
Margaret Austin Retreat
Center - Texas
Raja Yoga Retreat

Yoga Classes
Many
students of yoga practice from an ego-centered
place of control. They are deaf to (or worse - choose to ignore) the body's
attempts to communicate. From a place of intellect and ego, they impose
yoga upon their body without awareness or respect for the steady stream
of requests and suggestions coming back to them from muscles, joints,
ligaments, skin, organs, and breath. This leads to a very confining concrete
and rigid practice that does not adapt itself to the natural changes that
occur as we grow, mature, and age.
When practicing from the intellect, students
are trapped in the past and the future. They remember what they learned
last year, focus on where they want to be next year, and very little attention
is left over for awareness of the present moment. This fragmentation of
attention is the antithesis of yoga (which means "to make whole",
"to join" or "to bind") and leads to boredom and discontent.
Many attempt to escape this boredom by pushing deeper into poses and taking
chances, often at the expense of the body. Others simply quit and moveon
to the next fad.

The emphasis at this retreat will be to learn to practice Hatha Yoga from
the body rather than the intellect. Yoga does not take place in the past
or the future. Yoga results from the total awareness of the present moment.
The motor cortex and sensory cortex of the
brain do not operate in the past or the future, but only in the present
moment. Likewise, breathing is a present experience. If for 90 minutes
we can bring all of our attention to the breath or the interplay and feedback
between movement and sensation, then we have spent 90 minutes living in
the present moment.
The first Hatha Yogis did not learn from
a human teacher. They were inspired from within by the presence of God
and from without by watching animals. These cats, dogs, eagles and other
animals were the first gurus, in honor of whom, Hatha Yoga named many
of the asanas.
These
original teachers of the very first yogis are still with us today. We
can go to the same source that inspired the original yogi. What makes
a teacher a teacher? Students! What turns a cat into a guru? The student
who watches and learns from the cat.
If animals are teachers, what is it they
teach? A cat stretches without thinking about how to stretch, whether
it is time to stretch, how long to hold the stretch, or which stretch
to do next. A cat stretches without thinking! It moves from the body,
not the intellect. When a cat stretches, even the most rigid human can
feel the joy that the cat knows. Cats love to live in their own fur. A
cat knows how to live in the senses, to feel the life force, and to take
pleasure in the simple routines of life, stretching, breathing, moving.
Most cats and dogs that I have known are
not capable of human speech. But they still talk to us all the time. They
still try to teach us with each movement and every stretch. What is it
they are telling us? What is it that they already know, and we have forgotten?
Animals know that within their own body resides an amazing teacher, speaking
in a language of pleasure and pain. Animals know to move away from pain
and to move into pleasure. The innate wisdom of the body guides each creature
with this secret language of subtle and not so subtle sensations, and
the result can be seen in the pleasure of a lioness stretching, or a gazelle
leaping with unbounded joy.
Rather than moving from ego and intellect,
move from the wisdom of the body. Let sensation guide you away from pain,
and into pleasure. Learn to hear and trust this inner mind/body dialogue
and let it guide you in your practice. This one lesson, once learned,
practiced, and absorbed, puts you in touch with a voice more readily available
and more reliable than a thousand teachers telling you what to do. Best
of all, unlike the external authority figure who stands between you and
God, your own inner teacher is God. Your Innner Guide is talking
to you. Are you listening?
For more information about Yoga please click
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