Showing posts with label energetic effects of backbend. Show all posts
Showing posts with label energetic effects of backbend. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

The Yoga Unicorn


The best stuff to teach always comes from one’s own practice, and in yoga experiential knowledge is considered to be the highest form of knowledge.  This is why I’m so excited to share the techniques in my classes that have so recently come together for me in the last month and a half.

When I spend time with Edward Clark (//Tripsichore.com), without fail, I have a new recognition of how lazy I am in my practice.  I don’t mean that I’m not doing enough chaturangas, I mean that I am not using the resources of my body (muscularly, Pranic energies fueled by the breath, et al) in even the simplest of poses, let alone transitions.  And the truth is that if I am honest about using everything to breathe my way into poses, the simplest poses require more effort than doing the hard stuff without the technique.

The latest epiphany was exerting effort through the back body to stabilize the torso.  This is particularly effective technique for backbends and pressing into inversions, but dramatically impacts stability in everything.  The Tripsichore breathing methodology is profound, and there’s so much to the seemingly simple premise of keeping a long neutral spine through pranayama technique while doing asana.

Edward recently wrote a few words about the muscularity of the breath.  In other words, we should actually be employing muscular effort to deepen the breath in a way that is coalescing and consolidating the body as Prana (fueled by the breath) moves the body through space.  The key is not to “just breathe”, but to use the breath as a vehicle through which Prana is manipulated, and Edward goes on to say,

“Few people seem to realise the muscularity of the breath…there is a great deal of physical effort put into a very precise movement.  Ordinarily, I suppose, we associate this level of effort with large movements…running, jumping…but one of the remarkable things about yoga is the discovery of what happens when you put that much effort into something that seems relatively limited….you know, instead of flailing ones arms or legs around, you put all that effort into moving the middle of your pelvic bowl a relatively small distance.”

To accomplish this involves a sustained level of concentration and effort to put some real depth and breadth of power behind the smallest of movements.  As it turns out, this intensity of focus (dharana) and careful placing of the body through manipulation of Prana (vinyasa) is what yoga is all about.  It’s a very intense process to master this technique, and I can assure you it’s worth it—repeated effort ultimately results in formerly elusive magic that makes everything come together to achieve what you could not do before.  And that, my friends, is better than a Unicorn smelling of fresh baked bread eating sunshine and rainbows.

To read the rest of Edward’s message on the muscularity of yogic breathing click HERE

To come to my classes and learn the “Unicorn Techniques”, there are classes Monday-Thursday 12N and 5:45PM at Seattle Yoga Shala.  Email me at lizdoyle@msn.com and I’ll send you the info.  You can also check out my website HERE: //LizDoyleYoga.com

Riding the mythical beast called Prana,
Liz

Here are the rest of Edwards comments on pranayama:

I suppose it is worth stressing that pranayama and breathing are not really interchangeable terms.  Breath is a mechanism through which prana is manipulated.   Essentially, any model one produces for what is meant by prana would be likely to include in its definition (though perhaps only tacitly)  that it is a way of looking at things that makes them have some kind of coherence.  E.g. the model of kundalini being a serpentine  energy that arises from some point  the base of the spine suggests a place where the movement of energy commences and a path through which it travels.    This possibly lends coherence to the movement  of the body and/or mental processes that happen when this model is used to interpret experience.  Coherence or unity being an alleged aim of yoga…an aim that would include the intentions of a practitioner and the resolution of their actions…could be evaluated then in terms of how well they were able to behave as if they were making prana/kundalini run through their body in a coherent fashion.   Breath would be part of this.

It is odd then that a slow and muscular breath is felt to be a just an optional add-on for most vinyasa practitioners rather than the place that any movement commences.

Few people seem to realise the muscularity of the breath…there is a great deal of physical effort put into a very precise movement.  Ordinarily, I suppose, we associate this level of effort with large movements…running, jumping…but one of the remarkable things about yoga is the discovery of what happens when you put that much effort into something that seems relatively limited….you know, instead of flailing ones arms or legs around, you put all that effort into moving the middle of your pelvic bowl a relatively small distance.

Apropos injury…one of the compelling reasons for the use of a slow breath is that it slows the practitioner down enough to be able to observe when they are getting into perilous territory.  It is hard to breathe slowly and go into a place where you injure yourself.


Saturday, August 13, 2011

Practicing From the Heart



For those of you who know me and come to class regularly, you know I have no problem waxing on regarding virtually any yoga related topic. So why was an article on backbending so hard to write? At first I started with the hows and physical benefits, but that’s really missing the forest for the trees. You can learn the hows, the secrets and techniques, along with anatomy and physical benefits at the workshop (CLICK HERE FOR INFO) -- The real question is the why…

Let’s start with how people sometimes feel about backbends. They can be intimidating, intense, and even scary. WHY? Well, if you’ll forgive the pun, it really gets to the heart of the reasons for a yoga practice. As yoga practitioners, we are striving to practice and live in a heart centered way. Backbends are often referred to as “heart openers”. What does that mean? Do you really want your heart “opened”?

For me, when I hear it described like that, it feels like maybe my heart will be opened in a way that would make it vulnerable and easily damaged or hurt. What that kind of language is really about is living fully from the wisdom of the heart, with the heart fully open to the richness of Life- which includes pain, pleasure and all that’s in between.

The true nature of openness of the heart has to do with truly connecting with others, the Creator and all of Creation. And to do that completely, there is a certain amount of vulnerability involved. Rachel Naomi Remen said, “At the heart of any real intimacy is a certain vulnerability. It is hard to trust someone with your vulnerability unless you can see in them a matching vulnerability and know that you will not be judged. In some basic way, it is our imperfections and even our pain that draws others close to us.”

This vulnerability then, is really about being authentic and real in a way that is available to others. Not so that you can be exposed to danger or pain, but so that you can connect. And the reason this works is because as you let go of the veil of “protection” you become closer to your true Self. When you can let go of your self with the little “s”, and be in touch with your Self with a big “S”, then the ego fades, and your interactions with Self and other are more about connecting genuinely than representing yourself in a certain way according to what you think might be most impressive.

This kind of openness and vulnerability will of course expose us to potential pain and heartbreak, but in a knowing that there will also be a corresponding joy and satisfaction that can only be experienced in the polarity between the two. This living from the wisdom of the heart provides fertile ground for the Grand Experiment we call a yoga practice. One of my teachers, Aadil Palkhivala talks about intensity versus force. As you move through your asana practice be very sensitive to the distinction between the two. At some point where you experience mental, emotional, spiritual discomfort, are you forcing it on some level? Use your spiritual discernment to know the difference.

Once you can have an awareness of feeling, practicing and living from the heart, you can use this Knowledge and Awareness to offer up the energies of the lower chakras (such as desire, fear, etc.) to the wisdom of the heart; offering also the energies of the higher chakras (thoughts, analysis, emotions, etc.) to the wisdom of the heart, the Seat of Love.

As you practice backbends, whatever comes up for you, offer it up. Work with intensity, and without force, opening your Self to all that Life has to offer, knowing you are meant and able to experience it ALL. And when you can approach not just your practice, but your Living in this way, you will be more connected to Everything, and bless the world with Who You Really Are.

Stay Bendy~
With Love, Liz