This thread intends to bring together ashtanga yogis and yoginis of the Nexus. As a dedicated ashtanga practitioner, I have to find inspiration and motivation day by day.
My route towards ashtanga has been quite colorful. Many years ago I started exercising just to lose some weight and become a little fitter. Being a very energetic person, with several years of learning from what psychedelics had to offer, I began researching the possibilities of combining physical exercise with some kind of spiritual training. As I live in a town where it’s impossible to find anything like this, I began my extensive research on the web. It was kundalini yoga that first caught my attention, and began practicing it 2-3 times a week, with great joy and satisfaction. However, after a year or so, I could do all the poses, movements, the breathwork, and it started to become less and less intriguing. During this period, I began meditating with and without pot, and really focusing on a clearing my mind. Then one day I watched a documentary about all kinds of yoga styles, where ashtanga was presented. The next day, I started with a David Swenson video, and I was shocked how difficult it was. I couldn’t even do the chaturanga, and after the two sun salutation sequences, I was more dead than alive…
And all this while being very fit!! So, this was the beginning of a beautiful friendship.
It’s been 2 years since I began practicing the first series, at home (as there is absolutely no yoga course where I live – sounds like middle ages, but yeah, I live in a straaange place), and it definitely changed my lifestyle a lot, my relationship with my body and my mind. First of all, I had to become very organized. Time management was not exactly my speciality, and my practice required almost 90 minutes, 6 days a week. It was a real challenge to find this time day by day. Sometimes I wake up at 5 in the morning to do it. And I do it, because it takes me to a completely different dimension if consciousness given by the effort to control my body, my breathing and my mind at the same time. When I first felt the harmony that emanates from the asanas and vinyasas, I knew right away that is was meant for me, I was meant for this.
Body. I’m very fit and strong, yet ridiculously inflexible. This type of yoga contains loads of asanas that require super flexibility, and if you don’t have it, then you’ll have to work your way to gain it. That’s the secret of ashtanga. In the beginning I thought I could do this my whole life with only vague results, however, after many months of consistent practice, I succeeded to do one teeny-tiny thing and that for me was a breakthrough. It was enough to motivate me for another few months! Of course, once hooked on it, doing it regularly and not focusing on achieving resuls but rather on feeling good in each posture (and recognizing the limits) makes me realize that I’m slowly but surely making progress. I have to do lots of research and study all asanas in depth because there is nobody to correct me.
I became a close friend of my body; I can’t say I had problems with it, but this practice makes you feel your body on the level of organs, it helps you to control your movements and to better tolerate physical pain. Not to mention its powerful immune boosting effect, and also its effect on physical appearance – it tones muscles, that become long and lean. Thanks to the practice, I learned to love and cherish my body.
Breath. In ashtanga ujjayi breathing is used, that is victorious breathing in Sanskrit, where the powerful inhalation takes place from the chest (the abdominal muscle is slightly pulled inside, and the rectal muscle needs to be squeezed in slightly, for support). I found this kind of breathing has detoxifying effects, it helps to sweat during the practice, and its other main function is to help perform the postures and movements correctly. I transferred conscious breathing to other moments of my life, because it’s relaxing, lifts my mood, and dissolves fear. Conscious breathing is my companion during my encounters with ayahuasca, and it also created a highly relaxed mood when I first smoked spice. Whenever something happens that I don’t like or makes me angry, anxious, or sad, I try to come back to the breathing, and in short time, everything falls into the right place.
Pranayama is also an essential part of this lifestyle, not long ago I started doing the BKS Iyengar method (pranayama used in hatha yoga) that consists of three stages, inhalation (puraka), retention (antara kumbhaka), and exhalation (rechaka). I think this will give results on the long-term, too. For the beginning, this pranayama technique really refreshes and energizes – this is what I experienced until now.
Mind. I should have begun with this part, as it is the foundation of all. Yet it is so difficult to catch its essence… So here’s my very subjective view on training the mind for ashtanga yoga. The situation: I have to practice yoga on my own, as there are no classes available in my area. I’m working, doing my second degree, I’m a wife, caring for my partner, doing all the housework, etc. The list is long! I had to make the effort to train my mind in the first place. To change my habitual patterns, such as going to sleep earlier in order to be able to wake up fresh before sunrise. Or, to learn how to find motivation when I feel I’m lacking it; in other words, to learn how to control moods. There is no such thing as I don’t feel like doing it today. This pattern simply seizes to exist. This mind training needs time to develop, and a huge amount of patience. This way, mind becomes balanced in relation to all aspects: body, thoughts, problems, fear, stress and other issues. The “ashtanga mind” helps me a lot with mediation – when I’m not using any psychedelic aids (with aids, I’m simply there and that’s it). And last but not least, this balanced mind constantly improves my relationships with people. It develops a friendly and humble attitude.
Psychedelics and ashtanga yoga. It’s not surprising I guess that using them have inspired me on my yoga journey. When I began practicing, it was acid that showed me the endless possibilities that my practice can offer me. Ashtanga yoga feels great on acid, actually. I also like to contemplate on the countless changes ashtanga has taken me through while drinking ayahuasca. I feel the warm and loving energy of this wonderful plant teacher while doing so. Yoga is certainly something very positive I embarked on in this life. On my first encounter with changa, I was sitting in lotus, while enjoying the visuals, the jungle-like nature and my friends’ happy faces. After the peak was over, I stayed alone under a big oak tree, in silence. Everything was just perfect – my mind was feeling great and my body was floating. I was completely dissolved in emptiness, and all I knew was that I was on the right track. Because of the plant spirit, and maybe because of my trained mind by all that consistent practice. I think all of this is inter-related. Working on living a healthy and focused life, you become balanced and happy. This is the simple mantra that guides me in life.
Sooo, after expressing my love for ashtanga, I’d love to read your adventures with yoga, and of course, not only ashtanga. What is your opinion on the yoga-entheogen relationship? What is your inspiration for practice, what do you find difficult and how do you overcome these difficulties?
Many thanks for reading my yoga-story, I hope that even those of you who don’t practice it, will find it inspiring and motivating! All questions are warmly welcome!