This is an article on the three most impacting quotes from the Gannon/ Life book, along with my personal take-away and experiences.
Reflection on Gannon/Life Book:
This is my big take-away from the book: that I had everything to do with where I am now; that I must set aside “I know,” so that I can be taught; and that the vibrations of yoga allow me to transform through cat-cow-cobra-dog.
I had everything to do with where I am now. Sometimes it’s tempting to take credit as my individual effort for everything I do and say. However, if not for efforts of those who have gone before me or for the graces of the Divine, I would not have the actions or words I have.
In physics, every action has an equal and opposite reaction. So too, in my life, do my actions have effects. For example, if I have a bad day at work through no fault of my own and go home with a negative attitude, the result, if I choose to maintain the negative attitude, is that I will say hurtful things to those around me. My friends and family around me will remember these hurtful words and it will have a negative impact on my future.
On the other hand, if, instead, after by bad day at work, I let it go—I lift it up to God—I say “good day, bad day, I don’t know”—I say “ah, so”—I ask that “God’s will be done,” I go home with a positive, or at least tolerant, attitude, the result, if I choose to embrace the positive attitude, is that I will be loving and gentle with those around me. At the very least, I will have the clarity to think “If you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all,” and I will withhold negative comments to those around me. Again, my friends and family will remember this version of me and give me that benefit in the future.
The quote from Gannon/ Life that inspired this thought is:
Each soul is working out what it must on its road back to the Source. When you accept that you will never know the real story behind someone else’s karma, you can stop envying or pitying others. You can start paying attention to your own karma, your own actions. You are the agent for your fate. You had everything to do with where you are now. What you did before matters. What you are doing now matters. What you are thinking now matters. * The yogi accepts a pleasant turn of events with equanimity, knowing that pleasure and pain never last forever. Yogis accept difficulties as opportunities to work out bad karma. It is wise to give thanks for everything that happens, knowing that the present situation can change in an instant. (page 45)
I must strive to set aside “I know” so that I may be taught. There’s something special to be about a student-teacher relationship. Sometimes the parties don’t even know they’re in that kind of relationship.
I want to take a second to evaluate the rare moments when I may fill the role of teacher: around my siblings, around the youth group students I volunteer with, around non-lawyers, and when tutoring on high school subjects. This said, all the “students” have something to teach me: my siblings all have gone on different life paths than me and have fantastic stories to share; the youth group students have such enlightened insights I can’t help but learn from; non-lawyers often see and seek clarity and simplicity in the round-about, difficult, complicated explanations I given them; and my high school tutoring students challenge me to be a committed person.
Now that I’ve identified when I may be the teacher, I must acknowledge, accept, embrace that I am usually the student. With my man, I am always learning form his kindness and generosity to be more patient with people and given them the benefit of the doubt. With lawyers, I am always learning how to do my job better—learning to review briefs and letters more thoroughly; learning to put up with more difficult personalities; and learning to stay strong in adversity.
I’m always learning. I don’t know, and I can embrace my “I don’t know.”
The quote from Gannon/ Life that inspired this thought is:
When you come before any teacher, set aside “I know,” so that you can be taught. (page 70)
Now we come to cat-cow-cobra-dog. This is how I like my asana practice. When I go to the gym by myself, after cardio and weights, I clear my mind for the day with my asana practice: mountain, breath in, arms to sky on inhale, arms arched back on exhale, dive into a forward fold, inhale, exhale, adjust legs and knees, inhale, exhale, step feet back to plank, inhale, exhale, inhale, push down on exhale, cobra on inhale, down dog on exhale, hold for inhale, exhale, adjust legs, inhale, exhale, adjust shoulders, inhale, step legs up to arms on exhale, inhale forward bend, exhale, inhale and roll up to mountain. Repeat. When in next down dog, drop knees and inhale, exhale, look at sky and arch back on inhale in cat, release all air and look through legs as spine is rounded in cow, repeat. This is so basic and I’m so in love with these movements and how they make me feel, that cat-cow-cobra-dog struck me intensely.
The quote from Gannon/ Life that inspired this thought is:
Each asana is a unique vibrational expression of an aspect of manifestation. In each vinyasa krama, you experience the flowing river of life as you become cat-cow-ocbra-dog. When we place ourselves in an asana, we express both the vibrational essence of its Sanskrit name and the vibrational essence of the life form that the asana embodies. (page 155)