Arranging The Structure: Raya Uma Datta - Bahiranga Sadhana Workshop - Day 3
Yoga Connections
Raya ended the first of his three consecutive workshops on the tenth of January. If this workshop is any indication of the next two, I highly recommend them. The first workshop proved to be a beautiful tribute to the extraordinary work of B.K.S. Iyengar.
Mr. Iyengar made it his life’s work to give us the best possible directions for our external quest, Bahiranga Sadhana. He and his daughter, Dr. Geeta Iyengar worked tirelessly to provide a beginner’s guide, an intermediate guide, a woman’s guide, a teacher’s guide, along with ongoing hands-on workshops around the world—and for those with over eight years of continuous study, month-long lessons at the Ramamani Iyengar Memorial Yoga Institute (RIMYI) to inform our body, mind, and spirit to better understand the principles outlined in his book Light on Yoga. In turn, this can inform our ability to practice the next level of the eight-limbed path of Astanga Yoga outlined by the Sage Patañjali and then the next level after that.
Prashant Iyengar mentioned in his Fall workshop how understanding the vast magnificence of what this path has to teach can take lifetimes. Synthesizing the incredible lessons BKS Iyengar taught us requires dedication, practice, and repetition. It takes analyzing sequences and constantly asking your mind, body, and spirit questions. What is overworking? What is underworking? Then, connecting our brain to the area in our body that is weak. “This is your problem child,” is an often-quoted statement of Mr. Iyengar. Raya emphasized how Guruji gave us lessons that take us far beyond what general asana practice can teach us. The use of props and supports help us identify what is working and what is not. Raya explained the “The brain is the map of the body,” but we must make those connections happen. BKS Iyengar’s critical analysis of each part of our body from the gross to the subtle helps students of Iyengar Yoga move from the raw shape of a pose to the sculpted grace of wholeness asana is meant to offer. To get even the tiniest glimpse of this experience is what keeps Iyengar Yoga students coming back to learn more.
Equilibrium is a word that Raya wanted us to understand as "a balance of forces." We focused on the upper thigh, which has many parts: anatomy withholding, inner and outer, and back to front, along with the many sections in between to be analyzed. As a whole, the upper thigh is not as awake as other parts of the leg such as the knee or calf. Raya increased our proprioception into the upper thigh with a series of asana that inform us about our work in this area. Asana such as Adho Mukha Svanasana, Urdhva Mukha Prasarita Eka Padasana, Virabhadrasana III, Parvritta Ardha Chandrasana, returning to Urdhva Mukha Prasarita Eka Padasana with the leg up the wall. Raya used the idea of "six degrees of separation" to explain how to get to a more complex asana, we must look at what came before it to inform us of the body/mind connections that must be made before we can begin to practice it. We used a weighted sandbag on the calf, Urdhva Mukha Prasarita Eka Padasana, to redirect our efforts into the upper thigh because we tend to lift from the calf, not the thigh, but it is the intelligence of the upper thigh that is the gateway to more complex asana such as an inverted elbow or head balances. By the time Raya took us to these places, attempting to split our legs and sustain our balance in the inverted elbow and head balances, we knew, in no uncertain terms, the value of the work of the upper thigh. The day gave us a glimpse into the unfathomable depths of detail that BKS Iyengar explored to facilitate our Bahiranga Sadhana and open pathways to experience the necessity of Yama and Niyama.
Raya did a spectacular job sharing the experience of how every arm position, every minute instruction BKS Iyengar has offered us creates more "intimacy" in the conversation between all the parts of the body until they all know their particular role and the "force" they must wield in that role to create a structure that will last. Equilibrium brings balance, and balance is something we can sustain indefinitely. Raya explained the stress we feel in the world is a result of imbalance. Iyengar Yoga teaches us how to arrange our structure to achieve balance. With that knowledge and wisdom, we can better structure our world to make it more balanced and sustainable.What a gift.
Thank you, Raya, for your special and specific insights, Iyengar Yoga of Greater New York for hosting, my mentor, Kquvien DeWeese, and The Iyengar Family, whose guidance has made it all possible.
For those with over three years of continuous Iyengar study, Raya will be offering two more workshops Antaranga Sadhana, Engaging in the Intra-Structure in February and Antaratma Sadhana, Surrendering into the Meta-Structure in March.
Namaste