A friend writes to me about reaching further in a yoga pose:
My head dropped back, my back arching and suddenly my “little baby pinkie fingers”
grazed the carpet. I stopped, the sensation alone shocking me. I had never found the floor before … Thoughts flashed across my brain over and over and over. Images of the posture, the full expression, hearing the dialog, feeling the sweat pour off my body. But I was frozen. I couldn’t, in that instant, even remember what to do next.
What happened? What worked this time that didn’t work before? And what should I have done instead of chickening out and coming out early?
Another friend of mine, a poet with whom I share many significant bonds, is in the middle of a transition. The college he works for has closed its doors and he is in the middle of moving to a new state and a new university, selling his farm house with its accompanying apple orchard, and hovering between being in relationship and not. In all of it, two things are constant: his poetry and his dog. He’s recently written to me about the sense of momentum without movement, of things changing both utterly and also not at all. He is certain of his future, to the extent that a person can be, he is simply not certain how the road will curve to bring that future in.
I’m an impatient person. I know this about myself. I cannot meditate, it drives me crazy. I have a very hard time imagining writing a long novel because of the time it will take. My interest deviates from my goals too often in life.
I once decided I would be a yoga teacher. I attended classes, I studied the path, I practiced almost every day. I learned about anatomy. I learned about alignment. I learned about the tree of yoga, its branches pushing out into the community and the heavens, its roots digging in deeply to the soul, the heart, the impatient brain. I gave it up, though. I gave it up after I’d drafted up a business plan for my own studio, after I’d spent hundreds of dollars on workshops and seminars.
I gave it up because I was sure that I’d made it, and then was told I had not. I applied to a teacher training with Anusara founder John Friend, and was turned down. I was told I needed more practice with teachers, and needed some practice teaching others. I got frustrated: I felt ready, I insisted, and here I was being blocked. The truth is, John Friend was right. And my reaction to his rejection of my application to learn with him made that clear. I wasn’t ready, precisely because I wanted so badly to be.
In my hours today and yesterday, I have been tracing the outline for a novel I’m not sure I can write. I’m also not sure I can’t write it, and I think that’s what terrifies me the most. I am outlining this great story, one that’s very interesting to me, and one that’s like nothing I’ve ever written (but is, in truth, very like the books I admired the most back when I used to read for fun). And what terrifies me is that there is no reason I can’t write the book. Well, except one.
There’s nothing so fearsome as being ready to be ourselves, to accomplish what we really want. And I think the reason why is because we can never be the ones to decide we’re ready. In the end, in order to be what we want, to have what we want, to accomplish what we’ve waited for, I think we need to be ready to let go entirely.
It really does boil down to that. We have to be willing to lie down and breathe and be patient. Or we have to be willing to shrug and smile and play. When John Friend told me I couldn’t be in his class, being patient and playful would have taken the form of more yoga and more training, all wrapped in the joy of the process. My friend the poet, in the midst of his transition, keeps running marathons and keeps writing poetry. And I hope my friend the yogini, when she reaches for and is bewildered by ustrasana the next time, will be gentle, maybe shed a tear or two, and then laugh and look at her blessed “little baby pinkie fingers” in wonder and admiration.
There are an eternity of moments coming, and in those we will find transitions resolved, novels completed, poses accomplished. When and how they’ll come, we can’t know. That they will, we must rest assured. Maybe the joy is in all the moments of anxious potential.

I have so many responses.. But my first one is that you, Sean, don’t seem afraid of spinning in that room at all.
More later
K
I have so much to say (shocking, eh?) and no idea where to begin.
I love how you have drawn the parallels between all of these situations. Sometimes I feel isolated in my battles, and I have a difficult time seeing how my individual challenges could be anything like anyone else’s.
I have had a similar experience to yours with the Anusara teaching thing. My husband and I once planned to move to Central America. We were certain that it was our path in life and had done every single thing to make it happen. We got rid of our stuff, moved out of our home, packed up, and left. We left nothing behind us, nothing. We didn’t even think about having a plan B. But the move and the situation didn’t work out and we did not stay. It was equally terrifying and hilarious the way the entire plan fell apart in front of us. In that situation, we chose to laugh, play, and keep going. We didn’t have much of a choice. I can’t say I was terribly patient during that time, but who would be? We were pushed all the way into a corner, and we had two choices. We could let it go and move on or we could suffer, fight, and try to endure a situation that was basically unlivable for us.
I don’t think anyone likes being pushed into a corner. But sometimes, it’s the only way we can think clearly. It’s like working your edge in a difficult Asana. You get right on that razor’s edge, and you could fall. Your heart races, you feel your mind moving, and your adrenaline rushes.. So, what do you do? In Natarajasana tonight, I had two choices. I could have fallen forward, out of the posture. Or, I could have taken a risk, kept kicking, kept charging, kept going.. And I did. I didn’t want to, but I did. And you know what? I didn’t fall. I found balance and quiet. Even in that rush, I was still.
So for your friend, selling his home, moving, taking a new job.. Or for you, pondering your novel and all of the changes in your life.. We are all the same, and the answer is the same for any one of us. Balance, patience, and determination. We have to laugh, like you said. We also have to cry. We have to marvel at the little things and let go of the big things.
I think you are starting to allow yourself to spin. You seem open to letting the air move around you, and feeling the rush. It’s good, and you’ll find the answers you need. Maybe they’re on your mat, maybe they’re in your family, maybe they’re out in the mountains. You have to find them. If the answers were easy, we’d never need patience. We’d all be in Full Camel, and all know exactly when was the right time to relocate. If the answers were easy, nothing would get broken. But if the answers were easy, we’d also never feel the exhilarating rush of our fingers on the carpet.
Be well.
K
OK I wasn’t sure where to leave this comment. But I was thinking about it all night and thought I’d share it with you. A while ago you wrote about motion, and I can’t find the post to save my life. Or at least, I can’t find the comment you made in the post that I am referring to, but I bet you’ll remember. Anyway. You said something about dancers being always in motion. You then went on to say that at least in yoga, there is a stillness, a “hold” with asana. Well, yesterday in class my teacher made a comment about “motion” and “emotion”. She said that emotion is simply energy in motion and that we have to learn to harness that motion. In yoga, in savasana, there should be complete stillness. But if we are laying there, feeling emotion, (that energy in motion) we are not really still at all. Same in asana, when we are holding at that critical point, that “ideal” place. Standing there or bending backwards and holding, we have to find stillness. Even in our minds and hearts. True stillness is a quietness of the body and mind. It’s a stillness of all of our energies, not just our physical body.
Anyway, I went on to apply this to the thought of you spinning, and stirring up things in your life. And I wonder if you are finding any stillness. My life is spinning right now, and things are getting a little messy. It’s hard for me, as I am a control freak. I like everything in order. I hate to see things get “broken” or dropped or missed. But the truth is that even when I have things totally in order, everything neat and tidy, I am not really still. It’s when my mind, body, and heart are totally still that I can allow for the things that should be still to simply be.. Even if they do get messy.
So (I am going to try to tie this all together) what I guess I mean to say is that while I am learning to play, and let things just happen, I am also trying to harness all of those emotions. Not so that I can hold on to them and store them back from whence they came. But so that I can let them go.
Hope this all makes at least a little sense. It sure did when I was working through it. In either case, you know how much I love to utilize your comment box for my rambling..