So far, the yoga is fun, productive, and completely kicking my ass. I had no illusions that it would be easy. After all I'm about as flexible as a brick. After my first session, I laid on the floor feeling that rewarding, "good" tired feeling which comes with expending effort. The same tired I would feel after an afternoon of pick-up basketball. The next morning, however, I felt like I had been in a street brawl. I'm using muscles that likely haven't been activated since I last played ice hockey a decade ago. Little muscles that the next day say, "Hey, f%&ker, remember me?" Little muscles that I should have been nicer to all these years. Little muscles that were so neglected they nearly put me in traction last year simply for loading the dishwasher. My elbow hurt for days. My lower back laughed at me. My surgically repaired knee barked its displeasure. But by sticking with it, I am slowly whipping them all into line. Of course, making progress is not the same as getting easier. I still don't look great in my skin tight yoga pants. (Let that image settle in. You're welcome. Do I really wear yoga tights? Wouldn't you like to know.) When the teacher instructs me to tuck my chin, I still have ask which one. Many of the poses still present great challenges. Humorous challenges. I-could-probably-sell-tickets challenges. Grace watches me practice with much amusement. I laugh at myself trying some of this stuff. It's like playing a demented game of Hokey Pokey. Put your whole self in, put your whole self out, put your whole self in, trying not to quake or pout...
My favorite moment, so far, occurred while I was home alone, fortunately. I was attempting a tree pose for the first time. A tree pose includes balancing on one leg while tucking the bottom of the opposite foot against the thigh of the first leg, then stretching your arms skyward. My first attempt went swell. Much better than I anticipated. Then I switched legs. I lost my balance as I reached for the sky, but didn't want to bail on the pose, thinking that I could pull it together. Instead I ended up hopping across the living room on one foot, like some sort of ill flamingo, nearly crashing into the couch and end table. That, kids, is why you start practicing in the privacy of your own home. I can only imagine the squeals of laughter had my girls been home.
As my practice deepens, my fitness improves, and my mind calms, I hope to shake loose a little enlightenment. I could use it. I question everything right now. I talk to my friends who have similar questions. Are we good role models for our kids? Are we saving enough money? What the hell is happening in the world? Do I have a job or a career? Does that even matter? When did Guns n' Roses become Classic Rock? Call it our Gen-Xistential Crisis.
For decades (holy shit!), I have wondered what I want to be when I grow up. I always thought it would one day pop into my head. I ponder. I ruminate on it. I pray about it. I talk to people. I know dazzling entrepreneurs and people who knew what they wanted to be early on and went after it. And I know a host of us stuck in neutral, convinced we were put here to do something different/better/more productive, but unable to pinpoint it. Now, we wonder if we are trapped between the safety of our day jobs and the risk of taking the leap if we ever figure out where to jump. We wonder if we are wasting our time and talents working for faceless corporations, municipalities, even families that give a hoot about little more than the bottom line. As resources are stretched thin, we are asked to trust the system, to do more with less. Lack of support and common sense from CEOs and superintendents tilts the scales towards ejecting and finding something new. I'm convinced, were we to band together, we could save the world, or, at the very least, put together a kick-ass fantasy football league. Hopefully, when an idea strikes, I will be ready for action. Until then I head back to the mat to breathe deep, seek inspiration, and play the weirdest game of solo Twister I've ever played.
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