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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.

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In Practice Room Tags Balance, Philosophy, Community
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Building an at-home yoga and movement kit

April 29, 2021 Becci Curtis
My at-home movement kit contains things I’ve picked-up over the years: a foam roller, a length of wooden dowel, blocks, different weight dumbbells, resistance bands, balls of varying density and size, and my most recent addition: some double-sided f…

My at-home movement kit contains things I’ve picked-up over the years: a foam roller, a length of wooden dowel, blocks, different weight dumbbells, resistance bands, balls of varying density and size, and my most recent addition: some double-sided floor sliders (great if you have carpet, otherwise a pair of slippy socks on a wooden floor would work just as well).

Transforming household objects into simple, effective, and cost-friendly equipment is one of the best things about taking part in yoga and movement classes online.

As a student, building an at-home yoga kit can boost your practice. You can start to move more frequently, more creatively, and more independently. You don’t need to invest in an image, or a lifestyle, that isn’t actually yours: realising you can start right now, exactly where you are (as you are), is pretty liberating.

As a teacher, incorporating equipment into online classes can be pretty liberating too. I can teach things online that it would be less possible for me to teach in-person. Finding a class venue with 12 chairs and enough wall space can be difficult enough, let alone 12 sets of steps, or stairs! I don’t need to stuff a range of resistance bands, straps, and tennis balls into my yoga mat-filled bike panniers. Cycling to class with blocks, dumbbells, kettlebells, and sandbags --whilst a challenge I would like to accept-- is not realistic when you have to make multiple trips across a city to teach multiple classes a day (although I would enjoy the kudos).

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In Practice Room Tags Online yoga, Home practice, Movement kit
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Practising consent

August 16, 2018 Becci Curtis
Photo by Andrei Lazarev on Unsplash

Photo by Andrei Lazarev on Unsplash

Protecting personal space and encouraging autonomy

As a student, I have had to rely on gut instinct alone; some teachers I would feel safe with (the body yields), other teachers would put me on guard (the body tenses). But gut instinct, despite the rhetoric we often hear to the contrary, is quite as often misleading as it is trustworthy.

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In Practice Room Tags Ashtanga, Yoga Teacher, Abuse, Consent
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Turning 30

July 23, 2017 Becci Curtis
View fullsize Two loves: yoga and cycling
View fullsize Wise words found on the yoga class door
View fullsize Outdoor Yoga in South Park, Oxford
View fullsize British Wheel of Yoga Spectrum Magazine

My life didn't magically become easy when I discovered yoga.

I did not suddenly become wise, or at peace with myself. I do feel more at ease, more wise and more at peace with myself than I did at 15, but I expect that most people do - with or without yoga, we grow up.

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In Practice Room, Living Room Tags Ashtanga, Self-practice, Aging, British Wheel of Yoga, Yoga Teacher
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A 15 minute yoga sequence for cyclists

May 14, 2017 Becci Curtis

Many of you will already know that I'm a keen cyclist. If you haven't seen me ferrying my yoga mats around Oxford atop my trusty commuter,  you might have seen me riding in my club colours on the Cowley Road; attended one of the classes I ran at this year's Women & Bikes festival; read about my broken collarbone, or heard me relate yoga and cycling at Thursday night's class, which have evolved from the cyclist-specific Winter Training sessions I started running back in 2015. (More recently, I have been working on the launch of VeloVedic training retreats for cyclists - our first event will take place over the August bank holiday - you can sign up to our mailing list here.)  

Last month I teamed up with Oxfordshire Youth Cycling coach, Jake Backus, to film a short yoga sequence with the aim to encourage young cyclists to complement their training with some targeted strength and flexibility work. We were very lucky to be joined by two of Oxford's upcoming talent: Florence Wiggins, who rides for the Zappi Junior Women's Team; and Charlie Quarterman, who was recently signed by Leopard Pro Cycling. Both Charlie and Florence practice yoga regularly - you can watch the three of us talk about the benefits yoga can have both on and off the bike here.

We developed this video with youth cyclists in mind, but the sequence can be of benefit to all types of cyclist - both young and old - and if you're not a cyclist, well, yoga is for every body, not just the cycling body, so why not give it a go too!

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In Practice Room Tags Cycling, Strength, Flexibility, Sport
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