The Power of Yin Yoga

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As I sit among the 100 others and hum
my oms
after what feels like a bone-stretching Yin
workshop, I contemplate its power.
After a
There is a balance between the Yin and the Yang, activity and stillness.
After a Yin practice, though, my body feels
weak
I move out of the poses with the slowness of an 80-year old, and cannot help but moan.
Breathe towards the legs, ground your energy, speaks the teacher—and I feel so vulnerable.
The Not-so-Quiet Yin
Did you ever think of Yin yoga as relaxed, slow and easy?
Think
There is nothing easy in the stillness of the body—at least for me, it is quite the contrary. This may be because when we practice Yin yoga, the body is still so the mind has space to roam.
My
As my teacher said,
We need to learn to ground this energy, to send it down, push it to the center to find balance.
Staying in
We have so much yang, and we need it—to get
But when we waste this energy, we tend to consume more than we restore.
The Emotional Side of Yin
Emotions seem to be the word of the day for me. Time and time again I enter my limits, and slowly exceed them. I open my body to degrees it has never been opened to before, and I become soft like the water. Or, at least I try to. Soft like the water, solid like a tree; rooted in my intentions, unaffected by the external circumstances. Promising myself to be there, to catch myself, to see myself through. Solid like the earth, but open within for new things to grow.
I try to be the reservoir of energy, the container, as we are told.
When I return from my edges, slowly, all I want to do is run home
and hide from the world, lick my wounds. I don’t know what those
wounds are, I don’t know in which box to place my emotions, all I
know is
I want to cry, because it feels like I have just undergone something worth crying about. Release from stress maybe, or more likely a safe return from places unknown and new.
Like a baby crying over new experiences, I go back to the beginning and cry, too.
So Why Do We Do It?
With yang style yoga we get to add on more layers, layers of strength, layers of muscles, layers to move us forward and upward.
In Yin, maybe these layers are being removed. We go back to the beginning of times, we try to get deeper into the tissues that have long been forgotten and start to nurture ourselves from there.
This requires openness and willingness to sit still in whatever may come.
I am not very good at being open or vulnerable. I’ve learned to take on the role of strength and independence in life, the motto was to plow through and not managing was never an option. I forgot how to be soft, how to hold myself open.
Yet this exactly is my fascination with Yin.
In its essence, yin cultivates the greatest of
strengths:
A kind assistant comes around to sooth me every once in a while, to move me further or adjust my feet, but I know it will not help.
This is my journey, and I’m left to fend for myself.
Searching for Freedom
In yoga we are ultimately looking for freedom—freedom of movement, maximum range of motion, freedom from identification with our thoughts. Our teacher tells us how we must first understand freedom with the body, since freedom does not only belong to the mind.
In fact, there is no separation in movement and stillness, they exist in each other.
Whether we try to meditate in stillness, or move to quiet the mind, it’s our task to understand this union of yin and yang, thereby finding our center.
I arrive again and again in search of my freedom. I stretch beyond my yesterday’s limits in search of my roots. And I cry, as I inch my way closer to my center.
Author:
Apprentice Editor: Alicia Wozniak /
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