Sun Salutes
WholePeople.com, June 1999
Im in a yoga class in San Francisco. Were stretching our arms out to the sides, exploring whether we can let the movement be carried by some deep inner energy rather than raw muscle power. I dont really get it, because of course Im using muscles. Then the instructor says, "It might help if you think of a person or a place somewhere youd like to reach out to." Instantly, my three-year old niece and nephew appear in my minds eye. My left hand reaches out to Lucy and my right to Henry, both two thousand miles away in Ohio. I smile with good wishes for these twins, and feel my arms grow just a little longer.
I breathe. I imagine aunt-ie love pouring from my heart through my shoulders and right out my fingertips, through the clean blue sky all the way to Ohio and into their warm and lively bodies. The ache in my deltoids disappears. I realize I could stand here in the hills of California for hours, reaching my arms out this way, because at last I have a good reason to. Thats when I finally get it its not a movement, a stretch, an exercise, its an offering. My heart wants to do what my brain has instructed my body to do. My thoughts and feelings and actions have been united, integrated, made whole. Intention matters, I realize with a start.
A week later, I walk into a different class. I hear a whisper that the group before us did 40 sun salutes in honor of B.K.S. Iyengars birthday. Inside I groan and wonder how Ill make it through. We begin. I hear, "Inhale arms up, exhale fold forward. Inhale look up, exhale, head down..." and know this will be the steady heartbeat of the next hour. In desperation I remember intention, and decide that if Im going to survive the morning, Id better find a way to engage myself.
I remember that surya namaskar is a prayer, an expression of life and of thanksgiving for the sun rising into the new day. My arms reach up and I glimpse the sky above me, through a window just over my head. Im surprised to hear a fragment of a childhood bible verse inside: "I lift up mine eyes into the hills
" I bow forward and remember surrender, devotion, thanks. I look up again in thanksgiving, and jump back in humility. This becomes my mantra, and in a funny way, it takes me right back to the beginning. Im not just doing the poses, Im feeling them, creating them, expressing them. I might as well be an ancient yogi waking thankfully to the sun after a long, dark night. My thoughts, my feelings, my actions have all become one. For the first time ever, perhaps, my sun salutes ring true.
Ive come to California to help pull together a video about yoga. Day after day, I bury myself in a tiny editing room, where I struggle to keep myself afloat in hour upon hour of footage. Throughout it all, one fragment of the video ricochets through my brain: "Why would you want to do that stretch anyway?" asks yoga teacher Angela Farmer. "Unless you desperately want to do it, dont do it. Unless the urge inside is so bursting to come out that you move out in that stretch, dont do it!" Shes speaking about where yoga came from, about how total the experience was for the original yogis. About how they completely immersed their whole being into the experience head, heart, breath, movement, feelings, thoughts, instincts, yearnings. Her point, I think, is that so many of us today practice yoga without letting vast realms of our inner world be touched or moved or engaged in the experience. That brings me right back to those ancient sun salutes, right back to my arms reaching all the way back to Ohio, right back to attention, to engagement, to heartfelt intention.
Why AM I doing this, I ask as I fall into a forward bend one morning. I ask the same question when I hop into dog pose, when I squirm into cobra, when I float off into movement that has no name. My first honest answer emerges from that raw, uncertain land of "I dont know." And then a whole lifetime of answers emerge -- to work out a kink in my left hip, to remember how to exhale, to undam the rivers of life inside, to tranquilize those chattering monkeys upstairs in my brain
Because Ive been told to practice more forward bends, because I love the challenge, because it helps me express something untapped inside, and because it just feels good. I find as many answers as there are poses.
As intrigued as I am by this unanswerable question of "why," my California experience points me toward its more pragmatic, earth-bound cousin: "How?" Ill probably never figure out why Ive been drawn to the world of yoga, why I climb onto my mat each morning, why Ive come here to help with this video, why Im here on this earth at all. But given that I AM here, given these are the cards Ive been dealt, how am I going to play the game? How am I going to live the life Ive been given? Not just why, but how?
And thats an easier question for me to answer. Whatever it is, whyever it is, I want my lifes how to be wholehearted. I want my awareness, my intelligence, my emotions to be clean and clear and total and true. And I want everything about me, everything inside me, to find expression, to shine, in everything I do -- whether its an essay or a video or even a few morning rounds of surya namaskar.
