Yoga means union. Union with the breath, union with movement, union with the divine, union with others in your class, union with your many parts, union with your imperfections, union with your perfection, union with your emotions, union with your physical body, and union with your soul.
Yoga is an ecstatic practice.
Ecstatic is a word that is making growing rounds in modern spiritual circles. The definition of ecstatic practice is a profound and overwhelming sense of joy, or mystical experience. I like to define it as a full embodiment of an experience.
Yoga can be rigid. We run through our sun salutations, we may hold or pause in certain spots, and at times the practice might feel more routine than fully embodied. There are ways to take your yoga practice a bit deeper that we often forget to incorporate.
Most yoga postures are meant to be held much longer than most modern class structures. Imagine holding down dog for 6-15 min, or warrior for 10 min. There is a moment when the asana lets go completely, when the body and mind separate from the asana spirit moves in. Many forget that the purpose of the asana (postures) is to prepare for final meditation.
You can also add dance to your yoga practice. Move your body, allow music to move you. Move around in a dancing pattern, then drop though the yoga postures, then back into a dance, then back into a yoga sequence… don’t spend a lot of time thinking, just let your body move as it wants. Don’t choose the asana, let them choose you.
You can also try to change-up the music that you might use for your practice. If you normally use kirtan music, try rock-n-roll, or something completely different that you would normally use. Shifting music can also shift your consciousness.
I’ll go deeper and give you specific practices to help you move your practice into embodied states. For now, breathe fully… live fiercely… and be present in your divine experience.
You are Loved. You are Beautiful. You are Divine.