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Iyengar Certified

Only the world's most knowledgeable, rigorously-trained teachers earn the
Iyengar Yoga Certification Mark.
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Summer 2008
Lately it seems many of
my students and friends, both female and male, are getting appearance-enhancing
surgeries, fillers, laser treatments, hair transplants, you name it. Why all
this fuss over appearance (or aging)? Is there so much unhappiness with self?
The attachment that is occurring to appearance and the placing of one’s
attention on it and investing it with emotional energy is defined in Yoga as
identification with the body-mind.
Lord knows this society places great emphasis on appearance and youth, looking
as good as one can. The problem with correcting one’s appearance is that it
reinforces the egoic personality and its destiny. It ignores the greater self.
This action attaches the person to the fruit of one’s action, the consequence.
And by presuming that which is eternal and essential to be in things that are
insubstantial and ephemeral, a person can get very lost.
Yes, the loss of looks (or ability) can bring a sense of diminishment to self.
Yet it is not. It is simply a change. Aging is change. In talking about
attachment we must also consider aversion. The Yoga Sutras list lust,
anger, greed and fear as a Yogins greatest enemy. The fear of aging, dying, of
change is non-acceptance of what is.
The thing to remember is that Yoga has the ability and purpose to attenuate the
causes of affliction and show us a way to transcend them. When there is a
prompting for action in the mind ask yourself, “What is the ego in my present
state?” Also ask yourself, “Am I defining myself with this action, with
the body/mind?” Then make your decision.
Still we must live in this world even as we attempt to transcend it. The central
message of Lord Krishna’s Song is the balancing of spiritual and worldly
goals (The Yoga Tradition, G. Feurstein, pg. 253). Worldly life and spiritual
life are not inimical to each other. They can and should be cultivated
simultaneously. This is the basis of an integrated life.
Our external actions are determined by traditional morals and values and codes
of behavior of our surrounding culture. Our internal awareness is cultivated
through observation and self-reflection. Integrating the two, ah, there’s the
yoga.
Namasté and Happy Summer,

Suzy
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