NYTimes 03-25: Guns and Yoga

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jfh

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It should be noted this is the NY Times Magazine, and is article II in the section "The Funny Pages." http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/25/magazine/25funnyhumor.t.html?_r=1&adxnnl=1&oref=slogin&adxnnlx=1174844289-+A81zx4g6lUS4qXEtJI+ig

Guns and Yoga
By PATTON OSWALT
Published: March 25, 2007
Not long ago, I decided to learn how to shoot guns. It was a Saturday morning, and I was curious. So after a breakfast of spelt flakes, soy milk and green tea, I went out shooting.

I believe in sustainable agriculture. I support gay marriage. I think war is a failure of diplomacy, logic and leadership. I’m embarrassed by the fact that it’s 2007 and my country is debating evolution. Pot should be legal. I dream of a world where punches are made of flowers.

And, it turns out, I love guns.

At the gun class, I learned gun safety, legal obligations, targeting and trigger pulling. And there were coffee and doughnuts, so you could pretend you were a maverick cop who didn’t play by the rules and, damn it, Chief, unless you let me do this my way, we’re never gonna catch this killer. Here, take my badge!

While shooting, I loved how the guns were small but also really heavy. I’m small and heavy, too, but not solid like a gun. I’m more like a duffel bag full of ball bearings and mayonnaise.

Here is how a gun works. You put these small metal cylinders full of explosives inside, and when the cylinders explode the gun doesn’t. It’s tight and strong and sends the cylinders flying out at whatever you’re pointing at — a paper target or, I hope, someday, zombies. While most things these days — movies, government employees, fast-food sandwiches and me — are slapped together with cardboard and frosting, a gun is a precision instrument.

Because I know how ridiculous I look holding a gun, I did pretty well. If your focus isn’t on being cool while you do something, you focus on results. I was free. I cut dead center (or close to it) on my silhouette target’s 8-ring almost every time. I imagined huge chunks of stew getting blown out of the backs of my attackers.

Later that day, I took a restorative yoga class. Shooting guns and taking yoga on the same day was the biggest “You got chocolate in my peanut butter!” moment I’ve had so far in my life. Guns and yoga are French fries dipped in a milkshake. Scotch and ginger ale. Elvis Costello’s “This Year’s Model” after a bad breakup. Reruns of “Law and Order” and having no life: they’re good together.

You shoot better when you realize that your soul is a leaf falling through time, and that work shouldn’t equal struggle. And yoga never aligns you with the universe better than when your forearm is still tingling from the buck and recoil of a .357 bullpup.

Someone needs to open a combination shooting range and yoga studio. I’m serious. Maybe I should do it. Hose off a few clips of Glaser safety slugs, then see how deep you can go into Warrior II. The murder rate would go down. No, wait — it would stay the same, but people would realize it’s all part of a bigger plan. Or, no, it would go up, because people would realize the transitory nature of existence, and that everything that has happened or is going to happen is always happening someplace forever, so why not put a slug in that dude’s head who won’t stop talking during “300”?

The people I took the introductory gun course with were an interesting bunch: two guys hoping to become armed security guards, an indie-music-store-looking black guy, a dad and his two teenage sons and a guy who claimed to be an actor researching a role. Did they know a neophyte yogi sat among them, counting his inhalations and trying to make his exhalations take twice as long?

Meanwhile, I was the only guy in the yoga class. In fact, I was the only non-soccer mom in the yoga class. Did they know they had a rifle-eyed street panther in their midst?

Probably not. In yoga, you’re supposed to go at your own pace and focus on your breathing. So no one saw me flopping my doughnut belly and Internet butt around like a wino when I was trying to do Bridge Pose, or Happy Baby or Slightly Superior Suburbanite. Like the legless, armless silhouette I shot at earlier that day, I had holes of self-loathing blasted out of me. My Corpse Pose must’ve looked eerily authentic.

All these thoughts whizzed through my head like tracer bullets as I lay there, in the evening gloom of the studio, with a dozen moms breathing mom-breaths around me. I floated out of my body. I hovered over Burbank. I was one with my target, and my target was bliss.

Namaste. Lock and load.


Patton Oswalt is a writer and comedian. He performs the voice of Remy, the lead rat, in “Ratatouille,” an animated film scheduled for release this summer.


Well, there are disconnects, and then there are cultural disconnects.
 
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This seems subtly pro-gun and it will be read by liberals, perhaps with grudging acceptance and curiousity. It is a good thing I think.

I admit that it feels silly, kind of like writing an article about going to school with black people in the 1950s, but there is no quick way to change the way people think. You have to slowly get them comfortable with the new way of thinking.
 
I am not good at reading between the lines of a joke article when written by someone who I am not familiar with, but hopefully he realizes that deep breathing won't stop a liquor store robbery/shooting.
 
Guns and yoga are French fries dipped in a milkshake. Scotch and ginger ale.

hmm, if shooting and yoga is as good as fries and a frosty or scotch and ginger ale, I might have to give yoga a try.

Very good article. It paints guns/shooting in a positive light and does so in a manner that soccer moms can empathize with. I don't see anything snide or maliciously sarcastic that could be seen as mocking or insulting gun owners.
 
For the NY Times to have something mildly progun is subversive to their editorial agenda. Everyonce in awhile, there is some kind of life section progun article about someone going shooting and liking it.

There's another article - which you would have to pay for about a sheriff auctioning off a M-16 for funds but I'm not paying to see it.

Their editorial page has been ranting about the DC gun ban decision. So it's nice to see a yoga and gun piece.

BTW, when I lived in Oregon, a gun range opened up a branch with a latte bar so you could watch the shooters - but I think it folded.
 
Yoga has been suggested by coaches to increase your shooting ability through concentration and self control. Haven't tried it yet thoguh.
 
I would like to point out that the writer is not from the NYT, but is a freelance writer who is being paid for his articles. The NYT probably has no control over what he writes. This is seperate from the editorial page, and the News sections of the NYT. It means that the NYT does not condone what he writes. Plus I would not consider the article pro-gun, because it is pure satire.
 
Actually, Patton Oswalt is a comedian. You might have seen him on Comedy Central's Last Laugh '06. More of an independent than belonging to one party.
 
I'm not sure what yoga has to do with guns, but I like them both. Yoga is the only thing I've ever found that was able to make me go from type A to completely relaxed. Gotta find time to start doing that again.
 
You know, this is loosely related but one day while flipping through the channels I came upon an infomercial featuring a very odd exercise device.
These leotard clad women were all extolling the virtues of this stretch and balance bar. The kind that ballet dancers use to warm up.
I couldn't stop watching it. Sad, I know, but what the hec?:neener: :D

Yeah, the article was funny. Welcome aboard Patton.
 
Actually, yoga is pretty useful to shooting - especially rifle. The ability to be flexible enough to sit steadily in sometimes uncomfortable positions (kneeling) for a very long time can come in handy. I don't do it myself; but I have met one guy who does and he can not only assume rock solid shooting positions, he can hold them long after my muscles and joints are screaming in pure agony.
 
Yoga is very helpful in attaining flexibility and concentration. I have found that TaiChi is even more helpful with pistol shooting.

Pops
 
The author of this little piece is a comedian. And as intended the article is amusing. However the intent of the New York media is still the same. We
as gun owners are to be derided, looked down upon. Because we like to shoot guns we are "different", outside of the mainstream, their mainstream.

Their was a hint of sarcasm and that sarcasm is directed at people who shoot guns. Because the writer of this little column is a comedian he is not to be taken too seriously, after all he is just a comedian. It's not like he is someone important like a politician or a newspaper editor. I am not impressed and I still have no use for the New York media.
 
well yoga is pretty awsome for more than one reason. well besides the health benefits, you are usually out numbered multiple times by attractive women who actually make a point of being accepting. meaning it takes about 4 minutes longer before I get shot down ;) . haha in all honesty though I try to do yoga when I can and I find it to be beneficial
 
I liked it and it was an interesting writing style; no more, no less. Not everything has a hidden anti-gun message... unless you read it backwards :)
 
That was actually very nice read, good use of visuals. Seems that he may have CONVERTED himself (if the article is true) hopefully anyone who is anti or still on the fence will take note and give it a try, the gun part that is.
 
breath control

but hopefully he realizes that deep breathing won't stop a liquor store robbery/shooting.

Actually, when combined with a good sight picture and controlled trigger, it does pretty well! ;)
 
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