What Yoga and Poetry Have in Common

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I vividly remember my first yoga class. My then-roommate and I had accidentally signed up for an intermediate level practice. We laughed as students around us flipped into Headstand while we struggled to (barely) understand Down Dog.

But after fumbling our way through that dynamic, breath-filled class, I spent the entire night writing. There was clearly something for me to discover with yoga, and I kept following that feeling until it became a steady part of my life.

Yoga and writing are practices that have much in common. Both focus on paying careful attention to the world and ourselves in it. Both ask us to remain present and consider how we feel, move, and what is happening around and inside us. The word “inspire” comes from the Latin root meaning “to breathe into,” and for many of us, breathing through our yoga practice wakes a feeling of creativity within.

And when it comes to poetry specifically, both work consciously with the breath. Just as yogis conduct their movement to inhalations and exhalations, poets consider the breath in decisions about rhythm, repetition, and where to break a line. Poetry also has ancient roots in an oral tradition where breath was used to help measure lines to make them easier to memorize. You might think of the breath as dancing through poems and yoga throughout time.

Text on a background related to yoga and poetry

On the yoga mat and on the page, these practices offer a kind of medicine amid a world of hustle and overwhelm. They honor precise decisions while also leaving room for mystery. They encourage us to slow down and notice what otherwise might be lost in scrolling and rushing. In fact, the presence needed to create a poem can be a helpful practice in and of itself that pulls us away from the swirlings of the mind, just as one experiences in yoga.

But this is not only a contemporary concept. There is a tradition of poets who worked with contemplative practices such as yoga and meditation. Poet Allen Ginsberg used to meditate with a pen and paper next to his cushion in case an idea came to him. Poet Mary Oliver famously took long meditative walks with a notepad in hand. The inner space created in yoga and other contemplative practices can give rise to poetry and art, if we pay attention. I like to think of these practices as moving in an infinity symbol—yoga can help make space for poetry in our minds and hearts, and poetry can, in turn, inspire us to come back to the mat.

And there is something devotional about both art forms. Where we place our attention is where we place our love. As poet Sylvia Plath wrote, “I took a deep breath and listened to the old brag of my heart. I am, I am, I am.” Isn’t this also what happens during the practice of yoga?

pOeMs

Over the years, we have received several unsolicited poems about yoga from readers. This, in turn, inspired us to put out a call for yoga-inspired poetry. Soon our inboxes were flooded. Some sent poems about postures. Others about meditation or personal insights gleaned from practice.  Many were titled. A couple originated from a college course in which participants were asked to write in Sanskrit and English. Below is a selection of yoga poems submitted by our readers. Perhaps you’ll consider writing your own.

Aspects of Aparigraha

This too shall pass

The constant anxiety about your future

The clenched jaw

The fear of being heart broken

The heartbreak itself

The future will arrive

Your jaw won’t have so much to hold

You won’t fear heartbreak because it, too, was fleeting

This too shall pass

The peace you feel on a slow Sunday

The excitement that follows the lightbulb moment

The naivety that only your imaginary friends remember

The deep belly laughs on girls night

It all passes eventually

Everything seemingly good or bad

So give yourself the gift

And feel fully

—Jenna Bowie

 

Experience

Yoga is experiential healing.

We learn how to shift our perspective,

Through movement and breath

Stillness and observation

By slowing down

Not thinking so much

It’s not an intellectual exercise

It’s subtle, feeling

And it evolves into loving ourselves

wholly

The more we get to know

The more we get to embrace.

When we begin to notice,

Listen and learn,

We more we reveal all we truly are

The beautifully unique

complex

messy beings we’ve manifested

as energy on Earth

In the stillness there is space to hold it all

When we hold ourselves in our hearts

We can share this love with others

Without condition

So, let yourself experience

Feel

Heal

—Ana Bartlett


A Love Letter to Yoga

Thank you for being my anchor.

Through the practice,

I’ve found a home in my body

and gratitude for what it can do.

For teaching me patience,

attuning to the small knowing

of where to go,

when to push,

and how to stay.

For giving me space in a busy world, slowing down when everything is speeding up. I know I always have a place to return to.

—Quyen Tran 

 

Seasons of My Practice

The winter of my practice is cold, slow, and cozy.

Pausing, rejuvenating, hibernating and resting,

In this season of contemplation and reflection.

The spring of my practice is transformative, patient, and slowly awakening.

Planting seeds for constant learning, watering, weeding, and waiting to bloom,

In this season of growth and expansion.

The summer of my practice is hot, fiery, and fast.

Pushing, striving, perfection and performance,

In this season of exploration and maturation.

The fall of my practice is dry, cooler, and changing daily.

Slowly grounding, releasing and letting go,

In this season of sorrow and grief.

The seasons of my practice

Follow the seasons of my life.

Each showing me to be

present with what is.

I know what season we’re in

By looking for the seasons within.

Expanding in summer, releasing in fall, yielding in winter, and blooming in Spring.

I arrive at my mat, greeting them all.

—Larissa Noto

 

 

Move Like You

Mind, body and breath

Dance together on the mat

Freedom in the heart

Amy Zambrano

I am a Black woman

Stepping into your class

I stay, yet there is no one like me here

I stay, even though my stomach churns

I stay, and breathe into the overwhelm

I stay, roll out my mat

I stay, when you say no colour boundaries and namaste all

I stay, when the poses are beyond my reach

I stay, after hearing take a child pose instead

I stay, even though I am ignored

I leave, and will never return

—Karen James

 

Mother Daughter Yin Yoga

I steal a glance

My heart open

Bolster under my spine

There she is

Prone to the sky

Heart wide

Face slack

Full of life, light, and energy

Chestnut hair gathered in a high bun

Lanky limbs settling in

Hands meeting at her heart center

Calm

Peaceful

Content

If even for just a moment

I am grateful for this practice

I am grateful for this stollen time

Together

Hearts open to the sky

Bodies anchored to our mats

Roots tapping down

Connected

To our bodies

To our spirit

To mother earth

Expanding outward

My mama heart shines

—Siri Newman

 

योगः करोतु

योगमार्गः प्रशान्तः स्याद्

योगो सुखं करोतु हि

दिपयेच्च मनं योगः

सर्वे च समदर्शिनः

Yogaḥ karotu

yo-ga-mār-gaḥp-ra-śān-taḥs-yād

yo-go-su-khaṃ-ka-ro-tu-hi

di-pa-yec-ca-ma-naṃ-yo-gaḥ

Sar-ve-ca-sa-ma-dar-śi-nah

May Yoga Do

May the path of Yoga be peaceful.

May Yoga bring happiness.

May Yoga light up the mind.

May Yoga bring equanimity to all

—Alison Guerrero

 

there is no stillness in the ocean.

there is no stillness in the ocean.

you breathe in,

drawing the lilting swell of salty expanse

into sun-drenched shores and sand-caked ankles,

yawning against the taste of gurgling seafoam and moonlit seaweed.

you hold your breath and squint your eyes against the brine,

for below the surface lies a churning force–

a beautiful and seething surrender,

unassuming in its decorum, yet steadfast in its breadth–

a moment of pause amidst eternal tides,

like the very earth is holding its breath.

only before the waves dip once more.

and with them the air from your lungs,

receding into its primordial expanse of salt and rock–

an ebb and flow against wind-whipped faces of limestone shores,

into the decidedly aloof divine pulsation.

but despite everything, the ocean churns on.

its rhythmic lull reminiscent of the wombspace,

with the power to suspend in a cradle of protection,

but also with the ability to drown.

you breathe in–

the salt sprays,

a gull cries out,

and there you are again.

there is no stillness in the ocean.

—Lauren Bocka

 

Child’s Pose

I curl up,

hips sink toward my heels,

release the heft of my body

and its tensions

to the Earth.

Hands in prayer,

fingertips resting

in the sticky grass

as this breeze runs to me.

Now –

Mother Nature

is so much more

than my childhood imaginary friend –

but a real mother

a nurturing mother

and she holds me here.

—Allison Zaczynski

 

Prakṛti’s Dilemma

प्रकृतिद्वैधीभावः
praktidvaidhībhāva

किं तस्मिनस्ति तस्यै तु पुरुषार्थमिदं हि चेत् ।
स पश्येत्सा तु तत्सर्वं संयोगः स्यात्परस्परम् ॥

 

kiṃ tasmin asti tasyai tu puruṣārtham idaṃ hi cet |

sa paśyet sā tu tat sarvaṃ saṃyogaḥ syāt parasparam ||

 

But what’s in it for her?

If this whole universe exists for the sake of purua.

He may see, but she’s all that!

Their yogic connection should be complementary.

—Dr. Zoë Slatoff

 

Grace

Double pigeon, forward fold,

a room full of held-still lungs

and Kristen says, do something 

to bring the breath back. 

Oh, look! How many times

the Divine has found a way to speak

through the matter of this world.

To get straight to the heart of us.

How all at once –

it’s made easy.

Could it have come sooner?

How much suffering could have been saved?

I could ask those questions.

Here I am, instead, Wasn’t it all worth the while?

rising from my throat, out my lips.

To have this water spring

from my face

as it does the sky

as it does the geyser

this celebration

that it is so – it is so! –

we help each other

bring back the soul

through a pigeon, a cue,

still might never know.

—Natalli Amato

 

In night so dark the eyes can’t focus,

let go your need for light.

 

Let go your blossoms to the sea;

let go each petal at highest tide.

 

Let go your necklace to the waves.

 

Let go the pages of the well-secreted diary

that marks your life; let go the ribbon

that held it in place all these years.

 

At lowest tide along the shore,

empty your ballooning pockets of their tokens;

they will be gathered by others soon enough.

 

Let go your steps behind in sand;

they will be scavenged soon, as well.

 

Let go your heart, broken or full.

 

Bring your heart in your two hands to the rocky

tidal pools that pulse and breathe—

 

Set your heart softly in the shallows

where muscles cling to life,

 

and let your heart go.

 

Only then will morning’s amber turn reveal

itself beyond the saltwater swells.

 

Only then may you see the crease in the sky

that birds travel through.

—J. Reuben Appelman

 

Ishvara Pranidhana 

I would gladly be a plankton

Swayed by the salty sea

Brushed into your comblike mouth

Gaping and consuming

Myself and a million others

Flowing down your gullet

Into your red, red stomach

To a fate unbeknownst

I swim into a crevice

A tiny fold of acid

Where my curved spine dissolves

Brief life so sweet and savage

—Sara Blowers

 

The beauty in life is in

Our own

Direct experience.

To love what is,

As it is,

As it is happening

Without need

For it to go on being–

Undoing the inner drama of

Resisting change

Undoing the attachments to how it

Ought to be

We simply

Free ourselves

To feel

To breathe

To be

And to become

—Megna Paula

 

Addiction

It slips unseen into the party

like a silent thief

determined to steal what is most valuable.

It slides into the bones and desires

and gets cozy in the easy chair.

It starts asking for special treats,

demanding daily treatment,

a repetition of a wash cycle:

rinse and repeat, dry,

rinse and repeat, dry,

but this fabric never quite dries

and the spinning is eternal.

It eats all the crumbs off the plate

just to return to the emptiness of desire,

the only fire it knows,

the only match to ignite the transgenerational flame

on the family altar of DNA.

Addiction cares only for itself,

feeds only itself,

pretending to be the cure for the deeper pain,

calling………calling…….calling

”Assuage…assuage”!

This remedy cannot cure

but only deepens

and thickens the scar of the original pain,

requiring more stretching,

more hot yoga,

to tear and stretch the scar,

exercising the wound to make it more soft and pliable,

the geography of pain becoming more detailed:

the softness of it here,

the toughness of it there.

Addiction is the unwanted guest

creating a house of lies

where only it can live.

How does one ask it to leave?

Build a new house;

call it the body.

Place it in a neighborhood

where everyone cares.

Let it dry in the sun in the backyard

like an old bed sheet.

Let it become a prayer flag

marking a boundary

to which one never returns,

fluttering ragged and tattered

in the Western wind

at sunset.

In the new morning,

love the little birds

that dare to alight on the line

at sunrise.

—Phillip Dirks

Fish Pose

the pelvis is an anchor
the rib cage buoyant
on spine of knotted rope

i
am going diving

some truth
may be at the top
of my head

alveoli tentacles flush
the engine of heart
i learn to see through water
it becomes a magnifying glass

cells open
a million portholes

where i went down
now i go up.

—Sarah Herrington



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