Archive for July, 2007

Eka Pada Rajakapotasana (one legged king pigeon)

Eka Pada Rajakapotasana (one legged king pigeon)
Eka Pada Rajakapotasana (one legged king pigeon or the mermaid pose)

I became comfortable with this variation of E.P.R before I explored E.P.R. II (photo below). There was a point in time when I’d look at photos of other practitioners in these two asanas and thought to myself “I’ll never be able to do that” and for a while, no surprise, I couldn’t. It wasn’t until I learned one of the most valuable lessons I’ve ever learned from Rodney Yee:

“Don’t Know. Just be Open.”

And so each time I climbed onto my yoga mat during my personal practice, I would explore One Legged King Pigeon, without forcing myself into it. I worked on opening my psoas muscle, releasing and broadening my lower back, and opening my shoulders. I had no expectations and did not impose an external will or listen to the voice that said “I should” be able to do this. Instead I explored, micro-moved, became the witness, as Iyengar says, a self correcting mechanism. The exhilaration that comes from “falling” into these asanas is a natural high. The feeling is one of tremendous release as if some rigid part of you finally lets go and you pass through a door that opens and you find yourslef in this new place both physically, mentally and spiritually. You can not “muscle” your way into asanas. As my mentour Marie Fourcaut said, “When you force the body it rebels.” The first time I touched my toes behind my head it was only because my heart, for a brief moment, was completlety open and I felt as though I might fly.
Eka Pada Rajakapotasana II (one legged King pigeon variation)

I don’t always move into this with ease and that’s okay. Again with each practice, no expectations, no external forceful will. This is a way of incorporating one of the Yamas or ethical practices, Non-Harming, into your asana practice. Be gentle with yourselves. Amazing transformations can take place.

Sirsasana (headstand)

Sirsasana (headstand)

This is another one of those asnanas I thought I’d never be able to do. So making the mental shift from knowing that I couldn’t, to “not knowing” was crucial if I wanted to move toward this posture.

Sirsasana (headstand)

Everything in yoga happens in increments. In many ways it is a practice of extreme faith. Sometimes the work we do, the transformations that take place are so subtle that if you are only goal oriented you will bump into a lot of ego driven frustration. The fact is that any change does move through pain, fear and frustration. Yoga is a process. And no yoga asana is ever complete. Every time I visit headstand the experience is fresh, new and without expectation. Most of my weight is balanced evenly along the length of the forearms. At any point in time I can lift the crown of the head lightly away from the floor, this ensuring the cervical spine is not compromised. Shoulder girdle is supporting the weight of the body. My energy is moving up and out of my legs. A lot of inner thigh work, internally rotating, hugging the midline of the body. The gaze or drishti is soft and straight down the center line of the mat. I am breathing, ujjayi breath, comfortably.

Headstand did not happen overnight for me. It took many hours of practice, I moved through fear and learned to trust my bodie’s wisdom and resources in order to turn my world upside down.