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The Tao is Ever Youthful
by Mark Powell
"He who is in harmony with the Tao is like a newborn child." --Tao Te Ching,
verse 55
Young children have supple bodies and supple minds. Their thinking is open, fluid,
fresh, original. Their limbs are flexible, yielding, pliant, yet surprisingly strong.
As we age, our minds fill with fixed concepts and static beliefs; we become "set
in our ways." We become stiff and life starts to seem dry and old. Simultaneously,
our bodies become calcified and brittle when compared to our childhood selves.
We presume all of this to be normal, but is it? Haven't we all met, at some point
in our lives, people who brazenly defied this "normal" rigidification?
Haven't you at least once, crossed paths with an elderly person whose body was peculiarly
supple and nimble and whose thinking was spontaneous, open, and inexhaustibly creative?
I would suggest that such people -- no matter how rare they are -- are not genetic
anomalies, but rather they represent our most natural state, throughout our lives.
Furthermore, I am convinced that, even if your body and mind have begun to stiffen
and calcify, you can initiate a powerful process of youthing, a process that washes
away time, that moves you in the direction of flexibility, suppleness and fluidity,
of limb and thought.
If you wish to return your body-mind to its natural state, open and vibrant, you
have before you the exciting process of experimenting with different approaches to
see what works best for you. Your body and mind truly are one, singular process.
That's why rigidity in one almost always co-exists with rigidity in the other. But
most of the modalities that can support your youthing process tend to emphasize one
dimension of the being, the mind or the body, more than the other.
For the mental dimension, even conventional psychological therapy can help us to
see certain fixed mental constructs that we didn't even know we were peering through.
A newer psychological system called Psychology of Mind (or the Health Realization
model) is also very nice for helping people access that fresh, ever new state of
the young child, which they call "free flow mode." Certain meditation approaches
can also empower our ability to "step back" and gain space from various
rigid life attitudes and previously unconscious presumptions that keep us interacting
with life in fixed, stereotypical patterns.
Indeed, some of the early Zen Masters spoke in terms of realizing one's Original
Mind. Krishnamurti's writings are virtually all aimed at stripping away the old accumulations
from the mind, to allow fresh, original perception and thought. The Divine Avatar,
Adi Da, might describe all of our unnatural "oldness" as coming from the
chronic life orientation of "avoiding relationship." This is the usual
way of being wherein we live contracted upon ourselves (the gesture of the closed
fist), preoccupied with our own subjectivity, rather than turned out, in fully abandoned,
free participation in life (the gesture of the open hand). To live as "the open
hand," is to be porous enough to be always touched by life, which is always
just as fresh, brilliant and mysterious as it was when you were just a toddler.
Of course, mentioning these resources is not to suggest that you can't enjoy some
significant youthing merely by generating a mighty intention and resolve. You can
deliberately cultivate a new, passionate curiosity and receptivity about people and
things. You can develop new creative arts, engage new life challenges, take new risks.
Get a degree in anthropology. Learn Swahili. Take up the bouzouki. No matter how
you start to regain the freshness and openness of your mind, you'll likely notice
changes in your body, too -- more looseness, lightness, expressiveness.
If you're moved to come at this more from the body side, you'll be amazed to experience
how working with the body affects your ways of thinking. Systems like Feldenkrais®
or Continuum or bioenergetic therapy are beautiful and elegant approaches to breaking
up brittle ways of living in and as the body.
Yoga, theatrical training, certain dance forms (like contact improvisation) and certain
martial arts (like Tai Chi, Hsing I or Pa Kua Chang) can also open up the body's
possibilities for movement and expression. Depending on how they're taught, however,
some of these disciplines can enforce an equally artificial, fixed "norm"
of movement, as unfree and unnatural as the randomly accumulated ones you're trying
to break out of! It depends on the teacher and your unique constitution. The barometer?
It may be hard, but, overall, it should make you more alive, open, free and spontaneous
in your body, not like you've acquired a new set of "shoulds" to conform
to.
Another option is Rolfing®, my discipline. As a Rolfer, I use my hands to directly
soften and free up bodily rigidities, in a precise, systematic progression. I work,
mindfully and reverently, with my client's myofascial tissues, releasing old restrictions,
melting the hard, tough, "armoring" that has accumulated. This restores
circulation, length, openness and bodily "spaciousness," allowing more
of the pliant quality of a young child to come forth.
The Tao Te Ching asks, "Can you let your body become as supple as a newborn
child's?" This "Taoist Rolfing," as I sometimes think of it, facilitates
your own consciousness of how you "do" rigidity and constriction, in mind
and body. Again, the Tao Te Ching: "The Master has no resistances in his body."
However you come at it, this "youthing" process is always the opposite
of the consumer model. It is not one of accumulating and acquiring and "adding
to." It is always one of releasing, relinquishing, letting go, unlearning and
stripping away. Because the natural condition of your body-mind is pristine, free,
unencumbered -- or, as the 6th Patriarch of Zen said, "pure from the beginning."
You simply have to go through the journey of discovering all the crusty limitations
that have accumulated over the years in your body and mind, and throwing them away.
What you will discover, a little more with each passing month, is a whole bodily
presence that is as free, spontaneous and fluid as a young child, but one who gets
to decide his or her own bedtime. And it really doesn't get much better than that.
Mark Powell is a certified Rolfer, practicing in the Uptown/Kenwood area of South
Minneapolis since 1997. He also teaches the Radiant Eating Program, Transforming
Your Diet as an Inner Path. Additionally, Mark has been a student of Avatar Adi Da
Samraj for 12 years, whose Spiritual Teachings have irrevocably shaped his approach
to Rolfing (and everything else) and, therefore, much of the approach reflected in
the article above. Contact him at (612) 872-6055.
Copyright © 2005 Mark Powell. All rights reserved. |
| January 2005 |
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