Yog(a): The basics
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Yoga is an integrated science which alone can restore the wholeness and integrity of our divided being and lets us enjoy real well-being. | Yoga is an integrated science which alone can restore the wholeness and integrity of our divided being and lets us enjoy real well-being. | ||
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The Times of India Feb 27 2015 | The Times of India Feb 27 2015 |
Revision as of 15:27, 5 March 2017
This is a collection of articles archived for the excellence of their content. |
Contents |
“What is yog(a)?”: the masters explain
The Times of India, May 23 2016
Nayaswami Devarshi
Patanjali, in his Yoga Sutras, gives the most clear and succinct answer to the question, “What is yoga?“ in his aphorism, “Yogas chitta vritti nirodh.“ The great master of yoga, Paramhansa Yogananda, interpreted Patanjali thus, “Yoga is the neutralisation of the vortices of feeling.“ Thought itself is neutral. It is only with disturbed feelings and emotions, likes and dislikes, along with emotional reactions to events, that humans truly suffer.
The mind is like a mirror. If a horse is reflected in the mirror, it will not discriminate as to what is reflected. The intellect is necessary to define it, “That's a horse.“ The ego chimes in next and says, “Why , that's my horse!“ It is only when feeling and emotion become engaged, that one says, “How happy I am to see my horse!“ Soul-bondage begins with the ego's `ownership', but real suffering happens with the involvement of feeling and emotion. This is why so many practices of meditation and yoga involve calming the waves of feeling and emotion.
Does this mean that we must deaden or kill our feelings? No! Adi Shankara described God as Sat-Chit-Ananda, or ever-existing, ever-conscious divine bliss. Bliss itself is pure feeling, so one could say , “God is feeling.“
Thus, the true yogi does not kill emotions, but instead transmutes them from restless human emotions that disturb and bind into the calm pure divine `emotion' of Sat-ChitAnanda. Practices of yoga and meditation are simply an ancient technology (technology definition: “the practical application of knowledge“) given to humankind to help us achieve that goal. Following are two simple yoga practices that will help to calm your emotions. The next time you find yourself getting upset or angry , take a long deep inhalation for 10 counts, completely filling the lungs. Hold the breath for 10 counts. Then exhale slowly for 10 counts. Immediately begin inhaling again, and repeat three to five times.
You will notice an immediate and positive change in your state of mind and emotions. The reasons for this change are too complex to explain in a short article, but they are based on the inner science of yoga, breath control and control of the life force, or pranayama.
You can see that when done properly , yoga is an extremely practical technology . It can help you face everyday problems in business, family life, relationships, moods, health, etc with more clarity , calmness, energy and thus with more effectiveness.
Here is another simple practice: Next time you find yourself feeling sad, depressed and emotionally heavy , take note of your physical posture. It is likely that it will reflect your inwardly down-pulling feeling, with the shoulders being slumped, spine bent and eyes looking downward.
You've likely never seen someone looking down at the ground with such a posture stating enthusiastically , “I feel so uplifted!“ And you will never see someone with a straight spine, shoulders back, chest out, eyes looking upward, saying, “I feel so depressed!“ By changing our habitual posture, we can influence our mood and emotions. Hatha yoga can help with this process, so can physical exercise, but simply changing your habitual posture will have surprising effects on your mood. This is one reason why yogis meditate with a straight spine, and with the eyes gazing upward to the spiritual eye at the point between the eyebrows, the kutastha chaitanya centre.
An integrated science
The Times of India, Jun 18 2016
Nivedita Joshi
Yoga, an integrated science, enables wellness
The sutras of Patanjali cover all aspects of human life, prescribe a code of conduct to lead a life of fulfilment and end with a glorious vision to reach our full potential. Yoga Sutras begin at the very root, mind and intelligence, called chitta or conciousness.In the first chapter Samadhipada, Patanjali analyses the movement and functioning of the mind. The second chapter Sadhanapada deals with practise.Patanjali goes on to provide deep insight into the nature of kleshas or afflictions that affect the body and distract the mind, resulting in distorted behaviour patterns of an individual. The cause of suffering is lack of knowledge and failure to understand the conjunction between Purusha, the seer, and Prakriti, the seen. The external world lures the seer towards its illusory joys, arousing desires. Non-fulfilment of desires results in pain and suffocates freedom if not controlled through yoga. We are all bound by the chain of pain and pleasure.Practise of yoga leads us to experience bliss untainted by pleasure and pain.
Pain may be adyatmika, self-inflicted, or due to adhidaivika, fate or heredity. Or caused by an imbalance of elements in our aadibhautik or constitution lust, anger and greed, all give birth to pain. We participate and aggravate these pains by direct krita, indulgence, by provoking them in karita, the other, or by anumodit, passive acceptance.
In Sadhanapada, Patanjali reaches out to the lowest level of the seeker who is spiritually yet unevolved. The sage strives to inspire him to aspire for absolute freedom and here he coins the term Kriya Yoga. Kriya means action and Kriya Yoga emphasises the dynamic efforts on the part of the sadhaka.
Kriya Yoga comprises eight yogic discipline yama, niyama, asana, pranayama, pratyahara, dharana, dhyana and samadhi. The seeker is taught to perform asanas so that he becomes familiar with his body and sense intelligence. He becomes alert and sensitive and sharpens his power of concentration. Pranayama gives control over subtle qualities of the elements sound, touch, shape, taste and smell. Pratyahara is withdrawal of the senses and organs of action.
The 16 sutras of the Samadhipada is most illuminating where Patanjali states `Heyam Dhukham Anagatam' (II.16). This aphorism explains that past pain is already extinguished and while the pain we are in process of experiencing can't be totally avoided it can certainly be mitigated to some extent with yogic practice and powers of discrimination. Pain that is likely to occur in the unknown future too can be prevented by adhering to yogic discipline.
According to Patanjali, yoga is a preventive healing art, with its science and philosophy . Practise of yoga assures us of robust health that alone can let us experience spiritual bliss. Patanjali also warns us of the pitfalls that may impede spiritual growth and advises us to stabilise body and mind so that we are not shattered when confronted with tragic realities of human existence.
The third chapter, Vibhutipad, deals with attainments. Patanjali exhorts us to continue the practise of yoga so that the intelligence of consciousness and soul may be equally balanced. Then we attain the highest state of wisdom where the person exists in a perfectly integrated state. This is known as kaivalya. This is the subject matter of the last chapter in the Yoga Sutras called Kaivalyapada that focuses on absolute liberation.
Yoga is an integrated science which alone can restore the wholeness and integrity of our divided being and lets us enjoy real well-being.
A healing of mind, body and spirit
The Times of India Feb 27 2015
Swami Chidanand Saraswati
The practice of yoga was intuited, channelled, perfected and codified by our rishis and sages for the attainment of total health in body , mind, and spirit, so that the material human body may be a vehicle for spiritual awakening and enlightenment. The word `yoga' means `union'. Yoga is that which we become, that which unfolds and awakens when the body , mind, thoughts, motions and intentions are joined together. Today , joyfully, the practice of yoga is burgeoning throughout the world. Yet, there is rampant competition amongst styles, lineages and `brands' of yoga.`Which is the best?' is a common question. If there can be a `best' and therefore a `worst', it is not yoga. If there is competition, criticism, back-stabbing and cheating, it is not yoga. Yoga is cooperation. Yoga is togetherness. Yoga is a practice through which we connect to our own breath, bodies, minds and ultimately to our spirits. Then, in that divine, eighth limb of yoga as elucidated by Patanjali, we experience samadhi, the ultimate union of our spirit with the Supreme Spirit, our soul with the Supreme Soul. It is a union, verily, of us to each other and to the Universe.
Today the world needs yoga more than ever. However, we need it not only because we are more out-ofshape, obese and at risk for diabetes and heart disease than ever. All of that is true and yoga can be a fabulous panacea for nearly all that ails our physical body . Yet yoga has much more to offer. Today that which ails us as individuals, communities, societies, religious groups and nations is separation. The borders and boundaries between `me' and `you' and `us' and `them' are thicker and more i and `them' are thicker and more intractable than ever. Our personal frame of reference is narrowing each day .
Our culture expounds `Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam', that the world is one family . However, today , most of us do not identify as members of the world family .Rather, we identify as members of a political party or a religious group, or a country club, or followers of a particular guru. The lines between us get thicker and thicker. That separation, that sense of `self ' versus `other' is what permits us to dehumanise each other so drastically that we can be complicit, directly or indirectly, in each other's suffering and death. That sep aration is also what leads to the increase of depression world wide. Depression is marked by feeling alone, disconnected, isolated from the world, feelings which, when taken to an extreme, permit us to even take our own lives without realising the pain our death will cause others.
Yoga is a solution. It is a solution to our abysmal physical health and skyrocketing medical bills. The postures and breathing exercises are unparalleled in their ability to restore wellness.Yoga is a solution to personal angst, depression and lack of meaning in our lives. As we connect with divine prana, we realise that we are being nourished by the Universe, and inextricably linked to the web of Life. Yoga is also a solution to that which ails our planet. When we realise our interconnectedness, then we stand up and change our attitude and our actions into ones that protect that global family as ardently as we'd protect our own nuclear family .
The challenge is ours: to co-opt yoga into yet another way to compete with each other and separate ourselves from each other, or to use it in its fullest meaning, bringing health to ourselves, our communities and our world. The International Yoga Festival is being held at Parmarth Niketan, Rishikesh, March 1-7. For details, visit http:www.internationalyogafestival.com
Mainly for the mind; body secondary
The Times of India, Jun 20 2016
Hasmukh Adhia
Yoga is for mind, benefit to body is incidental
Most people think of yoga as asanas only , as a way of physical exercise. Some people think of yoga as postures and breathing exercise.Few know of yoga as a technique of meditation. Yoga is a technique of developing awareness of mind with a view to enjoy life with fullness. The benefit that comes to body is incidental. Sage Patanjali defines yoga as the process of gaining mastery over mind.The second appropriate definition of yoga, given in the Yoga Vasishta is “Manah Prasamanopaya Yogah“, which means `Yoga is a subtle technique to calm down the mind'. The Bhagwad Gita defines yoga as a state of equilibrium of mind “Samatvam Yoga Uchyate“. Aurobindo calls yoga as a process of rising above our base nature to divinity . Vivekananda calls yoga as a tool for condensing the process of evolution of man to cosmic being or super consciousness. Who is the ruler of our life? Undoubtedly it is our mind. Raja Yoga is so called because it is a technique of training our mind, which is controlling our life. Many people mistake yogasana to be one of the alternatives available for physical workout. This is so untrue.First of all the purpose of physical exercise is to improve the body , while the purpose of yogasana is basically to control modifications of mind. When we do asanas in the way prescribed by scriptures, our mind becomes steady and quiet.
Once you practise asanas for a long period, the mind learns to be steady in all situations. In the process, the body also becomes flexible and toned.
Another major distinction between asana and other physical exercises is in the method of performing them. In physical exercises, it is believed, that faster the movement, better it is. But in asanas, slower the movement, better it is. And the main benefit of asana comes in maintaining the posture in the final stage.
Also, in yogasana, the coordination of breath with body movement has to be perfect. Then it becomes more beneficial.Breath carries prana, the life-energy of our body . The disturbance in flow of prana in our body causes restlessness of mind and disease in body . Systematic breathing practice removes the imbalance of prana in our body .
So along with asana, breathing coordination is necessary .
The third main distinction lies in the level of awareness.While doing asana, one has to remain fully aware of the body part which is being affected by the posture. Listening to music while doing asana can also cause distraction.This is not the case with physical exercise. Most people workout while listening to loud music or watching TV .Yogasana has to be done in a quiet and pleasant surrounding where one can link body and mind properly by maintaining awareness.
Because of all these differences, yogasana is far superior in its benefit to both body and mind. While both physical exercise and asana improve our skeletomuscular, cardiorespiratory and circulatory systems of the body , yogasana also improves the neuromuscular system and endocrinal system which control our sympathetic and parasympathetic reactions in case of perceived stress. So, in lifestylerelated diseases such as hypertension, diabetes, anxiety and depression, yogasana gives spectacular results.
Happiness is a state of mind. Our idea of `what makes us' happy changes from time to time depending on how trained our mind is to experience happiness. This technique of training your mind is nothing else but yoga.
Yog, not bhog is the goal
The Times of India, March 30, 2016
Yogi Ashwini
What is the point of playing the best music in the world to a person whose ears are plugged? What is the point of showing the best scenery to someone who refuses to open his eyes? What is the point of offering the finest delicacies of the world to someone who does not have the appetite for them? Yoga is the final frontier, a very serious subject. If you are not ready to do the practices as taught to you, there is no point of taking up yoga. You will neither get the experience, nor the glow because your higher senses will not awaken. Even if those senses are forcibly activated for some time, it is not going to last forever. There are two kinds of people. First is the kind in whom this sense is completely missing. Second kind is that you have the sense, but it is curtained with veils of maya. For you to experience the truth, these veils have to be removed.
Sanatan Kriya is the process of removing these veils. The practices that you have been given, individually or collectively, are a process to remove the veils that have curtained your senses. When you do the kriya, you establish a connection with the gurutattva. It is like inserting the plug into a socket, and the current flows. But if you do not want plug in, despite having the sense, you are unable to experience it. You only perceive creation by your five senses sight, touch, smell, hearing and taste. You do not know anything beyond because you are veiled by the five senses, maya. At times, a guru helps you to remove that curtain, you are made to experience what lies beyond. You see it, appreciate it, but after sometime the curtain is back because of your inherent desires.
There are five basics to yoga one asana, one mantra, one guru, one isht and a single intent. If your intent is evolution, if your intent is of your guru, you can never digress from the path.
Ego is the biggest road block for a sadhaka. Jnana never comes from reading books or listening to lectures; it comes from somewhere else. Divine messages come in mysterious ways. Ego is the greatest veil, which never allows you to see the truth. It makes you believe that you know everything. The one who understands and accepts what is lacking in him, where he is going wrong, can very easily go ahead but the one who keeps denying till the very end nothing can be done for such a person. Do not try assessing the subject of yoga with your limited five senses, that `this will happen' or `this should happen', wait for your experience. You are a normal human being you have five senses and certain desires. Every soul has a desire and to fulfil that desire it takes a body and to rise above that desire it holds the hand of the guru. The problem arises when people start doing yoga for bhoga. Yoga is for rising above bhoga.The body and five senses are for bhoga, but yoga is to rise above desires. Yoga chitta vritti nirodh. Gita talks of control of senses. What that control is, the guru will guide you. Just like indulging in senses is an experience, similarly control of senses too is an experience.But for this, you need a guru.