My sister, her husband, and their two little girls (ages 4 and 15 months) visited this week so I’ve been pre-occupied with dress-up, bedtime stories, and princesses. Children are natural yogis, so of course I also learned a thing or two about yoga.
Here’s a sampling:
1. “We are all princesses!” The ultimate compliment coming from a 4-year-old girl. I think there’s a lot of truth in it, too. We can be princesses if we make the choice to see the good in ourselves. In yoga terms, it’s like saying we’re all a spark of the Divine. We’re all perfect just the way we are.
2. “This is my special talent–a gift from God!,” announced Rosemary when she discovered that she could actually stand up in three feet of water, and thus could “swim” on her own after keeping a death grip on Aunt Erica for at least an hour. Sometimes we take for granted that simple pleasures (like the ability to swim in a pool) are pretty amazing gifts. “They should make this a part of yoga.”
3. What was your favorite animal at the aquarium? “All of them!” That’s right. It’s impossible to choose one fish, reptile, or amphibian over another when they’re all new and exciting. This is what we call “beginner’s mind” in yoga. The first time you experience something, you’re totally present and open to learning. You giggle with delight the first time you touch a slimy sting ray and are exhilarated when find yourself in a new backbend you’ve never tried. Same thing.
4. While beginner’s mind brings a sense of awe and wander to things, it also introduces an element of surprise–and sometimes fear. When my nieces were scared of something–the ocean, the pool, a snake at the aquarium–they were also curious. I watched as they touched a scaly animal with the tip of one finger (testing the waters, so to speak). Then, when nothing bad happened, they would try again with a little more confidence (two fingers), and so on until their fear vanished. This is how we approach new yoga poses, and it’s a smart way to approach life, too. Always testing our boundaries and limitations, but with caution and respect for the unknown.
Bob Weisenberg says
I love this, Erica. I'm so glad I happened to catch the link on Twitter. (I've been so wrapped up in my own projects recently that, regrettably, I haven't been able to keep up with my favorite bloggers.)
I like the Yoga/kid analogy, and I'm now experiencing it with my grandkids and grand nieces. Direct quote from YogaDemystified.com:
The great gurus of Yoga and other Eastern traditions achieve inner peace and experience the ultimate joy in life by cultivating the boundless wonder of a child. For them every moment is the occasion for innocent amazement, even in the middle of the most trying circumstances. They still experience all the ordinary pain and difficulty of being human. They just process it differently.
Have you thought about writing for Elephant? Did I ask you that already? Could I publish this blog on elephant as a guest on my blog?
Bob Weisenberg
Elise says
I love this! I have doing yoga with my son but I love but I have to say a highlight of my year is teaching yoga at Fairy Camp, a camp that a good friend of mine, Jodi set up to teach young girls about what she learned as a masters student in women's spirituality. At the camp we dress up with lots of glitter and fairy wings to celebrate the divine especially of the feminine type. http://www.fairycamp.org
Love it!
meg says
I love this post! I just recently did a training for teaching children's yoga at Kripalu, and with the arrival of my 9 & 10 year old cousins to visit this week, had my first opportunity to share yoga with them today! I especially loved #4 on your list about the beginners mind — I loved that aspect of sharing yoga with them.
Bob Weisenberg says
Since we're talking about kids yoga, just want to make sure everyone's aware of this indispensable book:
Once Upon a Pose
Bob W.
SpoiledYogi says
Bob,
Yes, you're welcome to re-post this to Elephant (or anywhere else for that matter), please just link back to the blog! 🙂
I did a guest post for Elephant a while back and got a great response! It's just hard to juggle all the places I want to write!
Bob Weisenberg says
Done. See: http://bit.ly/ds70Zk
Let me know if you want me to edit anything. Pass the word.
Bob