This is for the ones who stand, for the ones who try
again, for the ones who need a hand, for the ones who think they can.~ Comes
and Goes (In Waves), Greg Laswell
My handstands had left the building.
My handstands had left the building.
My yoga schedule was off, and so was my usual inclination to
go upside down.
My handstands were missing, and I didn’t know how to find
them. And I wondered if rearranging the furniture hadn’t actually been the best
idea. After all, the armoire against which I’d practice my handstands had left
the building, too. Maybe that was the reason?
It was a Monday night, and I arrived at practice for the
first time in a week. I set up my mat and told the instructor what had
happened, that my handstands had disappeared. It was not the first time they’d
gone missing, and it made me feel back at Square One.
When you ask who’s new
tonight, I said, I may not raise my
hand, but I’m the one who’s new again.
I’m not sure why I had to confess, but I wanted someone to
know!
The instructor thought for a moment, and then exclaimed that
it was good to be new again, that I’d have the chance to learn from scratch.
Months earlier, a friend and I had stayed after class to
work on our handstands. At that time, I had them down, and this same instructor
came over to see what was up. He stood on his hands while telling us that handstands
need to be fed every day. This made sense to me as I had been serving mine breakfast,
lunch and dinner, and I tried a few of my own before standing up to hear what I
hoped would be some good inversion tips.
But the instructor skipped over any such tips. This young
man who could probably cross the room on his hands instead sat on the
windowsill and at once began to talk about the point of the postures, especially
the handstands.
He spoke of compassion and loving others and loving
ourselves in order to love others. And before I knew it, he was talking about
the need to heal over and over in an effort to find this compassion and this love for ourselves
and for others.
Suddenly, my day turned as upside down as I had set out to
be, and I hoped it didn’t show how much work it was for me to remain upright. Having
felt so good from both my practices that day, I was surprised at how unsteady
this topic made me.
I listened to him and forgot about the handstands. Instead, I
asked how he came to know all this and how one is supposed to go about this
healing.
I learn from my
teachers, he said, and I surround
myself with people who are good to me.
I didn’t
know that healing
and handstands were one and the same, that both were practices that needed
to be fed every day.
It was several months past this discussion when I found
myself in the week of my missing handstands. It was the Tuesday after the
Monday I was new again, and I was putting my overclothes in a cubby at yet another
practice as another instructor stood nearby.
While I stuffed away my shoes and my shirt, I declared that my
handstands had left.
He obviously didn’t know from such catastrophic thinking, but
his reassurances didn’t stop me from mine. And I didn’t mention how I’d
connected the dots to conclude that my practice had left, as well. I struggled
through the very hot practice that followed and was secretly relieved when
there were no opportunities to invert. I hadn’t even been ready to try.
We sealed our practice with three Oms and, before I left the
room, I stepped aside to look for my handstands. I lifted first one leg and
then the other and felt my hips float into the air. I pressed into my hands and
pulled in my core, and, slowly, the ceiling became the floor.
Do you see they’re
still here? It was the instructor. The room had emptied as I lingered
upside down before standing up to hear what I hoped might be some good
inversion tips.
But this instructor also skipped over any such tips and,
before I knew it, I was back in that same conversation, the one that had
nothing to do with handstands.
I thought they were
gone, I said, as if my handstands had feet that could walk away.
Don’t even think that sh*t!
That was all it took for him to explain that it was me who
had left and not my handstands. And I quickly understood that my search for
handstands was indeed the same as a search for healing.
And so, in this apparent effort to heal, I made a bold
reply.
As someone who gets teased for her clean language, I
repeated his words, more to myself than to anyone else. And then he said it
again to make it sink in, and I said it right back, so it would. I wanted to
seal this message as I did my practice, so it could be with me for a while.
And then I got dizzy from what I think was the heat, and I
had to sit down to rest. And from there I explained the way I’d connected the
dots, because I had to further confess. And he told me some more, without
mincing words, but he spoke from compassion and love.
And that night I left with my hope intact, and the next day
my practice was back!
My handstands returned from all that I learned, and I knew some
healing had happened.
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