Posts Tagged ‘yogic path’

The Yogic Path: The Upanishads and Yoga

Friday, March 25th, 2011

yoga teacher educationBy Faye Martins

As the various forms of Yoga continue to spread from India to the outside world, there will be more and more individuals that will be drawn to the ancient practice and become increasingly involved in not only the physical aspects of Yoga, but to the philosophical and spiritual aspects of it as well.

The farther one explores the Vedic literature or Hindi culture, the more frequently one may come across significant religious scriptures, such as the Upanishads. What are the Upanishads and are they necessary to be known by modern Yoga students?

What Are The Upanishads?

The Upanishads are part of Vedic literature and one of the most important collections of texts that belong to those that follow the dharmic religions of Hinduism, Jainism, Sikhism, Buddhism and more. While many of the texts in the Upanishads do discuss religious subjects, there are a fairly large amount which deal with secular topics including philosophy, psychology, rules of society, and guidelines for traveling along the path to unity, which is known as Yoga. The Upanishads may seem to only have religious undertones, but many scholars argue that the collections can also be seen as some of the earliest records that have shaped Indian government and society in addition to religion.

How Do They Connect to Yoga Practice?

All Yoga styles seek to achieve the same thing: Balance and unity with the body, mind, and soul. For centuries, Yogis and their students utilized the teachings of the Upanishads to further achieve greater understanding about themselves, the world, and the purpose of it all.

The Upanishads offer insight as to why one practices the stances, why one meditates during the day, and why one must balance the mind and body in order to create a more harmonious being. The Upanishads can act as a catalyst to deepen ones resolve and drive to practice the art of Yoga.

Do I Need to Study The Upanishads If I Practice Yoga?

No, although the Upanishads are incredibly rich in knowledge and give insight into Indian culture, it is not necessary to read the Upanishads for one to practice a Yoga lifestyle. Many Yoga teacher training programs briefly cover the surface of the Vedas, and some Yoga certification courses don’t discuss them at all.

One of the reasons Yoga is so appealing to many people is that it does not have one set path or direction: Yoga simply means the path to unity, and how an individual achieves that unity is entirely their own path. While some people may find guidance within the scriptures, others may find it from asana, mantra, pranayama, meditation, Nidra, or something else.

© Copyright 2011 – Aura Wellness Center – Publications Division

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Yoga a Path to Happiness

Monday, December 6th, 2010

Lotus flower in summerBy Dr. Paul Jerard, E-RYT 500

There are many paths to happiness and Yoga is one of them. Within all forms of Yoga, we learn the principles tolerance and acceptance. To avoid judging ourselves, and others, is a key to finding contentment. Let’s look at how the practice of Yoga can be your path to happiness.

When we learn to accept ourselves, and others, at face value we have made a major step toward contentment. How many people want to change the way a friend, spouse or partner lives life? Maybe we want to change others for the best, or possibly we just want to micro-manage someone else’s life.

You have to wonder how relationships survive, if one side of the relationship constantly struggles for change and control. If we constantly judge, over handle, and refuse to accept differences in friends, we strain the entire structure of a friendship.

Yoga teaches us that compassion (karuna) for all beings is a moral action. Karuna is not simply pity; it is the action of compassion for others. If we have compassion for loved ones, why do we choose to judge them or struggle for dominance in our relationships?

Granted, there are times when we should help a person we see who is on a path of self-destruction. For example: Our children cannot guide themselves until they are adults. As parents, we would like to see our children responsibly take control of their own lives. Once a child becomes an adult, we are best to think carefully and be controlled in our advice.

With all of this said, the moderate Yogic path is the best choice in building relationships of unity. Loving relationships are difficult for many of us to maintain, but we can put forward our best effort. It is not an easy task to accept people the way they are, but we will be much happier when we learn to appreciate the positive aspects of our relationships.

© Copyright 2010 – Paul Jerard / Aura Publications

To see our complete selection of Yoga teacher certification courses, please feel free to visit the following link.

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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

The Yogic Path Paves the Way to a Healthy Ecosystem

Friday, September 17th, 2010

By Rita Burlingame

For five thousand years, the practitioners of Yoga have experienced and documented marked improvements in all areas of physical and mental health.  In the past decade, clinical research has demonstrated Yoga to be an effective tool by which to maintain and improve health, and even a means by which to rid the body of disease (Barrett 76).  Both science and history have illustrated the effectiveness of Yoga as a path to complete fitness and perfect function of the human body.  However humanity has entered an age of abundant population, our actions yield global consequences. We are in search of a system by which to improve the health not only of the human population, but also of every living thing on this Earth.  In this essay I will explore both the practice and theory of Yoga and its relationship to the health of the individual body and the global ecosystem.

Yoga asanas are a physical program to promote health of the total organism.  While popular physical culture promotes only building of the musculature, the asanas develop and strengthen the outer body, tone the internal organs and strengthen mental faculties (Swami Vishnu-devananda 46).  By the expansion and compression of the entire system of joints, and exercise of all musculature in the body; asanas benefit the muscles, nerves, and endocrine system.  Yoga is a whole body hygiene that keeps the body functioning in perfect equilibrium (Hewitt 165).

Recently, with the invention of modern medicine, the maintenance of health has been reduced to a disease and treatment model.  Yoga takes a step back and looks at health as a complete system that must be meticulously cared for to maintain optimal functioning.  When the body is cared for and the asanas are used as a physical hygiene, the body is able to ward off the diseases and slow the aging process.  Yoga is also an effective treatment for many physical conditions that modern medicine reduces to treatment with medications.  Various asanas and regular practice can cure ailments from asthma, to diabetes, to thyroid imbalance  (Hewitt 367-368).  Jennifer Barrett gives her prescription for good health in ‘The Healing Power of Yoga’, she says “people want a cure for the healthcare system… if we used Yoga as regularly as we used our toothbrushes, people would be physically and emotionally healthier” (76).

When we chose to prevent and cure these diseases without medication we are benefiting our individual health and also the collective health.  When we look at our health from a holistic perspective, we begin to see the health of humanity from a ‘whole-istic’ perspective.  The pharmaceutical industry has tremendous cumulative affects on our health and also the health of our environment. As we begin to take better care of our bodies through diet and exercise, our needs for prescription drugs should be reduced to zero, other than in the most severe and rare circumstances.  The overuse of over the counter medications and prescription drugs affects the health of the population and damages the ecosystem.  Drugs are metabolized through the body and released back into water supply through our waste, this contaminates the ground water with various hormones and other chemicals (Focazio 205).  The perceived high need for medications would not exist if we, as a society, would take better care to use the health science of Yoga as preventative medicine.

Physical fitness is just one of the ways that Yoga helps to improve the organism.  Yoga is also rich with ethical guidelines for the practitioner.  The first limb of the eightfold path is the Yamas, five ethical rules to serve as guidelines for our interactions with the world (Palkhivala 1-2).  The five Yamas are Ahimsa (non-violence), Satya (truthfulness), Asteya (not stealing), Brahmacharya (control over impulses) and Aparigraha (non-covetousness).
This first of these five Yamas is Ahimsa, which means non-violence.  Traditionally Ahimsa has been applied to our interactions with other people, but when we broaden the definition to all sentient beings, a vegetarian lifestyle is the only viable option.  The vegetarian practices non-violence toward animals, as he does not believe it is necessary or ethical to kill for food.

Additionally, on a planet that’s clean water resources are dwindling, it is irresponsible to consume meat, a food that is considered in many countries to be a luxury item.  In the current industrial agricultural system, it takes less than two hundred and fifty gallons of water to produce one pound of the following foods; potatoes, wheat, corn, rice, and soybeans.  Comparatively, it requires an astounding twelve thousand gallons of water to produce just one pound of beef (Pimentel).  Swami Vishnu-devananda puts it simply as he poetically states “the natural appetite is nature’s instinct in the animal kingdom to protect its life upon the earth” (Swami Vishnu-devananda 210).

The next two Yamas, Satya and Asteya, work together; truthfulness and not stealing.  Fast food companies and the meat industry would like us to believe that eating meat is healthy, that without meat our bodies will not receive proper protein or nourishment.  This simply is not true, the vegetarian diet is able to provide a human with all necessary vitamins and minerals better than the diet of a meat consumer (Hewitt 152-162).

Stealing comes from the belief that we cannot create what we need.  “We steal because we misperceive the Universe as lacking abundance, or we think that there is not enough for everyone and that we will not receive in proportion to our giving” (Palkhivala 2).  In addition to stealing flesh from the animals and fish from the sea, Man steals oil from the ground and coal from the mountain tops because we do not believe that what we already have on Earth is enough abundance to sustain human kind.  The Yogi knows that he mustn’t take what he cannot replace, not stealing from man also means not stealing from the Earth which we all must share.  As we progress on the Yogic path, over consumption becomes unapealling.

Brahmacharya means to control one’s impulses, this is something that Western and consumerist cultures struggle with.  For the human race to become sustainable we must learn to control our impulses to make unnecessary purchases, to throw an item away without thinking of its ultimate destination, and to pollute.  Brahmacharya as impulse control also means to cease acting without thinking.  If a person stops to think how their purchase of certain goods directly supports slave labor or rainforest destruction, would they still make that impulsive purchase?

The ultimate goal of Yoga is to find union with the divine by the cultivation of mindfulness.  However the journey is just as sweet as the destination, an early benefit of the Yoga of meditation is that it produces mental tranquility.  When the brain is functioning in a tranquil state one feels relaxed.  A relaxed mind is more likely to make mindful decisions, rather than hasty emotion driven choices (Hewitt 13).  When we are able to clearly examine the full impact of our choices, we will choose the ones that create good Karma.

The last of the five Yamas is Aparigraha, non-covetousness.  Many of the ecological problems we are now facing were created by greed.  Large corporations are producing the most goods they can for the lowest production cost; this means the most toxic products, the cheapest labor and the least regard for environmental destruction (Robbins 209-10).

Westerners have become so entangled in the consumerist system and socialized to define themselves by what they own that the mass production and global shipment of products has risen to a level that is unsustainable.  The Yogi does not covet what he does not need, and hence lives simply and sustainably.  The austere life of the Yogi is the most ecologically sound way to live.  The Yogi lives by the Yamas and abstains from harming the planet, from killing the animals that live upon it, and from stealing from our one and only planet.  The Yogi does not participate in the corporate consumerist society, which is directly responsible for the destruction of the ecosystems of Earth (Robbins 210).

The only way for us to begin the rebuilding of our planet is for those in who are knowingly or unknowingly participating in the system of destruction to develop compassion.  It is not sufficient for those who have been participating in the system to act or react from guilt.  To heal the planet we must act through love, compassion and gratitude (Eisenstein). Compassion is the feeling of love for all sentient beings, as we develop compassion for all life it becomes impossible to ignore how the consumerism and greed affect the planet and people.

The Yoga of meditation and the practice of Karma Yoga build a sense of compassion in the individual.  Jhana, the Yoga of knowledge teaches that actions must not contradict reason.  We will begin to think of “nature not as some wilderness ‘out there’ that needs protecting, but as trees, streams, and living beings that share the same prana that enlivens us” (Swami Veda Bharati 12).  Western society has become dangerously entrenched in the idea of the separate self.  We must practice the Yoga of knowledge and meditation to reveal that we are all one. Union can only be achieved by cultivating the mind, body and spirit through Yoga.  As we make progress toward the ultimate union with the divine, the separate self is dissolved.

The ethics of Yoga affect our food and consumption choices just as the practice of Yoga asanas increases our physical health. The health of each and every individual also relates to the collective health of the environment. As we perfect our health through physical hygiene and diet rather than through the ingestion of pharmaceuticals, the water supply will no longer be polluted by these chemicals.  As we chose to limit our consumption to need rather than greed, our environment will no longer be polluted with industrial waste.  Just as human health affects the environment, the health of the environment affects humans through the ground water supply, air quality and food quality.  As each human becomes healthier, the entire population becomes collectively healthier.  It is only through ethical and mindful choices that we will begin the healing of our planet.

As the Yogi practices meditation and perfection on the way to divine yolking he becomes gradually more aware that he is connected to all things.  To be one with the divine is to become one with all.  The desire to love, cherish and give to the life on this planet will grow from the realization that we are not separate from any part of the vastness of nature.  To heal our planet we must first heal ourselves, let us take the first step by sharing the knowledge of Yoga.

Bibliography

Barrett, Jennifer. “The Healing Power of Yoga.” Yoga Journal May 2010: 76.

Eisenstein, Charles. “Rituals for Lover Earth.” Reality Sandwich. Jonathan Phillips.
9 October 2010. Psyche Feature. <http://www.realitysandwich.com/rituals_lover_earth>.

Focazio, Michael J. with Dana W. Kolpin, Kimberlee K. Barnes, Edward T. Furlong,
Michael T. Meyer, Steven D. Zaugg, Larry B. Barber and Michael E. Thurman. “A national reconnaissance for pharmaceuticals and other organic wastewater contaminants in the United States — II) Untreated drinking water sources.” Science of the Total Environment. 402:2-3 (2008) 201-216.

Hewitt, James. The Complete Yoga Book. Schocken Books: New York, 1977.

Palkhivala, Aadil. “Teaching the Yamas in Asana Class.”  Yoga Journal. Andrea
Kowalski. 28 February 2009. Yoga Journal for Teachers. 10 August  2010. <http://www.yogajournal.com/for_teachers/984>.

Pimentel, David. Ecological Integrity: Integrating Environment, Conservation and
Health. Island Press: Washington DC, 2001.

Robbins, Richard. Global Problems and the Culture of Capitalism. Prentice Hall: 2010.

Swami Veda Bharati. “Sustainable Spirit.” Yoga Journal May 2010: 12-16.

Swami Vishnu-devananda. The Complete Illustrated Book of Yoga. New York: Three
Rivers Press, 1988.

Rita Burlingame is a certified Yoga teacher.  She teaches classes in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

Your Path – After You Become a Yoga Teacher

Sunday, May 30th, 2010

By Paul Jerard, E-RYT 500

Many Yoga teacher interns have different reasons why they seek out an initial 200 hour Level 1 training course. After teaching classes for a while, some experienced teachers are looking to teach students who have much in common with them. For example: The teacher who is very fit is often looking to teach students who are athletes.

In some cases, a doula, mid-wife, nurse, or a mother may be drawn to pre-natal Yoga. Teachers with young families, and children of their own, may be seeking to teach Yoga for Kids. A Yoga teacher, who is past the point of middle age, may be looking to teach students who have something in common with him or her.

Regardless of our personal reasons, each of us chooses a different path, and sometimes, that path may be one of specialization. In our first Yoga instructor training, we may have reflected upon the fact that there is a divine plan for each of us.

There are instances when our Yogic path is based upon finding a purpose, realization of a skill set, or our personal code of ethics. In order for us to choose the correct path, we have to look within ourselves, on a personal quest, to find a more fulfilling and focused direction.

At the same time, any direction we choose should not be an obsession of self-love or self-hate. Some of us whole-heartedly value the opinions of others. This can be a good thing, if the advice we receive is based on reality. The point being – in our lifetime, we will receive advice that is not in our best interest.

With that said – some opinions you hear may be in the best interest of the person giving you the information. For one reason, or another, some people give opinions, which tend to hold others back from making progress. While this is not always the case, we should always logically measure any advice.

This is why training the mind is such an important part of Yoga. Very often, training the mind is skimmed over during a Yoga teacher training. It seems the centerpiece of many teacher intensives is asana practice. However, to have a healthy body, and not be in control of one’s mind, is self-defeating.

Once the mind is trained, we must be able to look within ourselves to determine logical courses and to find our personal path in life. Very often, we hear the words, “What is Yoga?” – Yet, many people simply answer that, “Yoga is Union.”

While this is partially true, Yoga is the application of Yogic principles for a better way of life and to practice the art of living.

© Copyright 2010 – Paul Jerard / Aura Publications

http://www.yoga-teacher-training.org

FREE Yoga Report. FREE Yoga Newsletter. FREE Yoga Videos. Free Podcasts. Bonus: Free Yoga e-Book, “Yoga in Practice.”

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

Teaching Yoga and Practicing Kshama

Thursday, March 11th, 2010

By Paul Jerard, E-RYT

What is Kshama? The meaning of the Sanskrit word “kshama” is forgiveness, forbearance, patience, or pardon. In Yoga, and in life, there is much “empty talk” about the values of kshama. The lack of conviction, concerning these values, stems from our previous lessons in life.

As we age, we usually become more patient, but we may be tainted by life experiences. One reason may be the constant absorption of unpleasant events. Every crime and scandal is instantly broadcasted around the world - thanks to modern technology. The burden of absorbing unpleasant events takes its toll on the young people of today.

Young people, who consistently absorb messages of sad events, tend to become somewhat narrow-minded in their viewpoints. These same qualities can be observed in adults who cannot forgive. During the course of life, we learn that none of us is perfect, but anger and jealousy will destroy us from within.

How can a Yoga practitioner learn to practice kshama? One can learn about the concept of kshama, but to practice it daily is a voluntary task on the Yogic path. One point to remember is that forgiveness “starts at home.” To begin, you must accept yourself, family members, friends, and co-workers for being human.

Kshama may seem simple, but how many people make a sincere effort to put forbearance into practice? Almost everyone wants someone else to forgive, or make the first move, toward reconciliation. Practicing kshama is accepting each person as unique, regardless of their differences in comparison to us.

Every philosophy, government, political belief, and religion has an extremist wing. In addition to this fact, people can be steered toward anger. Yet, we know the path of tolerance and moderation, in all matters, is the logical choice. It is only human to be swept up by dogma, but the path of tolerance has kept humanity intact up to this point.

Why should Yoga teachers point out the values of kshama? If you listen to the daily news, on any given day, people need to be reminded about forgiveness and reconciliation. To accept the path of moderation is freedom from the burdens of hate, anger, and jealousy.

To accept extremist viewpoints is to create your own prison of hate. Do we want our life’s work to be remembered for what we created, or what we destroyed? Forgiveness is humanity’s legacy, while intolerance has been our curse. Kshama is contagious – share it with others and it will proliferate. Sharing kshama with others is a mission for Yoga practitioners and humankind.

© Copyright 2010 – Paul Jerard / Aura Publications

FREE Yoga Report. FREE Yoga Newsletter. FREE Yoga Videos. Free Podcasts. Bonus: Free Yoga e-Book, “Yoga in Practice.”

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

The Yogic Path – Four Yoga Solutions for Teen Anger Management

Tuesday, January 5th, 2010

By Paul Jerard, E-RYT 500

Yoga techniques and counseling help adults who struggle with anger management. Yoga can also help teens learn to find themselves during the most confusing time in human life. There is research which indicates that hormonal changes may also contribute to aggressive behavior during adolescence.

According to the U.S. National Library of Medicine, there was a study conducted by Warren MP and Brooks-Gunn J., at the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, St. Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital, in New York City, of 100 adolescent girls between the ages of 10.6-13.3 yrs. The last line of the study states: “These data suggest that hormonal changes may be more important than the physical changes as determinants of certain mood and behavior patterns at adolescence.”

The older adults become – the less familiar they may be with the causes and solutions for anger that some teens feel. There are a multitude of reasons why teens feel angry. Hormonal changes are not the only factor, as relationships at home, in school, and with friends, are part of the equation. Below are four solutions for anger management, which are commonly found in Yoga.

1. Identify the Problem: In Yogic self-analysis, we learn to identify problems and create solutions. For a teen to identify the problem requires honest discussions with family members, a counselor, or both. The chances are that this method will require a series of discussions with a mediator, who is not emotionally involved with any anger flare-ups.

2. Identify the Trigger: During Yoga meditation one learns focus and quiet the mind. Each of us has triggers, which enhance states of anger. For example – adults may feel anger in a traffic jam. By the time the adult commuter arrives to the workplace, he or she is carrying emotional baggage from the daily commute.

For teens, it is much more difficult for them to precisely identify emotional triggers that cause anger. For example – a teen may accept a certain amount of peer pressure during the course of a week, without mentioning any of this to his or her parents. Also, teens (from broken families) may resent the fact that they are not able to obtain instant feedback from both parents.

3. Make Time for Therapy: It is easy to put constructive tasks aside for the daily situations in life. However, a teen, who is dealing with anger management, is a teen who is at risk. Therapy could resemble any number of possibilities. Traditionally, families dealt with teen anger management from within.

These days, more families find solutions through professional counseling or adjunct therapies, such as Yoga. The benefits of Yoga practice for teens are many. For example – teens who participate in Yoga sessions learn how to develop inner calm, build self-confidence, and to use reason in potentially emotional situations.

4. Resolution: To resolve inner conflicts requires teens and their family members to settle their problems over the long term. In other words, once a resolution is reached, there is a need to let go of anger. In fact, anger is another form of self-imprisonment, which can bring much grief to us during our lifetime.

In summation, Hatha Yoga offers many techniques, which stabilize the mind. Pranayama, asana, Yogic philosophy, meditation, and relaxation techniques are priceless tools to rid oneself of excess anger, regardless of age.

© Copyright 2010 – Paul Jerard / Aura Publications

FREE Yoga Report. FREE Yoga Newsletter. FREE Yoga Videos. Free Podcasts. Bonus: Free Yoga e-Book, “Yoga in Practice.”

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

Yoga Resolutions with an Objective in Mind

Friday, January 1st, 2010

By Paul Jerard, E-RYT 500

How often do people wish for changes? How can people make more effective resolutions? Where do beginners go wrong in maintaining a steady Yoga practice? There are many benefits that occur when practicing Yoga, but these benefits are not instant. Yet, those who stay on the Yogic path, experience benefits because of Yoga’s systematic plan of action.

How often do people wish for changes? The answer is: Most of the time, people wish to improve their lives, but wishing or wishful thinking, without action, leads nowhere. Whatever one does, says, or thinks, is karma to some degree. Yet, failing to take action (non-doing) is also a form of karma. Simply wishing, without action, is not enough to change oneself or the world around us.

A decision to do something (resolution) is sometimes taken very seriously. The beginning of the year is often a time of self-reflection because of time away from work. Depending on where we live, with respect to our culture and our climate, each of us has precious time during the course of the year. When we have time away from the daily grind, we are able to think more clearly about our purpose in life.

How can people make more effective resolutions? Developing a strategy of motivation and inspiration is the key to making great changes within us and the world around us. What inspires you, burns within, like an eternal flame. Inside each of us is an inner voice that would like to make a difference.

We cannot just wish for a cleaner planet, world peace, social changes, or a better diet. We have to take part in it. We have to feel good about what we do. We have to be inspired by a cause to be a part of a lifestyle change. True inspiration is what gives each of us gratification, and it can move the world.

Inside the philosophy of Yoga is a strong belief in tolerance, loving kindness, forgiving, and self-realization. The first to change must be oneself. In order to help others, we must help ourselves. This change from within is an age old process, but it always works.

Where do beginners go wrong with maintaining a steady Yoga practice? Beginning Yoga students want to change themselves in an instant to make up for lost time. The Yogic path must be a gradual walk – not a sprint. Time is not our enemy because it is eternal. When you enjoy each second of your existence, you have achieved the state of self-realization.

Yoga’s systematic plan of action requires us to enjoy life – one step at a time. Enjoy all that is good in life and always focus on the positive. There is no need to worry about making up for lost time if you are on the Yogic path.

© Copyright 2009 – Paul Jerard / Aura Publications

FREE Yoga Report. FREE Yoga Newsletter. FREE Yoga Videos. Free Podcasts. Bonus: Free Yoga e-Book, “Yoga in Practice.”

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

The Yogic Path – Showing the Way

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

Seated Yoga MeditationBy Paul Jerard, E-RYT 500

There are many rewards that follow the disciplined study and practice of Yoga. Among them are finding one’s self, tranquility, and the ability to show others a better way of living. Meditation, relaxation, self-analysis, and self-awareness do not receive as much attention as the Yoga postures and physical benefits, but years of practice grace us with inner peace.

After many sessions of practicing meditation and self-analysis, some of us realize why we are here. We find our life purpose and move forward. Yet, what do we leave behind for our family, friends, and students? Once we have found our life purpose, there should be no hesitation on our part, but we should leave markers along the path for our loved ones and the generations of Yoga practitioners to follow.

As you know by now, Yoga is a lifestyle and one does not have to attend a Yoga class to practice it. Yoga is with you as you walk, talk, breathe, think, sit, or eat. It can be described as a science of life, a health maintenance system, an art of living, as well as a path to pure bliss. The fact is: Yoga can be practiced by anyone, anywhere, and at any time.

When most people think in terms of leaving a legacy behind for future generations, they think of financial arrangements, money, or an inheritance. While a few of us may be able to do this, others worry about their next pay check. It would be nice to leave a monetary legacy behind, but financial wealth is not a guarantee in this life.

You are guaranteed to live in the hearts and minds of others, when you help them. Those who practice Karma Yoga (selfless service) are remembered by those they help, and those who see their example. Although we should not go bragging about all the people we help, our example will inspire others. If we had no examples of modesty and humility, these would be foreign concepts.

Mohandas Karamachand Gandhi serves as one example. His deeds are remembered worldwide and he still serves as an example of a Karma Yogi. He practiced ahimsa and introduced a non-violent civil rights movement, which would later be replicated in other countries. Imagine if he had never lived. What would India and the world be like today without his example?

Therefore, humanity needs people who are living examples of loving kindness, tolerance, mercy, and forgiveness. It goes without saying that it is good to perform acts of kindness anonymously, but the generations behind us need to see reference points. In this way, the Yogic path might be decorated with street lights.

© Copyright 2009 – Paul Jerard / Aura Publications

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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

The Yogic Path – Truth and Inner Vision

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

Outdoor MeditationBy Paul Jerard, E-RYT 500

One, who studies Yoga, is traveling down the Yogic path, but where is he or she going? What is truth, and how can Yoga help us find it? Will the eight limbs of Yoga, described by Maharishi Patanjali, reveal the true path? How can inner vision help us as we continue to practice Yoga? Let’s examine these questions, and dig deeper, as we continue to study Yoga.

When one travels the Yogic path, where is he or she going? Yoga is made up of many components. An exceptionally flexible person may visit one Hatha Yoga class. After one class, he or she may leave bored and go back to dance or gymnastics. This happens every day because some people view all forms of Yoga as an exercise in physical mastery.

If you have a purely physical goal, why would you want to open your mind toward mental, emotional, and spiritual health? To the long-term practitioner, the Yogic path is not one single streamlined highway. Yoga has many paths, styles, and forms. To every practitioner, Yoga is a quest for improved well-being.

If the Yogic way is a spiritual quest, then the path leads to Samadhi (a state of concentration, which leads to a pure presence of mind). Yet, there are many ways to describe Samadhi. Some may describe Samadhi as a state of deep meditation, a state of bliss, or a state of supreme union.

What is truth and how can Yoga help us find it? Truth could be described as: “a fact that has been verified.” Yet, propaganda is verified by organizations, companies, and governments. Worse still, propaganda often appears to be a fact, until we research it in greater depth. Research and study is the key to finding the truth. The Yoga of knowledge, which we know as “jnana,” is the search for truth and enlightenment.

Will the eight limbs of Yoga, described by Maharishi Patanjali, reveal the true path? Yes, but each of us is different, and we may be hypnotized by a single limb. There is nothing wrong with that, but we should know what Yama, Niyama, Asana, Pranayama, Pratyahara, Dharana, Dhyana, and Samadhi are. How many people are familiar with Yama and Niyama? Most practice Asana or pranayama and ignore the rest. Remember: There are many paths and the best direction is usually, but not always, forward.

How can inner vision help us as we continue to practice Yoga? The most common questions people ask are: “Who am I?” and “Why am I here?” Inner vision requires self-study. To know oneself, without judgment, is a major step in life. Many people do not know their strengths or weaknesses. These perceptions of strength or weakness are not based on someone’s opinion, but on pure internal focus.

Each of us has true worth. Each of us has a special skill set and purpose in life. If you find your life purpose, you are making progress in your study of Yoga.

© Copyright 2009 – Paul Jerard / Aura Publications

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The Right Yogic Path

Monday, October 26th, 2009

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