Libby Cox · Yoga & Philosophy
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I wish I could puke like you.

3/2/2011

3 Comments

 
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http://www.elfwood.com/~aaronstaengl
A while ago, I taught a workshop inspired by Douglas Brooks’ talk on the Triadic Heart of the Goddess: Kali, Saraswati and Lakśmi. Like a good Tantrika, I proceeded to describe how these goddesses manifest as us, and that when we take on their characteristics, we see them come to light in our actions. One of the attributes of Kali, as I understand it, is her amazing ability (in some depictions of her) a. to gross us out, and b. to vomit and regurgitate.

Have you ever come home from a life-changing movie/lecture/class/training and said to your roommate/lover/friend, “I’ve just got to share this with you! I had the most amazing experience and I can’t keep it inside”? Sometimes life, yoga, this stuff is too big  for us to keep inside (like Kali the big Black Hole attracting everything in her direction.) We have to share it, to teach it, to learn and re-learn it. We have to puke it back up, partially digested, and take a good look at what we’ve made of it so far.

At the end of a 2 ½ hour lecture and asana class, hoping to integrate these stories and information into my students’ bodies, one of my students came up to me and said, “I wish I could puke like you do.”

My response, respectfully, ir/reverently, was “It takes practice.” I think this image applies to the learning process and the process of sharing one’s insights from practicing yoga. As a student of yoga, I am constantly in a process of digesting the information that my yoga gives me. When I teach, all I have to offer is this—partially digested, regurgitated insight. I wouldn’t have it any other way. I’m still, always, in a process of learning. This process is scary!

Sometimes I wish I just knew the "right" answer, that I could simply offer something to students with a definitive sense of authority. Yet so often, yoga doesn't provide answers. As Judith Lasater says, "Asanas aren't answers; they're questions." We have to get out of our heads and into our bodies and hearts. (Hence all the severed heads.) That deep exploration, that undefined process is scary just like Kali is scary. She’s the darkness. She’s the blackness of the unknown. She represents Death. But, you see, when we’re dead, that’s it for corporeal learning. But Kali also represents rebirth and a mother's love for the birth of humanity. So, can we invite ourselves in our humanity into the unknown and see it as a gift, as a learning process; as a process? I am a student of partially digested process.

3 Comments
Charlie Hollis link
3/2/2011 03:01:05 am

Libby,

Sometimes a thoughtful answer is the right answer. You can help start someone in a direction that they wouldn't have gone in otherwise. You make a comment with the intention of informing. What the individual does with that information is then part of their journey I suppose.

For me, I have a sense of suspicion when someone states something "authoritatively." It makes me wonder,"Well, how do *they* know?"

Here's to puking, and all of the messes it may create, and those that it may solve!

Charlie

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Kasey link
3/2/2011 11:24:37 pm

Wow, Lib, this is a wonderful way to describe the process of learning and sharing. Very visceral, but that's how it really is, I think, when we really let go and let it happen in the messy way of life. Sharing like that is messy and scary, but exhilarating, too. I like of us recovering perfectionists and control freaks, and then I think of the process of birth ... or sex ... or death ... the big, beautiful, unbudging truths and experiences of being human, and they are so messy! All kinds of body fluids and embarrassing noises and vulnerability and loss of control. Thanks for sharing YOUR perspective on this. You're a good writer and teacher!

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Libby
3/4/2011 10:24:04 pm

I love that the two of you both wrote about how messy life and learning can be. It's so true. I've noticed recently that students respond much more readily when I "confess" something so human that I've done, usually relating to my fieriness--like laying on the horn in traffic when someone's just cut me off, and doing so 15 minutes before I'm about to teach a yoga class. For me, the yoga teachers from whom I have learned the most are the ones who remember they're human and vulnerable and recount these stories to their students (Judith Lasater, Seane Corn, to name a couple.) I think we often say something like "I'm only human;" instead we might say, "I'm fully human." More affirming.

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    Libby Cox

    Yoga you can bring home.

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