Showing posts with label expansion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label expansion. 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, April 22, 2011

A Small Prayer for the Evening...


Dear god-universe--cosmic-soup-tingly-feeling-in-my-fingertips-and-chest-whoever-you-are-this-evening,

(Please tonight, as I'm wending my way toward sleep, please, please, oh-that-which-is-softer-than-me-and-all-open-arms, please help me to remember a few things, as I head towards bed.)

Please help me to remember, first, not to turn expansion, into pressure.  And that just because good things are happening, does not mean I have to become a better version of myself in order to keep them.

Please help me to remember that making lists of all the things I need to get done, is not the same as getting those things done.

Oh, and help me, if  you could, to remember to breathe into the tight places.  Please help me to remember that I know the difference between that which is open and that which is closed, and that it's up to me to choose which of those I want to be.

Could you also, while you're at it, help me to remember that it's all going to be okay? To remember that I can let go, and worlds will not collide?

Help me, please, to remember not to rob myself of joy/bliss/thrill/excitement/lovelovelove with the expectation that eventually (and soon) the other shoe is going to drop. Please help me to stop looking for that damn other shoe.  Remind me, please, that sometimes there is only shoe.  The good one.  The one that fits.

Also, please help me to remember that there are other people in the world. Help me to remember that I am connected to them. And that my heart isn't just yearning to be open so that I can have more stuff and fun-times, woo-hoo!  But so that we can collectively all begin to open, heart by heart.

And help me remember that I am allowed. And that there is room. And time. And resources to get everything I need to get done...done.  And also help me to remember that I will never get it all done.  And also help me to remember that all of those things I think I need to do, are just pale sad covers for the real and only thing I ever need to do, ever worth doing, which is learning, finally, how to fall madly in love with my own life.

Please help me remember how to fall madly in love with my own life.

And with you.

And with everyone else.

(Even the jerks.)


Lots of love,
YogaLia

Monday, April 11, 2011

Expanding in All Directions...

(This is the universe.  It is also expanding.)

Let me just say this...my man is out of town, I'm on the couch drinking wine and eating crackers, and on in the background is a reality show about someone named Aubrey. Who is this Aubrey? I have no idea. But something about the ting-y reality television sound is making me feel less lonely. Oh, and you. You, too, are making me feel less lonely...

Save me, Shanti-towners!

Okay, so there's this interesting thing that's happened--this becoming a teacher thing--which has, for me, taken my attention off of my OWN practice (which used to be the obsessive subject of all of my talking and writing and exploring) and put it more firmly onto the practices of my students and the people around me.  And as my relationships with my students grow, as people return to class over and over--and actually even among those students I'm meeting for the first time--I am starting to notice distinct patterns in their practices.  This type of student pushes too hard, this one has trouble focusing, this one is just naturally graceful and has no idea, and so on and so on.  All of these archetypes of people and practices keep making themselves known.

And there is one student in particular who I've been thinking a lot about lately.  She comes religiously to my classes at the gym where I teach, and she's sweet and attentive and always in the front row, and well...I like her.  And I have watched her, over the last many weeks, take some definite steps forward in her practice.

But...she could be taking LEAPS.

Because, every time I go over to her during class, she's "in" the pose, and I think that she thinks she's fully in the pose, but if I even begin to encourage her to open more or extend more...it's like she has just MILES of room in her body that she's not even near filling.  I start to roll her shoulder back, and instead of the half-inch most people have to play with, she's got feet of openness to expand into!  This is not the case with all students.  Many people, even beginners, know how to play at their edge.  They know how to expand.  In fact, many of them (don't look at me) have the opposite problem--they OVER expand and OVER reach and need to learn to sort of shhhhhhhhhhh, soften.

But we're not talking about me--um, them.  We're talking about my lovely half-extended student to whom I find myself saying, over and over, "you have so much more space than you're giving yourself."

And each time I tell her this she smiles, her lovely shy little smile, and opens up into all this possibility she didn't know was there before (and then immediately goes back to kind of...uh...half-assing it.)

But this is the thing!  I don't think she IS half-assing it...she's obviously interested and invested and curious...she asks questions and comes to class without fail...so it's not that she's not invested, she just doesn't know what it feels like to expand.

And as I watch her and encourage her and sort of bite my fingernails secretly about how much further I feel she could go, I can't help but think about how often in my own life I do a version of this same thing--how I can just sort of stop, right at the point of comfort, and assume it's good enough.  Okay, yeah, I'm here.  Or, well, I'm here-ish.  I'm here-looking.  I seem like I'm here.  That will suffice, right? 


No, imaginary self, no it will not suffice!  I mean if I'm not expanding...if I'm not filling up my life with my FULL self, with all of my extremities and my open-heart and open-throat and closed eyes and energetic toes...then what?  Then I just stay. Exactly. Where. I. Am.

And that, honestly, is what I think is going on--maybe not with this particular student, but certainly with the pattern she is caught inside of in her practice, and that is: we assume we are still where we once were.  We assume that who we were in the past, how open or strong or revolved our body may have been in the past is STILL how open and strong and revolved it is today.  And we forget to expand.  We forget that maybe we already HAVE expanded--that maybe our boundaries, which are constantly growing and shifting, have moved a bit further out then we remember them to be--and that it is our job to continue to fill all of that delicious space.

In my own life, in this time when so many things are changing and expanding, when in certain moments I really just want the ride to slooooow down--in this crazy time, it gives me some small comfort to remember that expansion is natural.  To remember that not only is it natural, it's imperative.  Because if we're not keeping up with our own growing pulsating boundaries, then we're only half-way making the shape of the pose, the shape of our life...but not really living inside of it.

So, Shanti-towners, what I want to say to you is, as I make ready to re-fill my wine glass and hunt for something less horrifying to watch...you have so much more space then you're giving yourself.

(And I think you ought to go and fill it.)