Last month, we reported that
Minnesotan Matthew Sanford, a paraplegic, has been nominated as
one of the nation’s
top 40 heroes in the 6th Annual Volvo for Life Award for his pioneering work
with yoga.
During a recent interview, Sanford shared some of his insights with
Access Press.
How is the yoga you teach different from that of other yoga practitioners?
I
teach adaptive yoga and we don’t use the full range of
poses. I have accessed and learned from a smaller number of poses,
to find the very basic core of each pose. Also, I use more props
and it looks a little different.
What is the type of yoga
you practice?
The type of yoga I practice
is called Iyengar yoga. It emphasizes alignment and precision more
than other yogas. Iyengar yoga, in particular, breaks the poses down
into smaller pieces. Yoga is a phenomenon that occurs at the intersection
of your mind’s
intent and your body’s
limits. The essence of yoga is action that is occurring in the mind-body
connection.
Does yoga re-channel chronic
pain?
Mind Body Solutions, our nonprofit,
is helping people transform the experience of pain and trauma in
their lives. When people experience pain they typically move out
of their body. They draw away from the pain. If you have chronic
pain you often vacate that part of your body, and eventually that’s going to make the pain even worse.
Yoga will help you learn to move and distribute your presence more
equally throughout your body. It is a great way to manage chronic
pain. Someone who experiences chronic pain may end up developing
fear and anxiety from it. The focus of their mental awareness is
on the pain they are about to experience. Developing a mind-body
practice, you can distribute your awareness and when you’re
in pain you can begin to distribute it more equally and tolerate
it easier. Everybody needs to develop a more subtle mind-body connection
because it improves quality-of-life.
How do you work with a client?
We
have now started a pilot program where Courage Center is on a path
to become a holistic rehabilitation leader, using the mind-body approach.
If you leave our health care system more aware of your entire body
presence, you’re less likely to come back with
secondary conditions. The more present you are in your body the
better you will be able to move throughout your life. (The rehab
professionals also need to be more present in their own bodies.
They need to study the mind-body relationship in order to understand
and guide others.)
One of my students at
Courage Center, a paraplegic who was injured very young, doesn’t remember ever walking. After one class, he
said, “I drove home that night weeping.” He learned how
to feel his whole body. He never knew it was possible for him to feel
the presence of his legs. He has now become one of my best students.
He totally gets it. Envision a system where it doesn’t take years
to feel the presence in your paralyzed body. When I started reporting
sensation in the hospital, they knew my spinal cord was damaged and
it was never going to heal. They went strictly to the psychological
component of the injury. They were worried that I wasn’t going
to accept the permanence of my injury, so they told me stories: the
whole “phantom feeling” stories, that I should just forget
about my paralyzed body parts. That was the treatment. The real injury
was a mind-body injury.
How did your hospital experiences
influence your decision to learn, practice and teach yoga to people
with disabilities?
One of the things I try to
say when public speaking is that the violence that I sustained and
survived didn’t stop
at the accident; it began. Some of the corrective violence I went
through (which you heard about in Waking: A Memoir of Trauma and
Transcendence, my recently published book, which is coming out in
paperback in June) was well-intended, and it saved my life. When
you’re having surgery, just because you’re asleep, doesn’t
mean your body doesn’t absorb the violence of being cut open. That’s
part of the message we need to get out. Rehabilitation is subtly but essentially
violent. You’re working hard. You’re trying to restore your life.
There needs to be more nonviolent mind-body experiences in the hospital.
Not everything is push, pull, yank, yank, pull; but it needs to be a balanced
experience. There are ways to teach balance. Breathing helps a lot with perception;
it helps you feel where you are in space, helps you feel your body. Those
types of things need to be part of the rehabilitative experience.
Where do you teach yoga?
I’m
teaching the adaptive yoga class once a week at Courage Center. I’m
also training teachers to teach this class, so that we can expand our adaptive
yoga program. We are designing a program that is going to change the way rehabilitation
is delivered, and improve the outcomes.
Do you have any final thoughts
you would
like us to know?
Through yoga, I have gained
a MIND-BODY insight that transforms the experience of living. I’m not a
Yoga teacher because I overcame my disability. I’m a Yoga teacher
because I have altered my mind-body relationship. This is the message
our culture doesn’t totally get. This is the message
I want to get out to everybody who lives with a disability.
We get so much pressure
to overcome our disabilities. And often, it’s
at the expense of being present and feeling whole. I want to be in
the body I have. I want to feel the body I have. I know good things
will happen when I’m in the present. Anxiety will change. Depression
will change. A whole bunch of things will change. ![]()