Shunya Mudra for Clarity
When we bring clarity to an issue, we see what is happening, correctly assess the situation, and consciously choose to take action.How do we get clear on what’s happening in America today? Our country’s lofty values of equality, democracy, and opportunity for all live side-by-side with a pre-existing condition we’ve suffered from for centuries – systemic racism, and prejudice, the main causes of social, legal, and economic injustice. Some symptoms are: the decimation of indigenous peoples, enslavement of Africans and legal segregation through Jim Crow laws, internment of Japanese American citizens during World War II, and the separation and internment of South American migrant children from their families at the southern border. The latest horror of police abuse, the public killing of George Floyd, an unarmed African American man, that we witnessed in real time on our digital devices is one more symptom of this country’s dis-ease that needs to be healed.As yoga teachers and therapists, we seek to heal our students and clients using the eight limbs of yoga to help them find clarity, contentment, and resilience. We can use that knowledge to help our country heal. Let’s start with vidya, clear seeing.
Vidya is the opposite of avidya, clouded perception. Avidya results from an inability to see the larger picture of our lives, our world, and how we move through them personally, professionally, socially, and culturally. Here is what happens when clouded perceptions influence our thinking and behavior:
- If our perception of a situation is wrong, wrong action likely follows.
- If our perception is correct but we doubt ourselves, we may take no action or wrong action.
- Slavery existed in this country from 1619 to 1865
- Legal segregation followed from 1865 – 1964
- The Civil Rights Act banning discrimination on the basis of race was passed in 1964
- VOTE in November. The yoga community is doing its part to help. Find out more here.
- Do your research. You can donate to relevant organizations, join grassroots efforts, or volunteer withprograms that offer direct help
- To increase mental clarity and openness to transformation, Joseph LePage’s book Mudras for Healing and Transformation recommendsShunya mudra
- Find a comfortable seat.
- Bend the middle fingers down to touch the mounds at the base of the thumbs.=
- Use the thumbs to hold the middle fingers in place.
- Rest the backs of the hands onto the knees or thighs.
- Relax the shoulders back and down, with the spine comfortably aligned.
- Hold for two – five minutes, or longer if comfortable.
Elizabeth (Beth) Gibbs, MA, C-IAYT, is a certified yoga therapist through the International Association of Yoga Therapists and is a guest faculty member of the Kripalu School of Integrative Yoga Therapy. Her masters’ degree in Yoga Therapy and Mind/Body Health is from Lesley University in Cambridge, MA. She is the author of Ogi Bogi, The Elephant Yogi, a therapeutic yoga book for children. For more information please visit her website at: bethgibbs.com.This post originally appeared, under a different title, on the Accessible Yoga blog.