Category: comfort (Page 5 of 5)

Off the Mat

Sometime in the past few months I lost my yoga mat. I used to keep it in the back of JJ’s vehicle because we would swap when I went to a class, but it has suddenly and mysteriously disappeared. Thankfully I have a gracious and generous yoga teacher who allows borrowing, however it means I have nothing to use when I actually get myself to a place of practicing at home.

I noticed the last time I moved myself into a sequence of positions that I tended to move all about the room. I would start centered so as not to kick the couch or a child, but the next thing I knew I came closer to the TV or brushed my arm against the ceiling fan. Recently I worked through some Sun Salutations in my hotel room and I’m convinced I shimmied my way backward at least 5 feet.

I can  be doing a very similar structure of movements, my body the same length and my steps similar in nature, yet when working without a foamy rectangle beneath my feet, my yoga tends to take on a waltz-like quality.

Image: Celeste Lindell via CC 20

Image: Celeste Lindell via CC 2.0

As my yoga teacher has taught me, what is true on the mat is likely true off the mat. The practice simply mirrors the soul.

I need visible guidelines in my life to keep my rhythms and practices effective. When I have a mat to center me, I can move freely. Remove those edges and my mind takes up the work of wondering where I am in time and space. Where is that chair again? Will my big toe crash into the footstool if I fully extend? A mat, a home base, frees me to fully be fully present in each and every position.

In my life, my morning times and a consistent schedule serve as a mat. With those underfoot I feel free to enjoy the motions of the day. When away, when tired, when crowded – I loose sight of where I am. Summertime reveals the depth of this truth.

The Original Comfort Food

Somewhere on my resume I need to include under “strengths” my ability to lactate. I now have the prerequisite “3-5 years experience” which would qualify me under a professional title, yes? And in those years of experience I’ve noticed trends. Notably is a small child’s attempt to eat even when s/he’s not hungry.

Take, for instance, a few nights ago when Baby M woke 4 times between 11:30-4. Of course, he refused to go back to sleep without a snack. My current style of parenting finds that snacking gets me back to sleep quicker than crying, so he enjoyed a few midnight snacks. But I. Was. Tired. 
The boy finds himself in a mean streak of teething and mama seems to be the best form of comfort. He doesn’t need food, he needs love and to be understood that yes, this sucks, you are not alone and I wish I could help. While all of those things are true, he doesn’t know how to experience them without something as comforting as a full belly. 
While it’s easy to blame evolution for my penchant for an evening nosh, we may have unknowingly stumbled into a habit of mistaking a full tummy for a full heart. And now the two things seem so easily interchangeable.

Perhaps this is why a fine banquet or dinner out has become so desirable – we cannot help but delight in the tastes of a delicious dish while enjoying company and conversation. It’s why eating alone becomes an acquired skill some feel shamed in adapting.

Food seems second nature to company, they come one with the other. And in our desire for one, we regularly get the other. Which means in our desire for one, we often reach for another. Perhaps, much like my 8-month-old, we don’t know if we need something to fill our heart or our belly. 

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