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Yoga
Articles
Yoga Isn't
Stretching
By Ray
Baskerville
If we look at the purpose of yoga and understand
it in its spiritual context, we could distill it as 'opening the
body, at the physical and subtle levels'. In this process of opening
what is held within these different levels, the holding and in fact
what creates the holding itself, is released.
This process of the release through opening is in yogic terms
purification. There is no way shape or form by which this process
can be equated with stretching.
Stretching does not transform. As the word implies implicitly it is
simply a forced lengthening. If we look at asana practice in this
way the consequence of stretching will of course result in greater
flexibility. This type of flexibility however requires perpetual
stretching to be maintained.
Because there is a force in stretching the natural response of the
body is to retract again once that forces is removed with the same
amount of force as was applied. This is a basic law of physics.
It is possible that through stretching, the body can be reshaped,
the muscles and tendons lengthened. But if we compare this affect to
the purpose of yoga, then the purpose is not achieved.
Doing yoga by stretching will also have benefits, but they will be
limited and short term. Yoga classes where you are exhorted to
pushed to the limit, and then some, might leave you in a state of
sweaty exhilaration, but like any high you come down. If this was
what yoga was really about, then gymnasts and ballerinas, would be
yogis and yoginis.
My yoga teacher in Rishikesh continually warned a naturally flexible
student that her flexibility was a barrier to her practice. He also
used to say that there were two ways to we could do asana practice.
One way was the way of force, in which I am including stretching. He
described the way of force as using a sledgehammer.
The second way he described as using a chisel, and a hammer. He said
the chisel was awareness the hammer was intelligence. Awareness
takes consciousness into the body and intelligence follows it and
directs it. As I have written elsewhere what the body holds is the
contents of our subconscious. Obviously this means that we do not
have conscious awareness of what is held.
Yoga as a process of opening and releasing is then the discovery and
making conscious what our subconscious holds in our body.
We live in a fast paced got to have it now culture. Sledgehammer
yoga might elicit fast results, but the possibility of injury can be
attested to by many. If conscious awareness was there could injury
occur? I think not.
What then is opening and how do we do it? Well first of all, as what
is held in the body is not conscious, it must become conscious,
which essentially means we have to discover it. This discovery
requires us paying a lot of attention while doing asana, the first
'union' is between awareness and body, then awareness body and
breath.
Holding is by definition a contracting. Opening then is a letting go
of the holding/contracting that is unconsciously occurring. It is
the creation of spaciousness in the body.
On a practical level it looks like this. We must in any asana find
and not pass the boundary of our bodies capacity. Then we slightly
withdraw from that boundary - just a little. Then we breath into the
area where we find our boundary. Inhalation is definition expansion,
so we breath space into the boundary of holding. Then as we exhale
we direct awareness into the space we have just breathed open, and
we keep doing this over and over again.
This is asana as a meditation practice. This is yoga as an ongoing
relationship of discovery with yourself. To practice this way takes
patience, perseverance and courage. Courage because sooner or later
you will start to meet parts of yourself you probably didn't even
remember or know where there. Parts in pain, in darkness.
In practicing this way, it is slower in terms of 'results' from the
external view, but the results will last forever and you are
fulfilling the age old adage to all spiritual practitioners "know
yourself".
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