Yoga at the Edge of the Mat

New possibilities arise from loving acceptance of what isyoga_woman_backbend

By Sharon Brock

When the yoga teacher asks our class to move into handstand, I invariably freeze. I never know if I’ll be able to bring my feet up to the wall or not, and I typically don’t make it when I’m experiencing fear somewhere in my life. Clearly there is a connection between what happens on my mat and what is happening in my life outside the yoga studio. And whatever is happening in my life is, in turn, a reflection of what is going on within. Knowing how this all interacts, can yoga be used as a tool to shine light on fears and negative thought patterns, and then help in the process of moving through them to bring more ease and joy into every aspect of life?

“Yoga is a mirror,” says Santa Monica YogaWorks instructor Jesse Schein. “Every emotion, reaction or observation of yourself while going through your practice will inevitably arise in a situation or relationship off your mat. You can use yoga both to quiet your mind and to open yourself up to self-observation and change.”

Schein explains that our fears are merely “stories” that we carry not just in our minds, but also throughout our bodies. We have 72,000 channels of energy, she says, and our stories block some of those channels, resulting in our feeling stuck in negative patterns. Asanas open and clear the blocked channels so that we can release the stories from our bodies. Additionally, says Schein, being present during yoga stills the fluctuations of the mind, where the thought patterns originate and are reinforced through repetitive thinking.

We know that if we always do what we’ve always done, we’ll keep getting what we’ve always gotten. So then how do we change worn-out thought patterns to experience more happiness and elicit new possibilities in our lives?

Daniel Stewart, counseling psychologist and co-owner of Rising Lotus Yoga in Sherman Oaks, teaches that yoga is a tool for transformation and that with consistent practice, it enables us to release negative thought patterns and create new ways of thinking.

“We can approach each asana as a window into our psychological process and patterns,” says Stewart. “With each pose, what thoughts come up? Do we push or pull back? Do we accept or criticize? This mindful attention to our experience brings us into alignment with our highest self, and negative thought patterns literally begin to fall away.”

Stewart counsels that transformation in yoga only happens when we are working at our “edge.” Equanimity, or the ability to stay calm during difficult situations, is a mental state that yoga practice can strengthen.

Try it yourself: Bring yourself into Warrior III and feel the outer hip of your standing leg start to heat up. Your mind, with its old thought patterns, may tell you to stop doing this—maybe even to run away—but you don’t. You hold still and take deep breaths because you know that when you control and elongate your breath, you control and calm your mind. It is in these moments of holding and remaining calm while your body is feeling discomfort that you are creating new neural pathways of equanimity. From this you learn that you can choose peace of mind under any uncomfortable circumstance. So the next time someone cuts you off on the 405 freeway and you feel a trigger inside, you have the space to choose not to react. With consistent practice of equanimity, both your happiness and physical health improve.

Renowned psychologist Carl Jung defined this phenomenon as “transcendent function.” He described it as the tension between your unconscious mind and consciousness, leading to the creation of new consciousness, or a new thought pattern. Here, your consciousness is the thought pattern that reacts to the pain in your hip in Warrior III by telling you to run for the hills. The unconscious is where the new thought pattern of equanimity resides. Holding the pose creates the tension between the two and allows the new thought pattern to arise.

Lasting Change

Albert Einstein once said, “No problem can be solved from the same level of consciousness that created it.” But it’s a challenge to expand our comfort zones and make lasting changes in our consciousness. Ira Israel, L.A.-based psychotherapist and yoga instructor, points out that daily practice brings fresh insights about ways of being in the world. It encourages us to start to take responsibility for our negative mind states and shift our individual paradigms. Fears are put into perspective, we begin to realize that positive outcomes are possible, and we become more courageous, both on and off the mat.

“Yoga is like a mental shower,” explains Israel. “You shower your body every day; yoga does this for the mind.” Put another way, “It clears out the cache of your mental hard drive so you can decide how you want to react during the day.” It supports our choosing how to respond, so we don’t always draw from pre-set reactions, or our stories.

Israel believes the best way to overcome fears is with radical self-acceptance and self-love, which we can practice on the mat.yoga mat rolled

“Learn how to love yourself and fears will naturally reduce,” says Israel. “There will be some days where you do certain poses and some days you don’t, but don’t worry about that, just enjoy being there. You know when you’ve shown up on your mat and you’re doing your best that you don’t need approval from others in the room, and this transfers into life.”

This brings me back to my handstand conundrum. I ask a much larger question: Why am I doing yoga in the first place? Is it to do a perfect handstand or is there a more significant goal? I realize now that it doesn’t matter if I do a perfect handstand every class or not. What matters is that I don’t get rattled if I don’t. Strengthening my mental patterns of equanimity, self-love and acceptance is certainly more important.

Israel suggests an even loftier goal: “Yoga allows you to explore your comfort zone by continuously giving you insights about how beautiful and divine you really are once you are able to release your negative mental chatter. Yoga is the union between the mind, the body and the divine so that you realize you are at one with the universe.”

Indeed, “That’s the goal of yoga,” he clarifies, it’s not “to do a perfect handstand.”

❋❋ If you liked this story you might also enjoy . . .

~ Ego and Injury in Yoga

~ Stay cool with Post-vacation Yoga

Beyond Asanas (Yoga 2.0)

Forgiveness through the Yoga Lens