
Playing the
Edge of Mind and Body
- A NEW LOOK AT YOGA
Joel
Kramer - Yoga Journal,
January 1977
What is Yoga? There are as many answers to that question
as there are people who do Yoga. This at first might appear
confusing, for Yoga is often presented as if there were
a true and fixed path to follow leading to a desired end.
Enlightenment, samadhi, bliss, peace, higher realms of consciousness
- these are the coins of the spiritual market place we are
told we can collect with the proper practice and dedication.
To find the proper practice it is common to go back to the
past, to tradition and authority. Perusing the past, however,
there doesn't appear to be any consensus for there were
schools and counter-schools with recommendations running
the gamut from demanding severe self-denial and austerities
to others that held that only in experiencing life and sensuality
to the fullest could true realization be achieved. The teachings
of today are just as varied. One school says that all types
of Yoga are contained within perfection of asanas, while
others say that too much emphasis on the body keeps you
limited to the gross material plane.
Tradition is important just as history is important - not
as a vice to squeeze the present into, but rather as a stepping
stone to grow from. It is necessary for all serious practitioners
of Yoga to take from other people's experience that which
can be helpful to create a personal expression of Yoga.
In the years that I have been exploring Yoga, an approach
has taken form that has been continually revealing, renewing
and exciting. The movement of Yoga involves among other
things the continual living recreation of the question,
'What is Yoga?' What follows is a brief introduction to
the way I answer this question.
Yoga is a living process. The heart of Yoga does not lie
in visible attainments; it lies in learning and exploring.
Learning is a process, a movement, while attainments are
static. One is internally learning about the whole field
of life using the energy systems of one's mind and body
to find out how one works and how universal patterns express
themselves through individuals. Yoga also involves the process
of freeing one's energy, moving out of the blocks and binds
that limit one both physically and mentally. Freeing oneself
is part of the process of self-knowledge for one's binds
limit the nature of the exploration, just as releasing them
permits learning to occur.
The way freedom is usually talked about is freedom from
something: freedom from pain, fear, death, aging,
disease, from sorrow, attachment, and of course, from the
ego or self which is viewed as the source of all problems.
The bondage of flesh and the tyranny of mind as they endlessly
create desire, are to be overcome through discipline. Yet
anyone who tries to do this necessarily confronts the basic
paradox that is a part of the spiritual quest: trying to
free oneself from anything contains within it the seeds
of the very bondage one is trying to escape. The desire
to be desireless is another desire. The push to conquer
one's ego in the belief that ego loss will be the ultimate
experience bringing perfection is self-centered activity.
The desire for ego loss and perfection comes from the ego
as does all desire. Thought then creates ideas of perfection
from second-handed sources or from memory's projections
and strives toward their accomplishment which is more ego
activity. This is another example of what I call the spiritual
paradox.
If freedom is looked at as a dimension of action rather
than as an escape from something, as a living process instead
of a goal, the spiritual paradox dissolves. The only real
freedom is freedom in action. Freedom is responding totally
to the challenges of the living moment. The true spiritual
quest is not 'How do I become free?' but rather, 'What is
it that binds me?' The most important thing about questing
or questioning is the nature of the quest or question. Asking
'How do I become free?' automatically places you in the
spiritual paradox, and even more important, is not answerable.
For questing after freedom always involves ideas about what
freedom consists of. The ideas I have, come from the state
of not being free, and therefore involve projections of
what it would be like not to have the problems that I have.
Freedom here again is freedom from something - fear, jealousy,
competitiveness whatever. The very ideas I have of freedom
are limited by the state of my consciousness and as I try
to force myself into the mold of the idea or ideal, I am
limiting freedom right at the start. So I can never find
out how to be free by seeking freedom. I can, however, find
out the nature of what it is that limits my awareness and
the scope of my responsiveness because that can be directly
perceived.
The body's potential responsiveness is limited by stiffness,
lack of strength and endurance. The mind's responsiveness
is limited by the way it thinks about things. The ideas
and beliefs through which you view the world necessarily
keep you within the field of these thought structures. The
way that you think about things totally influences not only
the way you act, but the way you perceive. If, for example,
you think that thought is the villain preventing you from
experiencing the 'now' and therefore must be conquered through
meditation, that mind-set influences everything you do.
In intellectual circles there is the tendency to greatly
value thought; in spiritual circles there is a tendency
to judge thought negatively. The interesting thing is that
both evaluations are just thought judging itself.
Yoga is the process by which I find out the nature of my
binds and keep in touch with those aspects of life that
limit freedom. I have found that a synthesis of two traditional
approaches of Yoga is the most direct route to this exploration.
Hatha, the physical Yoga, and Jnana, the mental Yoga, both
deal with discovering the limits that conditioning imposes.
No conditioning is just physical or just mental. How we
think is a part of how we feel and, of course, how we feel
influences the thought process. The term 'conditioning'
here refers to habits of the mind and body which are programmed
in through experience. This includes genetic conditioning
which is also programmed in through experience, although
the experience is of a different order.
Yoga then is the exploration of one's total conditioning,
Hatha Yoga using the body as the doorway, and Jnana Yoga
using the mind. I am not presenting conditioning as a new
villain to be conquered. Conditioning is part of the organizational
principal of universal energy which builds patterns and
systems that are the stuff of life. Conditioning is a fact
which actually aids the movement of life, for without it
there would be no life. At the same time conditioning is
a hindrance to freedom since habits also constrict by channeling
the new into old patterns, by creating and reinforcing the
tendency to go on automatic which limits awareness, and
by creating attachments to familiar pleasures and securities
which block real change. Freedom does not lie in negating
or overcoming the fact of conditioning which is impossible,
but rather in springing, in the living moment, from those
patterns that limit the field of what is possible.
In Hatha Yoga what is possible in any posture is a function
of your conditioning (including what you ate yesterday).
If instead of trying to force yourself into the idealized
final position, you use the posture to explore the limitations
imposed by conditioning, there is automatically a relaxation
in mind and body. The postures then become highly refined
tools to approach the edge or limit that binds you. Awarely
playing at the edge of conditioning changes the field of
what is possible.
Yoga is a process of opening, of moving beyond the physical
and conceptual limits of conditioning. Experience by its
nature conditions, so that moving out of it is an endless
process. There is no mastery of yoga since one can only
master that which has an end. The concept of opening, however,
can slyly become just another idealized goal to be achieved.
Actually, awareness of the tendency of the very nature of
thought to stop process is part of what Jnana Yoga is about.
A key to the process of opening that keeps you truly opened
is what I call 'playing the edge.' The body's edge in Yoga
is the place just before pain, but not pain itself. Pain
tells you where the limits of physical conditioning lie.
Since the edge moves from day to day and from breath to
breath (not always forward), in order to be right there,
moving with its often subtle changes, you must be very alert.
This quality of alertness which is a meditative state is
at the heart of Yoga. A great danger in Hatha Yoga is going
on automatic so that the postures become mechanical exercises,
bringing with them dullness, fatigue, and resistance to
doing Yoga at all.
Just as the mind is more elusive than the body, so the
edge in Jnana Yoga is not as obvious as in Hatha. The habits
of mind that have accumulated over time continually reinforce
themselves. Habits of mind are repetitive ways of thinking
about things and of structuring the world in such mental
patterns as beliefs, values, fears, hopes, ambitions, self
images, images of others and of the universe itself. For
instance, whether I view the universe as either basically
benign, malevolent or neutral (indifferent) seems to be
an abstraction far removed from daily living that I might
seldom overtly think about. These world views, however,
are the basis of common attitudes (idealism, cynicism, skepticism)
which are patterns that color all perceptions by monitoring
what comes in, and directly affect day to day life.
How does one play the edge of thought? In Hatha Yoga, the
Yoga is in the quality of attention to the physical system
so that one learns to listen to what the messages of the
body are saying. The muscles, tendons, nerves, glands, and
organ systems have their own intelligence and information
processing networks that can be tuned into and learned from.
Playing on the edge physically sharpens the ability of the
total organism to interpret and integrate this information.
Thought also manifests in systems which are set ways of
thinking about a particular segment of one's life. These
systems are sometimes in harmony with each other but often
not. Each role or pattern in one's life has a thought structure
or system that gives life to and perpetuates the behavior.
Hatha Yoga stretches and strengthens one physically so
that one has a stronger and more flexible body. Similarly
Jnana Yoga stretches and strengthens one mentally so that
one can use the structures that thought builds creatively
and harmoniously, and yet not be bound by the limits that
thought places on life.
Mental edges are similar to
physical edges in that they are marked by resistance to
movement and opening. In the mind, fear is the indicator
of resistance as pain is in the body. Fear circumscribes
the structure of personality or ego. The ways you think
about yourself or the world are the basic building blocks
of personality and they are very rigid. When these structures
are challenged, fear arises. Fear often expresses itself
through attack and defense as a means of alleviating the
pain that fear brings. Attack and defense are a way of shoring
up (protecting) the challenged structure and burying fear
in what is called the unconscious, giving you the illusion
of not being afraid. Fear is a great teacher since it is
a key to finding out the nature, depth, and degree of your
attachment to various thought structures.
In Hatha Yoga, as you awarely play the edge of what is
physically possible, your edge moves. What is possible has
changed - you have changed. There is more flexibility, more
openness in the tissue, and correspondingly more energy.
As Jnana Yoga plays the edges of mental resistance, the
very doing of this moves the edge, enlarging the limits
of what is possible. This is really what expanding consciousness
is all about.
A major difficulty in Jnana Yoga is that since your mental
edges define the way you perceive, the very perception of
where your edges or conditionings are is limited by your
present perception: if I try to look at the way that I look
at things, the way I do it is the way that I look at things.
How I look at things at any given moment is me. Another
problem of Jnana Yoga is that there is no set body of techniques
corresponding to asanas to use to play your mental edges.
In Hatha Yoga the asanas are necessary because in living
you rarely challenge or even reach your physical edges.
You are, however, confronting your mental edges on a day
to day basis whether you want to or not, so that mechanical
technique is not necessary.
In Hatha Yoga the demands of a given posture, the immediacy
of the feedback of physical pain, the possibility of injury
through carelessness, the proper use of breath, can aid
in bringing forth the necessary attention. In Jnana Yoga,
attention is also the key. To find out how thought works,
it is necessary to pay attention to the forms it takes:
words, sentences, images. It is also very important to be
aware of where your attention is at any given moment. Your
attention at any moment is what you are at that moment and
this directly reveals your conditioning.
Being aware of the movement of attention is actually a
meditative process that shifts consciousness. The resulting
sense of distance and quality of detachment permit an objectivity
that is not bound by the structures of thought. This objectivity
is the source of newness and creativity, bringing a sense
of awe that transcends the merely personal. It can also
bring fear. Since we hold the world and ourselves together
with thought, real objectivity can challenge the fabric
of our lives bringing resistance and fear. This very fear
is an indication of the existence of mental conditioning
and paying attention to it (playing the edge of it) 'stretches'
it in a somewhat similar way as awarely playing the edge
of pain stretches the body.
Although Jnana Yoga cannot be practiced in the ordinary
sense, ('practice' usually means repetition toward the accumulation
of desired habits), one may 'practice' Jnana Yoga by simply
sitting quietly, observing the inner panorama. An advantage
of sitting quietly is temporary removal from external reactions
that permits more ready access to thought. Sitting also
allows what has been repressed by thought or inattention
to bubble up. Since one's mental edges display themselves
in the relationships of daily life, with people, ideas,
the physical environment, so the 'practice' of Jnana Yoga
can and does occur not only during formal sitting, but in
all aspects of life.
One might mistake attention for continually trying to figure
out what's going on inside which can end up in paralysis
or in removal from living. Attention is not an analytical
process involving brain activity. It is a simple registering
of what is happening so that there is no 'figuring out'
involved.
Trying to be attentive does remove one from what is going
on and therefore is not attention. One does not do Jnana
Yoga by trying to force attention to the structures of thought
to find out what thought's limits are. Since the edges are
there, one does not have to seek them. A thought, although
more elusive, is as much a fact as a bird or a tree, so
all it takes to see it is objectively looking. The simplicity
of Jnana Yoga is made difficult in that the brain is so
conditioned by thought and so habit-bound in its mental
structures that the shift of consciousness from thought
to attention at first sounds mysterious. When thought thinks
about this shift either through reading about it or by remembering
a previous occurrence of it, thought tries to bring about
this shift. This is impossible as the shift does not occur
within the field of thought. Yet this quality of attention,
this shift in consciousness, is available at any instant,
for one can be attentive even to the fact of one's inattention.
You only really learn Hatha Yoga by getting on the floor
and doing it. You learn about Jana Yoga by doing it, too.
Even though the learning is not a mechanical accumulation
of skills, you can learn about the nature of the mental
processes, which are mechanical, and that keep this shift
in consciousness from happening. The very doing of this
allows the shift to occur.
Although I have presented Hatha and
Jnana Yoga as separate, ultimately they are not, for each
complements and completes the other. I have found that Jnana
Yoga is not only helpful in doing Hatha Yoga, but necessary.
Hatha Yoga is a miniature universe containing within it
in its own form all of the problems of so-called ordinary
life: ambition, image making, the subtle or not so subtle
intrusion of comparison and competition, the pleasures of
accomplishment, the dislike of regression, the frustrations
of not having expectations met, and of course, the potentially
ever-recurring specter of fear. Fear of aging, of dying,
of one's own sloth and laziness, of not measuring up to
standards, of not making it (whatever 'it' is) - these and
other aspects of life display themselves in Hatha Yoga in
a particularly direct and poignant way. Awareness of the
structures of thought that come out of physical exploring
is an integral part of the process of exploring the body.
In exploring mental conditioning you find that psychological
tightness conditions and tightens the body. The common phrase
'up tight' is ordinarily used to describe a mental state.
When you are up tight you can notice how the body is also
physically tightening. These habitual body tensions that
over years bring about stiffness are the repository of internalized
mental states. Opening up in physical Yoga opens you up
mentally and opening up mentally aids in the opening of
the body. I look upon Hatha and Jnana Yoga as two sides
of a coin, as mirror images of each other. They are different
routes of exploring what it is to be a human being.
Many features of other traditional approaches to Yoga such
as Karma Yoga (the yoga of action in the world) and Raja
Yoga (which is Patanjali's specific combination of different
Yogas) are incorporated in this approach. Tantric Yoga,
which traditionally is a blending or merging of the male
and female, can involve an edge playing in relationship
which reveals other aspects of conditioning. Bhakti or the
devotional aspects of Yoga that involve a surrender to what
is, comes out of a deep seeing of how the universe works.
Serious people within an historical epoch have always re-examined
and redefined the thrust of importance - which later becomes
tradition, to be redefined again as times and the movement
of consciousness evolve. The way I have answered the question
'What is Yoga?' is in one sense not traditional. Yoga
has always been a synthesis of personal experience and tradition
- a blend of the new and the old. Indeed, an integral part
of the tradition of Yoga is to be continually reinterpreting
what Yoga is. It is this flexibility at the heart of Yoga
which has allowed Yoga to be meaningful for thousands of
years.

QUOTES FROM JOEL'S WORKSHOPS
"Yoga is a process of coming to terms with oneself,
of accepting one's limitations and working with them."
"Yoga is a discipline that breaks through the rigidity
and set patterns of aging. It opens you to change and growth."
"Yoga is one of the quickest ways to control how you
feel. There are lots of predictable ways to make yourself
feel bad, but few sure ways to make yourself feel good on
a daily basis."
"As one ages, thought patterns become more rigid,
just as your body becomes more rigid. Through yoga, you
can age elegantly and keep resilient."
"A mind that fears pain builds structures to protect
itself. To be self-protective, is to become rigid."
"You cannot stay the same. You either get more rigid
and crystallized, or you move to be more flexible."
"It is interest that keeps you alive - more than diet,
exercise, etc. Newness keeps you alive... Infuse a quality
of newness into everything you do."
"The only mistake there is, is a mistake you don't
learn from."
"Yoga is a living process. The heart of yoga does
not lie in visible attainments; it lies in learning and
exploring."
"The secret of doing yoga is just to start, and let
yourself stop whenever you want to - instead of having an
idea of how long you should do it. This keeps yoga from
becoming a cage to
resist."
"Work up a five minute routine for yourself (or whatever
is realistic for you now) that you can really do, no matter
busy you are or how bad you feel."
"Make your yoga the most important thing you do in
a day - even if you only do it 5 or 20 minutes, give it
your total focus and care."
"Remember that the very essence of yoga is the attention
you bring to it, the exploration, the creativity involved."
"The key to yoga is being in the breath."
"Yoga is a play in patience...a willingness to be where
you are...and being interested wherever you are."
"If you play with your limitations and edges, the postures
come automatically."
"Yoga gives us openness and energy...and the strength
not to be blown away by that energy."
"If you spend more time in asanas you do well, or on
the more flexible side, you create more imbalance."
"Vary your yoga practice - make it creative. One day
you could make deepening and staying in the breath your
total focus; another you could do only a few postures and
hold them longer; do a pose and then a counterpose; do all
the postures you don't ordinarily do; do just cycles (standing
postures, headstand, etc.; work mainly on backbends once
a week."
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