• Free beginner's series
    • 2025 class schedule
    • Class membership
    • Cyclists course
  • Sign In My Account
Menu

Becci Curtis Yoga

Street Address
City, State, Zip
Phone Number

Your Custom Text Here

Becci Curtis Yoga

  • Online classes
    • Free beginner's series
    • 2025 class schedule
    • Class membership
    • Cyclists course
  • Sign In My Account

Notes on balance, falling, ground, and grounding

July 9, 2021 Becci Curtis
Photo by Jon Flobrant on Unsplash.

Photo by Jon Flobrant on Unsplash.

Despite changing location many times—from venue to venue and, more recently, online—each Wednesday evening class with me involves some kind of group discussion and it has been this way for 7 years, or so. People come and go, but we have built enough of a foundation that we can maintain an exchange of ideas. There is a thread that loosely connects one class to the next.

Last month, our topic (the container, or 'guiding structure' for our chat) was ‘balance’, which has led me to think a lot about falling (and not falling), support (and lack of support), the relationships (and outcomes) between the two (and their opposites).

Balance as aspirational state

We often use 'balance' to describe 'an even set of circumstances’, or ‘an even experience of circumstances’ (‘equanimity’ comes from the Latin for ‘equal’ and ‘mind’, quite literally: even-mindedness). In yoga and mindfulness practices, 'balance' comes across as a sought after quality, or state. There is perfection in symmetry: the middle path one might take towards obtaining a clear and unfluctuating mind (citta vritti nirodha). It has an aspirational quality to it.

Balance is the fruit of practice; something to work towards. It is to be gained and maintained from moment to moving moment. [Perhaps it would be better to substitute ‘balance’ for ‘equilibrium’ here i.e. the balance between two competing forces resulting in no net change.]

Balance as temporary experience

In movement practices, we use 'balance' to describe what happens when we don't fall over. We can get really good at balancing, but we can only really get good at balancing in limited positions, on limited surfaces, under limited conditions, and for a limited amount of time: tree pose on the sand in a thunderstorm FOREVER, anyone? Balance is something to be experienced. It is dynamic and fleeting: it moves from moment to moment.

I favour the experiential. I am a big fan of stepping away from the superficial confines presented by a yoga mat. The moving (and witnessing) of a body and mind in a small space—mostly facing the same direction, and always on even ground—is not true to life (it's definitely not true to my life) and therefore has limited application. A good place to start, a good place to learn a new skill, to concentrate, and rest perhaps, but still, not a place anyone can realistically (or even desirably) inhabit forever.

Read more
In Practice Room Tags Balance, Philosophy, Community
Comment

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.

Read more
In Living Room Tags Anxiety, Philosophy, Ethics
Comment

Tending the weeds

June 28, 2018 Becci Curtis
Who needs a yoga mat anyway..?

Who needs a yoga mat anyway..?

Yesterday I was listening to the environmental writer, Emma Marris, talking about how little we value nature unless it’s pristine, beautiful, and untouched by humans - unless humans have positively impacted that beauty, of course. It struck me that this is often how we approach our lives (or, this is often how I approach my life anyway).

My antenna clearly tuned into this theme, I started listening to Michael Stone’s Dharma talk ‘Buddhas on Blades of Grass’. In it, he discusses the Buddhist monk, Dongshan, telling his students to ‘go to a place where there are no weeds’. Spoiler alert: there is no such place.

On the surface, we value moments of hardship less than we value moments of comfort and security. We dismiss (and try to forget) the people who negatively impact us, and we move closer towards (and hold in our memory) the people that offer us support and have failed to disappoint. This is a safe and logical strategy. We want to repeat good experiences, we do not want to repeat bad ones. We would always choose comfort over discomfort. We would always choose to tend the flowers and not the weeds.

However, when I start to dig deeper into this thought, I realise that the times when I have been the least comfortable have held the greatest personal meaning for me. Hard times have paved the way for growth, wisdom, resilience, and humility. Moments of crisis are perhaps the times where we are the most easily intimate with our thoughts and feelings, precisely because we cannot escape ourselves, no matter how much we would like to.

Read more
In Living Room Tags Philosophy, Flourishing, Kleshas, Self-practice
Comment

Beyond the yoga class

March 24, 2018 Becci Curtis
Photo by Dan Gold on Unsplash

Photo by Dan Gold on Unsplash

Some resources for going inside and out

The time we spend in any yoga class is very limited. Self-study (Svadhyaya), and expanding our perspective, is integral to yoga practice and philosophy.

If you know me (are on my mailing list, or like my Facebook page), you'll know that I like to share things I find interesting, or think will be of interest. The following lists some resources that I have found particularly useful in developing, investigating, and questioning my personal practice and my teaching; or, more simply, how I am, and how I want to be, in the world.

Some resources are yoga-specific, others take a more sideways view. Make your own connections, be open and curious, and maintain a healthy level of skepticism: in the words of Danny Paradise, 'trust the message, not the messenger - the messenger always has their own problems'.

This list will continue to evolve. If you have questions, recommendations, or comments, I'd love to hear from you. Any suggestions for how this list could be most usefully organised are also very welcome.

Read more
In Reading Room Tags Resources, Yoga Teacher, Creativity, Philosophy
Comment

Some tips for growing plants and people

January 29, 2018 Becci Curtis
View fullsize Orchid roots
View fullsize Orchid flower stem
View fullsize Orchid re-flowering
View fullsize First orchid bloom
View fullsize Orchid flower close-up
View fullsize IMG_2251.jpg

Some tips for growing plants (and humans)

It was a just another rubbish orchid that refused to re-flower. I assumed that it would slowly die, and when I considered it dead enough, I would simply throw it away.

Read more
In Living Room Tags Orchid, Philosophy, Flourishing, Mindfulness
2 Comments
Older Posts →
A yoga teacher smiles at people joining the online class.

Subscribe to my monthly newsletter

Connect your body and your brain by learning how to move more freely without getting changed.

"Shut up [insert your much loved but perpetually annoying person’s name here]! Can’t you see I'm trying to do yoga!”

Thank you for subscribing to my monthly newsletter.

To prove that I’m worth the space in your inbox, keep browsing, then check your email, and confirm your subscription.

Browse

Topics
  • Philosophy
  • Self-practice
  • Cycling
  • Online yoga
  • Anxiety
  • Community
  • Stress
  • Injury
  • Yoga Teacher
  • Ashtanga
  • Creativity
  • Self-care
  • Abuse
  • Aging
  • Balance
  • Beginners
  • Breathing
  • British Wheel of Yoga
  • Flourishing
  • Goal setting
  • Kleshas
  • New Year
  • Rest
  • Strength
  • Suffering
  • Weak wrists
  • Anatomy
  • Anger
  • Baddha Konasana
  • Bharadvajasana
  • Brexit
  • Consent
  • Ethics
  • Exhaustion
  • Flexibility
  • Hamstrings
  • Home practice
  • Kriya
  • Mindfulness
  • Mobility
  • Movement kit
  • Neglect
  • Orchid
  • Pelvic Tilts
  • Resources
  • Salutations
  • Social justice
  • Sport
  • Sutras
  • Training
  • Finding Room 1
  • Housekeeping 1
  • Living Room 13
  • Practice Room 15
  • Reading Room 2

Most recent

Featured
Modest goals for sustainable change
Modest goals for sustainable change
What's your movement mood?
What's your movement mood?
Do your wrists feel weak? Part 2: Strengthen
Do your wrists feel weak? Part 2: Strengthen
Do your wrists feel weak? Part 1: Mobilise
Do your wrists feel weak? Part 1: Mobilise
"How should yoga feel? Just stretchy?"
"How should yoga feel? Just stretchy?"
Speed date your hamstrings
Speed date your hamstrings
The slow yoga blog RSS

A life practice. A life practising.

About

Becci

Contact

Privacy policy

Quick links

How should yoga feel? Just stretchy?

Do your wrists feel weak?

Free beginner series

Membership

Your first class?

Sign-in to your account

Terms of service + FAQs

 

Copyright © 2015- Becci Curtis