What
does it mean to be mindful? I'm sure we could all describe it in a
different way. Some might say focused, conscious, alert, aware. How
would you describe mindful? I believe that being mindful is the goal of
yoga, it's what we practice, and all the other stuff like peacefulness,
health, clarity, wellness, those are all byproducts of mindfulness.
Once
we become practiced at mindfulness, we'll find ourselves applying it to
all the other things we do in life: work, our relationships, how we
spend our free time, even how we do those things we don't love doing
like taking out the trash. And let's not mistake being mindful for
perfect or blissed-out or even happy. It's just mindful. To have an
emotion, for example, and to be perfectly mindful, is to allow yourself
the capacity to be completely aware of it, completely involved. And that
goes for anything. To really appreciate time with our kids, practicing
yoga, the enjoyment of a meal, or enjoying whatever we like to do, we
need to be mindful, lest that fun or those flavors pass by unnoticed.
But
maybe because of this mindfulness, we'll have experiences and see that
what we are isn't defined by them, that what we truly are is bigger than
that emotion, that time with our kids, or that yoga posture. And it's
by being mindful we can actually use the experience of an emotion or
yoga pose or whatever to witness our true identity, which is mindfulness
itself. The emotion or whatever is simply the brushstroke on the canvas
of mindfulness. Don't mistake the brushstroke as the painting. If it
weren't for the canvas, there could be no brushstroke.
So
as we are in yoga practice this week, let's practice understanding our
True Nature by practicing mindfulness. I also invite you to practice
being mindful as you leave your house to go about your day or drive to
work. Notice everything: the feeling of the steering wheel (or
handlebars), the feeling of the road beneath you, the flow of traffic,
the song on the radio.
See you in class.
Scott
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