Floating
Our natural state for the first 9 months of our life is one of floating. We are composed of mostly water, so the state of floating is something that effects our mind/body organism. Dolphins, whales, otters, seals, etc. are mammals that have maintained a lifestyle and environment that is mostly composed of floating. As bipedal creatures, we are very far from coming to terms with the effects of gravity, and there is some kind of innate yearning for us to return to an environment that is free from the constraints and damage that gravity does to our mind and body. Even in our language we use "floating on a cloud" to denote ecstatic states verses "weighed down" to denote feeling heavy and burdened. One way to get a feel for the effects of zero gravity is the experience of floating in a highly salinated tank that distributes gravity equally throughout the body, so there is as close to zero gravity as you can have on earth. This article recounts one of my many experiences of floating on mind and body.
Coming
out of a float I sit in front of a fish tank. It is a perfect bridge
from floating, because I have been a fish floating in my own psyche.The
rhythmic undulations of tropical neon are exactly what my mind/body
wants and needs to see. This fish tank visual movie
is what I have just experienced viscerally, so there’s not much
distance or separation between me watching and being
in the tank with the fish.
Remember, the observer effects, and is effected by the observed.
I
feel what the fish feel, wavering and weaving in their watery
environment. It reminds me of swimming with dolphins and my awe at
how one they are with being a mammal and living in water.
The
sea anemones and psychedelic plants extend their tentacles; sensing,
touching, in perfect harmony with their environment.
Natural
State-Flowing/Floating
Our
natural state is a flowing/floating wave like dynamic. Flowing and
Floating are close cousins. We can translate flowing and floating in
many ways such as a resilient, open, honest and willing attitude.
Physically, we can stretch, get massage, practice Flow Yoga, Tai Chi,
swimming, and of course floating.
Socially,
to practice flowing and floating we can give and receive feedback.
This is a hallmark of any healthy balanced system. We can practice
ways to process emotion, to minimize resentments, reach out for help,
spend time in contemplative practices such as meditation and prayer,
and get lots of support so we don’t get bogged down.
Psychologically,
“Flow
is the mental state of operation in which a person performing an
activity is fully immersed in a feeling of energized focus, full
involvement, and enjoyment in the process of the activity. In
essence, flow is characterized by complete absorption in what one
does. Proposed by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, this positive psychology
concept has been widely referenced across a variety of fields (see
his groundbreaking book “Flow”).”
After
floating, sitting in front of a beautiful aquarium is a physical and
sensory reflection of what I’ve just experienced for an hour or
more. Like astronauts that need decompression support from being in 0
gravity, a floater needs to decompress and slowly come back into
gravitational, upright orientation.
The
left hemisphere of the brain begins to come back on line because the
right hemisphere concerned with spatial, creative flow has been
dominant while floating.
Falling
Vs. Floating
Floating
is very different from falling. This may seem an obvious fact, but
the two states are often confused. All the orbiting planets, moons,
stars, and satellites are falling, but it seems like our moon is
gently floating in the night sky, and that the sun actually rises up
from the ocean. So it is counter-intuitive to realize the moon is
actually falling, as is the earth.
Walking
is another example of falling vs. floating. One of the reasons it’s
quite a feat for toddlers to learn to walk is that in order to take a
step, they must fall into it. it takes a lot of trust, confidence and
coordination to take a step, and then another. We have the phrase
“falling down drunk” for a good reason. When one is intoxicated,
one losses their ability to ‘fall’’
gracefully.
On
the floating side of things, running moves us, biomechanically,
towards a floating type of experience. Also dance can be seen as a
movement toward experientially practicing floating. Just watch a
video of Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers, or Martha Graham to see
floating in action. Or Michael “Air” Jordan floating from the tip
of the key, suspended as if from cables until he stuffs the basket
ball. Or the Russian ballerina Baryshnikov, taking flight in one of
his magnificent leaps.
We
wouldn’t necessarily expect ourselves to stuff a basketball like
M.J., after being in a float tank, but we can expect to embody a
level of floating that, if we intentionally practice, will transfer
and translate into parts of our life. It could be the way we drive,
the tone of our voice, and our level of fluidity and flexibility in
all of our transactions.
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