Reclined Butterfly: The Butterfly Dream

Yin and Yang now is mostly understood as Sun and Moon. A day consists of day time and night time. In nature, after the sun is sets, the moon rises. Practicing Yin yoga is to cultivate the Yin side of our selves, and it’s “a quiet practice”. Holding in the position, we can close our eyes, quietly listen to our body, listen to our breathing, and listen to the voice within our heart.

According to Paul Grilley, Yin yoga “is not just another brand name of yoga postures, but the expression of theories derived from Chinese medicine and Taoism.” And one of the leading figures of Taoism is Zhuang Zi.

Zhuang Zi (Zhuang Zhou) is known for his unconventional attitude towards death. He looks at life and death as a natural process like the sequence of the four seasons. Thus, when his beloved wife passed away, he was singing and hitting a drum instead of crying. When people question his behavior. He says, “To go about crying while she is in the  abode of the universe would be for me to declare that I am ignorant of the laws of nature.” Lamenting death is like lamenting the season change from summer to autumn.

Zhuang Zi writes about his famous dream – The dream of a butterfly. One day, Zhuang Zhou was dreaming that he became a butterfly, flying freely and happily. When he woke up, he wondered if it’s the butterfly in his dream or he is in the butterfly’s dream. Of course, he didn’t contemplate too much about who was the dreamer. He knew if he was stuck in worldly material duality, he would be entangled in the web of his own mind. Zhuang Zi sees the duality but is not caught in it. Thus, the attitude he looks at life and death with is all about Qi (energy). And he tells us, “Birth is gathering of Qi, death is dissipating of Qi.” Human beings as well as the whole universe, are merely Qi and its form’s transformed.

The pose Reclined butterfly is similar to the pose Butterfly. However, changing the form from sitting to recline makes a difference. First, the reclined position takes the pressure off the lower back. Second, our chest is opened up and can create more space for breathing. Third, with props placed for support of a needed body part, such as a block under each knee, it becomes a restorative pose for rejuvenation. 

Enjoy the practice!

Notes:

  1. Paul Grilley, Yin Yoga: The Foundations of a Quiet Practice, DVD (Pranamaya, Inc., 1993)
  2. Paul Grilley, Yin Yoga: Outline of a Quiet Practice (Ashland, Oregon, White Cloud Press, 2002)
  3. Zhuang Zi (Beijing: Peaceful Press, 2004). 庄子,中国和平出版社

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