This is a blogpost from *way* back when (circa 2008, see below)...a recent email from a new friend took me back to it... so I share it again this morning. I'll call it an encore!
Last  week, I taught a class on pratipaksha bhavana, a method suggested by  Patanjali in his Yoga Sutras for working with negative mental states and  overcoming paralysis by cultivating, acting on, or even just  entertaining its opposite. It's been such a useful practice for me in  every arena in my life and when my life or my heart is beset by fear or  stagnancy, I always turn to it.
You see I am such a thinker (aka, obsessor). My mind will attach to one thing and pre-occupy itself with that one thought excessively. Having a healthy dose of the air element, I will run things over and over again in my mind yet also being who I am (in all my many splendoured facets) I tend however to keep working with it only in ONE way. Usually the first way it struck me. To the exclusion of all else.
Let's call this the Capricorn banging her head into the same brick wall syndrome. Yet never connecting that practice to the headache that follows. Yoga and meditation have been fabulous for helping me make that connection (my head thanks you) and Patanjali's method has been invaluable for helping me find a DOOR in the wall.
Whenever I am stuck or mired down - in my actual life or in my thoughts - I practice this now.
I contemplate, entertain, imagine, and YES sometimes even act out the opposite. Of what I'm feeling, what I'm thinking, what I'm believing, and what I'm doing. Have a read...  
Saturday Samskara 
These days I've become a bit of homebody... It's not that I'm  actively  avoiding group socializing on the weekends but, with our cold  and wet  weather and adjusting back to my daily work routine, I've just  been  rather enjoying the regular date with my couch on Saturday night.  An  engrossing book, delicious meal, glass of red wine or steamy mug of  hot  chocolate and I'm all set! It's become an easy and even enjoyable   pattern.
In Sanskrit, my Saturday night habit (or RUT) is called a samskara. Like  a deep groove in the road, a samskara is a tendency/habit/path that we  keep tracking into. It is easy, comfortable, and almost  inevitable that  no matter which way we steer, we will tend to fall  right into it.  There are only two ways to break out of a well dug samskara. First, we  have to be aware of and acknowledge our tendency or habit AND second, we  have to create a new pattern. 
Happily  approaching preparations for last Saturday's evening meal, I  received a  last minute invitation from a good friend offering a new  possibility.  Party. People I didn't know. All the way across town. She  dangled  enticing descriptions of the house, the people, all of the  planned  activities.... But you know, my first instinct was still to say  no. The  deeply entrenched pattern emerged. 
However, some delicate, whispering voice inside my head said, why not?  The voice got louder. Why not do something completely different,  completely random, completely new? What my friend Diane offered was  enticing  and beguilingly so. It was outside my usual plans and so much  so that I  made a quick and intentional decision to open up to the  possibility of  something new. 
Where did this choice take me? 
Handmade pizzas  cooked in a handmade outdoor pizza oven.
A decadent hour baking in a  handmade outdoor sauna 
An invigorating post-sweat swim in the winter  sea (ME? I don't even swim in CHCH during the summer!?)
Bowl after bowl of decadent  homemade ice cream
A  rocking all night jam session (drums,  guitars, piano, trumpet, and  various creative uses for nearby cutlery,  glassware, and/or pots and  pans) in the warmth of heat pump and high  energy fueled living room. 
Fantastic. 
And these people do this almost every weekend?!?! Where have I been...? 
Before any asana, before any finer detail of anatomical alignment, the  very first principle of Anusara  Yoga is Open to Grace. Feel the breath  and open to the bigger picture.  This means that I make the choice to  take a pause and actively release  my usual and oftentimes self-limiting  ideas of who I am, what I think I  can do, and where I think the  ceiling is on the roof of possibility. 
On  the yoga mat this means I open up to the belief that maybe this pose  is  possible for me today. That maybe I can turn to my breath and  follow it  for just an extra count longer this time. That maybe if I  just move and  breathe and celebrate the glory of my existence in this  body, this  place, right at this very moment that all of the trouble I  left behind  at home may have a new perspective when I return. 
And on last  Saturday, this meant that when I left behind my couch, my  book, my mug of hot  chocolate, and simply showed up open and willing, I  allowed myself to experience and enjoy one of the  most  fantastic and impromptu gatherings I have been to in a very long time. 
