mental. For example,
yoga moves to a new dimension when you usually prefer to
do yoga alone rather than in a class or group. This is a
sign that you are generating energy from an internal place
and are in touch with your own inner processes. Another
more advanced breakthrough, which is also mental, is when
you fundamentally do not fear hurting yourself. This means
that you are sufficiently in touch with the feedbacks of
the body and with how to do yoga that you can fix your own
problems.
These are examples of mental changes that have a more far-reaching
effect on your yoga than how flexible you are or what postures
you are doing. In fact, one of the greatest changes that
occurs is when you see that yoga is a process to be lived
rather than a goal to be achieved. This is true for every
posture. Getting the final pose is not the important thing.
Technical aspects such as proper use of breath, concern
with alignment, creating more energy to strengthen nerve
flow, and so forth, are important only as tools of self-exploration.
The yogic process is both simple and profound. It involves
confronting yourself and your limits, learning to read physical
and mental feedback, knowing how to get into blocked areas,
and knowing when to push and when to relax in the posture.
The essence of creativity is an aware balance between control
and surrender. This involves the capacity to take your life
in your own hands and direct it. It also involves letting
go so that life can lead you. Yoga is a miniature universe
in that it encapsulates the basic polarities of existence.
Each posture is a play between push and release, focus and
attention, direction and letting go. The more yoga teaches
you this balance, the more it carries over into other areas.
Balance cannot be achieved mechanically by formulas or by
copying others who may have greater understanding. There
is a creative, personal aspect to it that can only be known
in yourself. Specifically, the answer to the question, "Should
I push for further depth, hold the posture, or back off
and relax?" is fundamentally knowable only in the moment.
Whether you move appropriately depends on how sensitive
and in tune you are. So yoga is - as is life - ultimately
an art, which means that there is always a uniquely individual
expression of universal principles. Everybody is both the
same and different. A given posture gets at similar areas
in everyone. Yet each posture can be approached in endless
ways. The more rigid your approach to yoga is, the more
mechanical your sessions become. When yoga becomes a chore,
it is a sign that the creative aspect is missing and you
are on automatic. You have to pay attention
not only to what your body is saying, but also to what happens
in your mind.
Feedback is one part of a system telling another part how
it is being affected. It is a key to integrating the internal
and the external, for it is both looking within and looking
without. Examples of physical feedback are pain, dullness,
different levels of intensity, energy flow, trembling, fatigue
and so forth. Mental feedback comes in various forms such
as boredom, ambition, fear, inattention, hurry, a sense
of struggle or effort, being easily distracted, or being
concerned with time, with comparisons, inadequacy, and so
on. There is also feedback that involves responses to externals
such as diet, environment and relationships. I can learn
from others, but it is only by being in touch with what's
going on inside of me that I can see if the other's point
of view makes sense for my life.
Integration of mind and body, without negating either one,
is a challenge all of us face. We are both two things and
one thing at the same time - a mind and a body, and a total
organism or unity. The "third perspective" sees
that the seeming polarities and paradoxes of life, such
as the mind/body split and individuation versus merging,
are actually not opposed at all, except in the way we think
about them.
We can look at the different problems that both Eastern
and Western cultures are facing as results of the imbalance
that both the "perspective of the one" and the
"perspective of the many" create. The West, as
exemplified by science, values progress (becoming).
This has given us great technical mastery and many material
advantages, including a longer life, but has created a spiritual
vacuum and brought alienation and isolation. The East's
yearning for the eternal (being) has developed
inner perspectives that help people break out of personal
isolation and connect with a power larger than themselves;
but this has been coupled with holding life cheaply and
has brought great poverty, suffering and human degradation.
Yoga means union. It offers the potential of
bringing together these polarities in our personal lives,
and is a force that can help forge a needed synthesis between
East and West. The flame of yoga is moving West. We have
a unique opportunity to infuse Eastern mysticism with Western
practicality and create a more viable context to meet the
challenges of these times.
© 2000 by Joel Kramer.
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