Paths of Yoga I
By Alma
De La Cruz
With
dozens of Hollywood celebrities following in their Guru’s
lotus footsteps and the sick Western commercial behaviour exploding
Yogas popularity to a system that simply enhances people’s
health, Yoga remains a system of spiritual unity of mind, body
and soul among millions of Indians and many others from Eastern
beliefs, as it has been for over five thousand years. As a result,
some forms of yoga have gained significant popularity outside
India, particularly in the West during the past century.
Yoga is a form of mysticism that developed on the Indian subcontinent
in the Hindu cultural context. The origins of Yoga are difficult
to track due to the lack of recorded testimony. One of the closest
meanings of Yoga comes from the Sanskrit word “Yuj”
which it is generally translated as “union” or “integration”
of the individual soul with the cosmos, or higher self.
Since the goal of Yoga dwells above any bodily consciousness,
it has both a philosophical and a practical dimension to achieve
that ideal state. On one hand, the philosophy of yoga manages
the relation of both the individual soul and the cosmos. This
universal philophy enjoins the practitioner to pursue his or her
own path to enlightenment. And on the other hand, its practice
can be any exercise or activity that approaches the yoga practitioner
to self-realization.
Four Paths of Yoga
Special practical yoga techniques have been developed by experts
in yoga. Traditionally, they have been classified into four categories
or paths: the path of meditation (Raja Yoga), the path of devotion
(Bhakti Yoga), the path of selfless service to the Divine (Karma
Yoga), and the path of intellectual analysis or the discrimination
of truth and reality (Jnana Yoga).
These Yoga techniques cover a broad range, encompassing physical,
mental, and spiritual activities.
• Raja Yoga involves psycho-physical meditational
techniques to attain experience of the truth and finally achieve
liberation described in Hindu thought to be moksha. The basis
of ashtanga yoga is the Yoga sutras (Sanskrit Verses) of Patanjali.
We will consider the different aspects of yoga while remaining
under the guiding principles of Patanjali's Yoga (Ashtanga Yoga).
Raja Yoga is a comprehensive yoga system which deals with the
refinement of human behavior and personality through the practice
the Yama (restraint) and Niyama (disciplines); attainment of physical
health and vitality through Asana (postures) and Pranayama (pranic
breathing techniques); management of mental and emotional conflicts
and development of awareness and concentration through Pratyahara
(sensory withdrawal) and Dharana (concentration); and developing
the creative aspect of consciousness for transcendental awareness
through Dhyan (meditation) & Samadhi (absorption in the universal
identity).
• Bhakti Yoga is the Hindu term for the
spiritual practice of fostering of loving devotion to God, called
Bhakti. Traditionally there are 9 forms of bhakti yoga. Sravana
(hearing of God's Lilas and stories), Kirtana (singing of His
glories), Smarana (remembrance of His name and presence), Padasevana
(service of His feet), Archana (worship of God), Vandana (prostration
to Lord), Dasya (cultivating the Bhava of a servant with God),
Sakhya (cultivation of the friend-Bhava) and Atmanivedana (complete
surrender of the self). The nine modes of Bhakti are the ways
in which a devotee attains the Supreme Ideal of life. A devotee
can take up any of these paths and reach the highest state. The
path of Bhakti is the easiest of all and is not very much against
the nature of human inclinations.
• Karma Yoga focuses on the adherence
to duty (dharma) while remaining detached from the reward. Karma
means to do, action, including those acts done by the individual
from birth to death. "Karma Yoga is the selfless devotion
of all inner as well as the outer activities as a Sacrifice to
the Lord of all works, offered to the eternal as Master of all
the soul’s energies and austerities," the Bhagavad
Gita says. Following the practice of Karma yoga, an individual
becomes true spiritual seeker and realizes his true nature as
Atman and he lives in this world, works for this world and still
stays untouched from the grossness of the mundane pleasures, thus
doing immense good to the society while on his path to salvation
and spiritual freedom.
The Swami Sivananda Yoga Venanda Center sums up karma yoga into
five actions:
Right Attitude It’s not what you do that counts, it’s
the attitude while doing it that determines if a job is a karma
yoga job, i.e. a liberating job, or a binding job.
Right Motive Same as attitude. It is not what you do that counts
but your real motive behind it.
Do your duty. Give your best. Give results.
• Jnana Yoga. This is the most difficult
path, requiring tremendous strength of will and intellect. Taking
the philosophy of Vedanta the Jnana Yogi uses his mind to inquire
into its own nature. We perceive the space inside and outside
a glass as different, just as we see ourselves as separate from
God. Jnana Yoga leads the devotee to experience his unity with
God directly by breaking the glass, dissolving the veils of ignorance.
Before practicing Jnana Yoga, the aspirant needs to have integrated
the lessons of the other yogic paths - for without selflessness
and love of God, strength of body and mind, the search for self-realization
can become mere idle speculation.
Jnana yoga teaches that there are four means to salvation:
- Viveka - Discrimination: The ability to differentiate
between what is real/eternal (Brahman) and what is unreal/temporary
(everything else in the universe.)
- Vairagya - Dispassion: After practice one
should be able to "detach" themself from everything
that is "temporary."
- Shad-sampat - The 6 Virtues: Tranquility
(control of the mind), Dama (control of the senses), Uparati
(renunciation of activities that are not duties), Titiksha (endurance),
Shraddha (faith), Samadhana (perfect concentration).
- Mumukshutva - Intense longing for liberation
from temporal limitations.
About Author: Alma De la Cruz, a staff mystic
employed by http://www.psychicrealm.com,
has a profound personal history where she has unabashedly delved
deep into the heart of occult mysteries for an extensive period
of her life. Her name literally means “Soul of the Cross”
in Spanish. Currently she is working publishing a manuscript that
delves into the mysteries of Hispanic new age beliefs incorporating
old insights with new spiritual methodologies. Check out her bi
weekly metaphysical column: http://www.newagenotebook.com
where she takes a new twist, incorporating Latin shamanistic philosophies
with leading edge occult beliefs.
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