In our last exercise, we looked at the skin on a somewhat superficial level. This month, we’re diving in deeper…

HealiungMovement

In the first article on skin, we talked about how vitally important the skin is to helping us to interact with, perceive and orient ourselves with our environment and others. We saw how the skin registers information and how touch can be perceived qualitatively based on previous experience, which for each of us is unique. At the end of the article I offered a small exercise to help you bring more awareness to your skin and its connection to your mind and emotions.

In this first activity I asked you to think back to an adjustment you received in a yoga class and to think about how your body and mind registered that adjustment. In order to cultivate this further, I suggested that you try doing this over the course of a month and to journal your thoughts at the end of your practice.

Now that we have a basis with which to start from, I would like to invite you to mindfully take on a new role with regard to your skin.

Shifting from Subject to Object of Observation

In last month’s exercise we practiced sensing and observing our reactions to external touch and compared it with verbal contact. In this month’s exercise you will be the object of observation – this time on both the giving and receiving ends. I have chosen an exercise to invite you to sense your own orientation in space, otherwise known as proprioception, and to experiment with self-adjustment in a yoga posture.

This exercise comes from my mentor Chris Hoskins, one of the main teacher trainers at Piedmont Yoga and owner of Studio 6 in Oakland California. We spoke about this article and after asking him if I could share his Passive Tadasana/ Standing Savasana exercise, he gave me his approval. Over the months that I was his mentee I practiced Passive Tadasana at the start of my normal daily practice.

 

Note: I am always very eager to move and have never really wanted to take the time to observe my body in neutral. I really hated this practice, which was part of our ritual each time we began an asana practice with Chris, be it in teacher training, at his studio or during private sessions. I felt wobbly like a palm tree, I had the sense that my feet were falling asleep and I was irritated that I had to stand there for sometimes 10 minutes or more. At some point after about 3 months of consequent and disciplined practice, I started to realize that what I was feeling was possibly muscular imbalances on either sides of the body. I started to feel how my bones wanted to line up but that there was also some kind of muscular tension pulling them out of alignment. Sometimes I would break a sweat simply trying to isometrically draw my right foot inward and back to set my femur parallel relative to the left one. This over time helped me to really feel my body in space, to sense my structure and to know what I was doing by feeling and not looking in asana practice, because I studied my structure and worked through those imbalances with more awareness and mindfulness. First, I did so with sprinter, then I moved on to seated poses and was able to find more and more stability in my passive Tadasana.

Here are some words of wisdom from Chris about the skin in our practice:

“I think that it is very important to realize that the skin is our largest organ, and that exposing as much of it as possible during asana practice greatly heightens one’s sensitivity, and facilitates being absolutely present. Mindfulness activities using the skin prepare us for the journey from the gross to the subtle, and in many ways it’s a metaphor for just that. In the end bringing yourself to the finer aspects of yoga is what the asana practice is all about. The skin and one’s quality of awareness of it are very important components of a truly embodied practice.”

Exercise for February: Proprioception Awareness through Standing Savasana

Note: As this exercise is tough to self-gauge you may want to take a short video of it to look at afterwards.

Step off of your mat if it’s rolled out, take your gaze directly before you and take a walk around the room. Resist the urge to look at your feet! Stop somewhere in the room and come to a variation of Samasthiti where you bring the big toes so close together that they almost touch, heels two fingers apart without letting the big toes or knees touch. Lift the toes and spread them out wide, then relax them downward. Close your eyes, keeping an active forward gaze from behind your eyelids. Wait and breathe. Feel where you are in space and feel if your feet are aligned. Take a few more breaths, then open your eyes take a look at your feet and adjust as needed.

Close your eyes again. Scruff the heels inwards, then outwards. Feel the talon of the heel and sense the stacking of bone on bone as you line up your structure to bear the weight of your body with lightness, using as little muscle activation as is needed to remain upright. Let your body take the breaths it needs. Use as little effort as possible to keep yourself tall. How do you feel? Stable and unwavering like a sequoia or wobbly like a willow… or something else? What thoughts are churning, how do those thoughts affect the way you are feeling in this posture?

Stay there for about 5 minutes, then take a rest and either have a look at your video or journal your experience.

My final words of advice are to stick with it, enjoy and try to practice this with vairagya. By that I mean, take it as seriously as the most challenging pose you are working on and work through the good, bad and neutral with consistency. Who knows, perhaps the key to what challenges you in that beloved pose could be hidden in your Passive Tadasana.

I hope you enjoy practicing this exercise over the course of the next month!

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