Picture
Practice makes perfect.  
Give your all.
When you don’t succeed, try and try again.  
Try and fail, but don’t fail to try. 

We’re taught to do our best from a very early age, and our parents aren’t wrong for teaching us this.  But unfortunately, most of our parental figures, coaches, teachers, and leaders, have taught us that to do our best we must put forth a lot of effort and try really really hard.  We must push ourselves to the limit.  We must work and work until we get it right.  Mistakes are bad.  Perfection is good.

When I was in 9th grade, I started having a lot of trouble in math.  I was in an advanced math class as it had all come pretty effortlessly for me up until that point. I had never been a huge math enthusiast, but I hadn’t ever minded the class before either.  Rather than have me drop down into the “average” class, my parents hired a tutor to help reinforce concepts so that I would get better grades on my exams.  I remember feeling that that harder I tried—the more effort I put in--the less and less I seemed to “get it”.   I remember leaving 1st period not only exhausted and frustrated, but with lots of anxiety and these strange tension headaches.  In the end I think I squeaked by with a C to my frustration and my parents dismay.  And from that point on, math was a joyless activity and still is to this day. I dropped the subject as soon as I could.

I think we all want the best for ourselves and our children.  But if we ride ourselves too hard, if we over-effort, if we wreck ourselves in our desire to achieve a goal—even if we eventually achieve that goal—what did we really accomplish? 

In the Alexander Technique, doing one’s best holds a very different meaning than it does in most of western culture.  In an Alexander Technique lesson, the teacher will put forth an intention, whether it be getting out of a chair or playing a piece of difficult music, and at the same time, ask the student to let go of the desire to “get it right”.  When the student truly lets go of their fear of making a mistake (not an easy thing by the way!), it not only creates physical and emotional ease and a greater sense of awareness, but invites the student to let go of a narrowed perspective and open themselves to new possibilities that may not have been there before.  Trying—in  other words effort—creates unnecessary tension.  When the student moves towards their goal with a sense of ease and freedom (both mentally and physically), they accomplish their task more efficiently, with more joy, and without sacrificing themselves in the process.

I work a lot with actors, and what I’ve come to find is that most performing artists don’t feel like they are doing a good job unless they exude a lot of muscular effort and tension (generally what is thought to be the opposite of good acting). When I am able to get an actor to do less, to not push for results or emotional qualities, their performance often becomes exceptional.  But what’s so very interesting is that most actors don’t believe me when I tell them how amazing their work was.  “But it didn’t feel like I was doing anything!” they cry.   “Exactly!”  I say.  What they failed to feel was the over-efforting and extra tension they are used to feeling when doing their work.

The next time you have an important goal—whether it is nailing a job interview, creating an impressive dinner party, participating in a 5K, or playing an exceptional golf game, see what happens—just for a moment—if you can let go of your desire to “get it right.”  What happens if you acknowledge a mistake gracefully and with curiosity rather than let it lock you up?  What if you open yourself up to other possible paths, even if the one you’re already on seems self-evident and clear? 

Doing your best might just get a whole lot better.

What are your thoughts about doing your best?  About achieving goals no matter the cost?  I'd love to hear your experiences and thoughts...



http://www.freedigitalphotos.net/images/view_photog.php?photogid=2888
ddpavumba / FreeDigitalPhotos.net


 
 
I recently read an article in the New York Times by William J. Broad called How Yoga Can Wreck Your Body.  Contentious?  Probably more than a little.  Upsetting to those who practice? Absolutely.  Being a dabbler in yoga myself I had to say my hackles went up at this one.  Still, the article made some valid points.

Broad’s article features a renowned instructor named Glen Black who teaches only a few simple poses and almost no inversions (head stands, shoulder stands).  “Black has come to believe that ‘the vast majority of people’ should give up yoga altogether. It’s simply too likely to cause harm…Not just students, but celebrated teachers…injure themselves in droves because most have underlying physical weaknesses or problems that make serious injury all but inevitable.”

Although his viewpoint is extreme, I can’t completely disagree with what he’s saying.

According to the New York Times, “The number of Americans doing yoga has risen from about 4 million in 2001 to what some estimate to be as many as 20 million in 2011 — [this] means that there is now an abundance of studios where many teachers lack the deeper training necessary to recognize when students are headed toward injury.”  The demographic of people doing yoga has also shifted.  Indian practitioners of yoga grew up sitting cross-legged and squatting, and continue to sit in these positions their entire adult life.   According to Broad, “Yoga poses, or asanas, were an outgrowth of these postures.”  Americans who sit sedentary in chairs all day staring at computer screens or fuming in traffic lack the natural flexibility that yoga demands. Even those of us who stay fit and take regular exercise are not necessarily equipped for the demands of some poses.

Furthermore, “a growing body of medical evidence supports Black’s contention that, for many people, a number of commonly taught yoga poses are inherently risky. The first reports of yoga injuries appeared decades ago, published in some of the world’s most respected journals — among them, Neurology, The British Medical Journal and The Journal of the American Medical Association. The problems ranged from relatively mild injuries to permanent disabilities.”

I believe the reason we are seriously injuring ourselves in Yoga at such an alarming rate is that many of us are out of touch with our bodies.  But we don’t have to be.

The Alexander Technique teaches you how to do whatever it is you do with more freedom and less tension. It teaches you to become aware of yourself in a new way, as well as how to pay attention to your body’s (sometime subtle) warning system.  Most of us walk around unconscious of how we move through our daily lives. Even worse, if we are consistently in pain we adapt by divorcing ourselves from our pain (and in doing so, divorcing ourselves from our bodies). We learn to put all our attention on the goal (“I’m going to get this project done tonight no matter what it takes!”) and ignore how we get there.  In doing all of this, we develop harmful postural or movement patterns that throw the body out of balance and weaken the structure as a whole.  This is what creates those “underlying physical weaknesses” that Black mentioned.  When the system is compromised, it only takes one wrong step and a little twist to cause a serious injury.

“Awareness is more important than rushing through a series of postures just to say you’d done them,” says Glenn Black.

Yoga is a five-thousand-year old form.  It has been proven to improve strength and flexibility.  It can lower blood pressure, lower cortisol levels and fight fatigue.  Can it be dangerous?  It can. But by applying the principles of the Alexander Technique to your practice and arming yourself with a heightened sense of awareness, freedom, and better overall coordination, yoga or any strenuous activity can remain safe and fulfilling.

The article quoted above is adapted from a new book coming out next month called The Science of Yoga: The Risks and Rewards, byWilliam J. Broad. 

I'd love to hear your thoughts....