The Scotsman

Yoga makes me feel the way I want to be on my deathbed

An hour of yoga passes quickly for Jim Duffy, helping him put aside thoughts of celebritie­s, Brexit and even dinner

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It is so easy to live your life in the future. Always thinking about what is ahead. Always planning and organising. Whether it’s making appointmen­ts for this or that or worrying about things that have not yet happened, we frequently live our lives in a future state. The problem with this is that we lose out on what is going on around us now. We fail to get to grips with our own the emotions and thoughts as we experience them.

Hours can go past and we have lost them forever as we live for tomorrow, next week or next year in our heads. I am hugely guilty of this.

So, I decided to do something about it. Something radical. I decided to try yoga.

For many of us, the thought of yoga turns our stomachs. It’s all just flower power and ringing bells, while sitting in a knee-crushing pose with our eyes closed humming “Ommmm”. Or even worse, it is standing on one leg with another held backwards with our torso leaning forwards and our hands out like wings. In short, a pose only a gymnast could do.

And finally, all the pictures of yoga that we see are of svelte, beautiful people with blemish-free skin, icewhite teeth and perfect bone structure. Gwyneth Paltrow has a lot to answer for. But forget all that claptrap and myth. Yoga is far from this mystical “marketeere­d” picture and a lot more like you and me – ordinary people with muffin tops and bingo wings. Not to mention the odd varicose vein and beer belly. And not a lotus pose in sight.

I rocked up for my first “simple” yoga experience a little apprehensi­vely. I had tried Bikram yoga in Glasgow a few years back. It was really good, but I started to find the poses a bit too stressful and my competitiv­e spirit started to shine through as I wanted to get better and better at holding the poses. And this is not what yoga is all about.

I said hello to the other five or six folks that were there and I stood over a mat. Then the teacher sat us down and we started. That was five weeks ago. And I have been practising my yoga twice a week at class in that time. So, has it helped me stop living in the future and grounded me any? Yes and no.

Tuning the mind, the body and the spirit into each other is not easy. But when it happens it feels great. Simply looking ahead, while sitting cross-legged and breathing in gently is just the start of it. Monitoring the breath as it fills my lungs, then holding it briefly, gives me that power and control over my breathing again. I am taking charge of what is coming into my bloodstrea­m. Then exhaling and focusing on how I feel brings me closer and more in touch with me.

Feeling what is going on in my body as I do this grounds me in the moment. My right knee is a little sore. My right hip and groin are not quite right and have been bothering me for years now. My back feels good and my bowels feel good. And all this is taking place more consciousl­y then ever before. This is what yoga is doing for me.

As each class progresses, we execute some easy poses that involve using a cushion to sit on and a wall to help with purchase to aid in stretching out our backs. We rest in positions like the “pose of the child” to bring us back into steady breathing after gently stressing our bodies in a stretch. And all the time I’m focusing on what each hand is doing, how my toes are gripping the mat and how strong I can make my knees as I pull in all the muscles around them.

At no time am I thinking about

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