Hubris

“Just Do It Because I Say So”

Ruminant With A View

by Elizabeth Boleman-Herring

Elizabeth Boleman-HerringTEANECK, NJ—(Weekly Hubris)—5/10/10—If I remember correctly, the poem comprised 61 lines.

I was 12 years old, and there was no way one could “get out of” the eighth grade at the Francis W. Parker School of Chicago without memorizing and reciting the poem. Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s “Kubla Khan: or, A Vision in a Dream: A Fragment,” to be precise.

Just thinking about the poem today (and I am 58, in my stockinged feet), makes me break out in a cold sweat. A light one, to be sure, but a cold one. Still.

Thinking back (and I obviously do that a lot), I’m stunned that, even at 12, I didn’t at least ask: “Why? Why do we have to memorize this poem to graduate from the eighth grade? Why do we have to memorize 61 lines of some 18th-century opium-smoker’s verse? AND, what does memorizing it have to do with passing the eighth grade?”

I believe my home-room teacher back then in Chicago was Mrs. Johnson. I had just returned from three years in Greece, and trying to adjust to America again, Chicago, a new school, and much, much else, at 12. I was also, as ever, on full scholarship: those on full scholarship do not fail to pass; do not ask “Why?” often, and unhesitatingly defer to those at the head of the classroom.

And, true, I’d been an all-but-straight-A, scholarship student, from Nursery School on through post-graduate work. I was compliant, much, much of the time. I did my homework. I showed up for tests. I even studied logarithms and Flatland under Mr. Barr McCutcheon (and went home and threw up afterwards).

And, when my time came to recite “Kubla Khan,” I stood, held on to the edge of my formica-topped desk, and intoned: “In Xanadu did Kubla Khan/A stately pleasure-dome decree:/Where Alph, the sacred river, ran/Through caverns measureless to man/Down to a sunless sea. . .” And there I stopped, full-stop.

On the stairs between the first and second floors of our Chicago brownstone, where my mother and I habitually sat, books in hand, while I memorized things (“The Messiah,” daily lists of Latin vocabulary words, anatomical parts, etc., etc.), I had at long last got to the point where I could rip straight through Coleridge’s completely (well, almost completely) unintelligible rant, without missing a word. I no longer needed cueing. I had it down.

But the stairs on Belden Avenue were not the classroom at F.W. Parker; and my mother was, patently, not the small sea of eighth-graders with whom I parried and thrusted and rubbed elbows every weekday. And when I stood before them, and their faces turned to me, expectantly, “So twice five miles of fertile ground/With walls and towers were girdled round:/And there were gardens bright with sinuous rills,/Where blossomed many an incense-bearing tree. . .” and everything thereafter went slap out of my head.

Mrs. Johnson cueing me, I limped through the rest of the poem, line by line, my face blazing, but I was a marked woman from there on out: give me anything at all to memorize (the lead in “Love’s Labours Lost,” “South Pacific,” the phone book) and, with my mother’s help, I could do it . . . on our stairs at home. But performance anxiety, or stage fright, or just simple why-do-I-have-to-do-this?-cussedness would short-circuit me if ever I had to perform anything solo in front of a group. I spent quite some (required) time “on the boards” at the F.W. Parker, in plays and in skits, but I was always, always, always as uncomfortable on stage as I was in Mr. McCutcheon’s math classes; always just a breath away from throwing up.

Moving forward now, like the Ghost of Xmas Future, I ask you to envision me last week, in my Iyengar Yoga Teachers’ Class in Madison, NJ. I am a fairly sane middle-aged woman now, and I have been studying Iyengar Yoga, steadily and fruitfully, for some six years. I’ve been compelled to memorize quite a number of Sanskrit terms, and I have participated in chanting Sanskrit prayers and invocations en masse. I also, regularly, get up in front of groups of Yoga students and teach—on a daily basis, actually.

So, you’d think that when my teacher, the Director of StudioYoga, asked me to lead the “Invocation to Patanjali,” a prayer honoring the founding-sage of Yoga and Ayurveda, a chant consisting of some eight, just eight lines of poetry, I could rise to the occasion. (The audience would be made up of about six to ten of my fellow-students; people I’ve known for over a year, and not a snotty eighth-grader among them.)

Reader, will it surprise you to learn that I can make it through “Yogena cittasya padena vacam .  .  .” but no further?

I took up “the issue” this past week with both my psychoanalyst (oh, don’t ask!) and with my best friend, who happens to be an Aikido Sensei.

The former’s response ran something like this: “WHY IS IT THAT PEOPLE IN POSITIONS OF AUTHORITY FEEL COMPELLED TO MAKE THOSE BENEATH THEM IN A HIERARCHY NEEDLESSLY SUFFER????!!!!” (Emphasis totally Dr. B’s.)

Jerry, my friend the Sensei’s response was: “Why don’t you just stand up and sing, ‘I’m an old cowhand, from the Rio Grande . . .’???

Well, I can answer Dr. B’s question: as student-teachers of Iyengar Yoga, we’re asked to memorize just this one chant, as the Sanskrit sounds themselves are believed to be part and parcel of the prayer: the medium is, largely, the message (just as “Aum,” or “Om,” which we also chant, would also lose most of its oomph, its mystery, its incantatory weight, in any sort of “translation”).

And I can’t sing, “I’m an old cowhand,” either, as I’d have the same problem with that, or “The Twelve Days of Xmas”: I’d freeze, just as surely, singing an old standard in front of my class as chanting the “Yogena . . . ”

So, I’ve done an end-run around my predicament. My teacher, Theresa, will not, I believe, wholeheartedly “approve” (some requirements are just that: required), but it’s the best I can do. Girl and woman, I am unable to sing something memorized before an audience.

So, I’m tearing a page from my uber-Guru’s book, my uber-Guru being B.K.S. Iyengar, himself. And what Iyengar teaches us is that some asanas, some Yoga postures, may be beyond our bodies’ abilities to assume for the time being. Thus, I may never, in this particular body of mine, be able to perform one of Iyengar’s trademark poses, Natarajasana, or The King Of The Dance. But, given some “props”—a ballet bar, a belt, a few years—I may yet get to a reasonable facsimile thereof.

But Iyengar’s like that: if a student’s body won’t quite assume the asana, well, bring a prop to the rescue. BLESS YOU, B.K.S.!

So, by tomorrow, I will not have “The Invocation to Patanjali” down, in Sanskrit, for my class. And I will never, now, I believe, make it from, “In Xanadu did Kubla Khan” all the way down to “And close your eyes with holy dread,/For he on honey-dew hath fed,/And drunk the milk of Paradise.” Nor do I really want to.

I do do what I can, though, and so I have written an English translation, my own version, of the “Invocation,” which I plan to read to Theresa and my class, for the first time, tomorrow afternoon at about two o’clock. Wish me, and that eighth-grader I still am on some level, luck.

Patanjali, the sage of Yoga

“Prayer to Patanjali”
transl. by Elizabeth Boleman-Herring, October 2009

Om . . .
Yoga, for stilling disturbances of mind;
Grammar, for bringing us unity through sound;
Healing, for banishing frailty and fear:
He who bestows all these benisons and gifts
Patanjali, brightest of all the souls I know,
Before thee, I bow here, in reverence and grace;
Oh spirit, incarnate, among us once as man;
With conch, wheel, and discus, and great two-bladed sword,
A symbol of victory, eventual but sure,
With wisdom, awakening, knowing what is real.
Ananta, your avatar, while among us here:
The serpent that, turning, makes everything appear.
Aum, Shanti, Shanti, Shanti, Om . . . .

PS Elizabeth Boleman-Herring is about to undergo spinal fusion surgery. Thus, her next few “Ruminants With A View” will reprise already-published essays.

Elizabeth Boleman-Herring, Publishing-Editor of “Hubris,” considers herself an Outsider Artist (of Ink). The most recent of her 15-odd books is The Visitors’ Book (or Silva Rerum): An Erotic Fable, now available in a third edition on Kindle. Her memoir, Greek Unorthodox: Bande à Part & A Farewell To Ikaros, is available through www.GreeceInPrint.com.). Thirty years an academic, she has also worked steadily as a founding-editor of journals, magazines, and newspapers in her two homelands, Greece, and America. Three other hats Boleman-Herring has at times worn are those of a Traditional Usui Reiki Master, an Iyengar-Style Yoga teacher, a HuffPost columnist and, as “Bebe Herring,” a jazz lyricist for the likes of Thelonious Monk, Kenny Dorham, and Bill Evans. Boleman-Herring makes her home with the Rev. Robin White; jazz trumpeter Dean Pratt (leader of the eponymous Dean Pratt Big Band); and Scout . . . in her beloved Up-Country South Carolina, the state James Louis Petigru opined was “too small for a republic and too large for an insane asylum.” (Author Photos by Robin White. Author Head Shot Augment: René Laanen.)

3 Comments

  • Catharina V Leeuwen

    Crazy girl, I love it…the story that is!
    I have the perfect solution for you here: Karaoke!!!
    And I never knew we differ so little in age: I am from 1947

  • eboleman-herring

    OK, Catharina, you’re on! Next time you’re in NYC, we hit the karaoke bars! If that doesn’t cure me, nothing will! (Born in 1951, by the way. A life that begins with Ike and ends up, thus far, with Obama, is going in the right direction! :-)) L, e

  • hnoakes

    Oh, Elizabeth! I knew we had a lot in common, but this! My family was part of the Russian Orthodox community in Japan (there was no Greek Orthodox church there). The Russians have a custom that at Christmas,children perform, recite etc. in front of the tree in order to get a treat. When I was 5, my mother, eager to show off in front of her Russian friends, had me memorize the first stanza of Pushkin’s “Ruslan and Ludmilla”. Now Pushkin is sort of a Russian Shakespeare, and “Ruslan” is one of his remarkably complex poems. At 5, I had absolutely no idea what I was saying, but I learned the sounds. When it came time to perform, I closed my eyes, turned my back to the audience and belted out the stanza. I still remember the verse and my mother’s reaction to my “performance”. I also remember that I had to be quickly escorted to the loo to regurgitate my breakfast, lunch and treats. Needless to say, I won’t take to the boards any time soon.