
Yoga as Self-Transformation (Page 3)
1
| 2 | 3
| 4 | 5
| 6 | 7
Doing yoga in the morning puts you in direct touch with
how you have been treating yourself on the previous day.
You learn to read subtle differences in flexibility, endurance,
and energy. The body has its own intelligence, and being
able to listen to and learn from that intelligence is an
essential part of yoga. Through this paying attention, yoga
can align and remold the structure of your body according
to an inner sense of what it needs.
Techniques of Yoga
Yoga, both as an accumulated body knowledge and as an art,
involves learning and refining technique. Teachers are useful
in helping expand your technical repertoire, which in turn
enhances your potential for creative self-expression in
yoga. Technique enables you to work the body in deeper ways,
and it also helps hone focus and attention. However, it
is important to keep in mind that although technique has
its own aesthetic quality - its own beauty - it is a means
for transformation, not an end in itself.
Attention & Focus
The essence of yoga is focus and attention - attention to
breath, to the body's messages, to energy, and even to the
quality of your attention. Over the years, I have found
that the way I do yoga is continually changing. Deepening
your practice is not so much learning to do more advanced
postures, but rather increasing your understanding of how
to do yoga. Precision in technique can make yoga, even in
very basic postures, more focused and exciting, and can
deepen your understanding of what yoga is about.
Learning to do yoga is, among other things, learning to
love doing it. Not necessarily all the time, but as a general
presence in your life. You can love someone who on occasion
frustrates or angers you, yet the love remains underneath.
If you've been doing yoga for some time and you don't love
doing it, this in itself is an indication that the way you
are approaching it should be questioned. At any place in
a posture, are you turned on, interested in being there?
If you find you're not, this most likely means your mind
is somewhere else.
Perhaps you're stoically enduring the pose so you can feel
you've done what you "should" or "what's
good for you." You could also be struggling to achieve
the final goal, which may be a completed posture, or yesterday's
level of flexibility. If your attention and interest are
not in the body, you are not fully present in the posture.
Attention in yoga involves letting go, a relaxation that
surrenders to the "what is" of the posture. Here
you are alert and watchful, but not passive. It's the body
that "decides" when to hold, when to back off,
when to deepen, and when to come out of the posture.
Yoga develops the ability to focus energy into specific
areas, which generates energy whether you're stretching
or relaxing in a pose. Learning to focus energy with great
depth and precision is a vital part of yoga that is often
not emphasized. This ability does not depend on flexibility,
but rather on a quality of mind that is able consciously
to sense the body for tightnesses and blocks, and then focus
into them.
By "attention" I mean
a broadening of the spectrum of awareness, which occurs
when the mind lets go of control and direction. "Focus"
is more one-pointed than attention and, of course, involves
control. Although focus and attention are different, they
are intimately connected. It is through being attentive
that you learn where to focus, and deeper focus brings a
capacity for a greater attention. This is another way that
yoga plays between control and surrender.
Breath
Breath is the fuel of life (traditionally called "prana").
In yoga it serves as a bridge between the mind and the body,
since it operates on automatic and can also be consciously
controlled.
Breath is a cornerstone of technique. Learning to use it
effectively is a key to deepening your yoga, since it directly
increases stretch, strength, endurance and balance. I use
a variation of "ujjayi," which is deep-chest breathing
that lengthens the breath through glottal control. The pull
of lungs across the glottis on inhale and the push of lungs
on exhale help you move in the postures and deepen them,
while at the same time relaxing you. In postures that involve
folding, compacting, and forward-bending, you move and stretch
on the exhale while holding and relaxing, or aligning on
the inhale. Conversely, stretches that expand the lungs
and chest are done on the inhale, relaxing or aligning on
the exhale.
Breath itself is an interesting lesson in control and surrender.
By using breath, instead of the mind, to guide and control
movement and stretch, the body can let go, surrendering
to the posture more easily. When breath and body are coordinated,
so they are moving as one, energy flows into the musculature,
totally changing the quality of yoga. The proper use of
breath gets you out of your mind and into your body, bringing
a grace and sensuality to movement impossible when the mind
is in control. This way of using breath gives a relaxed
and centered attention to the whole organism, and can also
be used to focus energy into different parts of the body.
Playing Edges
Another important dimension in yoga is learning how to "play
the edge." The body has edges that mark its limits
in stretch, strength, endurance, and balance. The flexibility
edge can be used to illustrate this. In each posture, at
any given time, there is a limit to stretch that I call
the final or "maximum edge." This edge has a feeling
of intensity, and is right before pain, but it is not pain
itself. The edge moves from day to day and from breath to
breath. It does not always move forward; sometimes it retreats.
Part of learning how to do yoga is learning how to surrender
to this edge, so that when it changes you move with the
change. It is psychologically easier to move forward than
to back off. But it's as important to learn to move back
if your edge closes, as it is to learn to move forward slowly
as the body opens.
1
| 2 | 3
| 4 | 5
| 6 | 7
|