Setting an Intention
Sankalpa
I was hiking after work, and heard a man wailing in the woods. He was crying out, “why, why, why”. He was in despair. I wanted to make sure he wasn’t hurting himself, but I wasn’t sure what else I could do. So I stepped off the path and waited. I waited and I witnessed. After a while, he exited onto the path, head down, and hurried off.
For the rest of my walk, I consciously sent healing thoughts his way. I quieted my mind and thought only of him and the healing he may need. He was not alone that day.
I’ve begun many yoga classes by setting a personal intention, a sankalpa. A Sankalpa is a longing of your inner heart, something that will bring you closer to your own truth. It’s a phrase, a mantra, a prayer, or even an image. As Anna Sugarman eloquently says, it is more grounded than a wish; more serious than a resolution; less complicated than either.
Fixing my intention on an unknown stranger made me feel the very opposite of unknown. It made me feel that he was known, and that I am known. If we are being cared for by people unseen, imagine how much we are truly seen.
Until next time,
Laura