23336
Wednesday, February 27, 2008
  Dancing For Your Whole Life: Yogic Advice from the Vijnanabhairava Tantra

Wander or dance to exhaustion in utter spontaneity. Then, suddenly, drop to the ground and in this fall be total. There absolute essence is revealed.

~ Vijnanabhairava Tantra, verse 111

Each of has the desire (yes?) to become ~ with each breath we take, with each step of our lives ~ more fully alive And yet there is the paradox that each breath we take, each step of our lives, brings us one step, one breath closer to our death. So how do we work with this? Is there a solution to this paradox?

The traditions of Buddhism as well as Kashmir Shaivism see (the appearance of) this life of ours as training-ground for (the appearance of) that moment of our death. They resolve the paradox through the understanding that only by training ~ in every moment ~ in the art of being fully alive, fully present here and now, in this moment, in this moment, in this moment ~ only through a practice such as this are we able then to be fully present (fully alive!) at the moment of our death.

The quotation above, from the Vijnanabhairava Tantra (a text written by the Shaivite school of Kashmir around the first century A.D.), points to such a resolution. Lets take a closer look

Wander or dance to exhaustion in utter spontaneity. Have you ever danced, or performed any other activity, so completely, with such total abandon, such love and absorption, that the point of exhaustion (what distance runners call the wall) opens into a whole new realm of experience, puts you in touch with a whole new flow of energy/inspiration? Its the moment when years of training (our accumulated expertise) is allowed to open, to fall away into a mindless spontaneity when movement becomes both divinely precise and effortless (Michael Jordan, Baryshnikov, & Jet Li come to mind here) when I am no longer doing anything, yet all things are still manifesting, radiantly, perfectly. In the language of Taoism this state of effortless doing is called Wu Wei.

Then, suddenly, drop to the ground and in this fall be total. Have you ever gone out on a warm summer night, laid on your back on a grassy hillside, and let your mind & heart & vision travel out into the starry sky, with its countless galaxies? When we surrender, we surrender completely no holding back. We let the whole thing dissolve. We die into the present moment. In the language of Tibetan Buddhism, this is called the Completion Stage.

There absolute essence is revealed. What if the essence of life and the essence of death were one and the same? What if both our wandering and our dancing were expressions of that one essence, and equally wise? What if we could touch ~ with each breath, each step, each of our awakened daily activities ~ the sweetness & power that is this essence?

And now, please feel free . to Dance!

Elizabeth Reninger holds a Masters degree in Chinese medicine, is a published poet, and has been exploring yoga - in its Taoist, Buddhist & Hindu varieties ~ for more than twenty years. Her teachers include Richard Freeman and Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche. To read more of her yoga-related essays, please visit her website: http://www.writingup.com/blog/elizabeth_reninger

Round Yoga Mats
 
Comments: Post a Comment



<< Home

ARCHIVES
Dec 6, 2007 / Dec 7, 2007 / Dec 8, 2007 / Dec 9, 2007 / Dec 10, 2007 / Dec 11, 2007 / Dec 12, 2007 / Dec 14, 2007 / Dec 15, 2007 / Dec 16, 2007 / Dec 17, 2007 / Dec 18, 2007 / Dec 19, 2007 / Dec 20, 2007 / Dec 21, 2007 / Dec 22, 2007 / Dec 23, 2007 / Dec 24, 2007 / Dec 25, 2007 / Dec 26, 2007 / Dec 27, 2007 / Dec 28, 2007 / Dec 29, 2007 / Dec 30, 2007 / Dec 31, 2007 / Jan 1, 2008 / Jan 2, 2008 / Jan 3, 2008 / Jan 4, 2008 / Jan 6, 2008 / Jan 7, 2008 / Jan 8, 2008 / Jan 10, 2008 / Jan 11, 2008 / Jan 12, 2008 / Jan 13, 2008 / Jan 14, 2008 / Jan 15, 2008 / Jan 16, 2008 / Jan 17, 2008 / Jan 18, 2008 / Jan 19, 2008 / Jan 20, 2008 / Jan 21, 2008 / Jan 22, 2008 / Jan 23, 2008 / Jan 24, 2008 / Jan 25, 2008 / Jan 27, 2008 / Jan 28, 2008 / Jan 29, 2008 / Jan 30, 2008 / Jan 31, 2008 / Feb 1, 2008 / Feb 4, 2008 / Feb 7, 2008 / Feb 8, 2008 / Feb 9, 2008 / Feb 10, 2008 / Feb 11, 2008 / Feb 13, 2008 / Feb 14, 2008 / Feb 15, 2008 / Feb 16, 2008 / Feb 17, 2008 / Feb 18, 2008 / Feb 19, 2008 / Feb 20, 2008 / Feb 21, 2008 / Feb 22, 2008 / Feb 23, 2008 / Feb 25, 2008 / Feb 26, 2008 / Feb 27, 2008 / Feb 28, 2008 / Feb 29, 2008 / Mar 1, 2008 / Mar 2, 2008 / Mar 3, 2008 / Mar 4, 2008 / Mar 5, 2008 / Mar 6, 2008 / Mar 7, 2008 / Mar 8, 2008 / Mar 9, 2008 / Mar 10, 2008 / Mar 11, 2008 / Mar 12, 2008 / Mar 13, 2008 / Mar 14, 2008 / Mar 15, 2008 / Mar 16, 2008 / Mar 17, 2008 / Mar 18, 2008 / Mar 19, 2008 / Mar 20, 2008 / Mar 21, 2008 / Mar 22, 2008 / Mar 23, 2008 / Mar 27, 2008 / Mar 28, 2008 / Mar 29, 2008 / Mar 30, 2008 / Apr 1, 2008 / Apr 2, 2008 / Apr 3, 2008 / Apr 4, 2008 / Apr 5, 2008 / Apr 6, 2008 / Apr 7, 2008 / Apr 9, 2008 / Apr 10, 2008 / Apr 11, 2008 / Apr 12, 2008 / Apr 13, 2008 / Apr 14, 2008 / Apr 15, 2008 / Apr 16, 2008 / Apr 17, 2008 / Apr 18, 2008 / Apr 19, 2008 / Apr 20, 2008 / Apr 21, 2008 / Apr 22, 2008 / Apr 23, 2008 / Apr 24, 2008 / Apr 25, 2008 / Apr 27, 2008 / Apr 28, 2008 / Apr 29, 2008 / Apr 30, 2008 / May 1, 2008 / May 2, 2008 / May 5, 2008 / May 11, 2008 / May 13, 2008 / May 15, 2008 / May 16, 2008 / May 17, 2008 / May 23, 2008 / May 25, 2008 / May 26, 2008 / May 28, 2008 / May 30, 2008 / Jun 1, 2008 / Jun 2, 2008 / Jun 4, 2008 / Jun 7, 2008 / Jun 8, 2008 / Jun 10, 2008 / Jun 11, 2008 / Jun 12, 2008 / Jun 13, 2008 / Jun 15, 2008 / Jun 16, 2008 / Jun 18, 2008 / Jun 19, 2008 / Jun 21, 2008 / Jun 22, 2008 / Jun 23, 2008 / Jun 24, 2008 / Jun 25, 2008 / Jun 26, 2008 / Jun 27, 2008 / Jun 29, 2008 / Jul 6, 2008 / Jul 7, 2008 / Jul 9, 2008 / Jul 10, 2008 / Jul 15, 2008 / Jul 16, 2008 / Jul 18, 2008 / Jul 20, 2008 / Jul 22, 2008 / Jul 23, 2008 / Aug 3, 2008 / Aug 5, 2008 / Aug 7, 2008 / Aug 8, 2008 / Aug 9, 2008 / Aug 11, 2008 / Aug 14, 2008 / Aug 15, 2008 / Aug 22, 2008 /


Powered by Blogger