Posts Tagged ‘yoga makes’

The Internal Fire of Yoga Practice

Sunday, October 25th, 2009

pigeon poseBy Paul Jerard, E-RYT 500

When you consider internal fire, do words like tapas (heat) and agni (fire) come to mind? Burning impurities from within is a part of Yoga practice. At the same time, many cultures view fire as a form of cleansing. This brings about many passionate notions regarding the benefits of physical challenges in Hot or Power Yoga classes.

However, let’s discuss the inner fire that drives us to practice Yoga on a daily basis. It is mentally inspired fire that usually keeps every Yoga practitioner going. The mind is like a furnace, which heats up your entire being with inspiration, passion, and charges the mind with positive energy.

Observe a person who consistently has low motivation. It could be due to poor diet. If so, then the body must receive the proper nutrients to charge itself and then charge the mind. However, the source of low motivation is often a deeper problem in the mind. It might be poor self-worth. A person, who believes that he or she is not worthy of happiness, has no internal fire.

Will becoming a dedicated spiritual aspirant help such a person? To see a need for change is a primary step, but one who desires liberation, still needs direction. This will require time and study with a competent spiritual leader. Self-direction is possible, after foundational study, with a competent teacher.

This is the dawn of the “computer age.” Most of us want everything as fast as we can start a personal computer. If a problem has been brewing for decades, we want a solution right now. Sometimes, we demand a pill that will solve everything in one month or less. Yoga offers many solutions, but the study is a lifelong journey, and solutions may not be instant.

To recognize change toward self-liberation is the beginning of freedom. To ignite the fire from within, we must address our holistic health. We have to look inside at our mental, physical, emotional, and spiritual well-being. Only you are familiar with your pain, ailments, and troubles.

Each of us has a different pain threshold. Some people cry about everything, while others have much more pain and say nothing about it. If anything can be said about Yoga, one point is certain: It makes the worst of times bearable. You can practice anywhere, at any time, and feel the benefits of reduced mental, physical, or emotional pain.

On the spiritual level, some will say: “Yoga helped me find myself.” Others may be in hot pursuit of moksha or enlightenment. Whatever one’s spiritual purpose may be, the internal fire burns steady, within a seasoned practitioner, because Yoga makes life worth living.

© Copyright 2009 – Paul Jerard / Aura Publications

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Yoga in 2009 – It’s Time for a Change

Wednesday, December 31st, 2008

YogaBy Paul Jerard, E-RYT 500

Yoga makes us realize that one person can change people for the best. Continued small changes can add up to major changes. The beginning of change, in any culture or society, starts within the thoughts of one or more people.

At the beginning of each year, we evaluate the past, plan for the future, and move forward with optimism. This year on January 1, 2009, the people of the world open their eyes with a vision of the future. We have choices and many decisions for 2009, but commitment is always the key to making changes.

It is so easy to lack commitment in relationships, work, and lifestyle changes. Most New Year’s resolutions lack sincerity or commitment. The reason is because we have to believe a resolution is possible.

Barack Obama’s campaign slogan, “Change you can believe in,” comes to mind. When going up a flight of stairs, you are better off keeping track of each step up a stair case than to focus on arriving at the top step. If we do not focus on each step, the risk of falling down the stair case is much greater.

This attention to detail is a lesson we learn from life. If you want to make positive changes, write your goal down, but underneath the goal you should note each step that is required for you to accomplish your ultimate goal. This planning process is worth every minute or hour you invest.

No matter what form of Yoga you practice, there are bench marks and mile stones along your journey. Life is the same way, because small steps of achievement are the highway toward success. Some Yogis will criticize self-improvement, goal setting, and success enhancement techniques.

Consider this: If each of us gave up on the search for success, would we be helping our families or the world? Classic Yoga texts required a Yogi with a goal. The opposite of achieving is failing and quitting. Do we want to endorse failing and quitting? Yoga would not be the system it is today, if all of its practitioners were against self-improvement.

Therefore, see Yoga for what it is. Yoga is the mother of all self-improvement systems. Yoga is also the mother of all health maintenance systems. The first requirement, on the path toward success, is to see endless possibilities and reality at the same time. This is why Yoga students, of all kinds, take small, but sure, steps forward.

Copyright 2008 – Paul Jerard / Aura Publications

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Free Podcasts. Bonus: Free Yoga e-Book, “Yoga in Practice.”

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FREE CONTENT: If you are a Yoga Teacher, Yoga studio, blogger, e-zine, or website publisher, and are in need of quality content, please feel free to use my blog entries (articles) – Please be sure to reprint each article, as is, including the resource box above. Namaste, Paul

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