honoring
your belly:
meeting place of body and soul
by lisa sarasohn
A
familiar conversation: Jane is meeting Francie for lunch. After
they order, Jane leans in toward Francie and confesses: I
shouldnt be eating. I feel so fat, my bellys so
big.
A
familiar complaint? As you read these words, one out of every
two American women is dieting. The reason? To trim the
tummy.
Most
of us experience our bellies as shameful. Our culture bids us
to battle belly bulge with diet pills, weight loss regimens,
exercise gadgets, girdles, liposuction, and tummy tucks. We've
bankrolled multi-million dollar industries with the notion there's
something wrong with our bellies as they are. We've injured
ourselves with eating and body image disorders. We¹ve made
ourselves miserable attempting to make our bellies invisible.
I
can speak for myself: When I was seventeen I started dieting
strictly (between periods of out-of-control overeating) in the
effort to look like stick-thin fashion model Twiggy. In twenty
years of alternate starving and stuffing, I gained and lost
more than 2,000 pounds.
Just
what is so shameful about a womans nicely rounded belly?
You may have noticed that advertising for girdles reads like
an FBI directive for suppressing foreign insurgents. Using phrases
like achieve firm control and obtain total
control, the hangtags on these stomach-shrinking devices
announce that they are in fact instruments of social restraint.
During
some periods of American culture an ample belly was actually
the fashion standard. But, since women gained the right to vote
in the 1920s, the most fashionable belly for a woman has
become the one that you cannot see. Apparently, if women are
allowed to wield some measure of political and economic power,
they must deny the power inherent in their bodys center.
As
Ive moved beyond what was an all-consuming eating disorder,
Ive learned: The belly is woman's power center, both as
symbol and in physical fact. I suspect our culture labels womans
belly as shameful because it cant stomach the full expression
of womens body-centered power.
What
is the power thats centered in womans belly?
Looking beyond the borders of contemporary society, we can see
that cultures native to every continent have recognized the
belly as the site of our soul-power. They have developed patterns
of movement and breath, traditions of dance, rites of healing,
spiritual practices that honor and energize the belly as sacred,
not shameful.
In
Japan, for example, the word for belly as sourcepoint for both
our physical and spiritual vitality is hara. In the process
of my own healing, I trained as a Kripalu Yoga teacher and studied
a Japanese style of yoga focused on developing hara through
movement and breath. And I read Karlfried Graf von Dürckheims
Hara: The Vital Centre of Man. One who develops hara, I learned,
unites with the nourishing, creative, regenerative flow
of the universal life force. One who develops hara experiences,
in Dürckheim's words, not a power one has but a power
in which one stands. One who develops hara expresses the
qualities of soulful living: confidence, courage, creativity,
a sense of purpose.
For
my own healing, I drew upon my yoga training and developed the
hara-strengthening practice Honoring Your Belly.
As I moved through this belly-energizing practice daily, I no
longer felt the need to stuff or starve myself. The eating disorder
diminished and then disappeared.
In
its place, I began to experience the very characteristics of
hara: new levels of creativity, confidence, and sense of purpose
in my life. Now, instead of hollow emptiness and gnawing hunger
in my belly, I feel radiating warmth. I feel a sense of satisfaction
in my belly, the sensation of being full and whole. And I feel
a resonance with the center of the earth, as if an invisible
cord extends from the center of my body to the planets
center. I feel that Im welcome in this world.
Developing
and practicing Honoring Your Belly essentially saved
my life. Over the last fourteen years, as Ive shared this
program with thousands of women in classes and retreats, Ive
witnessed the profound benefits the practice brings to myself
and others.What I see time and time again is this: the power
centered in womans belly is pro-creative power, kin to
the Power of Being that promotes creation throughout the universe.
This pro-creative power generates new human life; it also brings
forth new ideas, images, systems, institutions, organizations.
Activating this power, we can direct it into any dimension we
choose: personal healing, intuition, creative expression, family
relationships, our work, our communities, our world.
Observing
my own and other womens experience, I see that the power
abiding within our bellies also brings us greater health, freedom
from addiction, sexual pleasure, more satisfying relationships,
a sense of abundance, a sense of the sacred in our daily lives,
a consciousness of our kinship with all creation.
A
new conversation
Our culture bombards us with instructions to belittle our bellies
and cut ourselves off from our bellies pro-creative power.
Choosing to honor our bellies instead takes courage (yes, guts).
Many
of us have internalized the cultures devaluation of women,
unwittingly working its violence upon ourselves. Weve
made our bellies the focus of our culturally imposed self-hate.
But unless we grew up without the influence of family, school,
friends, advertising, television, movies, books, newspapers,
magazines, and toys (let's not forget Barbie) how could we have
done otherwise?
The
good news is: We don't have to torture ourselves any longer.
We can choose to support ourselves and each other in honoring
our bellies as the site of our soul-power, the home of our soul-knowing.
Instead of complaining to each other about the size of our stomachs,
we can encourage each other to use our belly-centered power
in ways that create a life-affirming world.
When
we do so, we restore sanity and self-respect to our lives: At
lunch, Francie listened respectfully as Jane confessed, I
shouldnt be eating. I feel so fat-my bellys so big.
And she replied: Yes, your belly is soft and round. If
you found a precious jewel-something so precious it had the
power to create life-wouldnt you place it in a container
thats soft and round, to protect and nurture it?"
Lisa Sarasohn teaches weekly Honoring Your Belly
classes in West Asheville and at Namasté Yoga Center
in downtown Asheville. For more information on classes and the
instructional Honoring Your Belly video, visit www.honoringyourbelly.com,
email bellyqueen@earthlink.net or call 828-251-5786.