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Using Your Body To
Strengthen Your Mind
by:
Steven Barnes
For thousands of years, physical
disciplines like yoga, Tai Chi and
Sufi Dancing have been said to increase mental and spiritual powers. If
this is true, how might one explain this, and even better, how can we
use this fact, practically, to enhance our lives as artists, business
people, parents, and partners?
First, we have to strip away the
mysticism from the activity.
Not that these activities have no esoteric aspect, but rather that we
have to approach them on the most down-to-earth level. The higher the
tree, the deeper the roots. The taller the building, the deeper the
foundations. If you want to soar, be certain that your tether is
strong. So we need to start with a simple, physiological explanation
(if possible!) and then suggest a way that this ties in to advanced
artistic accomplishment, relationship skills, intellectual clarity, and
spiritual growth.
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My own enlightenment in this regard came
from studying the work of
Coach Scott Sonnon, the first American martial artist to train in the
former Soviet Union. While there, this brilliant man met Russian sports
and performance scientists who had been studying indigenous health
system in the Ural Mountains for a century. There, they found movement
and wellness concepts equivalent to anything in China or India. They
shared many of these concepts with Sonnon, and invited him to share
them in turn with Americans. Over the years, Coach Sonnon has created
hundreds of books, videos and essays on his interpretations of this
core knowledge.
Perhaps the single most important in terms
of Body-Mind is what
he calls the “Flow State Performance Spiral.” In order to relate this
breakthrough thinking in such a short essay, we’ll have to condense
considerably:
1) All physical technique is composed of
three aspects: breathing, movement, and structure.
2) Each of these aspects is controlled by
the other two (breath is created by movement and structure, etc.)
3) Stress “dis-integrates” this structure.
In other words, when
you are under stress, the physiological signs will manifest in your
breathing rate or shallowness, your posture, your muscle tension. This
is why lie detectors work!
Before he died, Hans Selye, the creator of
the “stress”
concept, said that he had misspoken himself, that it is not stress that
hurts us, it is strain. Stress is the pressure we are under. But strain
is the degree to which that stress warps us out of true.
Stress is not the enemy. In fact, when
handled healthfully, it is the primary trigger for growth. So the key
is to avoid strain.
Let’s skip around a bit to a truth about
artistic and
intellectual pursuits: your ability to utilize your intelligence,
education, skills or talents will be in direct proportion to your
ability to maintain “flow” under stress. Or to put it another way, in
life, we are rewarded for how much stress we can handle without
folding. Writer’s block, for instance, is nothing but a poor reaction
to performance stress.
Combining these ideas, what we have is that
mental and
emotional balance under stress leads to excellence. Combine this with
the fact that learning to cope with physical stress develops skills
that are tremendously applicable to the mental arena. The most
vulnerable portion of the “Flow State” triad (breath, movement,
structure) is breathing. Proper breathing will be degraded by stress
before you can detect it in posture or muscle tension. This is one of
the reasons breath control is addressed in most religions and spiritual
disciplines, whether this is through pranayama (yoga), exercise, hymns,
ritual prayers, dance, or sacred postures.
A good yoga teacher, for instance, will
place the student in a
posture sufficiently extreme to force total concentration. When the
student learns to relax and focus, that posture becomes relatively
easy, and a more extreme posture is given. The point is to teach the
student to monitor their own internal process. Fine martial arts or
breathing meditation teachers use similar techniques.
The student learns to recognize the early
signs of strain, and
to dissipate them. NOTHING in life creates more stress than lack of
oxygen, and learning to remain calm in the midst of oxygen debt will
teach you to remain calm when the children are screaming, when your
boss is on the rampage, when someone cuts you off on the freeway.
Or when you have a writing deadline, or when
insecurity and fear hammers at the door of your resolve.
Deliberately practicing a physical
discipline to enhance this
quality of calmness and centeredness, while simultaneously working
toward goals balanced in body, mind, and spirit, exposes you to the
currents of life while helping you develop the skills and strategies
necessary to excel. This, over time, leads to excellence, even in a
purely mental arena.
There are numerous disciplines that will
teach proper breathing
under stress, and this article has listed a few. If you wish to reach
your maximum potential as a mental, spiritual, and emotional being,
seek one of these techniques out, and integrate it into your life. It
is one of the best investments you could ever make in your future.
About The Author
NY Times Bestselling Writer Steven Barnes
has lectured on
creativity and human consciousness at UCLA, Mensa, and the Smithsonian
Institute. He created the Lifewriting high-performance system for
writers and readers. Learn more at: http://www.lifewriting.biz
and http://www.lifewrite.com.
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