Swearing is the New Asana: Why Parents Need Rage Yoga

by ParentCo. October 04, 2016

Since I was very young, I've struggled with controlling my anger.

As a little girl, I'd succumb to temper tantrums often. Throughout adolescence, I'd quarrel with my parents, having meltdowns in rapid succession. When I was married, I'd fly off the handle at the smallest of infractions, becoming even more incensed when my former husband refused to engage in an argument. He'd always manage to remain reasonable and level-headed; to stay exasperatingly calm regardless of how irrational or emotional I became. Instead of this calming me too, however, his detachment and formality only angered me further, making me feel trivialized, childish, and impotent. I doubt his fighting back would have done us any favors, though. The problem, of course, wasn't him. And it wasn't my parents, my siblings, friends, or peers, either. It was (and is) me. Me and My Rage. As a bipolar adult, I still struggle with rage issues. Often. Big-time. I'm impatient, impulsive, and irritable. Plainly stated, I have a short fuse. Excess anxiety makes me hyper-vigilant – that is, I become startled easily. When that happens, it triggers instantaneous anger. Of course, anger's actually a secondary emotion to fear. I know this, as I sit here, rationally typing away. But in the moment, I don't take a beat to carefully consider my reaction and arrive at a more appropriate, healthy response. In my estimation, there isn't time to employ some anger management coping strategy such as counting to ten, deep breathing, or using "I" statements before I totally lose it. This temperamental behavior isn't reserved just for me or unique to those diagnosed with bipolar disorder. In fact, I witness similarly demonstrative displays most commonly among my friends with kids. (Just an observation.) Anyway, the medication that I'm on does take a significant edge off my predominant negative emotion – anxiety – and in doing so it reduces overall incidences. Running also helps a lot because it's so aggressive, so physical. But anxiety still happens and I struggle. The white hot anger takes control and before I realize what I'm doing or saying, I've lashed out, been disruptive or awful to somebody – and that's never good. One anxiety reduction method that's been suggested to me time and time again is that I begin practicing yoga. Honestly, I really would like the physical and athletic benefits of a dedicated yoga practice. I know that yoga would help me with things like flexibility, core strength, and correcting muscle imbalances – all of which contribute to what I'm ultimately seeking: injury prevention so I can keep running. Theoretically, it sounds great! But as far as the spirituality part goes? The meditative piece? Bringing the hands to the heart's center, and all that jazz? You can keep it. To me, that seems very annoying, very aggravating; all that slowing down, holding still, breathing deeply, and keeping quiet. Even as I think about a hypothetical practice, I'm growing itchy and annoyed. Yes, chaturanga dandasanas would do wonders for my delts, but how to proceed with making a yoga practice more appealing to a ferociously angry, rapid mood cycling person, such as myself? And would a traditional yoga practice even work towards eventually reducing my anxiety, that is, if I practiced regularly? Would it actually help even out my moods, grant me more patience, or make me less likely to go ballistic at the slightest affront? Probably not, actually. Come to think of it, I know several yogis with a dedicated practice who are angry and impatient as all get out. Ultimately yoga is about union, not separation, yet they are divisive, narrow-minded and just kinda...mean. But I've been hearing about all these alternative forms of yoga popping up and one particular mutation, er, interpretation caught my interest: “Rage Yoga, a brand-new, unconventional type of yoga practice developed by Lindsay Istace of Calgary, Canada who uses screaming, swearing, and heavy metal music during workouts.” You don't say. Tell me more... The official website defines Rage Yoga as “a practice involving stretching, positional exercises, and bad humor, with the goal of attaining good health and to become zen as f*ck.” The classes are based on the Vinyasa flow, which I don't really know much about other than it's continual movement from one pose or "asana" to another, rather than holding the poses for a period of time. So it's faster-paced and "fitness-y." And there's screaming. And swearing. And loud music. It's, essentially, venting. I like what I'm hearing so far. Rage Yoga is the only yoga I could deal with at this point in my life. That said, "at this point in my life" is I’m a single gal with zero dependents. I have the theoretical luxury of visiting with my nieces and nephews, patting them on their cute behinds, and then high-tailing it outta there as soon as pre-naptime fussiness begins, or worse, the full-blown meltdown. But we’re all human, and as such we can relate to occasional feelings of edginess and hyper-vigilance, right? Ultimately, this type of yoga class sounds really cathartic and definitely worth trying. Since these classes are only offered in one Canadian city, those of us elsewhere will have to settle for the six-week online courses slated for this summer, but I’m sure copycats are close behind. Better yet, YOU could start a Rage Yoga studio yourself! If you do, let me know. I’m game for some screaming, swearing downward dog.


ParentCo.

Author



Also in Conversations

mother with child
How Teaching Goal Setting Inspires Children

by Joy Turner

Setting goals allows kids to experience growth socially and emotionally by helping them develop self-regulation skills, gain responsibility and build confidence.

Continue Reading

mother with new baby
Postpartum Hospital Bag Essentials I Wish I Had

by Yelena Shuster

I’ve texted every pregnant person I know to ask them everything I could gather to make their hospital stay better. Here’s everything I wish I had—and why.

Continue Reading

sitting with friends
The Power of Taking the Time To Check in with Yourself

by Hannah Brencher

When I began cultivating a discipline of unplugging to be more present, I realized that I wasn't checking in with myself; I was making an excuse to check out.

Continue Reading