Karin Eisen Yoga

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The Plateau

Yoga is experienced mostly on a plateau.

When you first start your yoga practice students often experience immediate results. What you are doing now is so different than before that you can’t help but notice the shift. You may initially be sore in places you never felt before. But then you fall into a routine. You may have a habit of going to class 3 days a week and once your body adjusts to that you have a new normal. You tend to be there for a while. It feels good. You are stronger and more flexible than you were before.

But then you want more, you crave the feeling of that initial shift. You want the next level of insight, that deeper feeling. Now is the time to practice patience. It takes a while for your body to completely remodel itself from the inside. We have to marinate in this new state for a while.

This is the first of many plateaus. You need to be content on the plateau as your body remodels itself. But then something needs to shift. Exercise physiology tells us that we need to change up our routine every 8 weeks or so, otherwise we fall into a rut, we become acclimated to doing the work. So what needs to shift? Either frequency, intensity, or alignment/insight.

Can you change the frequency? If you only practice yoga by taking classes, then you may not be able to change the frequency. You may be limited when classes are offered and by your time and ability to get there. At some point, if you want change, you need to start practicing yoga at home. This may allow you to practice more frequently as well as allow you to practice the things that you want to work on. Plus, by practicing at home, you save the commute time.

Can you change the intensity? One of the obstacles to moving off of the plateau and into the next level is that we start to go on auto-pilot. In class, I have been asking people not to rest their elbow on their knee in Side Angle Pose. If you always rest your elbow on your knee in this pose, you will never go any deeper. Your hamstrings won’t get the extra stretch and your quads will get used to the level of demand you are putting on them. If you have to reach to a block, you might be reaching a little bit further and this little bit can be the thing that moves you off of the plateau. I know that putting your hand onto the floor or on a block is harder than resting your elbow on your knee, but that is part of the effort or tapas that can move you to the next level.|

How about insight and alignment? If you can’t seem to be able to get your hand to a block or onto the floor in Side Angle Pose, it is time to look at what you are doing in the pose. Is your front knee bent 90 degrees, or does it just feel like it is? Look in a mirror, or have a friend take a picture and look at yourself objectively. You may be surprised at what you are doing as opposed to what you think you are doing. If you take a picture of yourself in a pose, compare your pose to a pose in a book like Light on Yoga. How does your pose differ from the picture? What would you have to work on to make it more similar?  Are you in alignment?

As you dive deeper into yoga, you may start to pay attention to the other seven limbs: yama (how you treat others), niyama (observances for yourself), pranayama (breathing practices), pratyhara (withdrawal of the sense), dharana (concentration), dhyana (meditation) and Samadhi (absorption). Physical progress can be halted by not attending to the other aspects of our life and health. These other limbs of moral and ethical behavior, as well as paying attention to the breath, concentration, self-study and meditation have a subtle, but profound effect on the physical body.

It is also important to allow yourself to be on a plateau. Maybe you cannot commit any more time or effort into your yoga practice. You may find yourself in a good spot and you just want to maintain that. That is fine. Stay there and marinate in your practices. YOu may find that, even there, things eventually begin to shift ever so slightly.

And finally, “Yoga will never work if we just do it for ourselves, it has to be for something bigger.” - From How Yoga Works by Geshe Michael Roche.