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Use the menu below to view previous Topic of the Month archives... FEBRUARY 2005 TOPIC OF THE MONTH PRANA So how do we know if we are filled with prana? And how do we know if it is flowing? Maybe a lack of prana is easier to identify. Are you tired, restless, ill, confused, lethargic, not able to focus, lacking motivation? These are signs your prana is weak. Are you Hungry, Angry, Lonely, Tired? HALT, pull your energy back. Imagine all your life energy is contained in 100 beams of light. This energy is what we need to get out of bed, dress, get to work, take care of kids, etc. How do your spend your energy? Many of us are not aware of our energy “leaks”. Our yoga practice is a tool we can use to detect these prana leaks, for example, this co-worker you had a disagreement with, you are stewing on that, you are angry. Whether you are right or wrong does not matter, you are giving your prana to this person. You may not be aware how you have been spending mental energy all day on this issue. You get to your Yoga class and begin sun salutes, you hop back and notice your energy is low, you push into up dog, back into down dog, inhale – exhale 1, you start to think about this person, inhale – exhale 2, you realize you have no bandhas, inhale – exhale 3, your mind is distracted, can you feel your energy flowing out of your body?–STOP THE DRAMA. Let this person and their doings go from your mind now, focus on breath, bandhas, form, and flow. This helps you disconnect. There are 100’s of ways we can lose energy, misplaced passion, addiction to people or substances or things, depression, fear, anger, pain, fantasy, attachments, etc. You can disconnect from these energy drains. If our prana is tied up we do not have enough to direct it towards what we want to create for ourselves (health, well-being, spiritual practices). Often when we begin Yoga, it feels like it is our darkest hour – it is a lot of uncomfortable exercise! But we stick with it. One day, a ray of light, “oh my down dog feels good!” We know what prana is, we know how to prevent leaks so we are filled with prana, now how do we control prana? Pranayama is breathing consciously, chitta and prana are closely related; where we send our thoughts, there we send our energy. We can influence the flow prana through the flow of our breath, and vice-versa the quality of our breath influences our state of mind. There are many different types of Pranayama and many different recommendations on how and where to begin. But it is really simple: Bring your breath into your attention. That’s it. Inhaling, expand your thorax, exhale allow the ribs to soften inward and the diaphragm to relax upward. As you feel your breath move your body become aware of the depth and length of your inhale and exhale. Make a conscious effort to equalize them. Pay attention also to the pauses between the inhale and the exhale, and the exhale and the inhale. These too are part of the breath. Feel the pause as pendulum, remember being on a swing? Remember the feel at the top of the arc where you are effortlessly suspended (and it feels delicious)? This is the pause in the breath, try to extend that delicious feeling. Prana is power, another definition of a yogi; One who’s prana is all within his body. Call your prana back, fill your body with your breath, use your Prana to “Start your engines” . . . Remember you have a choice of where you send your prana. Make a conscious effort to disconnect from your energy drain and call your prana back. You must constantly take an inventory of where you are sending your prana, are you feeling listless, tired, drained? This is your cue to check in and turn your attention to the present moment, bring your breath to your attention. You can take your Pranayama practice to the next level. Apana is a form of prana in the body in the lower abdomen (there are actually 5 types of prana-vayus). Apana is the energy that removes waste from the body. Apana moves down, but also needs to move up toward the flame of the digestive fire, Agni, to burn the rubbish before it can be removed. (It is the prevention of apana moving upward that leads to diseas. In inversions, Agni’s flame aims toward the lower region of the abdomen helping us to burn the rubbish.) When you can keep your prana in your body, burn the rubbish, and disconnect from the prana leaks, you will connect with Satchitananda (Truth, Knowledge, and Bliss).
© 2006 Bobbi Misiti | Be Fit Body & Mind YOGA |