Knowing when to surrender

While doing child’s pose yesterday in yoga, our teacher said that the pose is also called “wisdom pose”. I had never heard this before, but as I thought about it, it made sense. In child’s pose, we need to relax and surrender to gravity, to make ourselves vulnerable like children. And in life, it often requires a lot of wisdom for us to fully surrender and let things be.

Do you ever think about how much energy you use up fighting things? From the mundane fights (traffic, kids’ bedtimes, the cable company) to more important fights (interpersonal conflict, problems at work, health issues), so much of our time is taken up with struggling against things that we sometimes feel like we’re not moving to anything.

Part of what drives us is the need to have and keep control of things in our lives. A feeling of control is important to managing stress; but so is realizing when something is out of our control, or deciding that control just isn’t worth the price it requires. So there might be times when it’s appropriate to “give in”, such as when maintaining a relationship is more important than winning an argument, or when the outcome is clearly more important to the other person than it is to you.

Exercising control is often a response to fear as well. Fear of change, fear of failure, fear of success, fear of facing difficult emotions – all can lead us to fiercely hold onto positions that really aren’t serving us. Bertrand Russell said that “to conquer fear is the beginning of wisdom.” And sometimes surrendering control, allowing events to happen and feelings to rise, is the beginning of conquering fear.

Sometimes when we are over-efforting, micromanaging every detail, too focused on the outcome, it’s easy to lose sight of the big picture. If we take a step back to see things as they are, and just stop trying so hard, we might be more successful in reaching our goals. Soren Gordhamer writes that “we can often make more progress and with less stress not by trying harder but by trying softer. By doing so, there is an ease to our effort…”

Top athletes and other types of performers know how to try “softer”, although they may call it by a different name. They train and practice for hours, but when called upon to perform, they have to let go of thinking through every move, step, or note and just let things flow through them. They have the wisdom to surrender, and to trust what is inside of them.

I just read about a study of centenarians showing that the people who live longest are the most optimistic and carefree, relaxed and upbeat, and notably non-neurotic. They are the people who let go of their stress rather than internalizing it. I don’t know if they are practicing child’s pose, but something tells me that they are also people who have learned the value of surrendering.

A great time to try yoga

D.C. Yoga Week starts this Sunday, May 15. The week of events, including free and reduced classes at local yoga studios, kicks off Sunday with yoga on the National Mall from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. There will be kids’ activities, yoga practice, music and an appearance by Shiva Rea, a nationally-known yoga teacher.

D.C. Yoga Week is a great time to give yoga a try if you have never experienced it before, or if it has been a long time since you tried it. Ten local yoga studios will be offering specials during the week (see the D.C. Yoga week web site for a listing). The purpose of D.C. Yoga Week is to raise awareness of yoga’s benefits for both physical and mental health, and to give people an opportunity to try it at a reduced cost.

What are some of those benefits? Practicing yoga postures increases blood flow to specific areas of the body, supplying them with oxygen, which helps them function better. Yoga also increases flexibility in the spine & elsewhere, helping people  carry out daily activities without injury. Yoga has been shown to alleviate symptoms of many diseases and conditions, such as anxiety and stress, arthritis, headaches, high blood pressure, addiction and insomnia.

Concentration on the physical postures of yoga trains the mind to focus away from thoughts. Regular yoga practice leads to greater stress tolerance because the autonomic nervous system has a higher threshold for arousal. The parasympathetic nervous system (which correlates with relaxation) is activated when practicing yoga, and becomes more dominant. Yoga teachers will often tell you that breathing through challenges on your mat makes you better able to deal with the challenges off the mat, in your daily life.

When you try yoga for the first time, don’t give up if you’re not sure you like it. Try several different types of classes, and several different teachers, before you decide. There are so many kinds of yoga, and styles of teaching, that sometimes it takes a while to find a practice that suits you. In the meantime, Yoga on the Mall (Sunday May 15) would be a low-key, fun way to try it!