by Dearbhla Kelly for The Huffington Post, June 22, 2012

Last December I visited a state prison in Northern California (Deuel Vocational Institute) and not only had the opportunity to teach yoga to inmates but also to talk with them afterward about their yoga practices. It was an incredibly profound and humbling experience. To a man they were articulate, eloquent and astute. In terms of their depth of understanding of the potency of yoga practice, it was way beyond what I read in most of the yoga blogs online these days. They were freedom yogis, practicing to find liberation behind bars. Imagine how confronting and challenging -- and how meaningful and transformative -- it would be to show up to your yoga mat every day if you were in jail for life.

One of the geniuses of yoga it that it also helps us get clearer about what we value in the rest of our lives through the opportunity it gives for self study (svadhyaya). Sustained practice over time leads to greater self-awareness because of the meditative aspects of the practice. Yoga is designed to make us more connected to ourselves, more aware of our tendencies and better able to witness our thoughts, emotions, sensations and feelings without reacting to them.

We know that we are reaping the more subtle benefits of yoga practice when we start responding to things rather than blindly reacting. Much suffering -- our own and other people's -- is borne of reactivity. In contrast to reacting, responding allows us to alleviate suffering. When we can pause and take a breath, or several breaths, and get a handle on our emotions and the heightened visceral sense of arousal before we speak or act, then we are practicing yoga. The space between reactivity and responsiveness is freedom.

This is what the prison yogis were talking about. Most of them had ended up behind bars because of their own reactivity and inability to manage their emotions, to be with the sensations in their body. Yoga was actually helping them get a handle on their propensities to act out. In their own words, they were becoming more equanimous, more chilled-out, and better able to deal with stress.

Click here to read the whole article.

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Tags: for, freedom, inmates, liberation, practice, prison, yoga

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Comment by josh on July 23, 2012 at 1:54am

This is beutiful.  I remember pulling into this prison on a bus full of 30 some inmates 15 years ago. We were and emergengy transfer from another prison because we had been involved in a large melee. We we left our original destination (jamestown) we had no idea where we were headed. When we pulled into the driveway of dvi and of the old timers with us raised his voice and said Well boys were in tracy do you know what they call this place.....Gladiator School. It is really nice to see that this program is getting run inside of Gladiator School it is a violent place and the heat does not help. It is 115-120 degrees here in the summer and the prison in next to a Dairy so your always covered in flies this all adds to the tension..BEUTIFULL!!!!

 

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