Showing posts with label Maria Cristina. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Maria Cristina. Show all posts

Friday, February 17, 2012

Structure and the Creative Urge…




Several weeks ago in a class, one of my favorite teachers, Maria Cristina Jimenez, had us rig up a little strap-sling for our upper arms, and in several poses she had us press out into the strap with our biceps as we folded forward.  Our charge was to find (and revel in), from that pressing out, the magical extra opening of the heart that quickly followed.

And for weeks I have been using and adjusting and playing with this same trick (thanks, MC!) and variations on it in my own practice, and in classes.

Right away, while testing this out in classes, I realized that there are two types of people.  There is the type of person who is all loosey-goosey flexi-pants, who really needs to draw in instead of pressing out.  This person has got enough out.  This person needs some holding to their center, and so for them the strap is actually about restraining, about holding them to the middle.  And then there is the other type of person (I fall into this category), who errs toward the muscular, rather than the loose, and who needs a little less holding it all together, and a little more expanding to their limits.  For them, the strap is really about something to expand against, to relieve all that constant contraction.

We all need structure.  Boundaries.  We all need something to push up against—whether that is a literal pushing out, or an invisible drawing in (a pushing up against one’s own center)—whoever, however…there has to be some kind of structure in place or else…chaos.

We know this about children.  You hear it all the time, that if kids don’t have boundaries, they are going to go crazy in the looking for them.  If you have ever made theatre or made a painting or made just about anything, you’ve probably heard a variation on this theme—that the rules have to be in place before anything really creatively free can take place.  You need to know who is doing what, where things are happening, what the beginning and what the end is or else…the whole creative work would just devolve into nonsense.

When I first started writing in a more serious way, several years ago, I used to ask P. to give me a list of random elements to make a script from.  He would come up with five or six things, sometimes practical like, “only use one location”, sometimes plot-based, “there has to be an explosion”, sometimes more moody, “it should feel dark all the time,” and off I’d go.  Immediately, list in hand, I felt free.  Because, though I didn’t know much of anything else, I at least knew that there would be an explosion, there would be darkness, and we would stay put. 

And the body, perfect metaphor that it is, is no different.  As soon as the boundary lines are established, as soon as the feet and the head and the ribs and the arms all know what they’re doing and where they’re heading—that is when a real opening can begin to happen.  You take a shape, and then you spend some time in that shape, and you explore its dimensions.  You push out, you draw in, you soften, you engage…the pose is a playground within which you experiment.  You play.

But the challenge is, that for most of us as adults, we are left to our own devices when it comes to creating structure.  I remember when I first moved to New York after college, at 22 years old, it was such a shock to my system to have no rhythm to my days.  I didn’t understand how people made it work, this whole life thing—where exactly was I supposed to go?  How was I supposed to spend my time?  Who was handing out the grades, here, anyhow?  It took years for me to realize (and I think I’m still figuring this out, day by day) that I had to be the arbiter of my own structure.  If there was something I wanted to do or make or be…I had to be it.  And without anyone nodding their approval I had to set aside the time and the means to make things happen.

I am a person who craves structure.  But, I am also a person who craves freedom and craves a creative life…often these two things do not go hand in hand.  There are days when all I want is for someone to tell me where to be, what time to be there, and what I should do once I’ve arrived, but what I often forget is that, that person…is me.  I am the one who gets to (has to) tell me where to be and when and what to do when there.  I am structure-maker and I am play-er within. 

Some days it’s harder than others.

But, on the days when the structure feels futile, when all I want to do is navel gaze and ruminate, I have learned to enlist my block-builder self, and set to work.  That is why the structure is there.  It’s there to hold the shape on the days when passion alone can’t suffice. 

These days, I just imagine a strap hugging against me, hugging my arms together, and I close my eyes and press out.  And then I wait for the opening that is sure to come…

Friday, October 29, 2010

Shanti-Town Recommends: Maria Cristina Jimenez


If you live in Los Angeles (or Puerto Rico?) and you've never taken a class from this woman...you should.

There are a few of my favorite teachers at Still with whom I haven't been able to take class in awhile, primarily because I've been teaching myself or doing my own practice or taking other yoga studios out on dates (don't tell!), and Maria Cristina is one of them.  But yesterday I got to take from her not once, but TWICE...and it was heaven.

Maria Cristina is not one of those teachers where you're going to walk away feeling like you had your ass kicked, that's not the kind of awesome she is (and way too often I feel like that's a measure of a great teacher, at least among those of us who tend to use achievement as the measure of our own worth)...no, no, Maria Cristina is awesome in an entirely different way.

First of all she, as a person, just beams with sweetness...she's quick to laugh and refers often to her students as "my chickens".  She cracks jokes, makes fun of her own love of reality television, and generally just creates an atmosphere that's love-er-ly to be in while in class.  Which is all great.  But that's not why I love her.  I love her because she speaks directly from her heart.  Which I think is rather large and soft and seems to have enough room for the whole class to climb inside of.  There have been several classes which I've taken from her where I feel a lump rising to my throat AS SOON as she starts speaking.  Which I'm sure is because she is communicating from her sweetness, from the center of herself, and it just reaches right out, zaps across the room, and flips on the lights in my own sometimes darkened insides. And THAT is what I consider a great yoga class...

So, if you're around: take from her! Doooo it.  Or you can just read her blog here.

(And thank you, MC, for two super great classes yesterday...)

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Just When I Thought it Couldn't Get Any Better...

I'm having a love fest with my lady teachers out here, and before I say anything else, I need to give each of them a brief plug...because if any of you are in LA and want to take class with an amazing woman, I would recommend any and all of these loverly ladies...

Maria Cristina Jimenez, who is gorgeous and warm and calls us all "my chickens" and who, for some reason, makes me get all welled up as soon as I sit down and close my eyes at the beginning of class. This woman is just all heart and makes one feel, you know...loved. Which, as cheesy as it sounds, is important. She's also a kick-ass teacher with a really graceful hold on alignment and the deeper philosophical truths about the practice.


Hagar Harpak, oh, Hagar...how I love thee, let me count the ways: 1, 2, 7, 100,000,000,000. Hagar, Hagar, dresses like a rock-star. Hagar, Hagar, takes my practice so far. Hagar, I adore...lovely Israely kinda crazy Hagar. She blows my mind and my body wide open. And I know she is going to kick my ass and turn me upside-down, every single bless-ed time.

Gina Zimmerman,  Gina has become a more recent important lady teacher in my LA yoga life, and she is amazing. I told her the other day that I now have a Pavlovian response to her class, and as soon as I walk in the door my energy just shifts and calms and opens wide up. Gina is like...a rock. A beautiful, mossy, wet and womanly rock. Gina is like how I wanna be when I grow up. She is grounded like nobody's business and a philosopher for sure and classes with her are D-E-E-P, deep.

These are my girls, and I have been going from one to the next...a morning class with Maria Cristina, an afternoon with Hagar, an evening with Gina...and something is happening. I don't know if it's the combination of their alchemy or just the next stepping stone in this constantly expanding practice, but my heart is breaking open, and I feel like the three of them might just hold the rocks. Lately I am overwhelmed with emotion in their classes...places where things have been held are cracking enough to let the light in. I don't even know how to tell them, individually or collectively...but they are peeling away the layers.

Find them, people. Take class from them. Let the glass be broken!!