TEBBUTT: Why Winter is a Time for Wonder

It could be the month I just spent in 93˚ F (34˚ C) Amazonia, or the welcome transformation of the Gothics into a tropical furnace, but I have to say it: I love winter in Ithaca – and I know you can too.

Set up your workstation by the Mann Library windows and just try not to be distracted by the naked boughs spreading their geometric silhouettes on a sky of midnight blue. Be the first boot to hover over a pristine blanket of snow on the Slope and anticipate the satisfying contact with your sole. Or, if gingerbread prose isn’t your thing, take a moment to consider the gifts of quiet and stillness that winter imparts within the annual march of birth, growth and death.

For me, winter’s value within the succession of the seasons is akin to that of बालासन / Bālāsana, or Child’s pose, in a yoga sequence. This restorative posture, which invites practitioners to relax the body and forehead in the manner of a sleeping child, is easily overlooked by those in search of more vigorous and active poses. But a wise yoga teacher once invited me to consider the potential etymological connection between the posture’s title of बाल / Bālā (child) and another Sanskrit term: बल / bāla (strength). Recasting this brief moment of repose not as the fragility and helplessness of youth, but as the latent power that is waiting to be released upon maturity, transforms its meaning within a yoga flow. Bālāsana, as a period of rest and inaction, is key to sustaining vitality and activity in the long term.

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