I have a favorite spot in each of the yoga classes I take.
At one studio, I like to set up
on the left in the front row. At another, I like to be in the middle of the
back row. At yet another, I like to line up my mat in front of one of the many
windows.
I wonder what I would do if the
instructors insisted on our choosing different spots each time?
As a yogi, I hear so much talk
about
transformation and moving in new directions. And while I think I’m doing my
best to evolve and transform, I know my tendency is to find what’s comfortable
and set up shop.
The other night, I was on the
later side and someone was in “my spot”. So, I put my mat down a couple spaces
to his right. But then I realized I was front and center, and I decided I
didn’t want that. So, I got up and put my mat to his left in the space right
next to him.
Hope
you don’t mind if I go here, I said, as if my indecision needed an
excuse.
But the room wasn’t as full as
usual, and it felt ridiculous to be an inch away from my neighbor with so many
open spaces. So, I got up yet again and moved to the second row, more to the
middle.
Outside my usual spot, I felt a
little out of place!
Funny how in that practice, the
instructor kept talking about leaving our cocoons where things are familiar and
safe.
Get
out of the nest, he
said. You may find comfort in there, but
it’s boring in the nest!
When I’m sweating and flowing and
doing the poses, these words make so much sense.
Of
course, I
think, standing on one leg and lifting the other out and back behind me in
Dancer Pose.
I’m
ready for lots of new things, I think while all wrapped up in Eagle
Pose.
I decide this spot is not so bad
after all, and I’m a bird who’s already left the nest by the time we hit the
floor.
The standing part of the practice
is over. We get a chance to catch our breath as we lay on our stomachs for a
moment’s rest.
And I’m amazed at how quickly I
pull back into myself. I know what’s
coming next. It’s the part I don’t like. Backbends like Locust and Bow with
our hips on the floor. And then more backbends like Camel and Wheel with our
hips off the floor.
I like the standing part of the
practice. I dance
right through the Warrior Is and IIs, through the binds and balances, through the
Triangle Poses and their reversals. This is what comes naturally to me.
This is what feels familiar. This is what I find most comfortable.
For me, the seated part of the
practice is the hard part. It’s like trying to find a spot when mine is already
taken. I can’t quite find my grove.
It’s a challenge to straighten my
arms and put the weight in my quads in the backbends. It’s a challenge to reach
the ground in the splits, even when I grab hold of blocks on either side. And
don’t even get me started on seated straddle, a pose for which I don’t think my
body was really made.
By this time, I’m thinking I want
my spot back!
But it’s kind of an illusion to
think there is only one spot for one person.
And I realize now that for all the
many new starts I’ve had, for all the new spots I’ve found, there will always
be the need to seek out more.
When I was a little girl, I
thought you just grew up, and that was that. Even as a young adult, I still
held on to that belief.
Only now am I realizing that we
are always leaving the nest; it’s a continuous process.
We do some abdominal work and an
inversion, and then we move into the resting pose of Pigeon.
Lately, I’ve gotten pretty good
at not fidgeting in Pigeon, but on this night, the instructor takes to talking
about the task of making ourselves vulnerable in order to make connections.
For me, this is worse than any
floor work; worse than any Backbend, Camel, Bow or Lizard.
Because I know that doing so is
the only way to leave the nest and find my next spot.
I love my spot in the yoga studio. I love the security in routine, and I hate the alienness of change.
ReplyDeleteThat being said, I absolutely agree with you that if we don't keep finding a new spot, we'll never challenge ourselves in new and different ways.
Yes, Hui. So true. Change is difficult, right down to where I put my mat. This past year, I changed up my practice, and what was so disconcerting and different is now my norm. So, ultimately, I think it's possible to find some security and sense of belonging in what at first might be new and strange!
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