Cory Bryant, Jivamukti Yoga Instructor |
I’ve written a lot
about my love of power vinyasa and Rocket yoga, but I haven’t written too much
about another kind of yoga I’ve only recently discovered. It’s called
Jivamukti.
A Jivamukti
instructor subbed our Rocket class, and I found myself with my fellow rocketeers
stumbling over his opening chants. I’d never chanted before.
The instructor took
us through all the familiar poses, but in a quieter and more deliberate way. His
voice was soothing and so was his music. It was a practice that was intense yet
gently settling, and I found it to be the perfect complement to the rest of my
yoga regimen.
So I went looking for
more.
And now I’ve started
to attend some Jivamukti classes. And, sure enough, at the beginning of each there is
chanting. All of us sit up straight in a comfortable seated position, and cheat
sheets are passed around for those like me who may be unfamiliar with the words.
The chanting only lasts
a few minutes, but it helps me settle in and makes for a quick connection with
those around me. It reminds me of the days when I used to go to synagogue. It’s
in another language and sung in unison.
And I like the sound.
It’s calming, and it makes me feel good.
Sound has always been
important to me. I start every day with music, and I never drive without it. I even rate movies and
television shows by the way they sound. There can be a certain rhythm to the
dialogue, and I like those with the most appealing pace.
Even the sound of
someone’s voice can mean a lot to me.
I’ve often been drawn
to a practice by the sound of an instructor’s voice, and I can honestly say
that all of those who have inspired me have done so first with their voices.
It’s something I can’t really further explain. I even once hired an attorney based
on the sound of his voice!
And once there was live
music at yoga. A guitar player sang to us for 75 minutes as we practiced, and I
couldn’t help but think there was a hidden microphone somewhere in the room. His
music and his voice seemed to wrap around us as we flowed through the practice.
And afterward I threw my arms around him and jokingly asked if I could take him
home, so he could keep singing to me.
The Jivamukti
instructor has written about why we chant.
Sound is God, he writes. Chanting the names of God
creates the resonance of God, which exists in you.
He writes that chanting
raises our vibration, which is something that exists in all of us. He says this
vibration is God, and the effort to tap into it is what marks the yoga
practice.
I think there can be
as many different reasons for embarking on this practice as there are beliefs
in God, but, ultimately, something does happen in this endeavor. Perhaps it’s
that we become aware of something greater than ourselves, something inside that
we may have forgotten was there in the first place.
And once this
awareness strikes, it’s impossible not to want more, no matter what our
beliefs.
And so we become
seekers. Suddenly, this is why we practice. It’s how I wound up in the
Jivamukti class. I liked the idea of using sound as a way to tap into whatever
it is that’s inside, because I do think something’s in there!
A while back, a rabbi
paid a visit to the yoga center as part of a meditation workshop. His synagogue
has a mindfulness center, and he spoke at length about the greatness that exists in each of us. He called it The Source. But instead of accessing it
through sound, he taught us how to access it through silence.
In magic marker, he
wrote the Hebrew name of God, יהוה, on a piece of paper and passed it around so all could see. There
are many names for God in the Jewish religion, but this one is actually never
spoken, as it’s considered too holy to speak.
He explained how the letters
could be used to meditate. From right to left as Hebrew is written, he said the
first letter, Yud, represents the
bottom of the exhale, as it’s so little as to almost not be there at all. The
second letter, Hey, represents the
breath by the very nature of its sound. It’s the inhale. The third letter, Vav, represents the top of the inhale,
because it’s long enough to fill the space in which it’s written. And the last
letter, another Hey, represents the
next breath. It’s the exhale.
To meditate, the
Hebrew letters are silently chanted, over and over with the breath.
Surprisingly, after our
short, silent meditations, he softly chanted aloud a little ditty to signal
that it was time to open our eyes.
I think the Jivamukti
instructor and the rabbi are both on to the same thing. Both share in the belief
that inside all of us is indeed something bigger than ourselves. And whether it’s
through sound or silence, both are seeking a means to access it.
And this search appeals
to me, even though I find the means to be a bit of a challenge. It’s not easy
to sit in silent meditation, a practice I must confess I’ve only just begun. And
the chanting is still foreign to me, even though something about it feels very familiar.
Set aside your ego and your judgment, the Jivamukti instructor writes in further explanation
for why we chant. Let the rhythm of life
move up and through you.
I believe he is
teaching what the rabbi taught, because when we fill our lungs with air until
we are as full as the letter Vav, isn’t
it the same as letting the rhythm of life move up and through us, too? And
surely that would leave no room for ego or judgment, by any means.
All that it leaves
room for, really, is what has been there all along. It’s what’s deep inside the
sound and deep inside the silence and, ultimately, deep inside us all.
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