Getting up for the 5:45 AM yoga classes was hard for me.
The anxiety would begin the night before. I would dread it. I would try and think of excuses on how to get out of it. I would wake up at 2 AM and panic, “Is it time yet?” I would worry that I wouldn’t get enough sleep. I would begin the suffering the night before! Then in class, I would tell myself, “This sucks, this sucks, this sucks.”
I realized that my anticipation was blocking presence. I was not available to reality as long as I insisted on my own version of it. A Course in Miracles says that judgment blinds us. That is what was happening to me. I was judging the future and blind to what was real. All I could see was my version, my prediction. I was going to war against reality. My victory in this “war” was being “right.” The early morning class did suck and I did feel terrible. And my reward for being “right” was suffering. Somehow I realized that this was not a good “victory.” There must be another way of seeing this.
I have found a new way of seeing this: presence. I doubt and question my anticipation. The night before, I say to myself, “Right now I am safe in bed. There is nothing I need to do or worry about right now.” No anticipation, no dread, no suffering.
When the alarm goes off, rather than tell myself how badly I feel, I try to feel what is really there to be felt. I become aware of the impersonal biological process of shifting from sleeping to awakening. I can feel my eyesight checking in and turning on, my balance, my muscles. I can feel the remnants of sleepiness fading. I appreciate the reality of the transition. This turns out to be a peaceful experience compared to me insisting on how bad I feel and how early it is.
1 comment:
Thanks Philip- getting out of bed felt much lighter -today. Joan
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