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The Greatest Yoga Lesson of Them All

By Ninazolotow @Yoga4HealthyAge

The Greatest Yoga Lesson of Them All

The Four Seasons, Winter
by Paul Cezanne

by Nina

“The discriminating person knows that suffering is inherent in change, in the anxiety over change, and in the subliminal impressions left by this anxiety. The past and present are intertwined, and even pleasant experiences are tinged with pain. Suffering that is yet to come can be avoided, however, by relinquishing attachment to any desired outcome in the future, since such outcomes are illusory. —Barbara Stoler Miller, from Yoga: Discipline of FreedomThe other day an older friend of mine told me that after three years of being on the market, her house finally sold. Even though this was a great relief—she needed to money from the house to live on during her retirement—she now had a dilemma. Her original plan had been to live in a small apartment in New York City. But even though New York had recently partly reopened after the long shutdown, it was still hard for an older person like her to live there alone, because so much of the time she would stuck inside, especially during the hot, muggy summer and the icy winter. So, she was thinking about maybe moving to LA, where the weather was better and she could get a slightly larger apartment, one with a small patio or deck that would give her a safe space for being outside. But deciding was impossible right now while everything was still up in the air. How long will it take for New York—and the rest of the world—to return to normal? She sounded philosophical about it. “I really wish I could resolve this now,” she said, “but what can you do?”I realized afterward that—one way or another—we are all experiencing the same dilemma right now. We’ve all had to scrap our plans and now can only wait to see how things play out. When will the pandemic end? And what will the world be like when it does?Although I hear some people talking about various “silver linings” of this pandemic, that’s not a phrase I like to use. From my point of view, there is nothing good about what’s been happening these days: people are dying or suffering from long-term physical damage, people are losing their jobs and their homes, and some are even going hungry, and people are feeling scared, anxious, and angry. However, I do see a huge opportunity here, an opportunity to take to heart one of the most important lessons of yoga.One of the basic principles of yoga is that change and uncertainty are intrinsic aspects of life. The material world (prakrti), which includes your body-mind as well as other beings and external objects, is by its nature ever changing. As T.K.V. Desikachar says:“Although in yoga everything we see and experience is true and real, all form and all content are in a constant state of flux. This concept of continual change is known as parinamavada.” —from The Heart of YogaThe pandemic is teaching us this lesson. Although some are in denial and just want to act as if everything is still the same as it used to be, most of us realize that, like it or not, the world and our lives have been forever altered by this pandemic. It’s not easy, of course. In yoga sutra 2.15, Patanjali identifies change as one of the main causes of suffering:“All life is suffering for a man of discrimination, because of the sufferings inherent in change and its corrupting subliminal impressions, and because of the way qualities of material nature turn against each other.” —translated by Barbara Stoler MillerAccepting this truth that the material world is impermanent is the first step to finding equanimity. Refusing to accept this truth, or “engaging in a fight against reality” as my friend Scott Lauze says, only increases our suffering because we will always be angry, frustrated, or depressed that things aren’t the same as they once were and that the future is uncertain.From this basic acceptance, yoga offers us the possibility of liberation from the suffering associated with the ever-changing material world. How you can achieve this depends on the particular yoga path that you choose to follow. But even if you decide not to go further than this, just accepting impermanence can allow you to navigate with greater ease through the challenges of difficult times.

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By Ryan Hazel
posted on 30 July at 07:56

Yoga is the best way to keep yourself fit