Anwen Meditates - A Steemit Health Channel // How Savasana Prepares Me For Death

in yoga •  8 years ago 

Today I'm going to try something a bit different on #anwen-meditates. I want to share my thoughts with you on one particular yoga pose - savasana, or corpse pose.


What is Savasana?

Savasana is known as corpse pose, and often is practiced at the very end of a yoga session. In savasana, the yogi is lying on their back, arms relaxed beside their body, legs outstretched, and the spine in a straight line. The teachings I often hear from my yoga instructors include:

  • "Relax your whole body"
  • "Surrender into the earth"
  • "Allow each muscle of your body to melt down"
  • "Be calm, but present"
  • "While this position is similar to a sleeping position, in savasana you are fully conscious of your being right now"
  • "This is the most important pose in yoga. All other poses are practiced to prepare you for savasana"
  • "Take your time here, enjoy the calm. The calm in your mind, the calm in your body, the calm in your spirit"


My Recent Preoccupation With Death

I have thought about my death quite a lot, and about death in general. I have participated in several shamanic ceremonies that circle around the idea of death. I made a post on Steemit a while back about a meditation on death that I practice. And I've always been fairly calm and accepting about death - until the past few weeks.

I don't know what triggered it, but a few weeks ago I started thinking about death constantly. I would be sipping on my coffee in the morning, and suddenly have this intense realization that there will be a point in time when I am no longer here to sip on coffee. I would be looking out onto my garden and suddenly realize that there will be a point in time when I am no longer here to look at my garden. I would be watching TV and suddenly realize that at some point I WILL NO LONGER EXIST. My ego began screaming. I was terrified.

I've found myself in grocery stores almost making myself high just thinking about dying, and looking around at all of the other shoppers thinking, "Are you all going through the same thing that I am?! Why is everyone so calm?!"

I was utterly confused about my death crisis, as I have experienced intense connection and universality and the pure love that comes with losing one's ego (or perhaps that comes with dying). Yet here my ego was, screaming, kicking, and crying. I don't want to get too wishy washy with you here, so I'll dive back into the yoga connection.


Savasana and Death

I'm not a mathematician by any means, but I am drawn to the concept of self-similarity. One definition of self similarity can be found here :

"Simply put, a fractal is a geometric object that is similar to itself on all scales. If you zoom in on a fractal object it will look similar or exactly like the original shape. This property is called self-similarity."

I believe that self-similarity can be found every where in our daily lives. I believe that there are many practices that we do that are self-similar to our life and death cycle. For example, falling asleep and night and waking up in the morning. Or...practicing yoga?

I was in a yoga class last Saturday and we were just transitioning into Savasana. Out of nowhere, the idea struck me....and this was my inner monologue:

"Whoa. Savasana. That's known as corpse pose. It's the death pose!

Huh. So Savasana represents death, and comes at the end of our yoga practice. Which means that the rest of the yoga practice represents life.

So...A yoga practice = life ; Savasana = death ; Practicing Savasana is like practicing for death

And harking back to self-similarity, if all other yoga poses are practiced to prepare me for savasana, then everything else in my life right now is like an exercise preparing me for death.


Final Thoughts

I also wanted to write this post to say - if you have been freaking out about death and what life is, you are not alone! We spend so much of our energy in Western culture trying to hide death, and hide from the thoughts of death. I'm trying to invite those thoughts, because without death there is no life, and damnit, I love my life! With that said, happy Saturday all and namaste :-)


This post is dedicated to my beautiful, loving Aunt Peggy, who recently passed away. Who's big heart kept her family together and without whom I probably wouldn't be alive today.

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Wonderful post anwenbaumeister for health and awareness! Am I supposed to hear ALL my bones cracking at once? Is this what "Savasana" Is supposed to sound like!?? lol BUT, on a more serious note, sorry for your loss...

Lol! I hope not ALL your bones are cracking with Savasana!
And thank you for your kind words, I appreciate it.

  ·  8 years ago (edited)

Thank you for this wonderful healthy and energizing content @anwenbaumeister - you have one follower more!

I also want to send you my condolences for your loss.

Thank you @puffin I appreciate your kind words

  ·  8 years ago (edited)

is it weird begin a guy and wanting to do yoja? Wait a yoja pose to prepare you for death?

Not at all! I know a lot of males who practice yoga.

You look so relaxed ,defenitely have to try Savasana out!

It can be very relaxing or very anxiety provoking depending on what state you are in before entering Savasana :-) One of my teachers said that is why we practice the poses before savasana, so that we can enter into it relaxed :-)
I have definitely had practices where I was not ready to enter savasana and it was the hardest pose of the whole class for me!

Hey great post! My condolences on your loss

Thanks so much @serejandmyself I appreciate it :-)

One aspect about self-similarity in fractal objects is that the similarity is scale-independent. A tiny piece of something will resemble the whole. (The structure of cauliflower is a great example.) And yes, falling asleep each night is like a smaller death in the microcosm resembling death in the macrocosm. Which is why waking up each day is so encouraging!

That's so beautifully worded, thanks for sharing!

There is still hope.
Look at that : http://2045.com/

Those are great insights into yoga. And yeah thinking of death is a good reminder of life.. and the entire cycle of the universe.

Thanks so much :-) Definitely...without death we wouldn't have life and without thinking about death it is easy to forget the gift of life!

Can i prepare for death later, not now?)

Whenever works for you :-)

Great form in your poses, Anwen. Kudos!

Thank you! As a dancer turned yogi I always try and stay aware of my alignment :-)

good post and like the thought process - thanks for the share

I'm glad you liked it, thanks for reading :-)

Hi @awenbaumeister, I'm sorry to hear of your loss. If you haven't already read it, then the "tibetan book of living and dying" is an absolute must read.

Thank you so much @yogi.artist
It is now on my reading list, thanks for the recommendation :-)

I liked this post. Please do more of this!

What is important is not to negate the ego, but rather to learn how to live with it.
The ego is you, but not every aspect of that which is popular to label "the ego" is actually an essential part of you.

Many of the worries and fears that people have are due to missfocus; Not due to the fact that you are the ego, but due to the fact that the ego is preoccupied with the wrong things.

Thanks so much!
Yes - definitely. I have seen many people try and reject their ego, which usually just has the opposite effect of what they intended!

Death is a part of life and we have to be accepting of it.

Yes, most definitely, it has just been a process for me to accept it :-)

In this fast paced world and with our busy schedule everyday, Yoga is a good exercise for raising awareness of ourselves and helps us to slow down to smell the roses.

Definitely :-) Speaking of which, I need to go smell my roses right now ;-)

Yes do take time to enjoy life. Each new day brings with it new hopes and new miracles like this poem that I have written. No intention to hijack your thread, but l feel this poem add value to what you are writing.

My condolences for your loss.

Yoga is definitely not a thing for me... I cannot even imagine myself doing such movements.

Thanks so much @lemouth
There are actually six branches of yoga. The branch of hatha yoga is the physical poses, however if this is not for you there are other branches such as jnana yoga which focuses on mindful meditation or bhakti yoga which centers around chanting and kirtan :-)

I was thinking about your post yesterday. We were visiting a kind of local association forum, and there was a live Yoga demonstration. If Kirtan means what I found on the web (discussing discussing discussing), then it is maybe for me :)

That's awesome! I look forward to hearing about your experiences with kirtan if you decide to try it out :-)