Sometimes, we only think we know where
we should be.
The other night, for whatever reason,
I was not supposed to be at yoga.
That’s not to say I didn’t try.
Believe me, I did!
In yoga, we’re told to trust the
process. I’ve heard this saying lots of times, but it’s only recently that I’ve
begun to understand its meaning. I think it means that we are exactly where we
are supposed to be at the time we are there, even if we think we should be
elsewhere.
And the other night, I got the chance
to trust this process.
For whatever reason, my best efforts
to get to yoga landed me right back where I started. I don’t know why, and I
never will; but, in the end, I think I have to trust that I was just not
supposed to be there.
I came home from work and did whatever
it is I do when I come home. Per my usual, at 7 pm, I changed into my yoga
clothes and left the house.
I am an early bird by nature. I have a
hard time being late, and to be on time and not early actually takes an effort
on my part.
Usually, I have an easy drive to yoga,
a miraculously easy time finding parking, and I always wind up on my mat at the
start of class.
On this beautiful winter night, the
sky was clear, the stars were out, and the moon followed me
on my drive downtown. It hung low in the sky with a yellowish tinge and served
as a backdrop to a pretty strange night of yoga that never was.
I landed in a great parking spot, but
the meter was broken. Two other yogis were trying to pay as well. No luck for
any of us.
I hopped back in the car, made an
illegal, non-yogic U-turn and parked in another spot across the street behind yet
another yogi. This time, the meter worked.
Class was starting in 10 minutes, and the line was out the
door. At this studio, signing up online does not guarantee a spot, and I
chatted with the yogi who had parked in front of me while we inched slowly forward.
This part always takes patience. It’s where the practice really begins!
We were close enough to the entrance
to hear the instructor start the class. And then, to my surprise, we were
turned away. The room was full, there were no more spots.
On the walk back to our cars, my
parking buddy confided that she had a backup plan. I begged her to tell me. I
was all set to practice with no place to go.
I don’t
know if you are as crazy as I am, she replied.
I assured her I was absolutely crazy
without a doubt, and she told me about a class starting in 20 minutes across
town.
So, off we went on a second try.
The moon was framed in my car’s front
window, and it kept me company as I drove further downtown to a perfect spot
right in front of this next studio.
My name was put on a wait list below
that of my new yoga pal’s. This class was full, too. After intense discussions
between the instructor and the front desk, it was determined that there was
only one spot left.
It’s
gotta be hers, I
said. After all, this was her back up plan.
No,
it’s gotta be hers, she
said, I don’t want bad karma! I told her
to come!
Two yogis being too nice.
The front desk assured us that her
name was legitimately before mine on the wait list, so in she went, and home I
went.
It had been two hours since I had set
out for yoga. Driving home, I was reminded of another time I was all dressed up
for yoga with no place to go.
It was the previous fall, and I was leaving
for an early morning
class when I locked myself out of the house without realizing I had access
to the spare keys in my garage.
Fortunately, I had my phone and my
coffee and called for someone with a spare. I sat down in the dark with the morning
moon for company and missed my class, thinking I was stuck on the front stoop.
Later that same night, I told my
friend the story, that I had sat outside that morning with access to my keys
the whole time without knowing and without going.
This friend has a beautiful Jamaican
accent and calls me Han. It was early
evening, and the moon had yet to show its face.
Han, he said, you were not supposed to be at yoga this
morning. He’s not a yogi, but he knew to trust the process. He simply shook
his head in response and smiled knowingly.
There
is a reason why, he
said, but we don’t get to know it.
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