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My Beginning Yoga Experience
by Boyd Martin
As I walked out of the Bikram Yoga studio toward my car after my first
class, I found myself declaring, "If I can actually do this yoga, it will
totally change my whole life." I had only been able to attempt half the
postures, with the rest of the time lying down, just dealing with the
heated, humid room. But it was a revelation as to the sorry state of my
body's condition, and the pathetic condition of my mind-body connection.
I had already made the firm decision to do yoga class every day for two
months, after reading Bikram Choudhury's introductory yoga book. He says,
"Give us two months. We will change you." After living with years of back
pain due to compressed lumbar discs and a sedentary lifestyle, I was ready
for that change--so ready, in fact, I was willing to subject my
de-conditioned body to 90 minutes of vigorous cardiovascular activity in
105° heat and 60% humidity (making the "apparent temperature" somewhere
around 145°). But the prospective discipline of it appealed to me, and soon
I was actually enjoying the gentle torture of it, as I began to move
muscles, bones and cartilage that hadn't been moved in years.
Beyond the rewards of seeing my body stretch and reach new ranges of motion
in class, it was after and between classes where the payoffs truly lay.
Bending over to pick up something no longer hurt, standing up after sitting
for a while no longer involved pain and stiffness, and I began noticing how
good I felt instead of how bad.
Of course, getting to these improvements took a while; and although I had
committed to two months of daily practice, it has now been nearly eight
months, and I can now say yoga is an indispensible part of my life. This
path has blatantly announced to me how I had incrementally reduced my own
range of motion with each tiny discomfort, each injury, each bout of
stiffness, in an attempt to protect myself from future pain. It is a common
life strategy, but a very wrongheaded one. The body needs to increase its
range of motion over time, and each discomfort or injury points the way. As
the World's Stiffest Person at 50, I was on the fast track to being a
crippled old man by 60.
I drew a valuable conclusion from this, that all the little aches and pains
and microconditions we had as twentysomethings, if not dealt with in a broad
and holistic way, are the exact pains and conditions that amplify over time
leading us to our ultimate demise. From this perspective, what is commonly
referred to as "aging," is actually more like an excuse for not answering
the body's calls for help early on. I'm just not buying the "I'm just
getting too old for this" refrain I hear from my friends. Time, friction,
and gravity will take their respective tolls, but only with permission from
you. If I end up dying at 94, I would rather have gotten there vital, active
and pain-free, instead of feeble, crippled, and tormented.
The main thing I've learned from my beginning yoga experience is that it
takes MUCH MORE WORK than I thought to reverse my past slothfulness, and
much more diligence on the day-to-day to maintain what gains I have
acheived. Bikram refers to the "body's bank account." You invest into the
account with yoga, and then spend the account when not doing yoga. Of
course, I found I was sorely and deplorably in DEBT, and am only now seeing
the light at the end of that tunnel, striving for the day I can touch my
forehead to my toes, rest my leg on my shoulder, and nap on my back with my
head on my feet.
SEVEN MORE THINGS I'VE LEARNED IN BIKRAM YOGA
1. If yoga turns it on, yoga will turn it off. I've had many classes where a
muscle or joint will "release" (I used to wrongly identify it as "strain"),
causing pain and stiffness or soreness after class. By the end of the next
class, invariably, that soreness and pain disappears.
2. Your body is stronger than you think it is, and you have more energy than
you think you do. One day in class I decided to completely ignore my
thoughts as to what I could or couldn't do in class, and was surprised to
find a whole new range of motion, and a whole new area of energy and
strength. The body obeys the limitations imposed upon it by the mind.
Because Bikram Yoga is one of the most strenuous forms of hatha yoga, it is
easy to claim to myself that I MUST be tired after all that exertion.
Letting myself engage in this way, certainly obtained the result. The
REALITY of yoga class is that it CREATES energy. Although it is natural to
feel weakness or exhaustion, that feeling is actually RECOVERY, and in a few
minutes, I claim to myself that I am refreshed and energetically ready for
life. And, magically, I am.
3. Trust your body to know what it needs to do. Patience. As obedient as the
body is to the limitations of the mind, it has also retained the awareness
of the sequence of how those limitations were imposed, and knows how to undo
them. The deeper problem with this is that many times there seem to be
opposing limitations and confused commands operating within the body. These
were put there by the mind, resulting in the wrong muscles being used to do
certain motions. The trick, of course, is to get the mind out of the way,
and it WILL resolve.
4. How you do yoga is how you do your life. The corollary to this is what
happens during yoga practice is a microcosm of what happens to you in life.
Paying attention to this is the road to revelation--as well as some inner
grins.
5. Flexibility and core strength are the keys to health. Nutrition is
important, drinking lots of water is important, getting proper amounts of
sleep is important--all things I had been doing throughout my life.
Unfortunately, I had overlooked the two most important things. Exercise is
inadequate (and I dare say useless) without flexibility and core strength
training. Again, it has taken much more than I thought to keep my body's
bank account from going into the red, and the quickest way into the black is
with flexibility and core strength training. (By "core strength" I mean the
deepest core muscles that create movement in the body, such as abdominal and
back muscles.) With a high degree of flexibility, all the enzymes, minerals,
blood flow, and myriad other rejuvenating substances the body creates to
heal and build itself can get to those areas that need it. Without
flexibility, there is withering and dying. I also noticed that I didn't
engage my abdominal muscles when I should, such as when bending over,
lifting, carrying, walking, standing up. This set up bad habits of motion,
and the obvious developing flacidity and inappropriate muscle recruitment.
6. Breathe. Combine this command with how you do yoga is how you do your
life, and you'll quickly see where you cut off your life force in daily
living. I would stop breathing when I felt weak, for example. Ooops.
7. Use your mind to guide and expand. This is a corollary to Number 3 above.
I noticed that by setting and visualizing goals on each posture, as well as
for the entire class, and by refusing to entertain any other thoughts--such
as how hot it is in the room, what hurts, what I'm afraid of, etcetera,
etcetera--lo and behold progress gets made. The body wants to feel better.
Help it out by concentrating on improving each posture, and when not doing
that, concentrating on breathing. I'm saving myself a lot of unnecessay
torture by applying this point in my practice, and in my life.
EMOTIONAL/SPIRITUAL CHANGES
The most impressive effect underlying all the physical changes has been my
greatly increased ability to confront life in the proper perspective--what
I'll call the "Small Potatoes Effect." This is where one does something so
monumentally difficult that the rest of life's daily conflicts, conundrums,
irritations and niggly stresses seem to all pale in importance. Or, more
accurately, they begin to assume the quality of merely the backdrop texture
accompanying my personal goals and purposes. They become the tiny, swirling
dust devils stirred up by my atmospheric movements of intention. These are
no longer "stresses"--they are revealing acknowledgements that life is
changing according to my desires.
As the practice advances, I'm wondering if perhaps it is not so much that it
is "monumentally difficult" to do this yoga, but that certain firmly
embedded toxic conditions residing for decades deep within organs, muscle
and bone are at last being purged--and that translates as a monumental
achievement on some subliminal cellular or auric level.
Whatever it is, it has restored my sense of humor, allowed me to rediscover
my enjoyment of living, and added an aura of leisure in everyday activities,
even as I find myself accomplishing more.
And so I continue on with my daily practice of Bikram Yoga with an inner
smile, remembering that Bikram says, "You gotta go through hell to get to
heaven," and remembering that the only reason the "hell" is there was my own
doing. But with yoga, my days of redemption are at hand.
©Copyright
2003 by AlternativeApproaches.com

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About the author: Boyd Martin is an avid daily Bikram Yoga student in the Portland, Oregon area. He is a professional drummer and freelance writer/webmaster, specializing in alternative health and wellness themes. You can learn more about Bikram Yoga at the Bikram's Yoga web site. |
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