EDUCATION
The Anti-Yoga Trilogy or Why I Can’t Do Yoga
(The third of 3 lame excuses)
by
Elyse Briggs, ERYT-500, NCTMB
Let me begin here by saying
that my respect for another’s politics, religion or belief system runs deep. I
believe that we humans need a greater source to rely on to find comfort, peace
and light and far be it for me to suggest that one way is better than another.
Me? I was raised in a
traditional Jewish family and can occasionally be found in Temple (“Ma, if
you’re reading this up there…I’m sorry that I haven’t been there in over a year
but next Friday night, I promise I’m going.”)
I seldom discuss religion or
for that matter politics with friends and I NEVER discuss the two with students
and clients. It’s really none of my business and if I did choose to discuss
these things with friends, students and clients, they would no longer be my
friends, students and clients.
This brings us to:
Excuse
#3:
My
religion does not permit me to practice Yoga.
More than occasionally
someone will say to me, “My faith/religion does not allow me to do yoga,” or
“I’m uncomfortable going to a yoga class because of the religious connotations,”
to which I say nothing. That’s a sticky one. Far be it for me to sway, coerce
or convert.
As a friend, teacher and
therapist, my wish for my friends, students and clients is for them to find
peace, joy and laughter.
I’ve been a student of yoga
for 30 years and haven’t once felt compromised … but that’s me. When I’m in a
yoga class, I’m not thinkin’ religion, I’m thinkin’ mind/body connection and
sculpted abs, butt and thighs … but again, that’s me.
My yoga class is a time for
self-reflection, and connection to “the bigger picture,” the universe or why
that sperm hit that egg at the precise moment to make me! Why think about such
things? Well, when I think large, I no longer sweat the small stuff. It’s how
I use MY yoga practice.
At my studio, everyone who
attends classes knows they’re welcome; no matter what size, shape, shade or
faith (I was looking for an “S” word but can’t seem to come up with one) they
may be. Often, during the resting posture (corpse pose or “Shivasana"), at the
end of a sometimes, vigorous workout, comes emotional release, laughter, tears
and sighs. A religious experience? Maybe, maybe not. What is certain though,
is that a quiet connection has been made. A connection that might not have
happened otherwise, that brings you closer to yourself than you may have been in
a long time. A connection that opens the mind and opens the heart.
I love to tell my students,
as they prepare to leave class, that when they feel filled to the brim with the
love and the light they’d experienced during class, its perfectly okay to let
some ooze out and infiltrate a friend, relative or even an upset stranger. What
prophet was it who said, “All we need is love … ?”
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