
Mind in Asana (Page 2)
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Let's talk a little about your theory of
how the mind influences the body in asana.
I have found that the essence of yoga is not
physical flexibility, but the quality of mind you bring
to your practice. For example, the mind is very much attached
to making progress, to getting better. But after you've
made some initial progress in yoga, you come to a point
where the body has to stop and assimilate it. You hit a
plateau. Suddenly, you have to put in the same amount of
energy just to maintain a certain level of proficiency.
Of course, at this point the mind starts losing interest,
and you back off, do yoga less or even stop doing it altogether
... until your body begins to complain and you feel motivated
to put more energy into it again.
In other words, you continue on the same
old treadmill.
Yes. And it's the attachment to progress that
causes this cycle. I'm trying to teach people that part
of the game of yoga is figuring out ways of keeping yourself
turned on so that the practice stays new and fresh. For
example, someone can be in a finished asana that is aesthetically
quite beautiful, yet they may not be doing yoga at all.
Whereas another person may be far from the completed pose
but is much more in touch with their body and what's happening
there. As I've said, I feel that yoga is a process. In some
ways, the accomplishments are like the froth on a wave.
They have their own beauty, but they're relatively insubstantial.
So the mind does have a direct effect on
the way we do postures.
Definitely. In fact, the real limits in yoga
are not physical (Of course, the body has its limits, but
that's not the issue.) The real blocks are the limitations
in the mind. We've already seen how the mind can limit our
movement in relationships; it has the same effect in asana.
For instance, think about the reasons you come out of a
posture when you do. Maybe you're bored, you feel you've
done your duty, you've held it as long as some book says
you should, or whatever. If you look closely, you'll find
that the first thing that tires in a pose is usually the
mind. The quality of attention weakens first. You begin
to treat the body casually, and then the body becomes tired.
To build endurance in yoga, you must build the capacity
to be in the body and attentive to it for longer periods
of time.
Let me give you another example of the role
mind can play in asana. As I do yoga in the morning, I may
watch my mind say to itself, "I want to be at least
as flexible as I was yesterday. Hopefully more so, but certainly
no less." The mind approaches an asana with a set of
expectations with a remembered level of flexibility that
it wants to match, feeling good if it reaches it, better
if it surpasses it, or a little turned off if it doesn't
quite meet it. The mind can't help doing that, because the
very nature of thought is comparative. But if that becomes
the total way you approach your practice, you run the risk
of ignoring the feedback of the body while unconsciously
pushing toward an image. And that image limits you and causes
you to tighten.
There seems to be a paradox here. We talk
about yielding to the body's native intelligence, but we've
also seen that much of what happens in the postures is controlled
by the mind.
It's not really a paradox. At times the mind
controls the body; at other times the body takes over. But
at still other times there is total movement, with the body
and mind working together. This point, which involves a
fusing of body and mind through the breath, has a special
energy, a special quality to it.
And you can reach this point by focusing
on the breath?
Yes, because the breath is one of the systems
that both functions automatically and can be controlled.
You've heard teachers say, "Breathe into your shoulder,''
and you think, "How in the world does one do that?"
It's not that you're breathing into your shoulder - you're
breathing into your lungs, obviously - but through the energy
of the breath and the focus of the mind, you can channel
and maneuver energy into different parts of the body. In
some ways, the breath is like a miniature universe,involved
in a process of expansion and contraction, stretching and
relaxation. Once you learn how to use the breath in the
body, you can relax into a posture, acclimatize, adjust
- and come out of the asana fresh and relaxed.
One of the techniques you're well known
for is "stretching in the nerves." What does that
mean? Can you give us an example?
Ordinarily, when we're stretching, we're reaching
for an elongation in the musculature. But there's another
kind of stretching, neural stretching, that doesn't require
great extension or flexibility. It involves using the muscles
to move through the nervous system, actually channeling
energy in a certain direction through the body.
For example try this: Extend one arm parallel
to the floor. Focus your attention initially into the upper
part of the chest and into the shoulder and then begin to
move it slowly out along the arm. Sort of squeezing the
the bicep and the back tricep and locking the elbow, p-u-s-h
energy down along the top of the arm and into the elbow.
Keep breathing. Now move the energy into the forearm, squeezing
the muscles of the forearm, using the wrist as a focus,
continuing that movement outward and down the arm. Now move
the energy from the wrist into the fingers of the hand,
s-t-r-e-t-c-h-i-n-g outward. What we're looking for is almost
a feeling of vibration movingdown the arm, like feeling
the whole arm at once Now relax. The actual movement of
the arm in this extension was no more than an inch or an
inch and a half, but it took real attention to feel that
line going. This is what I call stretching into the nerves
when you're using the muscles to pul1 the energy of the
nerves downward and outward.
This technique doesn't improve flexibility
per se, but it does begin to give the body the assimilative
capacity to integrate flexibility through increased neural
strength. Working with lines of energy also makes it increasingly
difficult to injure oneself, because injuries are usually
the result of reaching for flexibilities that the body is
not ready for.
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