As we explored various ways to do poses using wall ropes, we taught our
discoveries to others. During this time, a group of students from abroad
came to study with Guruji. They had studied with him in the past and
were eager to learn "what was new". They were all thrilled with the new
wall rope system, and when they left, they expressed their desire to put
up wall ropes in their studios back home.
Two years later, the same group returned to continue their studies at
the Institute. We were astonished! They could no longer do the poses
that required strength or endurance. Their intensity had faded and their
poses had wilted. Their bodies were floppy, depleted of spunk and
strength. We couldn't understand what had happened. Very diplomatically,
we inquired about their daily practice. They said they had been so
excited about the wall ropes that their entire practice now consisted of
hanging on wall ropes in one pose after another! We had our answer: An
approach that had been designed to merely balance an active practice had become their sole practice, hence their practice was now an imbalanced practice.
The young and aggressive members of our group of student teachers had a
good laugh at the expense of these yogic bats, yet they continued to
practice in their own imbalanced ways. Many of them felt that they were
far too young and fit to bother with restorative poses at all.
Restoratives were for the old or the weak! Or the lazy! These young
teachers just wanted to "go for the burn," and become lean and mean.
They wanted to become as physically attractive to the opposite sex as
possible, yet somehow appear "yogic". As an inevitable consequence, one
of these young teachers became physically abusive to his wife and
children. Another ended up with extremely high blood pressure, while yet
another became chronically irate and judgmental. Still another,
violently pushing against the tensions that were bottled up inside him,
ended up resorting to the bottle. So, while those who practiced only
restoratives could barely hold themselves up, those who practiced only
vigorous poses ended up agitated, overly sexed, and violent. Ah,
balance! Why are you so hard to find?
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