Kosher
Sutra: ‘These are the appointed festivals for God,
you shall call them holy’ (Lev 23:37)
Soul
Solution: Improved clarity and improved
relationships
Posture:
Bridge
Body
Benefit: Strengthen arms and legs, open heart
space.
One
of the greatest afflictions of our age is the lack of
exclusivity. There are high rates of marital infidelity for
both men and women, placing an ever-growing pressure on the
institution of marriage. Our once close-knit social circles
now extend to lists of virtual friends that number in the
hundreds or thousands. Worst of all, our incessantly-texting
generation has developed the inability to focus on the
person we are with, as highlighted in the recent NY
Times article Keep Your Thumbs Still While I’m Talking To
You.
How
does it feel when you are with a friend and they aren’t
paying you full attention? Or you are betrayed by a lover’s
affair? We don’t like it. It’s not the way we are wired.
Often the problem lies deep within ourselves and according
to the yogis we are in an age of mental distraction, which
they called vikshipta
chitta, a distracted mind, or mudha
chitta, an infatuated mind. Oy.
Our
Kosher Sutra: ‘These are the appointed festival times for
God, you shall call them holy’ (Lev 23:37). The term for
‘appointed festival times’ is Moadim,
which means an exclusive time. I recently heard it
translated as a ‘date with God’. It’s date night!
The
word kodesh,
meaning holy, is elsewhere defined as separating something
out to make it special. The Chernobler Rebbe and Sfat Emet
explained that we can make time itself holy by marking it
out for a specific reason such as a festival or sabbath. In
this sense we also make the private relationship with our
spouse holy because it’s separate, dedicated and exclusive.
The commentator Rashi said that this word for holiness is
often mentioned in conjunction with our intimate life (on
Lev 19:2), and this is possibly because it is through
sexuality that we have the greatest opportunity to be
exclusive. Dating many people at once might hold sound fun,
but it doesn’t lead to good results.
How
would a woman feel if she received a piece of jewellery from
her husband, only to discover that he also bought an
identical item for his mistress (and indeed to discover that
he’s got a mistress at all)? The festival sacrifices are
described four times in the following sentence as milvad,
i.e. specially-designated, or apart (Lev 23:38). In order to
make a marriage special it has to be exclusive, or the
person will end up levado,
e.g.the same word also means ‘alone’.
The
focus for our generation’s yoga practice is ekagratachitta,
meaning a one-pointed or singularly-focused mind. The most
common objection I hear for newcomers is, ‘I can’t do yoga
because my mind is all over the place’. The response which I
rarely say is, ‘you need to do yoga because your mind is all over the place’. We learn to be at one with
our thoughts, singularly-focused in the moment. ‘If not now,
when?’ asked the sage Hillel.
In
relationships we thrive spiritually, emotionally and
physically. When we learn to be focused in our thoughts and
focused on the person we are with, we all benefit.