Showing posts with label slow practice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label slow practice. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Grace in the Space...


"While individuals vary, the natural pace of human beings is slow. In an atmosphere of slowness, kindness and thoughtfulness flourish....Hurry (pressure) makes one slightly insane.... You cannot be violent to yourself (rush) and expect your [practice] ultimately to meet your standards. Being slow is a teacher." 
- Gail Sher
  Writing the Fire

I inherited my father's hyper-punctuality.  I spent countless hours as a child, entertaining myself in movie theatre arcades, waiting for movies to begin to which we had arrived forty-five minutes early.  If there weren't any video games in the vicinity for my brother and I to while away the time (and often there wasn't) it would mean three quarters of an hour watching corn kernels spin in the popcorn popper.

I apologize, in advance, to my own future children, as I'm sure they are destined for a similar fate...

I can't bear to be late.  Being late makes me feel like the earth is spinning in the wrong direction.  When I first moved to New York, I would give myself an hour to get anywhere.  Sometimes more.  I have, more often than I would like to recount, been the first one at a rehearsal, at a party, at an audition, at a class--for gods sake--even classes I didn't like.  I have, even as an adult--unfettered by parental time tables--found myself much too early for a movie and (sadly) too old for the arcade.  Pop, pop, pop goes the popcorn popper.

But, it's not the punctuality that I've come to find troubling...it's the hurry.  E.g., to be added to the above list: first one finished with her test, first one done eating, first one across the street, first one to the end of the book, first one to the end of the sentence, first one with her hand raised, first one to know what to say to you in this troubling situation, first one to the silverware drawer, first one in bed, first one out of bed, first one to the passenger seat, first one to finish her to do list, first one to start thinking thinking thinking upon waking waking waking, first one with the bright idea, first one with the funny, first one to the end of the inhale, first one to the end of the exhale, first one to the end of this paragraph...

(you get the idea.)

I checked out a book from the library the other day on yoga and anxiety (it's for research, okay, Mr. Librarian...it's for research), and I was reading a chapter all about the symptoms of anxiety and the traits of an anxious person, going along at my usual break-neck pace (I've always been a very fast little reader, able to take in entire chunks of text at a time), and as I sped to the end of the paragraph, I read the following:  "Did you hurry to the end of this sentence? Go back, and read it again.  Slowly."

Yikes.  You mean, this whole time I thought I was just a super special smarty-pants speed-reader, and you're telling me that I might just be...rushing? Anxiously?

(I can literally HEAR my husband smirking as he reads this.)

There are three things in my life that make me slow down:  my husband, my writing, and my yoga practice.   My husband, because just the feeling of his arms around me or hands on me or voice in the room actually changes my physiological make-up, I'm sure of it. It's happened ever since we first met...I can remember the way his voice on my voicemail, even at the very beginning, made me feel like I could just...breathe...easier.  Writing does it because, well, writing just does that to me--quiets me.  Similar to husband's arms around me as calming influence (though not nearly as sexy) is the feeling of my fingers on the keyboard.  It changes my chemical makeup.

And then there's the yoga...oh, the yoga.

My body seemed to know, when I began to practice seriously, that there was an untapped wellspring of grace somewhere in that clutzy form of mine.  And one day, it just let it out.  I remember being in a class, and moving between two poses and feeling, suddenly, that my body was no longer made of body...but of silk. Or water. Or thick smoke.  I remember feeling like I could move, not just the grosser elements--the big limbs and muscles--but everything in my body, all the way down to the ends of my hair.  I could move from my cells.  I could move from my skin.  And I felt the way that pose could slip into pose into pose into pose...and, oh my, oh my.

This, you have to understand, born from a girl used to feeling more scrappy than serpentine, more used to the sound of her body accidentally running into things than the sound of breath moving through it...the feeling of grace, I'm trying to say, was not one I was used to.

I remember thinking, "well geez, body, if this is was what you were made to do...why didn't you tell me sooner?"

And as I practiced more and I more, I realized that in order to feel all of this juicy stuff...in order to really move from my toe-tips to my hair-tips...I had to slow down. I had to allow some time.  Things don't melt all in a flash...it takes a slow steady application of heat, (if you don't want to end up with just a bubbling pot of burnt).  It's this way with food, and it's this way with muscles, and it's this way with pesky and particular thoughts.  There has to be room and time for things to transform.

But, until very recently, this slow-ness has been confined to the space of my mat...it has been my sole refuge of slowness.  Until recently.  When, for whatever reason, it has finally become apparent to me that if I want larger change in my larger life, I have to take what I am learning and make it...larger.  I have to begin to stretch out my little yoga-bliss-sweater so it covers the whole of my life. Which means, consciously bringing tools out of the classroom and into my living room/bedroom/kitchen/waking life.  Which, in this case, means slowing down.

Walking a little slower.  Talking a little slower.  Doing less all at once.  Breathing. More. Thinking. Less.

Inhale.

Exhale.

Our natural pace is slow.  When we are relaxed, when we are calm, when we are happy, things move slowly.  Our breath. Our thoughts.  Even the changes in the room around us.  Haven't you noticed--when you feel turned on or connected to your life, you suddenly have time to notice the way the breeze moves the curtains just so?  To notice the sounds of a chain cling-clanging against a far away fence somewhere? To notice the way the little hairs on your arms wiggle?  To notice the color of the sky outside the window?  Has, in those moments, has the speed of the world changed...or have you?

If you have some time today (heh heh)...try it.  Take something slow. Anything--a walk down your block, the next forkful of food you bring to your mouth, the speed at which you are reading to the...end....of...this...sentence.

Try it out.  See what happens.

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Slow, Slowly and Sloooooooower


Substitute teacher this morning, the lovely Allison Linamen, whom I have taken from before and, whoo boy is she lovely. She's a dancer turned yogi (my favorite! They're always just so lean and long and lovely to look at), and she is an alignment nerd (which I am quickly becoming myself), so I was happy to see her.

She had apparently taken a Feldenkrais-y workshop yesterday and was all revved up about the four hours they had spent lying on the floor performing barely visible adjustments. ("Don't worry," she said, "that's not what we're doing!"). Feldenkrais for those of you who don't know is...um...something. That. Dancers doooo. It's like a...um...movement. A, um...mind/body...sensory sort of...pilates-esque...um.

No, seriously, I have no idea.

It has something to do with movement. Efficient movement, maybe? I don't know.

Here's a quote from the Feldenkrais website:
The Feldenkrais Method is for anyone who wants to reconnect with their natural abilities to move, think and feel. Whether you want to be more comfortable sitting at your computer, playing with your children and grandchildren, or performing a favorite pastime, these gentle lessons can improve your overall well being.

Learning to move with less effort makes daily life easier. Because the Feldenkrais Method focuses on the relationship between movement and thought, increased mental awareness and creativity accompany physical improvements. Everyone, from athletes and artists to administrators and attorneys, can benefit from the Feldenkrais Method.
Okay, got it now?

Anyhoo...we were NOT going to lay on the floor for hours, but lovely Allison did inform us that we would be moving slowly and with a lot of attention. I was both excited and frustrated by this prospect.  Well, no...I was mostly excited. It would mean geeking out on the subtler alignment and hopefully it would help me to stay centered and "on the dot". Which I needed. Badly.

The last class I went to, on Friday, was a total disaster--and that was no one's fault other than M-I-N-E, mine. Have you EVER heard me call a class "a disaster"?! Well, it was. Or at least...it felt that way on the inside.  I haven't been in a class and been that preoccupied in...I don't know how long...but my mind was acting like a crazed hyena, and for the life of me, no matter how many times I told myself to settle or calm down or soften, I could not get it under control.  I nearly wrote an email to Gina (friday's teach) after class, apologizing to her for my being in the front row and being just totally and utterly distracted. But I didn't because, really...my problem, not hers.  So, I was determined this morning to stay engaged in my body and the work of it, even if it meant bringing myself back a hundred million times over the course of an hour and a half.

It's amazing how difficult it can be to just STAY focused, especially when the mood is a little, ehm...fragile. Over and over throughout class, I would feel myself deeply IN the pose and then suddenly I would catch my mind running off, making sure the fire was still lit under my big pot of worry (thank you, monkey mind, for that) and I would have to yank on it's little chain: Stay Here. That was my mantra: STAY. HERE.

STAY.

HERE.

Sta---no! Staaaaaaay heeeeeeere.

And the slow pace of the class ended up being a total blessing--I could watch my feet as they settled, toe by toe, into the mat, and I could send all of my attention to the C-curve of my ribs or the extension of all the musculature from toe tip to fingertip--it gave me time to run away and return, run away and return and then finally just...return. And return. And return.

And as it happens, every time...every time I am with myself and practicing, at some point during the class there is a very quiet ping! of my heart breaking open just a little bit more and I am FILLED with gratitude. Thank you. Thank you for this practice.

Thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you...