Tantra, Cellular Awakening, and Embodyoga®

cn16x24_6975Tantra and Embodyoga®
Tantric thought arose about 1000 years after the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali were codified. Whereas the Yoga Sutras of Classical Yoga address the objective of overcoming the obstacles presented by being in an embodied form, Tantra is the yoga of engagement and relationship. Tantra sees the body and the world as the foundations of yogic practice, far from obstacles that need to be overcome, as is so often the perspective in Classical Yoga. In contrast, Tantra focuses directly on the body. Tantric philosophy includes a direct study of the human body-mind-energetic system with the goal of recognizing the Unity of all of life and engaging in the play of a life lived fully. A person who lives life in fullness accepts and incorporates all aspects of the human experience and celebrates our embodied form as nothing more or less than an expression of the Divine. Tantra recognizes the value of experiencing the universal wholeness (of which we are all a part), while enjoying the play of differentiation and individuality, which we embody as human beings. By viewing each individual body-mind system as a miniature replica of the structure of the universe, Tantra teaches that by studying our selves and our relationships—through all the levels of our personal manifestation—we open to the Universal Reality that is equally within as well as without. The practices of Hatha Yoga derive from Tantra and are designed to assist each person in the process of recognizing the abundance of life force that plays out before our eyes at every moment. Embodied Anatomy™ follows the same techniques that are outlined in the Yoga Sutras.

Embodied Anatomy™ takes us on a journey into the varying textures and densities of our form and structure. We consciously inhabit and become intimate with the family of cells and functions that support our very existence. In this process we begin to recognize the intelligence and awareness that is at the basis of each and every part of our body. Through Embodied Anatomy™ we actively explore ourselves in space from our densest structures to the most ethereal and spiritual.

For example, the densest aspect of our bones, compact bone, expresses our mineral body – the element of earth – and the consciousness and qualities of heaviness, stability, strength, stillness, and simple presence. Yet, at the level of the marrow that flows within them, even our bones are fluid and warm. This is a very different inner experience from the compact bone itself, which is relatively dry and moves less quickly. Yoga invites us into ourselves to explore the way the elements mix with intelligent–awareness and form a structural matrix. Earth, water, fire, air, and space are the elements that the ancient seers have pointed to for our inner contemplation. Our organ body is fluid, voluminous, and mobile. It relates strongly with the element of water warmed by fire.

Fully embodying our anatomy we become able to initiate movement directly from different body tissues and learn to allow the consciousness of these tissues to express in the movement. For example, moving from bone and muscle has a very specific quality of consciousness that expresses and is visible in the created form. Movement from the organs is softer and more fluid than bone, because those are the qualities of organ. Our glandular system has a lighter and more highly vibrant expression than bone, organ, or muscle. Initiating movement from the glands provides a crystalline kind of suspension system of support for the vertebral column and the skeletal structure as a whole. Glandular support feels light. Movement from the fascial system offers an interpenetrating fluid, elastic, and strong web of support throughout all the body tissues.
Although we appear to be solid, we know that at the level of the spinning atoms within we are actually composed of vast amounts of space. The yogic picture of human existence places awareness at the core. At the very subtlest level of our structure is space and the quality of ananda, or bliss. This experience too is embodied (part of who we are), and the invitation of yoga is to realize this by direct experience. Further, the yogis tell us that at the level of our “inner space,” the experience is one of bliss.

Cellular Awakening

Embodyoga® is a whole-person experiential investigation into, and enlivening of, cellular awareness. Through inquiry into our bodies in our asana, pranayama, and meditation practices, and by investigating our relationships in the world, we actively engage with all aspects of self and the environment in which we live. Our inquiry reveals direct perception and authentic experience of our true nature. By inviting insight into our true nature, we begin to notice that we are awake and alive at every level of our being. Cellular awakening alters our perception of self, the world, and our place in it. We spontaneously recognize that as we are, so is everything else.

There really is no end to these investigations! Embodyoga® offers tools and maps for investigating each layer of body and mind. Each practitioner’s journey is different and unique to him or herself. Our yoga practice is an ongoing exploration that is always fresh and new. We naturally create varying expressions of movement in asana, even when we are executing the same postures. We both create and witness the form of our practice taking shape. We become full participants in the dance of our individual and universal creation.

Over time, practice continues to yield greater benefits and enjoyment as we progressively recognize ourselves to be the Universal at play, expressing through the individual as qualities, shapes, and textures of moving consciousness. Our Embodyoga® practice follow the same process of the eight limbs yoga outlined by Patanjali in the Yoga Sutras. The yamas and niyamas guide our relationships with self, other, community, and the environment. We practice dharana, the yogic principle of collecting and focusing awareness. As we inquire, the naturally compelling attributes of body-mind draw our awareness deeper due to the increasing comfort and bliss inherent at the subtle levels of our being.

Through Embodied Developmental Movement™ we explore ourselves in time. Developmental movement patterns present very early in life, from our experiences in-utero and throughout the first year. As we grow, we move. Brain development and movement are interrelated, and it is our premise that developmental movement patterns underlie neurological integration of body and mind. By revisiting these patterns as adults, we are able to improve our mind-body coordination and integration.

Practitioners of Embodyoga® are motivated by curiosity and desire to see life as it is rather than as we think it should be. Our explorations are really fun! The deeper we go in our yoga inquiry, the more enjoyable the process becomes because the blissful qualities that emanate from our core draw us in. The style of practice will be familiar already to practitioners of Hatha Yoga. We use asana, pranayama, and meditation. In Embodyoga®, we fine-tune many of the basic Hatha Yoga techniques using cues from the inner body. Our practice may be very gentle and strongly inquiry-based at times, while at other times it may be vigorous strength building, or a flowing vinyasa style.

As students and future teachers of Embodyoga®, you are encouraged to recognize and celebrate the life force that is moving through every cell in your body! I would like you to know yourself from the inside out as a sea of self-aware, creative intelligence that is rising and falling with the movement of life force. When we practice Embodyoga®, we are willing to do the down-and-dirty work of investigating ourselves each time without a preconceived idea of who and what we think we will find. We are willing to see ourselves as we are. The process is sometimes easy and sometimes difficult. The goal is not to create a mood of enjoyment or happiness. The point is self-knowledge through our ongoing inquiry. We find out for ourselves who and what we are at each and every level of awareness, and through our personal experience we become established in that knowledge. Increasing self–knowledge leads to comfort and contentment, which allows spontaneous joy to arise. Abiding self–acceptance is the result of direct experience with our true nature and all that we are.

3 thoughts on “Tantra, Cellular Awakening, and Embodyoga®

  1. Thank you so much for sending these blog posts to me. I find that my journey is a spiral…perhaps a helix, that slips, slides, descends, ascends and hovers, backs away and reapproaches. I love this adventure, as an explorer/sharer. Sometimes I am mindboggled when I read things this comprehensive and I sit back and feel as a beginner again. Then I realize I digested so much more this time than the first time I was coming to these ideas and experiences…just another way to measure growth. .

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  2. Hello Patty
    I found some of you’re writing in Currents. I am an SME in BMC but have never got on with yoga as it is usually presented. Since I have started a serious relationship with a wonderful girl who happens to be a yoga teacher I thought it is time to challenge my resistance. It had been really difficult for us as a couple to find a common language for our bodywork passions.

    Whilst we have both been making efforts there is a sense that I don’t really “get” her thing and she doesn’t “get” mine.

    But for is in sight. We have started reading your blog together. Finally we can point at it and say “that is what I have been taking about.”

    So than you for main my desert relationship better and also being part of my “way in to this fascinating body of practice

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