I was listening to this radio program about how some people get emotional at the gym during a workout. While it was interesting, it didn’t have any real answers except to say that it happens. I’ve not had much experience with emotions at the gym, but I have experienced and seen a lot of emotions on the yoga mat.
After my father died, I couldn’t lie down for Savasana without crying. I wasn’t aware that I had even been thinking of him at the time, but suddenly I would be flooded with tears. It didn’t happen if I did Savasana lying on my belly or if I just sat in meditation while everyone else was lyingd own.
The article talks about how your brain receives information through your senses and it has to figure out what those sensations were caused by.
“We all have these four most basic types of sensations. They’re called affect, Barrett said. “Things like feeling worked up, feeling calm, feeling pleasant, feeling unpleasant,” she said.
Affect is basically always there while you’re conscious.
“Emotions are the brain’s attempt to make sense of what the bodily sensations mean in a particular circumstance, in a particular situation, based on past experience, based on memory,”Barrett said.”
I underlined the part about how your brain processes what bodily sensations to mean based on past experiences. While the article doesn’t state this, (you can read the whole article here.) what that means is that our “issues are in our tissues” (I like to quote this, but I didn’t make it up, it comes from Candace Pert, a molecular biologist who wrote a book called the Molecules of Emotion.)
Another way to say this is that if something happened to you that caused your body to react in a certain way, then every time your body feels a similar experience, it will cause your brain to respond in the sam way it did to the first occurrence. In yoga we call this a samskara.
I’ve noticed that this can happen a lot in yoga. Because we stretch and contract our bodies every which way on our mats, it’s inevitable that we will stretch a particular part of the body that may have previously contracted in response to a certain situation.
For example, we call back bending postures “heart openers”. For a lot of people, emotional pain causes them want to protect their hearts from future occurrences. The typical response is to contract the muscles on the front body by rounding the shoulders forward and drawing more into themselves in to not be hurt by the outside world, again. Performing postures that challenge that physical pattern can recall the original emotion associated with the response. Sometimes you can feel this emotion coming u and you can stop it. Especially if you feel self-conscious getting emotional in a public setting. But sometimes the emotion is surprising and strong and you can’t help it.
I think what was happening for me was that I was closest to my dad. He was the one that always made me feel safe and held. When I would lie down in Savasana, I felt like my safety net was missing. He was no longer there to catch me when I fell. This went on for about a year, until I finally felt strong enough without him. And then my crying jags on the mat stopped.
There is always a box of tissues in a yoga studio. My training as a yoga teacher has been to allow people their emotional space if I notice someone crying quietly on their mat. Reaching out to them during the episode can bring it to a halt and processing their emotions can be very therapeutic. However, I do like to reach out to that student afterwards, to check in and see if they are ok. You always have to exercise your own judgment. Maybe that student needs your help right then. I try to let their behavior dictate how I respond. Some people will quickly exit the room, sending a clear signal that they want to keep their emotions private. But some people have lingered on their mat as everyone else is leaving. I have read that as an invitation for me to check in and offer a hug or a shoulder to cry on.
In my example, I didn't really want anyone to interfere with my emotions at that time. There was something sad and delicious about those moments, almost as if I could feel his presence. That would immediately evaporate as soon as someone asked me what was wrong. I wanted those few extra moments alone with him, even if they were sad.
Processing our emotions as we open our physical bodies and challenge our patterns and habits is part of the transformative process of yoga.
Have you ever had an emotional experience on your yoga mat? What is your take on it? I'd be curious to know. If it happened during one of my classes, would you want me to comfort you? Or, to leave you alone?