Yoga for staying calm
WellBeing
|Issue 203
Learning to stay present during life's inevitable storms can lead to invaluable lessons of acceptance and growth.
“Welcome the present moment as if you had invited it. It is all we ever have so we might as well work with it rather than struggling against it. We might as well make it our friend and teacher rather than our enemy.”
~ Pema Chodron
If there’s anything we have learned from the past few years, it’s that life is going to continue to provide us with challenges. Just when we think the storm has passed and we are ready to sail in optimal conditions, the weather seems to turn and keep us on our toes. The relentlessness of the continually changing weather and stormy skies can be overwhelming and exhausting. It’s understandable why we begin to check out, close our eyes and just want to wake up when it’s all over. This approach can offer us short-term peace by escaping the discomfort of what is. However, in the longer run, there are benefits in staying completely present in the storm as we learn acceptance and embrace the opportunity to grow from every experience.
The power of atha
The first word of Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras is atha” or now. It is an auspicious word, with some teachers suggesting that if you really understood what atha means, you would understand everything and reach a state of yoga or liberation. Practising mindfulness, which Jon Kabat Zinn defines as paying attention, on purpose, in the present moment, non-judgementally”, is the key to staying in the now”, no matter what is going on. The non-judgement part can be particularly tricky to practise. Seeing our experiences as they are, without putting any kind of lens on them, framing them as good or bad, allows us to foster more acceptance in our lives.
The power of acceptance
“Accept, then act. Whatever the present moment contains, accept it as if you had chosen it. Always work with it, not against it.”
~Eckhart Tolle
This story is from the Issue 203 edition of WellBeing.
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