Sometimes,
you just know what you know.
I’ve always had a bit of a
sixth sense, but that doesn’t mean I can see the future or always pave what I
think might be a good path.
This heightened intuition
is a knowing that is difficult to describe. The best I can do is to say that if
a truth could be
touched, it would feel like this. This might sound vague, but the feeling is
anything but.
When I am
practicing yoga, I can experience a sensation similar to this sixth sense. In a
pose or after a practice, a calmness comes at me, and I feel centered and light
and surprised.
It is like the feeling I
get when an old favorite song comes on the radio. O, I know this!
I was at yoga the other
night, and the instructor was all excited about the new funky music playing. I
approved as I had just added Stevie Wonder to my personal Pandora playlist, and
Stevie and his friends had been serenading me at home.
I was in handstand, killing
time after practice while awaiting some instruction on backbends. I moved
my mat near the wall and pressed into my hands, lifting first one leg and then the
other. Usually, it takes a few tries, but this time, right away my legs found
their hang, and I was easily upside down.
Instead of feeling my
weight in my hands, though, I felt no weight at all. A
calmness came at me, and I felt centered and light and surprised.
I felt such certainty in that moment, upside down.
How is it
that such clarity and certainty are never the result of a conscious
effort?
It’s not like I sit down
and decide to come up with an answer to something that I don’t even know is on
my mind. It just happens out of the blue, in the same sudden way as easily
landing that handstand.
The only conclusion I’ve
been able to come to is that when I am clear of concerns, an openness is
created. I get a filled up feeling, and that’s when the answers come.
It’s when I know what I
know. It's the time to write. It's the time to paint. It's the time to draw.
The instructor came over to
help me drop to a backbend from standing. We were giving it three tries after
every practice. Stevie Wonder blasted through the sound system, and I got that
feeling. I placed my hands at my heart, told the instructor that Stevie had
followed me here from home and dropped back with more certainty than ever
before.
Of course, it goes without
saying that these times of certainty can be counterbalanced by bouts of
uncertainty, where I wonder if I am headed in the best direction or if tilting
back is even a good idea at all.
It’s the wondering that
gets in the way, the over thinking that closes the open space where the answers
come in.
Before yoga, I had never
exercised, and I can’t believe I missed out on all those years of using this
method to make sense of myself. A lot of confusion gets worked out on my mat.
The practice clears away the chaos by moving me out of my head and into my body.
I arrive home to shower,
not at all surprised to turn on my music and find Stevie still with me,
finishing the exact same song that took me back at yoga.
The shower has also been
the source of several epiphanies. I guess hot, hard water pressing down on me
does the same thing as my yoga practice. Standing there, I’ve definitely had a
calmness come at me. A realization occurs, I feel centered, light and
surprised, and I am certain of a new truth.
Kabbalah, the study of
Jewish mysticism, teaches about something called the Certainty Principle. It
exists where we can’t see, and it’s supposed to help in facing difficult
situations. According
to Yehuda Berg, author of The
Power of Kabbalah, the principle goes like this: "When challenges appear
overwhelming, inject Certainty. The Light is always there.”
There is a lot of study
behind the Kabbalistic principles, but a down and dirty broad stroke would be
to say there is a lot we don’t know, and don’t need to know, in order to
believe that what’s happening is as it should be.
Something
is always certain, though I’m not always sure what.
It doesn’t escape me that
being certain takes some kind of faith. And, even so, I have to admit that I
often reach those rare times of utmost certainty only after traveling through
some confusion.
Keeping up my yoga practice
helps me keep the faith.
And that helps me be open
for the centeredness, lightness and surprise for those times like when I reach
to reference Berg’s book and somehow open right to the page on Certainty.
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