Monday, August 29, 2016

Off The Mat Musings: Discomfort

Leaning into discomfort with mindful movement and mindful breath. On the mat moment captured by Mothwing Photography .

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“Lean into the awkwardness with forgiveness,” she writes. “Discomfort comes with new growth.”

My friend’s words of wisdom provide a sense of comfort within this intensely uncomfortable period of my life and invite me to shift my perspective on discomfort.

Leaning into discomfort is new terrain. Typically, I react to discomfort by fleeing from the awkwardness. I reroute in the hopes of bypassing experiencing the layers of uncomfortable emotion and lessons dwelling within the discomfort. I redirect through distractions and busyness: I respond to all my emails, delete old photos from my phone, clean my room, turn up the music, listen TED Talks…all of which is externally productive and counterproductive to my own personal growth.

The discomfort arising in my professional, personal and spiritual life calls for my full attention. The invitation is to step into the feeling, to listen to the lessons, to be present in the change. And the invitation to be present in discomfort emerges every time I step on the yoga mat – to teach and to practice:

The discomfort of practicing a challenging pose.

The discomfort of connecting and focusing completely on the breath when my thoughts are whirling and jumping for my attention.

The discomfort of being still and greeting whatever is present with me in that moment with no judgment.

Rewriting my response to discomfort begins with carrying lessons learned from mat to everyday life. Practicing presence in uncomfortable experiences is an integral part of the yoga practice.

In yoga classes, teachers often refer to finding “an edge” in the pose. The “edge” exists on the border between challenge and comfort. The discomfort signals a gradual change in the pose – a muscle illuminated and awakened through a stretch and a strengthening. Mindfully moving into poses allows us to discern sensation – if there’s pain, release and modify.

If there’s discomfort, meaning sensation could be intense and the breath is still accessible and full, then recommit to the breath, slow and steady, and settle into the pose. The deepening of the pose happens gradually; forcing and pushing results in injury, so compassionate acceptance for where we are in that particular journey for that pose frees us from any mental resistance and invites us to be deeply present. Always know that the moment there is pain, and the breath is no longer fully accessible, this is the moment to leave.

For me, there can be discomfort in leaving. On the mat, I feel more at ease leaving a pose if it’s not aligning to serving my current needs, but off the mat, the discomfort I’m currently experiencing is the discomfort of leaving behind old patterns and stretching into new ways of perceiving, living, being.

I feel discomfort advocating for myself, and know that fiercely committing to be my own advocate is absolutely vital for my own emotional health. I’ve been conditioned to put others’ needs beyond my own, to ensure other people feel comfort and ease at the expense of my own well-being, to over-assume responsibility and as a result become a target for other people’s discharged discomfort. I feel uncomfortable establishing and adhering to those boundaries, but the discomfort is minor to the pain I felt in the past of being overly burdened by the demands and needs of others, and being targeted as a scapegoat for things out of my control.

I feel discomfort in the fear that people may not like me because of these boundaries set as acts of self-love. The discomfort signals my people-pleasing tendency and that I’m actively, tentatively moving out of this conditioned behavior.

I feel awkward stretching out of my comfort zone professionally and personally, and know that in order to gain experience, I need to identify the edge, reach out from there, and be openhearted to what unfolds.

Leaning into discomfort, I realize that the appearance of discomfort is not a sign of inadequacy, but an awakening to a change illuminating the grander possibility for expansion, personal growth, evolution. 

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Leaning Into Discomfort - A Playlist to Provide Comfort in the Discomfort:

*Green Mountain State – Trevor Hall

*Show Me Love – Hundred Waters, Skrillex Remix 

*Pain Told Love – Tribe Society

*Water – Ra Ra Riot

*Outer Space – G, Genevieve

*From Eden – Hozier

*Selah – Ms. Laruyn Hill

*Slow Down – Scott Orr

*It’s Alright – The Fractures

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On The Mat Muse: Forward Folds are excellent opportunities to explore finding the edge of the pose. Taking slow and steady breaths, feel and honor sensation to settle and establish an equally challenging and rewarding stretch. As a feisty and fun yoga teacher once told me, remember that touching your toes doesn’t mean you’ve reached enlightenment. As in all poses, practice radical self-acceptance about where you are in that journey with that particular pose. Namaste, Loves.