photo credit: Lograstudio via Pixbay |
Over the years, I have become fairly vigilant when it comes to avoiding the plague. I can hear a productive cough a mile away. Wait-staff that constantly touch their hair and face send shivers up my spine. I use the self-checkout because it is one less person touching my stuff and I will shoo away any well-intentioned employee that starts bagging for me. Why the fuss?
I take the immune-suppressive drug azathioprine to
control Crohn’s disease. As a result, my immune system (that hates my guts;
literally) is essentially turned off. While I have enjoyed remission for the
past eight years, I have also been living with the fact that I am more
susceptible to illness. A ‘little sniffle’ has the potential to lay me out for
a week or more. While I realize I can’t stop every little bug from entering my
life, I
do my best. And let me tell you, staying on high alert can be frustrating and
tiring.
Cooking, writing, and walking have been great for
reducing my anxiety and re-energizing my spirit. I have also tried yoga. I
struggle though because I dislike group fitness (plague potential) and my home
practice usually results in me laying on the floor while my mind wanders off,
which leads to self-loathing for ‘doing it wrong.’ Either way, I let anxiety
win.
Last week I gave the studio another shot and I am
thankful for the epiphany generating experience. Here’s the play by play:
I arrive 15
minutes early, just one other guy in the room, fabulous! Ten minutes go by and
boom, there are ten of us packed in the boutique sized studio, almost mat to
mat (I need a two mat buffer at least!)
The instructor tells us to welcome ourselves into the space and find our comfortable seat. As I attempt this seemingly simple task, I realize I smell feet. As I try to convince myself that they are not my feet I smell, I hear sniffling. I look around and spy The Norovirus Queen beside me has a neat stack of used tissues on the corner of her mat! Then the man across from me starts to forcefully exhale; I hear, feel and smell, his warm breath. I think he had tuna for lunch. My first inclination is to bolt, grab my gear and get the hell out of there. I think I left my comfortable seat in my car!
I scold
myself, “that’s not a very yoga-like attitude Kelly Ann; we are one are we not?”
So I stay. Still, I can’t get the infernal sniffling noises out of my head; I
can’t un-see the neat stack of booger rags. Down the rabbit hole I go! How
often does the studio clean the floor, the yoga blocks, and the blankets? Is everyone
is up to date on their shots? And when was the last time any of them washed
their hands? Did she just say Happy Baby?! Good lord, not a pose for a Crohnie!
Finally Savasana time arrives and as I laid still in the darkness, my
intestines start to gurgle like a flushing toilet. I visualize myself sick in
bed for the next week; my chest tightens. So much for relieving anxiety!
I laugh about it now but there just has to be a
lesson here, right? As I’ve been working out how to put this story to paper, I recalled
a passage from the book The Tao of
Pooh by Benjamin Hoff;
"Things Are As They Are.”
When you know and
respect your own Inner Nature, you
know where you belong. You also know where you don't belong. And yet, many people violate this simple principle
every day of their lives and try to fit square pegs into round holes.
Ah the irony! Close contact makes me anxious and fearful
of getting sick so I avoid it, yet I will purposefully subject myself to close
contact in a yoga class because, well
… it’s yoga.
After realizing the folly in my behavior, I
now appreciate that all things aren’t for all people and that’s OK. I have decided
to stop forcing myself into conducts that don’t fit for me. Bottom-line: my
desire is to reduce my stress and anxiety, preferably in a plague-free
environment. I think it is safe to say that yoga classes in the studio do not
fit those criteria. I will continue to embrace cooking, writing, and walking as
they are amazing activities that truly bring me joy. I am thankful I can do
them. And instead of viewing lying on the floor while my mind wanders as failed
yoga, I can re-frame the situation and see it as a delightful session of daydreaming
and
I’m OK with that too.