living my yoga: pratyahara

i had forgotten about that bulb i'd received at christmas.  the instructions said after planting, i should tuck away someplace cold and dark for a month - bringing it into the light after  its month long hibernation.

in my house, we have an old-style pantry, built right into the wall.  (i think, back in the day - it was meant to be a liquor cabinet.  however we use it to store just about everything from tools to extra boxes of cereal to bulbs that need darkness!)

so there i was, rummaging to find an extra box of weetabix for my morning ritual ... and there i found my bulb.  only it wasn't just a bulb anymore.  it had sprouted a stem about 8 inches long.  

how did this happen in such a cold, dark place?

pratyahara is the fifth stage of ashtanga yoga and offers us the opportunity to turn inward.  to quiet all our senses that we not be disturbed by sight nor sound.  and in detaching from the sensory world,  we find a spiritual energy.  

a blossoming, one might say.

i asked my class last night how many had allowed the snow and the cold to break their normal routines. how many had even been kept from their yoga mat and hunkered down at home.

the hands sheepishly raised.  

its okay, though.  that's what was to be.  there are times we need to withdraw - and should not be so hard on ourselves for answering that call.  we must remember, those times we sit still in darkness ... those times we tuck ourselves away from the outside world ... those times we allow ourselves just to "be" ... we are simply granting our very essence a chance to renew.

our minds fool us and taunt us for being stagnant.  but it is our minds that are the fools.

powerful growth occurs beneath the surface.  a deep energy is cultivated and then begins to grow upward.  so when you emerge, you are strongly rooted and ready to blossom upward ... toward the light.

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Comments

  • 2/27/2010 10:12 AM melita wrote:
    i love it that you said that it's ok to let everything go and hunker down. i think that all of this snow is mother nature's way of telling us we all need to slow down (and not feel guilty about it - which is the hard part). enjoy your snowy weekend. hugs!!
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  • 2/27/2010 10:25 AM Rebecca P. Cohen wrote:
    I just checked on my bulb Peg - it looks very similar, and yes, I forgot about it too! At this time of year, I love looking closely at trees and shrubs and their buds. All this time, in the cold, they have been getting ready to blossom.
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  • 3/1/2010 6:08 PM Bob Weisenberg wrote:
    Hi, Peg.

    Good analogy. I would say that's one of the great lessons of Yoga--that inactivity does not equal stagnation.

    Erich Schiffman thought this was so important he made it the main theme of his book, expounding on it in depth on page after eloquent page, and even incorporating it into the title:

    Yoga--The Spirit and Practice of Moving into Stillness
    http://www.movingintostillness.com/teachings.html

    Thanks for your thoughts.

    Bob Weisenberg
    http://YogaDemystified.com
    Reply to this
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