learning how to do this is one of the primary lessons of asana, and sets the stage for the next limb, pranayama, ie the breathing practice, as it is w/ control of your breath that you gain awareness of, and power over, the autonomic processes governing your instinctual responses
suffering is a function of not just the outside world, but the inner as well; while we do not always have control over the former, we do the latter, much more than we are lead to believe. to become the best versions of ourselves, we must conquer our pain.
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RT @pee_zombie
an extraordinarily clear and insightful exploration of Buddhism's core insights into the nature of the self and its relationship to suffering https://twitter.com/Ma…
https://twitter.com/pee_zombie/status/1414093324731002883
this teacher encourages you to "breathe" space into the gap between stimulus & response, to consciously harness your breathing to change the subjective experience of the message's urgency; when you do this, it feels exactly like your mind opens up to spaciousness, room to breathe