Excited and a Little Scared in Everyday Ramblings

  • June 16, 2019, 8:57 p.m.
  • |
  • Public

Not only is it Father’s Day but it is also the day of the Pride Parade here. Our downtown area is hopping and although it was cloudy and cool earlier it is lovely out now. I hope everyone has a fun celebratory day.

It’s been 35 years since my father died of a heart attack in his sleep. Blessedly we did have improved interactions the last couple of years he was with us; before that he was always a shadowy and difficult figure in my life. I was hard on him as a teenager and he could not deal and so I was sent off to live with my oldest sister.

Up until yesterday I had been thinking about the issues with my heart as a genetic gift from him, a luck of the draw kind of thing. He didn’t suffer, he was active and engaged and rational the day before he died and I am grateful for that. He did the best he could. I know that now.

I find well-constructed and thoughtful continuing education for yoga teachers irresistible and yesterday I was looking at some cool new content for teaching yoga to people with eating disorders.

The teaser for this program (that I happily purchased) is a short video about the physical effects eating disorders have on the heart, which is after all… a muscle.

Then she starts talking about anorexia specifically and the heart. Eek.

I was an anorexic teenager. Not a kind of wanna be anorexic, I had the full disease before the general public knew what it was. I say ruefully I was a trendsetter, but not in a good way. In my brain, now fully developed, I still have a lot of the thought patterns of a not healthy person that were laid down as my brain was developing.

You would not know it to look at me now, that is the thing about eating disorders, you can’t always see them, and that is part of the training here.

Anyway, the teacher says in no uncertain terms, anorexia damages the heart. It does so in a few different ways but one of the ways is something that has shown up on EKG’s my whole life, as Bradycardia, a slow heart rate. Since I became an adult my heart rate has been unusually low. The doctors always say, “Oh you must be really fit!”

I am but lurking behind that…is this.

A damaged heart.

I suppose I can be grateful for the assholes at work for behaving in such a discriminatory and ageist way for surfacing this fact.

Nah. I’ll skip that gratitude.

I think this training is going to be truly helpful for me. I have tried therapy a number of times and I remember Larry, my most recent long time therapist and Zen teacher used to always ask me when we were talking about what was going on…where do you feel that in your body?

The thing is I never knew.

I could approximate it, generally say, my stomach or my chest or whatever but I was basically faking it.

So here I am yesterday doing my big continuing ed homework and I am thinking oh I am going to be able to teach this deep meditative relaxation technique to my students in groups and it will be (and already is) nifty, but then they start talking about co-meditation.

What the heck? People meditate in groups sometimes but meditation is a private thing, right?

So this is a simple but very effective structure where you sit with one other person and you give them support in coming into a deeply meditative state and then you encourage them to describe it to you (and themselves). And “stuff” naturally arises. There are some simple pointers as a facilitator you can use to help the meditating person feel safe and comfortable but there is no agenda. You are not trying to fix anything or heal anything or change anything.

And I am supposed to practice doing this.

Whoa baby, this will be interesting. I am excited. And a little scared.


Last updated June 16, 2019


Zipster June 17, 2019

These days I so wish I could go back and make different health decisions, but alas as we all know, not possible. Still I think some decisions will serve you in good stead, and yoga is one of them.

Marg June 18, 2019

I didn't realise you had issues with anorexia when you were younger - it's encouraging to see how healthy you are now and know that - what broke the pattern do you think?

noko Marg ⋅ June 18, 2019

Circumstances. I was living with my family in a middle class home that I could rebel against by choosing not to eat but after my mother died my father couldn't cope and sent me (without support) to live with my oldest sister, who was raising two small children on her own. We literally did not have enough food and I loved those kids and we fed them first and it shifted my mindset. And then I got infectious hepatitis and had to eat to get well. A lot going on back there. Thanks for asking.

Marg noko ⋅ June 19, 2019

A lot indeed - thanks for telling me!

edna million June 19, 2019

I didn't know that about anorexia either - and it's astonishing that something from so long ago can still affect your physical health. My dad smoked from the time he was probably 13 or 14 until his 40s, and even in his 80s doctors could tell he'd been a smoker.

The co-meditation sounds really interesting! I can never pinpoint where I feel things in my body either, beyond just vaguely.

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