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Practising patience

March 18, 2020 Becci Curtis
The last yoga class of term, Magdalen College, Tuesday 10th March 2020.

The last yoga class of term, Magdalen College, Tuesday 10th March 2020.

Putting yoga to work in a time of pandemic

To borrow a phrase from the internet: what a year this past week has been.

If nothing else, it's a lesson in how quickly things can change and - fortunately/unfortunately - it's a lesson we're all learning. I hold fear in one hand, hope in the other, and I'm not sure where to place either of them.

My primary instinct is to get to work. On an emotional level, I want to comfort (because I need comfort): we’ll all be ok, this too shall pass, I'm here for you, we'll get through this. On a practical level I want to help (because I, too, need help): what do you need? What can I bring? What can I make? What can I do? All ways of saying: I don't know what I need, I don't know what to ask for, I don't know how to be constructive, I don't know what to do. Tell me. Please.

Maybe you’re stockpiling. Maybe you’re denying, or downplaying. Worst-case, or best-case scenario planning - it's all the same: fear and hope.

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In Living Room Tags Anxiety, Philosophy, Ethics
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"Isn't yoga supposed to make you a calm person?"

February 24, 2017 Becci Curtis

Is growing supposed to make you a tall person?

Yoga enables me to create a space in which my feelings at any given moment are valid, whilst reminding me that the way I feel now won’t last forever.

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In Living Room Tags Suffering, Philosophy, Anger, Self-practice, Anxiety
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Stress: How can yoga help?

April 10, 2016 Becci Curtis
Illustration by Min Gyo Chung; sourced from 'The mindful corporation' by Adria Vasil, Corporate Knights, Spring 2014 Issue

Illustration by Min Gyo Chung; sourced from 'The mindful corporation' by Adria Vasil, Corporate Knights, Spring 2014 Issue

Being stressed is easy. Being relaxed is something quite a few of us need to work at.

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In Living Room Tags Stress, Anxiety, Breathing
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Stress: What is it?

January 21, 2016 Becci Curtis
Credit: I might be dead tomorrow - mental health n shit http://imightbedeadtomorrow.tumblr.com/

Credit: I might be dead tomorrow - mental health n shit http://imightbedeadtomorrow.tumblr.com/

Yoga is often peddled as an antidote for stress but before we can understand how yoga can help us, we need to understand what stress is and how it affects us. So, what is ‘stress’ and when does it become a problem? (Cheat: watch the videos at the end of this article...)

Everyday stress

Stress, in basic terms, is what we associate with the feelings of 'pressure' and 'too much pressure' in our daily lives. Pressure, on its own, is not a bad thing - it motivates us from getting up in the morning, to hitting that deadline. In isolation, these everyday types of stress take place on the bottom rungs of what we could call the ‘stress ladder’ – our feet are never more than a step away from the stress-free safety of the floor.

Moving a few rungs up this ladder - a small jump away from the floor this time - an increased feeling of pressure (although we might still describe these occasions as ‘stressful’), can be encouraging and help us to achieve what we might not have achieved in a more relaxed state. For example, finding your Olympic-standard running legs in the last few minutes before your train leaves the platform; or not giving up in Sirsasana (headstand) because you feel like everyone in the class is watching you. The pressure we might feel in an everyday-kind of stressful situation makes us more efficient and alert.

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In Living Room Tags Anxiety, Stress
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Breathing space

December 8, 2015 Becci Curtis
Breathing for anxiety

The benefits of taking time to breathe are common sense, yet taking time to do so is counter-intuitive for most of us. When experiencing stress or feelings of panic, we instinctively know that slowing down our breath might help. We say, ‘calm down… take deep breaths…’ but for a process that happens automatically, controlling our breath can feel like a chore in comparison.

If you are new to yoga and have recently begun a class, you will notice that your teacher constantly instructs you to breathe. To begin with, it’s likely that you will ignore the instruction (intentionally or unintentionally) as you will have much to concentrate on besides when and how to inhale or exhale. How you breathe will be the least of your worries, although you will still benefit from a reminder every now and again. Holding our breath is very common when we are concentrating and it may come as a surprise that your teacher notices you doing this before you do. (Without wishing to give away all the yoga-teaching-circle secrets - your purple-blue face is a good hint!)

Once you have settled into the class routine and have become familiar with some postures, it’s likely that you will have the space to add some breath work into your practice. In the early stages, this is likely to feel unnatural (because it is) and uncomfortable (because it is). You might even feel that breathing is just another aspect of the yoga class that you are getting wrong. As you become more practiced however, this will pass. Learning to breathe (like learning anything new) is difficult – so go ahead and let yourself off the hook.

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In Practice Room Tags Stress, Anxiety, Breathing
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A yoga teacher smiles at people joining the online class.

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