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After Ashtanga (?)

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I changed the title of the blog to 'Recovering Ashtangi...at home'. I like the play on words, is it a recovering from Ashtanga or a regaining of Ashtanga. Last month it felt like the former, this month perhaps the latter.

I still get mail, there is clearly a lot of disillusionment in Ashtanga of late, from students and teachers alike. For some the spell has been broken somewhat and there is the temptation to let the practice lapse, to give it up altogether, but then what, what comes after Ashtanga. When a practice has dominated your life for months, years, decades even, what happens if and when you stop, there is some fear there, grief even for something lost, a practice, a lifestyle, a community perhaps.

"I still love the practice but....". 

I've been hearing that a lot.

'I love the practice but I don't want anything to do with Pattabhi Jois, with Sharath, with those, friends and teachers I'd looked up to who criticised and vilified the victims of those who came forward to talk about Jois' abuse, as well as any who spoke up in support'.

I'm not sure I'm the right person to comment, I've been moving further and further away from straight, by the book, Ashtanga for years. And yet I always tended to feel that what I was practicing was somehow still Ashtanga, a couple of months ago, it did feel like a final clean break.

I practiced Qigong for three months, I learned Tai chi, I practiced Simon Borg-Olivier's Spinal movements, asana virtually disappeared from my practice..... but then it came back. At first I would just include Krishnamacharya/Ramaswami's key asana, Paschimottanasana, Janu Sirsasana/Maha mudra, Sarvangasana, Sirsasana, baddha konasana but then I would move from Simon's spinal movements into some Standing postures and soon realised that I was basically practicing half Primary.

I've always felt half Primary makes a lovely practice ( half second perhaps every couple of days), being short it allows plenty of time for pranayama and a Sit just as Krishnamacharya intended. It's modifiable, you can practice it slowly, long slow breathing perhaps with kumbhaka following Krishnamacharya's instruction in his early Mysore text,Yoga Makaranda. Or you could practice it with natural breathing as Simon Borg-Olivier might suggest. You could add in a couple of preparatory postures or more advanced developments of a posture or both as we see in Ramaswami's Vinyasa Krama, also clearly present in Krishnamacharya's early teaching. Practiced this way we are perhaps recovering Krishnamachary's original Mysore teaching, we are in the Realm of Pre-Jois, pre-Ashtanga.

What is most important is that we do still practice...  something, maintain a daily discipline to give focus to our lives in seeking to reduce our attachments. Yoga Philosophy is very simple, as ever it's the scholars bless 'em that make it complicated. I remember Ramaswami saying that he always found  Patanjali's Yoga Sutras approachable, immediate (my words), it's the commentaries that confuse matters.

Pattabhi Jois lifted his Primary and Second series from Krishnamacharya's table of asana (that we can see in his second Mysore book, Yogasanagalu). Jois' Primary series is barely changed from the list, minor tweaks, second series contains a little more of a shuffle, a rearrangement of some of the asana groups, his Advanced series, while containing the same asana as Krishnamacharya's table, is completely different following the requirements of the course Jois was asked to teach. If the asana are the same, the way they have become practiced is not.

Fixed series perhaps helped make Ashtanga popular (and those early practitioners were attracted to the physicality of the practice as much as any spiritual suggestion), popular not necessarily better. It also caused problems. Remember, a fixed series led to faster breathing, a hot, faster sweaty practice. A long fixed series meant that pranayama was basically discarded along the way. Meditation, the whole point of the practice for Krishnamacharya and indeed for Patanjali barely  made it into the picture.

And the money rolled in.... to Mysore, piles of it. Has anyone ever taken a look at the shala books I wonder, at the taxes paid or indeed not paid. Don't care about taxes, think about them again next time you walk past Mysore's slum. Don't be fooled by trumpeted charities, you pay your taxes and use the influence you have to make sure the money goes where it should. 

We became asana obsessed, fixated, our attachments grew rather than lessened. Youtube and Instagram came at just the right time, look at me look at me.

Sharath of course, however well intentioned may be or been, sought to preserve his grandfather's legacy despite being well aware of the sexual abuse, he virtually deifies him every Guru Purnima but then Sharath's legitimacy is tied to his grandfather. Sharath took care of the family business before looking out for his own families future. Becoming ever more authoritarian and dogmatic the practice became, as it were, preserved in amber.

Ironically, often the power yoga classes, the vinyasa flow classes the modified ashtanga in gym classes may likely be closer to Pre-Jois Krishnamacharya Ashtanga, more authentic, more traditional in this sense than the dogmatic fixed Jois Ashtanga Sharath seeks to dictate and preserve. Jois, Sharath preserved but one simplified aspect of Krishnamacharya's Mysore teaching, that as it was taught to the young boys of the palace (yep, it's true, what Jois passed along was that which was originally designed for young boys). But in the same period,   often at the same time in a side room as Jois or another assistent took the boys class, Krishnamacharya taught to men of different ages in the same way that he continued to teach when he taught Ramaswami just after leaving Mysore. Krishnamacharya also taught his wife and daughters as well as Indra Devi. Krishnamacharya practice was consistent throughout his life.

Most however, the shalas and the gyms, have abandoned the essence of the practice, discarded the pranayama and the meditative activity, some though have rediscovered it, teach it quietly, somewhat under the radar. For Krishnamacharya the asana and pranayama clean the room, we don't then leave, we sit. He suggested that the meditative activity be twice as long as the pranayama, the pranayama twice as long as the asana, try selling that in a forty minute gym class or to Sharath next time you practice in Mysore, mention that you would like to do half the series and practice your pranayama and Sit...

 "NEXT"!

Note: Manju Jois, Pattabhi Jois' son includes pranayama and a meditative activity (chanting) after every practice.

The growing disillusionment with Ashtanga is perhaps an opportunity to recover the Pre-Jois practice of Krishnamacharya. It is a simple practice, what we might think of as half an Ashtanga series, a handful of basic postures practiced mindfully, with or without transitions followed by a simple breathing practice and a meditative activity. It's as fixed as we want it to be, as modifiable as we wish it to be. It perhaps recovers much that was lost along the way as Ashtanga was made more popular, more marketable.

Many practice their Ashtanga this way already, as Richard Freeman has said, those who are less flexible are somewhat blessed. Home practitioners are equally blessed. A different approach to our practice suits us at different times, I myself may have needed the full on dynamic, sweaty asana/series chase for a time but perhaps I became somewhat lost in that. Most who stay in Ashtanga will no doubt end up adapting their practice eventually anyway, as they let go of the asana chase, the series chase, perhaps the fame chase.

How do we respond to the Ashtanga crisis? Reduce our attachments.

Make shapes mindfully, breathe, sit and follow our yama/niyamas as best we can, enjoy our practice.

We are so often seeking legitimacy for our practice, authority. The authority for our practice, the legitimacy of however we practice comes from our Sitting, from how well our practice prepares us to Sit or to go through our lives mindfully, treading lightly.








Yoga. Don't try this..... at home (or anywhere else).

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I used to have a photo behind the blog title of my best ankle grabbing Kapotanasana, a while back I took it down, I no longer wanted to promote extreme backbends. I replaced the kapotasana with a Paschimottanasana, my body flat as a pancake along my legs.... but then it struck me that trying to replicate a representation of a paschimottanasana that I'd practiced and deepened for years could be just as dangerous as the kapotasana I had removed previously, "...there go the hamstrings, there goes the lumber spine"....., so that had to go too.




I like the photo of my lake and mountains much better.

Removing the photo header is one thing but what about all the blog posts on working towards advanced postures, all the leg behind head work, the deep twists and binds, the dropback and coming back up, the countless attaining and then deepening kapotasana posts? Deleting the blog, the whole blog is one option and I may go that way at some point but I've always tended to feel that this blog belongs to the readers and those who have commented over the years as much as to me. I know it's also used as a resource by some although that worries me too. I'm not an historian, there is a lot of highly questionable conclusions here, many that I've gone beyond others that I perhaps should have and you probably should too. I suggest you don't trust a single post as read, question everything, treat every statement as a starting point in forming your own conclusions....., then don't trust them either, you're probably wrong too.

Despite barely able to touch my knees when I started yoga I was able to end up practicing all four of the original Ashtanga series, Primary to Advanced B (who knew that under my extra twenty kilo I just happend to have a body that would allow me to do pretty much anything).




 It might not have been pretty at times but then Sharath and Pattabhi Jois' own asana probably kept Iyengar awake at nights. Take a look too at the old videos of the early practitioners practicing Advanced series with Jois in a garage, like me, most there probably shouldn't have have been exploring those intermediate and advanced postures. Personally I don't think Pattabhi Jois ever had much of a clue what the hell he was doing, he kind of made it up as he went along, just as his teacher Krishnamacharya had before him, However, when sexually abusing his students in his classes, I am convinced that Pattabhi Jois knew exactly what he was doing, even going so far as touching his male students in similar ways to make it seem perfectly acceptable, it never was.

These days I practice more modest asana and practice them modestly, I don't seek to enter postures that deeply, even Primary postures. I mentioned in my previous 'After Ashtanga' post that once I get  past Simon Borg-Olivier's Spinal movements my practice resembles an Ashtanga half Primary. But even here I modify, simplify, back off and substitute. If I'm going to continue to  practice asana then I seek a safe (for my bodies future as well as for the present), gentle practice. And yet there are still postures I feel I should probably drop, I suspect I shouldn't practice my beloved baddha konasana, certainly not as deeply as I practice it, shoulderstand and headstand are equally questionable (sigh).

It's your body, your bodies future, practice what you want as you want, you probably will anyway but be warned, Yoga IS...., can be, dangerous, you can do some serious damage to your joints and spine. I got away with it, you might not be so lucky. And most teachers don't have a clue what they are doing, I suspect, Sharath, Pattabhi Jois, even Krishnamacharya never opened an Anatomy or Physiology book in their lives. They and even Krishnamacharya's teacher and teacher's teacher took their asana from sketchy descriptions in old ant nibbled texts, from paintings and sculptures and reliefs on temples, made by artists who probably never practiced themselves, often these teachers made postures up themselves as well as the questionable benefits claimed to be obtained by practicing them.

But even that warning probably doesn't justify keeping this blog active.

Those who fall in love with asana practice will explore and take photos videos and share them with friends on social media, nothing wrong with that, sharing work in progress, it's what we were doing with these blogs. Clearly we didn't know what we were doing, we blindly trusted teachers, and that no doubt comes through. But when teachers present these Advanced postures to promote themselves and their workshops then that is something else altogether. In fact don't trust a single teacher, most have been brainwashed, either by themselves or others into thinking that what they practice and teach is perfectly safe, it's probably not but then neither is walking down the street or sitting at a computer all day, practice at your own risk. If you do seek a teacher, sit in on a class first, make sure they have more than the yoga alliance anatomy minimum, find out how long they've been teaching, if they are respected by their peers, check the policy of the studio who hired them, do they seek experience over Instagram followers and even then be prepared to walk away.

Do not do this.....at home...... or anywhere else.

And yet...., should you still choose to (after much reflection just as you would hopefully before diving with great white sharks), then a simple, gentle meditative practice can be quite profound. Despite the potential risk to my joints I still like to wave my arms about, take a simple posture and sit with it, I still like to explore simple breathing patterns, I still like to practice..... at home.

Below, a class with Simon Borg-Olivier, perhaps the only teacher I've encountered personally who I have confidence in that what he offers, along with the caveats he gives, is likely safe enough for most. There are others of course, you just have to hunt around a bit...., a lot.



(After) Ashtanga: beyond dogma - 1. Seated and asymmetric postures.

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I wrote my first blog post in a couple of months this week but decided it was too negative and took it down after a day. If I'm going to start posting again and it's a big IF at the moment, I want to try and be somewhat more positive.

It strikes me that the Ashtanga world has gone through somewhat of a paradigm shift of late.

For many, the old authorities have been loosened. Pattabhi Jois has lost credibility through his abusive behaviour and this raises questions as to the authority of those who, in turn, have emphasised a close relationship to him. Some were enablers, talking down those who did wish to speak up, others remain apologists, many just looked the other way, most were no doubt just confused. More and more are speaking up, too many others remain silent. Some argue that it was another time or another place, perhaps they haven't seen the article (Remski) where Saraswati, upon being told that his (Jois') behaviour was not acceptable in the US, reportedly said, 'It's unacceptable anywhere'. Some argue, shockingly, that his behaviour wasn't as bad as Bikram's. Others continue to profess to be confused as to why anybody would not speak up, not go back, are they equally confused as to why so many stay in abusive marriages, even today when divorce is so much easier, to those who argue thus I would suggest there is a lack of imagination, understanding and empathy.

It has been shown (here on this blog) how the Ashtanga series (the first two series at least) were a slight reordering of Pattabhi Jois' teacher's (T. Krishnamacharya) table of asana ( see Lists). This isn't a practice that Jois invented, he never claimed to, but rather that he was just teaching what his teacher taught him, clearly there was much that the mature Krishnamacharya didn't share with the boy Jois.

We can see too the practice that Jois presented as Ashtanga was a simplification of his teachers teaching, what was shared with the boys of the palace rather than in the side rooms where Krishnamacharya would teach his private students, hints of which might be found, freely available to all, in Krishnamacharya's early Mysore texts ( Yoga Makaranda - Mysore 1934, Yogasanagalu - Mysore 1941 - Free Downloads).

We can see too, in the 1938 documentary video of Krishnamacharya demonstrating asana, that he is presenting Sarvangasana and Sirsasna  kramas ( shoulderstand and headstand sequences) close to those he would teach to Ramaswami soon after leaving Mysore. Krishnamacharya was I believe constantly exploring both his own practice and his teaching to others, just as perhaps we should.

With authority loosened, parampara shown to be a justification of authority (financial?), we find ourselves perhaps somewhat free from dogma, the traditionalists may be shocked to realise perhaps that often, the more flexible ashtanga vinyasa taught in gyms may actually be closer to how Pattabhi Jois' teacher would teach (note I'm not talking about goat or beer yoga here but the sincere, student focused rather than dogma focussed, vinyasa teachers.

Jois presented one, simplified, version of his teacher's teaching, as well as one approach to teaching it. Even Sharath, it seems, while holding firmly to the dogma of the first seems to have taken a somewhat less hands on, aggressive, approach to the second. Many of the most respected, long term Ashtanga practitioners/teachers have taken innovative approaches in their own teaching.

Krishnamacharya argued that we don't all need to learn ALL the asana (how could we, six series merely scratches the surface of all the possible variations) but that some should (learn as many as they can). Likewise, we don't all need to learn a relatively fixed, dogmatic approach to Ashtanga vinyasa, although perhaps some should, so that practice of the boys of the Mysore palace isn't lost completely. Equally we should also reject the idea of there being one traditional, authentic approach, and explore our practice freely (and safely), just as Krishnamacharya seems to have done, this strikes me as more authentic, more traditional.

More than anything we should challenge the idea of yoga as equating with asana, the asana for Jois' teacher Krishnamacharya was ALWAYS integrated with pranayama and with the meditative limbs and on the ground of a code of behaviour (E.G. Yama/Niyama).

*

A couple of months ago, I wrote a post where I stated that I no longer identified as an Ashtangi (a clumsy expression I admit). I wanted nothing more to do with Yoga and explored Qigong for a time, I learned Taichi too but gradually slipped back into an approach to practice that had been evolving over the last few years (see Proficient Primary).

A series of posts then perhaps, an opportunity to raise and question dogma, here's the first.



(After) Ashtanga: beyond dogma - 1. Seated and Asymmetric postures.

-How strong do I need to be, how flexible do I need to be-


In his book Yoga Mala, Jois indicated a certain freedom in how we might approach our practice after reaching fifty, just as he did to those with less time available. 

We don't need to wait until we are fifty however, this was always Krishnamacharya's approach.


Over the last year or so, I seem to have settled into this short krama as the main seated/asymmetric portion of my practice.

Notes:

I work gently into Paschimottasana, the knees bent slightly at first. I have my hands over my feet and it's the pointing of my feet that takes me down into the folded version. I will often include a short kumbhaka after the inhalation and/or a kumbhaka after the exhalation when folded. Krishnamacharya includes Kumbhaka in most of his asana instruction in his early Mysore book, Yoga Makaranda (Mysore 1934).

I don't bother to jump back between sides (Mantra: How strong do I need to be, how flexible do I need to be) or between postures but practice it somewhat more in the approach of Ramaswami (and thus his teacher Krishnamacharya), practicing all the postures on one side and then on the other. Ramaswami mentioned once that even though we might not jump back or return to standing there is, in a sense, always an implied count. Of course, one might take a more Ashtanga like approach, practice first one side and then the other, jumping back between sides or perhaps just between postures. Just as we might include a jump back and through between each asana we might also return to standing each time.

This short sequence is not unlike the first part of the Ashtanga Primary series, ardha badha padmasana is skipped ( we already have a standing version with more freedom for the hip), Kouchasana from second series though is slipped in, as is bharadvajrasana but here a simpler version from Simon Borg-Olivier that I've come to like with less stress on the knee.

An Ashtangi might not see any resemblance to Ashtanga at all in this....., unless of course I were to publish my practice in a book as my own.

I will often include Maha Mudra with kumbhaka before folding down into Janu Sirsasana A. I practice Janu sirsasana D (which used to be part of Ashtanga Primary back in the day supposedly) rather than C, again, to give less stress to the knees.

These are the only two versions of Marichyasana I tend to practice these day, omitting the half lotus versions, again, to go easier on the knees. I will often finish this sequence with navasana include the first few backbends from second series or prepare for a sarvangasana (shoulder stand) krama.

Below is speeded up version and below that a video in real time .





after ashtanga

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I wasn't sure I would post again but I read a comment from somebody this week who made me think that, now more than ever is when we should be posting, as many of us who do not choose to look the other way try and navigate our way through these times. Jois shared a simplified version of his teacher Krishnamacharya's teaching, like the boys in the palace for which it was designed (Yeah, it kinda was), it's given us some discipline, the broad brushstrokes of a practice. Now it's time perhaps to step out from behind the veil of dogma and enter the side rooms where Krishnamacharya would perhaps teach the more subtle, mature, aspects of practice as found in his early Mysore texts and that perhaps intuitively we suspected were available to us from our own practice.

If I continue to post here, rather than continue to dwell on the negative (that much), I hope to look forward to exploring practice 'after Ashtanga'.

Below is a slightly developed comment I posted on an fb thread this week.


***

Two things came up this week. A friend returned to a shala I once practiced in for three months. My first thought was how nice it would be to practice there again but then, as I clicked through the photos, I saw the picture of Pattabhi Jois on the alter that I remembered from when I had practiced there and realised that, however much affection (love actually) I may have for the teacher or the room, I really had no desire to practice in a space that keeps Jois' photo in pride of place when in full knowledge of the recent accounts of his abuse by victims courageous enough to submit themselves to the online abuse they receive in turn from many of their peers.

The photo was admittedly small and if not on the alter then perhaps relatively discreet, surely it would be easy to just ignore the photo and practice. I'm aware of the teachers affection for Jois and from where it stems, I understand that it's hard, still I personally wouldn't choose to practice there while it remained.

If that small photo on the alter is relatively discreet then what to make of Jois Yoga. As far as I'm aware the walls are still chock full of giant photos of Jois, how does anyone bring themselves to practice there, how does the teacher teach, the owner justify it, what a daily slap in the face of #metoo and of anyone who has ever spoken up or come forward, inside or outside the yoga communities
.
Jois Yoga - photo from an image search on google (chosen because everyones face is hidden in baddha padmasana).

Later in the week I saw a photo of hundreds of Yoga students (600 I now hear), practicing in what looked like a gymnasium or conference hall (aircraft hanger?). At first I thought it was an old Bikram photo but it was actually Sharath in Madrid and I felt quite dismayed. I remember when we used to be proud of the fact that we taught and practiced in small rooms, that our practice seemed to be the polar opposite of Bikram. But this photo, along with the absurd Paramaguru tourism title that Sharath continues to allow to be used in promotion and now there on his website, speaks to me of a blossoming Bikramesque ego.

But perhaps it has nothing really to do with Sharath, he's clearly just embracing the money tree now. For those attending, perhaps it's more of an Ashtanga festival. We all love (in my case loved) Friday Primary and the thought that whatever the level/series, every Ashtangi around the world was practicing Primary series that morning.

Sharath in Madrid 2018 - photo from a google image search, shared publicly on Facebook and Instagram

What remains a comfort to me however, is occasionally visiting the fb Ashtanga Home Practitioner page and seeing how, mostly, everyone there just seems concerned with their practice, in exploring and developing their practice, (mostly) sharing rather than showing off to inspire and support each other, just as in the old blogosphere. Jois, Sharat, seem of little concern to most, they take their inspiration however and from whatever teacher or online source they find most beneficial but mostly it seems to come through their own practice.

I know too there are Ashtanga shalas and teachers less concerned with dogma and personalities or self promotion and more concerned with the practitioner who shares their room and how they can most support them.

The practice is about the practice, Jois didn't invent it, only simplified and somewhat codified what is there available for us all in Krishnamacharya's early writing, the details of the practice, the little differences (Royaalll with cheese) are less important than that we do practice... something, as regularly as possible, with commitment and sincerity. From that discipline, that foundation  and it is only a foundation, we can build a practice that has some relevance in our lives and perhaps those around us.

Surely there will always be a community of somewhat (however loosely) like minded practitioners.

I may no longer identify as an 'Ashtangi'  (Note: I've changed the blog title to (after) Ashtanga Vinyasa Krama Yoga at home') but recognise that my practice is still pretty much half Primary, more Krishnamacharya than Jois perhaps, more influenced by Simon Borg-Olivier these days than Swenson and Freeman but more similar than different.

This week is my holiday, rather than run off to Okinawa I decided that, like many Ashtanga practitioners I suspect, all I really wanted to do for the week, was have a longer, more savoured, practice each morning, practice my Pranayama twice a day, Sit as much as possible, reread the 4th pada of YS and review some of the online courses I have.


***

Note: I've no interest in promoting these posts through fb anymore or anywhere else, but do feel free to subscribe (old school).

(After ) Ashtanga: Beyond Dogma #1 - Authority

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I wrote my first blog post in a couple of months this week but decided it was too negative. If I'm going to start posting again and it's a big IF at the moment, I want to try and be somewhat more positive.


A couple of months ago, I wrote a post where I stated that I no longer identified as an Ashtangi (a clumsy expression I admit). I wanted nothing more to do with Yoga and explored Qigong for a time, I learned Taichi too but gradually slipped back into an approach to practice that had been evolving over the last few years (see Proficient Primary).

A series of posts then perhaps, an opportunity to raise and question some dogma, here's the first.


(After ) Ashtanga: Beyond Dogma #1 - Authority 

It strikes me that the Ashtanga world has gone through somewhat of a paradigm shift of late.

For many, the old authorities have been loosened. Pattabhi Jois has lost credibility through his abusive behaviour and this raises questions as to the authority of those who, in turn, have emphasised a close relationship to him. Some were enablers, talking down those who did wish to speak up, others remain apologists, many just looked the other way, most were no doubt just confused. More and more are speaking up, too many others remain silent. Some argue that it was another time or another place, perhaps they haven't seen the article (Remski) where Saraswati, upon being told that his (Jois') behaviour was not acceptable in the US, reportedly said, 'It's unacceptable anywhere'. Some argue, shockingly, that his behaviour wasn't as bad as Bikram's. Others continue to profess to be confused as to why anybody would not speak up, not go back, are they equally confused as to why so many stay in abusive marriages, even today when divorce is so much easier, to those who argue thus I would suggest there is a lack of imagination, understanding and empathy.

It has been shown (here on this blog) how the Ashtanga series (the first two series at least) were a slight reordering of Pattabhi Jois' teacher's (T. Krishnamacharya) table of asana ( see Lists). This isn't a practice that Jois invented, he never claimed to, but rather that he was just teaching what his teacher taught him, clearly there was much that the mature Krishnamacharya didn't share with the boy Jois.

We can see too the practice that Jois presented as Ashtanga was a simplification of his teachers teaching, what was shared with the boys of the palace rather than in the side rooms where Krishnamacharya would teach his private students, hints of which might be found, freely available to all, in Krishnamacharya's early Mysore texts ( Yoga Makaranda - Mysore 1934, Yogasanagalu - Mysore 1941 - Free Downloads).

We can see too, in the 1938 documentary video of Krishnamacharya demonstrating asana, that he is presenting Sarvangasana and Sirsasna  kramas ( shoulderstand and headstand sequences) close to those he would teach to Ramaswami soon after leaving Mysore. Krishnamacharya was I believe constantly exploring both his own practice and his teaching to others, just as perhaps we should.

With authority loosened, parampara shown to be a justification of authority (financial?), we find ourselves perhaps somewhat free from dogma, the traditionalists may be shocked to realise perhaps that often, the more flexible ashtanga vinyasa taught in gyms may actually be closer to how Pattabhi Jois' teacher would teach (note I'm not talking about goat or beer yoga here but the sincere, student focused rather than dogma focussed, vinyasa teachers.

Jois presented one, simplified, version of his teacher's teaching, as well as one approach to teaching it. Even Sharath, it seems, while holding firmly to the dogma of the first seems to have taken a somewhat less hands on, aggressive, approach to the second. Many of the most respected, long term Ashtanga practitioners/teachers have taken innovative approaches in their own teaching.

Krishnamacharya argued that we don't all need to learn ALL the asana (how could we, six series merely scratches the surface of all the possible variations) but that some should (learn as many as they can). Likewise, we don't all need to learn a relatively fixed, dogmatic approach to Ashtanga vinyasa, although perhaps some should, so that practice of the boys of the Mysore palace isn't lost completely.  And I for one benefited from that highly structured approach in the beginning in developing a disciplined daily practice, it suited my temperament. Equally we should also reject the idea of there being one traditional, authentic approach, and explore our practice freely (and safely), just as Krishnamacharya seems to have done, this strikes me as more authentic, more traditional.

You might argue that there needs to be authority, that we need to be taught how to practice these asana. You're probably right. Unfortunately it doesn't seem to have been the case that Jois had much of an idea HOW to teach asana... safely or to whom (see the advanced series in a garage video on youtube), perhaps the same went for Krishnamacharya, did either of them ever open an anatomy/physiology book, has Sharath? Or was it all mostly intuitive, trial and lots of error, damaged for life error. And of course Pattabhi Jois' students, his authorised teachers followed his lead in how they taught the Ashtanga series, cranking students into postures, promoting extreme backbends, twists and hip openers. An 'authorised' teacher may well be one of the most dangerous teachers to go to. 

Thankfully, more recently, many teachers have taken the initiative themselves and turned to the anatomy books, to workshops with teachers with a focus on safe practice, and Sharath too (who adjusts less and less), in special courses for his authorised teachers, seems to suggest safer adjustments as well as those to avoid. He is also said to be open to students discussing their practice with him and why they may not wish to practice certain asana.  So there are safe authorised teachers to go to but there are also some frankly terrifying authorised teachers out there, I speak from personal experience. There are claims that Jois injured some, perhaps many, of his students to lesser and greater degree, we will never know how many. It's often tended to be the Ashtanga mavericks and/or those teaching outside the KPJAYI or sharathjois.com authorisation system who have challenged dogma in favour of safer practice, a safer Ashtanga. Sharath may excommunicate those Ashtanga teachers who offer teacher training but at least these training tend to include a safe practice, anatomical awareness, element, John Scott's TT with David Keil comes to mind.


More than anything we should challenge the idea of yoga as equating with asana, the asana for Jois' teacher Krishnamacharya was ALWAYS integrated with pranayama and with the meditative limbs and on the ground of a code of behaviour (E.G. Yama/Niyama).

(After) Ashtanga: beyond dogma - 2. Seated and Asymmetric postures.

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A series of posts perhaps, an opportunity to raise and question some dogma, here's the first.



(After) Ashtanga: beyond dogma - 1. Seated and Asymmetric postures.

-How strong do I want to be, how flexible do I want to be-



Over the last year or so, I seem to have settled into a flexible approach to this short krama as the main seated/asymmetric portion of my practice. I'm not suggesting anyone else should practice this way, Ramaswami (following Krishnamacharya) would suggest that you follow the requirements of your body that morning as you choose the asana to practice.

I remember once practicing full Primary, Second and Third series in a single session (quite absurd, there's a blog post somewhere), these days this tends to be my main static asana practice and feels sufficient. I might include most of the Ashtanga standing sequence or spend more time on Simon Borg-Olivier's Spinal movements (treat it as an alternative rather than as a warm up). I tend to include the first few backbends from Second series once or twice a week and go in and out of gomukhasana, baddha konasana and padmasana from sirsasana.

Notes:

I work gently into Paschimottasana, the knees bent slightly at first. I have my hands over my feet and it's the pointing of my feet that takes me down into the folded version. I will often include a short kumbhaka after the inhalation and/or a kumbhaka after the exhalation when folded. Krishnamacharya includes Kumbhaka in most of his asana instruction in his early Mysore book, Yoga Makaranda (Mysore 1934).

I tend to move away from Krishnamacharya in my breathing, at times I ver ymuch follow Krishnamacharya's instruction, as with the kumbhaka above but I will also tend to switch to natural breathing and these days i always tend to breathe with an abdominal rather than chest focus.

I don't bother to jump back between sides (Mantra: How strong do I need to be, how flexible do I need to be) or between postures but practice it somewhat more in the approach of Ramaswami (and thus his teacher Krishnamacharya), practicing all the postures on one side and then on the other. Ramaswami mentioned once that even though we might not jump back or return to standing there is, in a sense, always an implied count. Of course, one might take a more Ashtanga like approach, practice first one side and then the other, jumping back between sides or perhaps just between postures. Just as we might include a jump back and through between each asana we might also return to standing each time.

This short sequence is not unlike the first part of the Ashtanga Primary series, ardha badha padmasana is skipped ( we already have a standing version with more freedom for the hip), Kouchasana from second series though is slipped in, as is bharadvajrasana but here a simpler version from Simon Borg-Olivier that I've come to like with less stress on the knee.

An Ashtangi might not see any resemblance to Ashtanga at all in this....., unless of course I were to publish my practice in a book as my own.

I will often include Maha Mudra with kumbhaka before folding down into Janu Sirsasana A. I practice Janu sirsasana D (which used to be part of Ashtanga Primary back in the day supposedly) rather than C, again, to give less stress to the knees.

These are the only two versions of Marichyasana I tend to practice these day, omitting the half lotus versions, again, to go easier on the knees. I will often finish this sequence with navasana include the first few backbends from second series or prepare for a sarvangasana (shoulder stand) krama.

Below is speeded up version and below that a video in real time .





Score one for the Spinal Movements - gentle practice for back pain.

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The great Buddha of Kamakura

I've just had ten days off work and being Typhoon season decided to stay home and enjoy practice for most of the time with just a short trip east to Kamakura and Tokyo before heading back to work.

We decided to take the Night bus to get an early start on Kamakura, before the crowds arrived. Good plan but I woke up Saturday morning barely able to move. The bus journey, hiking through the hills, sleeping on a dodgy bed, twisting awkwardly in the night...., not sure what was to blame but I was worried I would be spending all day in bed. A hot bath and Simon Borg-Olivier's Spinal movements got me moving again.

I tend to practice Simon's Spinal movement sequence as a warm up, occasionally as an alternative, to regular Standing postures but Saturday morning it was about the only movement I could manage. Ten minutes of that and I could manage a downward dog, another ten and I was back out the door with my backpack for another day wandering around the big city.

Back home via the Shinkansen, back is still a little tender, it's probably going to be nothing but Simon's spinal sequence all week.

Simon often posts short demonstrations, free on-live classes etc. on his fb page (https://www.facebook.com/simonborgolivierpublic/) as well as on youtube but a full version can be found here https://yogasynergy.com/product/spinal-movements/ I bought this and it was excellent for getting a hang of the basic movements from which you can improvise.

Thank you again Simon, for getting me moving and saving the weekend.




Just the first five minutes or so of the movements below repeated rather than moving on to the variations





Note: Everyone's back pain is different, this worked for me but may not the best option for you, discussing it with your doctor is always advisable.

Yoga and Ageing ( with particular reference to Ashtanga).

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Many who write about Ashtanga and ageing, often critics of Ashtanga generally, fail to understand that while many do take a somewhat aggressive, energetic, approach to their Ashtanga practice it is also possible to practice Ashtanga in a relaxed, generally safe, non striving way. 

Yoga and ageing is in the air at the moment it seems, in reference to Ashtanga in particular.

I imagine it' may be assumed by some that my own moving away from Ashtanga was partly to do with growing older, I'm not sure that's the case.

I was, what, forty-three when I started practicing yoga and I started with Ashtanga. In the beginning it was very much a struggle. I was overweight, I wasn't flexible in the slightest but with daily practice and a switch to a vegetarian diet I quickly began to lose weight, became stronger and more flexible. I was practicing full primary within a year, Intermediate after two, and within three I had practiced all of 3rd and 4th series, although the later series corresponded with my move away from straight Ashtanga.

I used to have a full on, dynamic approach to practice, my practice room was hot, I would throw in Kino half handstand jump through's between every posture, mostly jumping straight in and out of a posture.


I remember that at one point I was losing 2 kilo in sweat each practice.


I was obsessed with asana and it was that which drew my attention to Ramaswami's complete book of Vinyasa Yoga, it had A LOT of asana in it. Turns out though that although there was a lot of asana, some variations I hadn't come across in Ashtanga, the approach to practice however was much slower.

So I started to practice Vinyasa Krama alongside my Ashtanga practice, Ashtanga in the morning, Vinyasa Krama in the evening. Later I sold a Saxophone and attended Ramaswami's five week Vinyasa Krama Teacher training in LA. For the first week or two I would get up at four am and do my Ashtanga in a stairwell, grab a coffee then go and practice three hours of Vinyasa Krama. By the third week we had gotten on to  the Vinyasa Krama Triangle and On one leg sequences, these were pretty tough so I stopped practicing my stairwell Ashtanga in the morning.

Two things in particular relevant to this post struck me while practicing with Ramaswami. One was that there was no restriction on which asana you could or couldn't practice, no 'next' asana or 'next' series to strive after, if you could practice asana you practiced it, if not there were other asana that worked towards it, this pretty much undermined the asana chase, I seem to remember my course essay was on overcoming asana madness.  The second revelation was the calm relaxed approach to practice and how ultimately our asana practice led up to pranayama and meditation practice.

When I came back from Ramaswami's course I sought a more relaxed, Vinyasa Krama,  approach my Ashtanga practice.


I was reminded of years before when I practiced Aikido. I'm not that big a guy but I have strong shoulders and a strong back and I would employ that strength somewhat while practicing my Aikido. I remember we had two new students join our Aikido club, one was twice the size of me, the other half my size. The size difference between the two was pretty dramatic and of course the larger of the two would easily throw the other around the Dojo. Over time however, the smaller guy, forced to focus on technique, began to gain the upper hand, the larger guy who had always relied on his size and strength barely progressed (Ss it happened, I heard the smaller guy ended up taking over the dojo when our Sensei left). I took note from this and worked more on my technique and I remember one session where I had to face three opponents, one with a wooden knife, the second with a wooden baton and the third unarmed. The idea was to throw each opponent with an appropriate technique depended on how armed they were, after being thrown they would roll out of the throw get up and attack again and again and again. In the past, using my size and strength, I would soon become tired but this particular session the technique clicked into place and I barely expended any effort at all, it felt as if I could go throwing attackers, on all day. I was in the zone.

I mention the above because I began to notice, that after practicing Vinyasa Krama my Ashtanga became more relaxed, more.... energy efficient. I remember switching from Kino's half handstand jump through to Sharath's little hop. I had been practicing long enough that I already had the technique down, no longer rushing I would ease myself into postures, a rushed led practice seemed ever more ridiculous.

And then I ended up focussing on Krishnamachrya's early Mysore texts, Yoga Makaranda and Yogasanagalu, again a slower more meditative practice where pranayama was very much a part of every asana, kumbhaka throughout the practice, conserving energy, staying calm with a slow  steady heat rate and composed breath became ever more important.



Many who write about Ashtanga and ageing, often critics of Ashtanga generally, fail to understand that while many do take a somewhat aggressive, energetic, and often downright dangerous approach to their Ashtanga practice it is also possible to practice Ashtanga in a relaxed, safe non striving way. On the few occasions when I have practiced Ashtanga at home, a full primary or Intermediate in the last year or two, I've noticed that I barely sweat, my breath and heart rate remain steady (except for karandavasana, too out of practice to keep a steady heart rate there). And this is borne out by seeing some of the more proficient practitioners practice. Despite practice challenging asana, their breath remains steady, as does their heart rate. A proficient Ashtanga practice is a steady practice.

Ashtanga CAN be a dangerous practice, we can dive right in, practice without any common sense, push ourselves too hard, trust and rely on a teacher with more dogma than common sense, allow ourselves to be adjusted by somebody who shouldn't be adjusting, race to keep up in a Led class or try to keep up with our peers, we can fail to listen to our own bodies, our own inner 'guru' if you like. However, practiced calmly, humbly, modestly, with less striving, listening to our body, preparing ourselves appropriately for each posture and how we approach it that day, how we approach our whole practice that day..., I tend to believe that Ashtanga is not significantly more dangerous than any other physical practice. You can twist, even break an ankle, a leg, just walking with your dog in the park.

Leaning towards a slower practice and less concerned with advanced asana, I began to practice less and less asana, pretty much settling on the ten asana I mention in my 'Proficient primary series of posts, it seemed sufficient. I still considered it Ashtanga and Ashtanga a Vinyasa Krama. I practiced less not because I was ageing but because I found spending more time in fewer asana more interesting, rewarding. Was that a more mature outlook, perhaps but I was still forty-three when I started Ashtanga, it wasn't as if I was in my twenties. Still, after getting to the leg behind head postures in Second series I do remember being stunned that my forty year old body could actually do such things.


Part of the asana chase I embarked on at the time, was I think because I had no idea how much longer Advanced postures would be available to me, I wanted to complete Advanced A, Advanced B even while I perhaps still could. No doubt too some (but by no means all) older practitioners are seeking to hold onto or reclaim their youth. Others however enjoy a relatively calm and simple practice and are irritated or perhaps bemused by the suggestion that they should strive for more asana, the next series, perfectly happy as they are ( and perhaps intuitively correct) in their satisfaction with the practice they have. Still others are perhaps somewhere in the middle.

And then, at some point, I became more and more interested in Simon Borg-Olivier's Spinal active movements, I would practice the movements as a warm-up to standing postures but gradually in place of standing. I noticed that I dropped down to eight seated asana and this week I noticed that I had dropped down to three, my whole ninety minute practice becoming Simon's standing Spinal movements and my own inverted version of the same.


The above video is from a little while ago, more and more I'm questioning binds altogether, trying to keep my movements ever more simple.

I moved away from Ashtanga, disassociated myself with Ashtanga, not because I was ageing, not because I felt it was an inappropriate practice for my age, I think it's perfectly possible to maintain a calm, steady, appropriate Ashtanga Vinyasa practice whatever your age, but rather because I believed Pattabhi Jois' behaviour, his abuse of his students, was inappropriate and damn right criminal. And almost, worse, the ongoing silence in the present community ( and yes, I do understand that many are still struggling with this). The Silence from Sharath on this when so vocal on other more banal matters, the silence from teachers I had looked up to, the enablers and apologists, the defenders, and those who attack and insult those who suffered Jois' abuse, often employing Trumpian arguments. I moved away from Ashtanga not because I was getting older, nor because of the abuse in the past but the silence of the present and because frankly, I found an approach to practice I currently find more  rewarding.

Upanishad Vidyas - Srivatsa Ramaswami June 2018 Newsletter from

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Upanishad Vidyas

Sri Krishnamacharya after teaching in detail both Samkhya Karika and Yoga Sutras started teaching several upanishads and upanishad vidyas. One day I asked my Guru why there are so many upanishads and upanishad vidyas if they all have one goal of teaching one Truth principle called the Brahman. He replied that since there are several teachers and students with different abilities it would be necessary to adopt different methods, discussions and arguments to arrive at the same Truth. Here I will take up a few such Vidyas and how they help the reader to understand the nature of Brahman

Perhaps  the most studied upanishad is Mandukya Upanishad wherein the Rishi author endeavours to explain that reality through our daily experiential states of waking dreaming and deep sleep to arrive at the fourth state of Brahmanhood.  The Vedas refer to that ultimate reality by the pranava mantra “OM” which is made of  the vowels 'a'. 'u'. and  the consonant 'm'  and It represents the three states we experience daily. We all agree that each one of us experience these three states daily. But are we able to identify this entity that goes through, experiences all these states. That is what this upanishad does.

We usually say that  an individual acts  during the waking state, then lies down and has a dream and then deep sleep before waking up again to go through activities in the waking state. But what exactly is the nature of the individual who goes through all  the three stages? What are the differences among the three states and what is common in all the states? What is common in all the states is the Self and what is experienced in each state because they vary will not be the self. So the Upanishad identifies the waking state observer as pure consciousness or Brahman which is known as Atman at the individual level and is represented by the syllable 'a' of the pranava. Then the same atman is experiencing the dream state and is represented as 'u' and then deep sleep as 'm'. 

Am I, Ramaswami.  not the one who has experience of waking state and then I lie down and have a dream and then deep sleep? There is a big difference. In waking state Ramaswami is the person identified commonly as the subject. But in dream we have another world the dream world, the dream objects. We all agree that the dream world and dream objects are different from the waking state world and objects and persons. In addition it is easy to see that the waking state subject Ramaswami is different from the dream state subject which the mind identifies as the subject which looks and acts differently from the waking state individual. It is also said that when one has a dream there is a partial temporary paralysis of several motor functions  and so the dreamer does not walk when the dream self does all activities. So the upanishad indicates that what we commonly talk about as the subject during waking state, it is different from the the subject in the dream state and the waking state dreamer is not the one who experiences the dream but the unvarying consciousness or Atman which is none other than Brahman. The upanishad wants us to see that the waking state Ramaswami is also an object for the Atman as the outside world and objects. Likewise for the Atman --and not Ramaswami-- the dream objects, the dream world and the dream self are all objects for the dream watching Atman identified by the Upanishad as 'u'. And one can extend the arguments to the deep sleep state as well. Then there is the pure state of the Atman/Brahman consciousness which yogis and liberated vedantins are said to be in, called kaivalya or brahma nirvana or the fourth state or turiya represented by the complete syllable 'AUM'

The Taittiriya upanishad looks at the ‘seen person’ as one made up of
five kosas, and exhorts the spiritual seeker to transcend the ‘five
kosa seen person’ by deep step by step contemplation and understand
the nature of the atman. These five kosas are envisaged, each one of
them as made up of the five parts of a bird,  and each one of the
kosas more subtle than the outer one. The five kosas start with the
one made of food or matter, the physical body. It is made of physical
matter  consisting of five distinct portions as the head, the right
and left wings, the body of the front and the tail or the back. It
gets energy from anna or food/matter. This kosa should be kept pure
and yogasanas are said to help one achieve this goal. There is a vedic
prayer which helps one pray for the pure satvic quality of the
physical body made fully of anna(annamaya) or matter.

This physical body is identified by everybody, including a child, as
the person, the self. But the self by definition is the innermost,
subtlest principle in every human being. Is there anything more subtle
than the physical body?  The upanishad begins to investigate.

And it finds out that there is an inner self to the physical body made
fully of life force called prana, in the same mold of the physical
body. This pranamaya permeates the whole physical body and is
visualized as the self of the physical body or annamaya kosa. It also
is visualized with five distinct parts, the head, the two wings, the
chest and then the tail. The Prana, the main life force is the head
of  vyana and apana are the right and left wings, then udana is the
body or heart of this kosa and then samana is the tail or support of
this system. A regular pranayama workout will help maintain this kosa
in good stead.

There is an inner self, of the shape of the person, to this prana maya
kosa which itself is a sheath or a kosa called mano maya. It is
permeated with an aspect of the chitta called manas. Manas coordinates
all the senses and instruments of action. Interestingly the most
important sense for a vedic scholar is the sense of hearing. Hearing
the vedas from the teacher the vedic student learns by heart the
vedas. Also this vedic student has his mano maya kosa full of vedic
knowledge. The head of this mano maya  is the yajur veda, the right
and the left wings are the rik and sama vedas. The body or the chest
is the vedic injunctions (adesa or the brahmana portion) and the tail
is the last veda, the atharva veda. It therefore actually refers to
our entire memory kosa. This kosa according to yogis can be kept in
good condition by pratyahara. The vaidics would say chanting of the
vedas  keeps the manomaya kosa in good shape.

Is there anything subtler than this? Yes, says the Upanishad. Subtler
than the mano maya is the vigyana maya or the kosa of intellect. This
is the self of the previous kosa, of the human form but is visualized
with a head which is shraddha or faith(in the scriptures). Since the
vedic scholar is doing this self analysis and investigation, he uses
this kosa towards the spiritual end. So the right wing is
righteousness or straight forwardness(rtam) and the left wing is satya
or the ultimate spiritual Truth. Then the heart or the atma of this
sheath is yoga or the ability to remain concentrated or go into
samadhi. The whole kosa is supported by mahat or universal
intelligence. The upanishad sadhaka has to have this kosa in good
stead to clearly understand the nature of the self using this kosa
diligently. And dhyana or meditation is the means of keeping this kosa
unpolluted.

The soul of this kosa is another subtle kosa called ananda maya which
is translated roughly as the bliss kosa. Again this kosa is  in the
human form but is visualized as a bird. The head of this kosa is
affection (priya), the right wing is glee (moda), the left wing is
ecstasy (pramoda) and the heart is bliss (ananda) and the support of
this is Brahman, the ultimate reality. The ultimate reality, the Atman/
Brahman which is defined (swarupa lakshana) as pure consciousness
unaffected by either time or space (satyam, gnanam anantam brahma) and
whose realization is possible by the path shown (tatasta lakshana) by
the knowledge called the pancha maya (kosa) vidya is what is to be
known to end the evil of transmigratory existence.

The first step is to  consider the human body, called the annamaya, as
part of the outside matter of the universe as it is that which is made
up of five elements, earth, water, etc., returns to the earth/universe
after death. During the lifetime, the annamaya body is sustained by
anna or food/matter, itself drawing the energy from it. The subtle
self of the human body which is the inner sheath known as pranamaya is
the one that keeps the body alive. The force that maintains it is
called prana sakti. It is said that udana, one of the five forces
keeps the balance between prana the inward life force and apana the
outward life force under balance. Once the udana loses that control at
the time of death, the apana with  prana and  other life forces leaves
the body. The other three sheaths , the manomaya, its inner core/
atman, the vigyana maya and the subtlest sheath the ananda maya are
controlled by the power of veil or ignorance called the avarana
sakthi. This is the power which prevents the individual from realizing
the true nature of one’s core or atman which is pure consciousness and
beyond the five kosas. This power when it operates in the subtlest or
the ananda maya kosa is known as ichha sakti or the power of desire.
When it operates in the vignyana maya kosa it is known as gnana sakti
or power of discrimination and then when it operates in the mano maya
it is known as kriya sakti. The desire for the desirable object arising
in the ananda maya leads the vignyana maya to contemplate the means
for fulfilling it and thereafter the manomaya directs the physical
body to do the necessary physical work to achieve the goal, which it
succeeds in sometimes and not some other times leading to the feeling
of happiness or unhappiness in the ananda maya self. Thus even though
the spiritual nature of the self is clearly discernible from the
pancha maya vidya of the Upanishads, it is obscured by the power of
the avarana sakthi or the power of spiritual ignorance which gets more
and more strengthened by the operation of this sakthi, life after
life. Hence the upanishad not only explains the nature of the real
self as opposed to the mistaken self (mithya atma) made up of five
kosas but also gives a step by step approach to strengthen the
spiritual knowledge leading to transcending the evil of endless
transmigratory existence.

Since the human body returns to earth and other elements the entire
universe including the human body is considered one virat one whole
universe of anna or matter of  the five elements. The prana which is
the subtle self of the human body is considered the subtle self
therefore of the universe and then regressing further one arrives at
the individual soul or atman as the self. And since now it is also the
Self of the Universe it is called Brahman and the advaitins proclaims
the oneness (advaita) of the individual self (atman) and the supreme
self (brahman) as one and the same. This pancha kosa vidya episode 
I am reproducing from an earlier newsletter.

Once a seeker is able to directly experience the Brahman the seeker's happiness is immeasurable. This is described beautifully in the anandamaya vidya of the taittiriya upanishad.The Bliss of one good youth well versed in the Vedas, firm, strong, healthy, quick, to whom the whole earth with all its wealth belongs, is one kind of bliss. Hundredfold and hundredfold greater in bliss in the order of succession are the states of Manushya-Gandharvas, Deva-Gandharvas, Pitris, Ajnanaja-Devas, Karma-Devas, Devas, Indra, Brihaspati, Prajapati, Brahma.

The bliss of Brahman is not to be considered as equal to a result mathematically arrived at by multiplying human joy by many hundred folds but it is the Bliss that is indescribable and infinite, the eternal the only existence. Every time it is asserted that the Veda-knower enjoys all these degrees of Bliss pro­vided he is untainted by desire and passion. A person who realizes the Brahman also knows that the individual atman or purusha in each individual creature and the one in the Sun yonder are one and the same. Such an individual never returns to be born again after leaving the layered body.

There are many such vidyas that the variety of upanishads boast of. Satvidya, pratardana vidya, panchagni vidya, dahara vidya, sandilya vidya, upakosala vidya, pratardana vidya are some of them.  The Bhagavatgita refers to the atman/brahman as the constant witness of the experiences of the childhood, then adulthood and old age and even death. The Mandukya refers to the same atma/brahman as the unvarying witness of the waking state, dream state and the deep sleep experiences of daily life and then the state of moksha or the transcendental state, the fourth or turiya. The panchagni vidya of Brihadarnyaka upanishad explains the state of five transformation the atman witnesses that take place in an individual between death and being reborn as a member of another species 


***

I was for three days in Germany teaching a workshop on yoga.The program was organized by BDY (German Yoga Body)( my translation). About 50 yoga teachers and practitioners attended the program.
On pranayama I had indicated that exhalation or racaka is perhaps the most important factor in learning pranyama practice. With a thorough exhalation making use ot the rectal, pelvic abdominal muscles and a flexible strong diaphragm the yogi is able to achieve exceptional racaka. And this facilitates a very good inhalation next taking in considerable fresh air. A few times say about 40 such pranayama everyday is refreshing as it helps to remove stale air from the lungs and take in fresh oxygen. My Guru would day that with recaka bala or strength of recaka or exhalation a hatayogi achieves a lot.

The whole program was arranged by my 20 year long friend Klaus Koenig.He translated the talks, demonstrated many postures. His young son 9 year old Hagen also was there helping his hard working father. A lovely kid.

On the way to the airport, Hagen gave a 'riddle'. How do you get a cow into a refrigerator? I could not imagine a cow in a  refrigerator like the one in my house. I said I did not know. He said, just open the door and put the cow in and close the door . Oh yes if the refrigerator was large enough it could hold the cow. Then he went on and asked, "Now, how can get a horse into the same refrigerator. I thought I knew the answer and said "Open the door, put the horse in the refrigerator and close the door"?He smiled and said, "No, you first get the cow out of the refrigerator and then put the horse in".

Klause continued. In the same way you exhale completely and then inhale for pranayama. Remove the stale air (cow) with recaka from the lungs (refrigerator) and then fill the lungs (refrigerator) with good inhalation or puraka(the horse)

 



In June I will be teaching a weeklong program covering a variety of yoga related topics at East Side Yoga in Austin Texas. Here is the link for more information

http://www.eastsideyoga-austin.com/product/srivatsa-ramaswami-visit-june-2018/

From June 30th to mid July I am scheduled to teach a 15 day 100 hour Vinyasakrama yoga teacher training program at One yoga in Victoria, Canada. Though I had not planned any more of this TT program, because my last year scheduled program at Oneyoga at Montreal was cancelled, we agreed to do it in Victoria for Oneyoga of my friend Ryan Leir. It will have three components A sixty hour segment will cover more than 700 vinyasas centered around more than 120 classical asanas in 10 major sequences,following the Vinyasakrama methodology with breath orientation as taught by my Guru Sri Krishnamacharya. Then there will be 20 hour segment consisting of a variety of pranayama methods and practice of some important pranayama procedures. It will also include the bandhas. In addition we will also cover yogic procedures that have a direct bearing upon the health of six internal organs or koshas viz., the heart and the circulatory system, the lungs and the respiratory system, the stomach and the digestive system, the kidneys/bladder and the urinary system, the intestines  and the uterus and  the reproductive systems. The third component  will be for 20 hours in which we will go through all the sutras in the fourt chapters of Patanjali's yoga sutra. 

I understand that there are still a few spots available even as the registration so far has been good. Here is the link. 

http://oneyogavictoria.com/events/vinyasa-krama-teacher-training-with-srivatsa-ramaswami


Of course I should also mention about another important program I will be doing at Loyola Marymount University in July/August 2018. It will be 8 day program of yoga related text studies. I will be teaching the twin darsanas or philosophies of Samkhya and Yoga one in the morning and one in the afternoon. We will go throug all the 72 slokas or verses of Samkhya Karika of Iswarakrishna and then in the afternoon all the sutras of Patanjali. Since these texts complement each other it will be very useful to study them together. Here is the link for registration.
https://academics.lmu.edu/extension/crs/yoga/programs/vinyasa/

Wish you Happy reading of Upanishad Vidyas

Srivatsa Ramaswami

Standing Asanas - Srivatsa Ramaswami July 2018 Newsletter

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Standing Asanas

Even as the definition asana is to be seated, in Hatayoga several standing postures are common and popular. In the vinyasakra yoga practice out of the 10 major sequences three are standing sequences. The most well known is the Tadasana sequence wherein one stands with the feet together and performs several asanas and many vinyasas centered around individaul asanas subroutines. Of the other two sequences, one requies standing on one leg and keeping the other leg in different positions in different asanas and then doing exquisite movements standing on one leg.This sequence requires a great sense of balance and regular practice instils a certain sense of balance both physical and mental. The third sequence in standing  with the feet apart say equl to the length of one's leg, in the form of a triangle,known as trikonasana. This sequence is very popular with contemporary yogis. Because of the broader base Trikonasana affords,it becomes much easier to work powerfully with the body muscles and also work with the joints as hips spine etc. 

The Tadasana sequence is the first asana sequence my Guru taught us. Standing on both the feet with the feet together, ankles touching each other, the thighs close, pelvis slightly forward and shoulders slightly thrown back this ensures standing straight in samasthiti or state of balance. Keeping the head down one mey watch how one balances when the eyes are also closed. Staying for a minute or two daily as soon as one gets up from bed would help to start the day with an even temperament. Since all movements are done with synchronized breathing in  this system, a minute or two of close observance of the breath would be helpful. Then many arm movements known as hasta or bhuja vinyasas help to stretch the muscles of the arms, neck and the chest and thus the accessory muscles of breathing. This would facilitate good breathing habits. Parva Bhangi and the vinyasas of side bending and also sideward turning  both of which will help the flexibility of the spine and forms the next subroutine in this Tadasana major sequence. Forward bending or uttanasana is the next subroutine and can be done with ardha uttanasana or half forward bending. This early prparation helps to stetch the muscles in the posterior part of the body as the calf muscces, the thigh muscles, the hamstrings, the glutial muscles etc. This subroutine lends itself to several vinyasas of the arms like padangushtasana, niralamba uttanasana. parsva- bhaga uttanasana and others. The next major joints that are dealt with are he knees,and all these are done still with the feet kept together and doing all contraction movements on exhalation synchronized with the movements and expansion movements like back bending during inhalation. Half squat and then full squat with varying arm positions mark the variety of vinyasas in this sequence. Utkatasana also can be used for some more involved asanas like malasana, kanchyasana, pasasana and others. Finally we have the tadasana where one tends to stand on the toes. It could be seen that vinyasa krama provides opportunities to do several asanas subroutines and vinyasas to be performed within  one basic asana in this case the Tadasana. There are a few very interesting off shoots from this sequence viz., Khagasana or bird pose, ding namaskara or salutation to the directions and with some additions from other asanas the well known surya namaskara the 12 vinyasa subsequence to salute the sun.

One legged postures are a class. When these postures are approached with vinyasas they bring out the best of balance. These were aso known as tapasvin poses or penance poses. Asanas like Bhagiratasana, Durvasasana and trivikramasana named after an avatara of the Lord, Vishnu come to mind. Though these poses appear simple if one can learn to stay in these poses for a time, say five minutes or more then one develops a good sense of balance a certin calmness and which will be helpful in developing one pointedness. Many of those who participate in the vinyasa krama yoga program initially do not consider them as very exciting but over a period of time start appreciating the unique sense of balance and calm they appear tpo generate and include them in their daily cup of asanas.popular with modern day yogis.

The Trikonasana or Triangle pose is very popular with modern yogis The uttita trikonasana where the feet are kept wide apart, usually involves side bending without bending the knees and looking straight. These are very good hip exercises and because of the broad base one is able to stretch the muscles more powerfully. The next asana and vinyasas will be uttita parva konasana wherein one still standing straight with the feet kept apart but bends the knees alternately to bend on either side. This lateral movement of the hips on a firm base of the feet helps to slowly and strongly stretch the hips, the groin and perineum laterally. Then we have the parsvottanasana wherein one turns to sides alternately with the feet kept aprt as in trikonasana. Without bending the knees one would bed forward giving a powerful turn to the hips. And finally we have the famous virabahadrasana or better known as warrior pose wherein one not only turns the body to the side but also bends one of the knees giving a new set of movements strong and powerful. There are quite a few vinyasa movements possible in each one of the four asana positions with the Trikonasana base.

The next set of asanas while  standing can be considered an extension of trikonasana wherein one spreads the feet further apart and do a few movements like forward bends side bends and also some back bends. It is known as prasarita pada uttanasana.If one can spread the legs further one can sit on the floor which would be samakonasana.a
The three major standing sequences with a number of subroutines and scores of breath synchronized winyasas are very powerful and may be an artistic way of doing asana practice afforded by Vinyasa krama. For more instructions and movemnts please refer to my book "Complete Book of Vinyasa Yoga"



***

I am sending this letter a couple of days earlier than usual as I will be travelling next couple of days and may not have adequate facility to send it later


--------
Steven Ross attended my 6 week full time  200 hour  Vinyasakrama Yoga Teacher Training program at Loyola Marymount University several years back. Since then he started a yoga studio in Austin TX, East Side Yoga and has run it successfully for sevaral years now. I taught a week long program there a few years back and was in his Studio again earlier this month for a week. For the weekend I spoke on Mantra yoga, taught Vinyasakrama and also spoke and taught Viloma Ujjayi pranayama. During the week, I taught in the forenoon several sequences from Vinyasakrama yoga based on my studies with my Guru Sri Krishnamacharya. It included Tadasana (tree or mountain pose and vinyasas), Asymmetric seated poses like marychyasana, Janusirshsana and vinyasas, Trikonasana sequence including Virabhadtasana and vinyasas, Suptasana including sarvangasana and vinyasas, Vajrasana and other seated poses and vinyasas and pranayama and introduction to dharana meditation practice. The afternoon sessions each 2 1/2 hrs included discussion of several topics of interest to practising yogis like 1) what is Yoga 2) Hatayoga for Internal Organs, 3) Fundamentals of Samkhya 4) The first 4 sutras of Yoga sutra 5) Upanishad Vidyas. Nice group and very good participation. Thank you Steven and all those who participated.



I will be teaching a 15 day 100 hr Vinyasakrama Yoga TT program at One Yoga in Victoria Canada from June 30th 2018

 I would like to mention about another program that yoga practitioners and teachers may find especially useful. It will be for 8 days teaching, morning 2hrs 30 mts  Samkhya Karika and afternoon 2hrs 30 mts the close sibling philosophy (darsana) Yoga Sutras of Patanjali, totalling 20 hrs each. Studying these two darsanas that complement each other could be very useful in understanding the Sutras better. The twin program starts July 28, 2018 Here is the link to register

https://cal.lmu.edu/event/lmux180728#.WzEVWKczaM-

Klesa - Srivatsa Ramaswami - September 2018 Newsletter

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Kama and Manyu

.Yoga students are familar with the klesas or distubances known as raga and dvesha or intense desire and anger/hatred.These two are preceded by asmita which is ignorance of true nature of the Self. Patanjali recommends kriya yoga which includes 'svadhyaya' . Many yogis give a broad interpretation to svadhyaya including self study. The word svadhyaya traditionally would refer to study of the scriptures, vedas. In fact there is a vedic mantra which directly deals with this klesa. "Kamah akarsheeth manyuhu akarsheeth namo namah". It would mean that all the deeds are done by kama or desire and manyu or anger, and it is followed by saying namo namah or that I pray to the devas that control these two emotions to spare me. The mantra is chanted by many people three times a day once at dawn again at noon and then at dusk as part of the daily sandhya ritual. The mantra is chanted 108 times on the day of sravana, usually the full moon day in the Aug Sep period every year. Actually the mantra used is a portion of the full mantra. The next line is kamah karta naham karta, manyuh karta, naham karta meaning it is desire that does this activity and it is manyuh or anger that does this wrong activity but not me the real self that is incapable of any action but is only a witness. This mantra helps to weaken the three klesas, asmita then raga and dvesha. Many people chant this mantra 108 times or even 1008 times evry year on the full moon day in the month of Avani or July/August period. 

कामोऽकार्षीन्नमोनमः।
कामोऽकार्षीन्कामः करोति नाहंकरोमि कामः कर्ता नाहं कर्ता कामः कारयिता नाहंकारयिता येष ते कामकामायस्स्वाहा

kāmo'kārṣīnnamonamaḥ|
kāmo'kārṣīnkāmaḥ karoti nāhaṁkaromi kāmaḥ kartā nāhaṁ kartā kāmaḥ kārayitā nāhaṁkārayitā yeṣa te kāmakāmāyassvāhā

मन्युरकार्षीन्नमोनमः।
मन्युकार्षीन्मन्युः करोति नाहंकरोमि मन्युः कर्ता नाहं कर्ता मन्युः कारयिता नाहंकारयिता येष ते मन्यो मन्यवे स्वाहा।
manyurakārṣīnnamonamaḥ|
manyuakārṣīnmanyuḥ karoti nāhaṁkaromi manyuḥ kartā nāhaṁ kartā manyuḥ kārayitā nāhaṁkārayitā yeṣa te manyo manyave svāhā|

Here is a free translation of the above two mantras put together. ( A video clip with the chanting of the mantra can be found in my facebook page)

danda namaskara.jpg
I bow to the devas of Desire and Anger ( to spare me). All activities are done by desire and anger--anger and desire have done all. Anger and Desire do all, not I (the real Self which is pure consciousness and the witness). Anger and Desire are the agents that do act not I do any activity(the Self, the witness). Anger and Desire are the ones that cause the individual to act and not I (the Self ). To these Desire and Anger I offer my prayers ( to spare the individual).

These mantras clearly go with the vedic, yogic and upanishadic philosophies that the real Self is pure consciousness and is only a witness but the prakritic body mind complex with the ego is the one that acts influenced by Desire and Anger.

Some people worry that this may prompt a few people not to take the  responsibility for their actions and say that anger and desire are responsible. But it should be emphasised that this mantra is to be used as a regular reminder that the real Purusha or the Self is the one with which one should identify oneself and is the witness, and not to prakritic body mind complex which is the one that acts. This is the teaching of samkhya, yoga and the upanishads. So if one after studying these philosophies and is convinced about the dichotomy of the real Self and the prakritic individual, then this mantra becomes a constant reminder of the true nature of one Self--all in the midst of worldly activities

Mantras are uplifting words or terms that protect the one who uses it or chants it. So if one is convinced about the teaching of a darsana or philosophy these come in handy to keep the individual on the right track. For instance if one is convinced that the real Self which is only a witness and not the agent having desire and anger which is the nature of the prakritic individual, then the subject may require to constantly remember that truth. Unfortunately due to old samskaras or habits of considering the body mind complex as the self and the overwhelming presence of the prakriti around and within, one is likely to fall back into the old habits. Take the case of an individual who is convinced that the Self or "I" and Brahman the ultimate reality  are one and the same after studying the upanishads. Then one may need a constant reminder and the mantra "Aham Brahmasmi" (I and Brahman) comes in handy. Repeated use of the mantra :Aham Brahmasmi: helps the sadhaka to be on track. Likewise the mantra under consideration becomes a powerful reminder that the real Self is pure consciousness and only the witness while the prakritic individual is the one that acts actuated by Kama or desire and Manyu anger. This could be a powerful  'mnemonic' tool for one who has a conviction about the vedic philosophy

sr pix.jpg



***


In August I completed a twin text program at Loyola Marymount University, teaching Samkhya Karika of Iswarakrishna in the forenoon and Patanjali's Yoga Sutra in the afternoon. The program was for a total of 40 hrs 20 hrs each of the texts
LA photo 2018.jpg


 In September I will be teaching 3 day weekend program (15hrs) of Yoga Yagnyavalkya at Chicago Yoga Center, in Chicage,IL . It will be between Sep 14 and 16, 2018.
 On September  23, I will be giving a 90 minutes talk on "What is Yoga", it is based on the introductory talk my Guru gave sometime early 1960s when he started teaching me the Yoga Sutras. It is at  MindBodySoul Yoga  which is based in Washington Heights, New York City

For the remainder of the year, I am scheduled to teach the following programs  
1.   Ananta Yoga Studio Wicklow  in Wicklow, Ireland between Oct 5th to Oct 9th. Here is the link for more details

2.  In Luxembourg Oct 12 to 14, 2018

3. In Santiago Chile, Center de Yoga  Oct 29th to Nov 3rd

In 2019 I will be teaching the 100 hr Vinyasakrama  Teacher Training Program at 3 different Locations. At Yoga Vahini Chennai, India (Feb 11 to 27, 2019) One Yoga  in Victoria, Canada (June 24 to July 9, 2019) and Loyola Marymount University, Los Angeles (July 27th to August 11, 2019 https://academics.lmu.edu/extension/crs/yoga/programs/)

I am also scheduled to teach a 20 hr program on Upanishad Vidyas between January 2 to 6,  2019 at Yoga Vahini, Chennai

Srivatsa Ramaswami

योगयाज्ञवल्क्य yogayājñavalkya - Newsletter from Srivatsa Ramaswami - October 2108

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योगयाज्ञवल्क्य yogayājñavalkya


संयोगो योग उच्यते
जीवात्म परमात्मनोः
saṁyogo yoga ucyate
jīvātma paramātmanoḥ

Ashtanga Yoga, Viniyoga, Vinyasakrama Yoga and a few other brands of several well known systems are yogasana practices  may be traced  to the teachings of Sri T Krishnamacharya. Many of the systems of asana practice emanating from Krishnamacharya are exhaustive and show what an outstanding yogasana teacher he was. But Sri Krishnamacharya, as many know, taught several other important subjects he considered useful or essential for life long yoga practitioners. He considered vedic and other chantings to be very important and spent hundreds of hours teaching chanting of several portions of vedas to many students including interested and talented women. His judicious use of yoga procedures especially the vinyasas and other yoga procedures like mudras pranayama for health and therapeutic purposes is something unique,--- like the application of yoga techniques for the health of vital kosahas or organs in the body, as the heart and the circulatory system, , lungs and the respiratory system, stomach and the digestive system, bladder/kidneys  and the urinary system , uterus and the reproductive system and the intestines. 


Sri Krishnamacharya was a great scholar of both religious and philosophical works. Many vaishnavites, the followers of Vaishnavism would come to him for studying religious works of the likes of Desikan, Ramanuja, Nathamuni and others. His knowledge of the complete spectrum of vedic philosophies was deep and wide. He had got several diplomas and honorary titles like Veda Kesari, Vedanta Vageesa, Samkhya Siromani, Nyayacharya, Yogacharya and others. One great feature of his teaching was that even though he was great Sanskrit scholar he was able to come down to the level of ordinary people like yoga students and explain them clearly, which was unusual in India at that time as most scholars would treat these subjects in a scholarly manner not necessarily as  experiential.



He taught several yoga and philosophical texts. Hatayogapradipika, suta samhita, siva samhita, gherunda samhita, yoga sutras, Bhagavat Gita,  Brahma sutras, Upanishads like Chandogya, Brahadaranyaka, prasna, kata, kena, taittiriya, svetasvara, kaushitaki brahmana, mandukya, mundaka, isa and many minor upanishads. And that included 

योगयाज्ञवल्क्य yogayājñavalkya, a unique yogic text the authorship of which is attributed to sage Yagnyavalkya a renowned vedic rishi. While some scholars dispute the claim that it was written by the same yogayājñavalkya of the Sukla Yajur Veda, there is no dispute about the sweep and depth of the contents of this unique yoga work of a brilliant yogi philosopher. 

The text follows the classic ashtanga yoga format of yoga but contains a variant and broader approach to each of the eight angas. The goal of yoga according to the author is union of jivatma, the individual Self with the Supreme principle, the paramatma, a classic approach of Bhakti Yoga and also of Vedanta.

संयोगो योग उच्यते
जीवात्म परमात्मनोः
saṁyogo yoga ucyate
jīvātma paramātmanoḥ

The book of about 500 verses is divided into a dozen chapters eight of which deal with each of the eight angas of Ashtanga Yoga. It details 10 yamas as opposed to the 5 in the yoga sutras. In the first chapter the sage insists on the scrupulous observance of one's duties according to the stage and disposition in life. The second chapter deals with the niyamas which are again 10 in number and detailed description of them and niyama observance consistent with one's own dharma.  The third chapter is on asanas and the sage describes eight asanas that he considers important all of which are seated ones except mayurasana or peacock pose which becomes relevant in the context of removal of diseases and also with respect  activating prana/apana and the gastric fire all of which are considered essential in arousing the kundalini an integral aspect for the cleansing of all nadis and opening up the sushumna nadi. 

Here is my friend and an ace, exceptional yoga teacher Ryan Leier doing Mayurasana and then me in Padmasana

peacock 2.jpg


SR B padmasana.jpg






Actually the book is a dialogue between  याज्ञवल्क्य yājñavalkya and his spiritually evolved spouse Gargi in an assembly of yogis sages and rishis. The fourth chapter is devoted to the nadi anatomy. It describes the position and route of major nadis, 14 according to the author. He would say of the 14 nadis from among the 72000 nadis in the body three, the ida, pingala and sushumna are important and of course sushumna is the most important of them all from the Yogi's viewpoint. It also describes the 10 vayus that traverse the nadis and their distinct functions. Additionally it describes the position of other important aspects as the kandasthana the origin place of the nadis, the place of fire or agni in the body, the nature and place of Jiva the individual Self, the position and structure of Kundalini and the interconnection among these phenomena. It describes in short the anatomy and  physiology that a yogic should know and to achieve an experience through the yogic practices to  the goal of union of jivatma and paramatma It also contains the important information that the nadis should be kept flushed and clean by a yogic practice called Nadi shodhana as the first step in the deeper yoga practice.

The brief fifth chapter describes the preparations and the actual practice of Nadishodhana. Then the sage returns to the ashtanga yoga practice, and dwells deeply and extensively into the next anga pranayama in the sixth chapter. Unlike the Hatayoga pradipika which describes several pranayama (kumbhaka) procedures and amantraka (without mantra) here it is full of samantaraka or with bhava also known as samantraka and sagarbha pranayama. This chapter explains how to locate the pranas in the different centers of the body and the mind slowly integrating with the prana. It is a very detailed chapter of the pranayama and its effects

The next chapter is also very absorbing. It is  the seventh chapter on pratyahara the fifth anga of the ashtanga yoga system. While pratyahara generally is considered to be a practice of drawing the five senses from the external objects, here pratyahara, one of the five variants of it,   goes much deeper and commends the withdrawing of  prana sensations within one's own body especially from the 18 important vital points in the body. It is deliberate and conscious effort to draw in the prana awareness from these 18 marma sthanas, 6 in the lower extremities (toes, ankles, shin, calf muscle root, knees and mid-thighs), six in the torso (anus, body center, generative organ, navel,heart and the throat) and six in the head (root of the tongue, end of nose, region between the eyes, midbrows, forehead and the crown). Thus by shanmukhimudra which याज्ञवल्क्य yājñavalkya includes in pranayama,  the yogi shuts out the external world communication with the senses. And then by the pratyahara from the marma stahnas the yogis is able to withdraw prana sensations within one's own body. 

From Pratyahara याज्ञवल्क्य yājñavalkya proceeds to explain dharana which according to him can be considered as five types. While Patanjali defines Dharana as focussing on one object, याज्ञवल्क्य yājñavalkya is more specific. He would commend meditating the atman /paramatma in the heart lotus. In another treatment of dharana the author wants the yogi to contemplate on the five elements or bhutas of which the human body is made of, He would divide the body into five regions dominated by the five bhutas. The lower most portion is predominantly made of earth or solid matter, the next higher region is more watery then the the next higher region is more of fire  then the higher region, the thoracic is dominated by air and finally the head portion is of akasa. Meditating on these five prakritic tatwas which according to all the yogis is not the real self helps the Yogi to directly experience that one is not the body.

Then the next step or anga would be dhyana which we generally term as meditation. Here one wants to know what is real, the individual Self (jivatma) and then the supreme self or paramatma. 

 While Patanjali would  want the yogabhyasi to do samyama or meditation of the real Self, here याज्ञवल्क्य yājñavalkya following the bhakti yoga and the vedanta philosophy and tradition would want the yogabhyasi to meditate or do dhyana on paramatma  which one would want to attain union with as per the definition of याज्ञवल्क्य yājñavalkya yoga. According to my Guru as per Bhakti Yoga there is only one dhyana that is bhagavat dhyana or meditation of the Lord, the Creator. According to the Upanishads, the source of the universe is Brahman which is nothing but pure consciousness immutable and the source of this Universe, the sustainer of the Universe and unto which the universe finally merges. That Brahman is the Paramatma and the Yogi here wants to merge the atman or the individual with that Supreme. So here the dhyana is on that paramatma. It can be done in its pure form as Brahman or also associated with its creation, the Universe. When one meditates on the ultimate in its pure nature then it is known as Nirguna dhyana and when associated with the attributes of the created universe then it is known as saguna dhyana. Both methods of meditation are recognized by the Upanishads. But thousands of ordinary bhakti yogis also have another option of meditating upon the Lord paramatma with a form so that the  saguna dhyana on paramatma becomes possible. याज्ञवल्क्य yājñavalkya includes this form meditation in the heart or mid brows  as dhyana.

Finally in the chapter on Samadhi याज्ञवल्क्य yājñavalkya recognizes one samadhi, In this the yogi brings about the union of jivatma and paramatma. Ultimately when the yogi sees signals that the end of life is near, sits in yogic pose, collects all the pranas and the unified prana moves through the Kundalini free sushumna and  reaching the crown finally  splits open the crown leaves the body and merges with the mahaprana or universal life force. The individual jivatma following suit leaves the body and merges with the Brahman, the paramatma and the union of jivatma and paramatma takes place. 

संयोगो योग उच्यते
जीवात्म परमात्मनोः
saṁyogo yoga ucyate
jīvātma paramātmanoḥ


Having instructed his wife and advising her to follow the yogic path to the end of her life  याज्ञवल्क्य yājñavalkya himself sits in a yogic posture and going into samadhi leaves the body and attains maha samadhi. And Gargi follows suit.

Virtually the text is a great internal  journey of a yogi, the life and death or ultimate samadhi . 

I am scheduled to teach this text as part of my 100 hr TT program in Vinyasakrama Yoga at Oneyoga  in Victoria Canada in  summer 2019

Yoga is a fascinating subject.

*****
Dasara starts shortly, a period to worship Goddess Sakti. Here are some of my Sanskrit chants of the famous prayers to Mother. 

1. Lalitha Sahasranamam  
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X6yJVTYDcl0

2.indrakshi siva kavacham
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bJ_2KH3Qk1M


3. mooka Panchasati of Kanchi Kamakshi
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Frhy4wxb7xo


In addition I have also recorded Devi Mahatmyam or Durga saptasati, Durga Sahasranamam, Gayatri Sahasranama some of which may still be available in the market as CDs or may be downloaded with some search. All were recorded many decades ago.




***


In September, 2018,  I spent three days in Chicago teaching  योगयाज्ञवल्क्य yogayājñavalkya, at Chicago Yoga Center to a compact group of yoga practitioners.


2018 chicago.jpg


I gave a 90 minute talk on "What is Yoga" at Bodymindsoul yoga studio in New York City. It was my first visit to New York City to teach after many many years. The studio is just 5 mts drive from my home across George Washington Bridge. Very nice group, hope they liked the content of the talk.

In October I am travelling to three countries, Ireland ( The Ananta Yoga Studios, Wicklow Town), Luxembourg (Center de Yoga,  Lu) and then Chile(Yoga Kanda). Here are the links for the programs







Happy Navaratri/Dasara

Review: Mysore Yoga Tradition (documentary) and the inclusion of Surya Namaskara (sun salutation) in Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga

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Reposting from this time last year

UPDATE Oct 9th 2018

Looking forward to attending this...

Mysore Yoga Traditions Retreat and Conference
February 8-22  2019
https://www.mysoreyogatraditions.com/mysore-retreat

The blog post Includes several 1941 Life magazine photos of T.R.S. SHARMA, one of the boys Krishnamacharya was teaching at the time in Mysore ( Note: 1941 was also the year Krishnamacharya published Yogasanagalu which contains Krishnamacharya's 'Table of Asana', divided into three groups, Primary, Middle, Proficient, which became the Ashtanga sequences we know today http://grimmly2007.blogspot.com/p/yogasanagalu-translation-project.html ). The post also includes a clip and some screen shots of T.R.S. Sharma from the documentary. I'm very much looking forward to meeting him on the retreat.

I like the thought of broadening our perspective of Ashtanga vinyasa out from one scene, one teacher, one family to that of Mysore itself, to the practice, practitioners and teachers the city has inspired, to the philosophical traditions from which it derives. This is, for me, personally at least, perhaps a way back to a practice I loved for so long after the upheaval of the last year.

It's no coincidence that Ashtanga vinyasa arose in that city and at that time, we can look to the Royal family and their patronage of Krishnamacharya, we can look to the Sanskrit college where Krishnamacharya and later Pattabhi Jois, taught. Ashtangi's know their practice is a Mysore practice but If you practice Iyengar yoga be reminded that Iyengar learned his yoga here, Iyengar yoga is as much Mysore as Pune. The Vinyasa Krama of Ramaswami, Mohan, Desikachar? We can see in Krishnamacharya's inversion vinyasas, in the 1938 Mysore documentary footage, the same vinyasas that these students of Krishnamacharya would later teach (we also see Krishnamachrya practicing Acroyoga with his kids in the same documentary).

Attending the retreat (https://www.mysoreyogatraditions.com/mysore-retreat), purchasing (https://www.mysoreyogatraditions.com/purchase) and watching the documentary are two ways to support that work too long neglected by the Ashtanga community, another is to donate directly here https://www.mysoreyogatraditions.com/manuscript-preservation


T.R.S. SHARMA (Mysore 1941), the year Krishnamacharya's Yogasanagalu was published (available HERE)
More photos of TRS Sharma's set of photos from the 1941 Life magazine shoot in the appendix as well as a ling to the rest of the photos and magazine article.
"And by the time I got to 16, I was able to do some 300 asanas with all the variations of course, because Sri krishnamacharya believed in a kind of innovating. There was nothing like a set, fixed kind of postures. So he would not insist that everyone has to follow the same regime, the same series of asana. One thing is , he was very particular about surya namaskara, you start your yoga with surya namaskara, after that the world is free. You are free to sort of innovate on postures. But Surya namaskara is an important thing. IT's kind of an introduction to the entire thing." 
T.R.S. SHARMA Mysore Yoga Tradition 2017


https://www.mysoreyogatraditions.com/

This quote by T.R.S. SHARMA in the excellent new documentary Mysore Yoga Traditions, released last month, was a bit of a game changer for me. Up until now I had tended to think that Krishnamacharya was perhaps somewhat dismissive of the practice of Surya namaskara, perhaps considering them little more than a fitness fad of the time (see my earlier post http://grimmly2007.blogspot.jp/2012/05/balasahibs-original-1928-suya-namaskar.html ). And that it was Krishnamacharya's young student Pattabhi Jois (said to have been asked to teach a three or four year course at the Sanskrit college) who added the Surya namaskara's to the beginning of the practice of the asana we find in Krishnamacharya's table of asana (Yogasanagalu (Mysore 1941). That Surya namaskara practice, along with practicing Krishnamacharya's table as fixed series rather than flexible groups that constituted Pattabhi Jois' main contribution to the formation of Ashtanga Vinyasa. I was mistaken, T.R.S. SHARMA is clear, Surya namaskara WAS important for Krishnamacharya. After their inclusion we are free to choose our practice, as well as to innovate, what is appropriate for us that morning.  This of course ties in with how Krishnamacharya continued to teach throughout his life, how Ramaswami , who encountered Krishnamacharya soon after the later left Mysore, presents his studies with his teacher.

Note: As much as I love and respect Manju, I strongly disagree with him here when he argues in the movie that it was his father Pattabhi Jois who researched and constructed the sequences of asana that make up Ashtanga Vinyasa. We have Krishnamacharya's table of asana in his Yogasanagalu (Mysore 1941) 
http://grimmly2007.blogspot.jp/p/yogasanagalu-translation-project.html, the first two series of Ashtanga closely follow the layout of asana in the table, with only minor reordering. The difference, as T.R.S. Sharma points out, is that for Krishnamacharya the practice of the asana was flexible, for Pattabhi Jois more fixed (See this recent post http://grimmly2007.blogspot.jp/2017/09/manju-jois-new-workshop-video-q-and.html). 

Manju stresses that there were originally only three series, Primary, Intermediate and Advanced, I would argue that it is with the advanced asana that Pattabhi Jois had the most input, arranging Krishnamacharya's jumble of proficient group asana into first one series 'Advanced', then two, 'Advanced A and B' and then finally four advanced series 3rd to 6th series (note: We can see most of the Advanced asana found in Ashtanga's 3rd to 6th series demonstrated by Iyengar in the 1938 documentary footage of Krishnamacharya, his family and students).

Of course Pattabhi Jois also mentioned that advanced asana were merely for demonstration, just as Krishnamacharya had suggested they were unnecessary for most but that some should practice them if only for the sake of preservation.

Ashtanga Vinyasa, it's origin and continuation is but one part of the story the documentary Mysore Yoga Traditions has to tell, I strongly recommend watching it, it is no coincidence that Ashtanga vinyasa evolved in Mysore, this is a city that has a long tradition of of investigating, preserving and teaching the history of yoga and it's texts through, among others, the venerable institution of the Sanskrit college and Mysore library.

Below. the trailer for the movie along with some info from the website and some more clips, the 

Mysore Yoga Traditions Official Trailer from Dallos Paz on Vimeo.


"Mysore Yoga Traditions! It is a tale to tell. Our original intention was to make a film about the life and teachings of our teacher Sri BNS Iyengar in honor of his 90th birthday. I had been asking for 3 years. But at the last moment, he changed his mind and flatly refused. An important part of his teachings has always been about rejecting fame and fortune, self-promotion and the egotism that goes with it. We knew better than to press the issue. But we went to Mysore anyway to see Guruji and see what would happen with the documentary idea. What happened totally blew our minds! Through luck, chance, good fortune and the tireless efforts of Kanchan Mala we were able to interview Her Royal Highness Sri Satya Pramoda Devi, the Queen of Mysore, as well as Bhashyam Iyengar, the principal of the Maharaja's Sanskrit College in Mysore (the college where Krishnamacharya and Pattabhi Jois taught) several of the professors there including MA Alwar, Gangadhar Bhat, Satya Nariana, Jayashree and Narasimhan of the Ananta Research Institute,TRS Sharma, Yamini Muthana, Sri Laxmi Thathachar the President of the Samskrti Institute, and many others. Guruji finally agreed to an interview in the end - he just didn't want to make a documentary only about himself. Becuase of this our documentary broadened exponentially and we owe it all to him! That level of detachment is why we call him Guruji.


What we came up with was a deep look into the yoga tradition in Mysore, how it has evolved and the philosophy that it rests upon. Our documentary will be an unbiased collection of statements from the intellectual community in Mysore about how they see their own yoga tradition. We were able to ask the questions that have always been in the back of our minds such as....How old is the Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga we are practicing in the west today and how did it evolve into it's current state? How do they feel about the idea that western exercise systems have influenced it? And how do they feel about the way yoga is being taught and practiced around the world today, among many other topics.

We left Mysore with our hearts full and tears in our eyes at the warmth, generosity, astounding level of knowledge, and deep sincerity of the great men and women we interviewed. We are extremely grateful to all of them! These interviews could never have happened without the help of Kanchan Mala who worked tirelessly to arrange them and convinced people who normally would never be interested in such things to give us interviews.

Also, I have to express my deep gratitude to Dallos Paz, our video man, Joey Paz who did nearly all of the long tedious job of transcribing these interviews, Kelly O'Roke who has been extremely generous and took so many amazing still shots, and Bryce Delbridge who supported all of us with utmost sincerity. Without these beautiful souls, this documentary could never have taken place".


MYSORE



Pattabhi Jois: Asthanga finds its Way to the West

Sri K. Pattabhi Jois was certainly the person who communicated Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga to the west. Without even speaking English fluently, he managed to create huge enthusiasm and dedication in his students. In my eyes, he was a creative genius. He systematized the asanas in a way that made sense and that many people could practice and memorize. To this day, his sequencing and approach is very influential in many forms of yoga throughout the world. His method of teaching turned out some of the finest western practitioners ever, and really ignited a fire in many people. And true to his culture, the way all good Indian teachers do, Sri K. Pattabhi Jois handed all the credit back to his teacher and the tradition that he came from. He never said a word about any of his own contributions.
I think that is where the confusion comes in. He insisted that yoga is ancient, that he was teaching a good method, and that his students should stick to it. What’s wrong with that? There is a lot of humbleness and dedication expressed there. To me, it is endearing! Especially in the yoga scene of today where everyone is trying so hard to think of any possible new twist to put on yoga. The moment anyone thinks of a good idea to add to yoga, they will usually try to brand it, copyright it, and take it to the bank! We have every kind of yoga imaginable now. We are so attached to the material aspects of the practice that we miss the point of the whole thing. We bicker and quarrel about asana sequences that are very modern in light of yoga’s long history, and fail to see the deep, beautiful community and culture that gave them to us.

 As David Williams used to say “Before practice the theory is useless, and after practice the theory is obvious.” Theory and practice: “Before practice the theory is useless, and after practice the theory is obvious.”

'Never changed anything' (said to be Krishnamacharya and Pattabhi Jois's reply when asked about the 'system they taught): Why does every teacher insist on having been giving precisely this sequence from his teacher, who received it from his teacher (and from his teacher and from his teacher…)?

Not every teacher does. My teacher, Sri BNS Iyengar, who just turned 90, teaches a slightly different sequence of Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga. He can be very innovative when working with advanced students. In fact, no two teachers teach every nuance of yoga exactly the same. No matter how hard we try, it is impossible. I think there is a good reason for fixed sequences. Having an underlying system in common is a brilliant thing and has had a very positive impact on yoga, in my view. The fixed sequences are like the scales a classically trained musician must learn. Anyone trained in the Ashtanga sequences of Sri K. Pattabhi Jois or Sri BNS Iyengar has a particular grace and competency gained through repetition of movement that is very noticeable. I think Sri K. Pattabhi Jois may have made a bigger contribution than anyone else in this regard. When the sequences are fixed, the practice becomes much more concentrated and the standard goes up exponentially.

So in my view, the asanas we are practicing do come from a long tradition. And the yoga community  they come from is very old indeed. They just happen to be a little more recently formatted than we would have liked to think. Yoga has been around forever and taken many forms.







Appendix


Here are some screenshots of the scene with T.R.S. SHARMA quoted above.










A short introduction to TRS Sharma from a recent workshop


"Ashtanga Yoga Studio is very honored to host a Skype lecture with TRS Sharma! This is an amazing opportunity to hear the thoughts and views of someone who studied extensively with T. Krishnamacharya during his early days in Mysore. TRS Sharma began to practice yoga with Krishnamacharya at the age of 12. Krishnamacharya is considered by many to be the father of modern yoga. Mr. Sharma grew up in the heart of the yoga tradition in Mysore. He comes from a long line of Sanskrit scholars and priests. Experts are now saying that at least half of the yoga postures practiced outside of India have been directly influenced by Krishnamacharya. Because he was educated in America, Mr. Sharma has a unique insight a very articulate view of how yoga has unfolded into Western culture. Mr. Sharma is particularly interested in the way Indian and Western culture have blended together, and the parallels as well as the stark differences in our views. He will be speaking about the history of the yoga we are practicing today, as well as the cultural and philosophical background that it has come from. There will be time for questions and answers at the end.
Have you have ever been curious about the origins yoga we are practicing today? Just who are the keepers of this knowledge? What do they think about the way we practice yoga today? Mysore holds those secrets. This is a rare and special opportunity!
Everyone is welcome!"

https://www.ashtangayoga.info/ashtangayoga/tradition/170314-tradition-vs-innovation/


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More photos from the Life magazine photo shoot, see this post for the full series of photos of Krishnamacharya's students. http://grimmly2007.blogspot.jp/2017/02/krishnamacharyas-mysore-yoga-students.html

Set 3
T R S Sharma

Note: TRS Sharma is interviewed in the upcoming documentary 
'The Mysore Yoga Tradition', see at 1:48 in the movie's trailer 
at the end of post.




 


I like the thought of broadening our perspective of Ashtanga from one scene, one teacher, one family to that of Mysore itself. It's no coincidence that Ashtanga vinyasa arose in that city and at that time, we can look to the Royal family and their patronage of Krishnamacharya, we can look to the Sanskrit college where Krishnamacharya and later Pattabhi Jois, taught. We can also make ourselves more aware of the great work being done in Mysore to preserve ancient texts and palm leaf manuscripts. If the fabled Yoga Korunta ever existed, these may well be the people to discover, digitise, translate and preserve....., as well as other equally fabulous works.

Preserving palm leaf manuscripts



Attending the retreat (https://www.mysoreyogatraditions.com/mysore-retreat), purchasing ( https://www.mysoreyogatraditions.com/purchase ) and watching the documentary are two ways to support that work too long neglected by the Ashtanga community, another is to donate directly here https://www.mysoreyogatraditions.com/manuscript-preservation

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Rebuilding Primary Asana - Choosing an asana teacher or asana instruction

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I mentioned that I was planning on rebuilding my Primary asana 'group' practice for the Mysore Yoga Tradition Retreat that I'm attending in February 2019. Rebuilding because I had washed my hands of Ashtanga for three months or so, practicing Tai chi, Qigong, Simon Borg-Olivier's Spinal sequence instead, out of disappointment at the response of the Ashtanga community to the revelations of Pattabhi Jois' abuse. But even before then, I had started to practice fewer asana (see Proficient Primary), preferring less asana, less...intricate asana, but with longer stays and Krishnamacharya's kumbhaka option, outlined in his books Yoga Makaranda (Mysore 1934) and Yogasanagalu (Mysore 1941) but perhaps not imparted to the boys of the palace.

https://www.mysoreyogatraditions.com/mysore-retreat and see previous post.

I was asked how I intended to go about rebuilding my Primary group.

Gently.

Rather than just jump back in..., or rather jump back through between sides, I'm only including jump backs between actual postures while I rebuild some strength, as well as some fitness, later I'll add the jump backs between sides as well, just in case I end up in a full led Primary on the retreat.

I see this too as a good opportunity to look closely once again at my approach to the asana I practice, to that end I'm reviewing Simon Borg-Olivier's excellent 84 key asana on-line course based on the asana of the Ashtanga series (note I've provided an Ashtanga asana concordance on the blog post below.

See this post: http://grimmly2007.blogspot.com/2017/04/what-is-it-about-mudra-also-simon-borg.html

I can imagine some shaking of heads because Simon, strictly speaking, isn't what many would consider a 'traditional' Ashtanga teacher.

There is often this idea, especially outside Ashtanga circles, of an Ashtanga teacher as a wide eyed, obsessive, bootcamp, drill sergeant of a yoga teacher. That they get up at 4am each morning to practice Full Primary, Second AND Third series ( at least) on nothing but four cups of coffee, except on rest and moon days when they would rather cut off an ear than practice anything resembling a sun salutation. That they are up to date on their authorisation from Mysore, where they visit religiously every year, sitting at the very front row during conferences hanging on every word. That they would NEVER post a photo on Instagram of a posture they haven't personally been given by the Overguru himself or, perish the thought, assist, adjust, teach or give a posture to a student outside of the series they have official, unrescinded, authorisation for. Such a teacher, is of course first to man the barricades, to join the inquisition against any questioning of the holy, unchanging, method.

Only such a dedicated devotee of the one true yoga practice is surely qualified to teach Ashtanga.

Nope, don't know anyone like that either.

Perhaps a few start off a little like that, a little, but I suspect that after a year or two of teaching actual students most soften somewhat in favour of the needs of the student rather than the preservation of a catechism.

I prefer room holders should I happen to find myself in need of a space to practice. I personally don't wish to be assisted, as a home practitioner I learned the asana of the different series by myself at home. We'll get deeper into a posture over time... or not, an alternative preparatory posture or alternative has always seemed preferable to a 'crank', Manju for instance suggests bharadvajrasana for those who sturggle with Marichiyasana D ( Which btw was in Krishnamacharya's Middle group asana not Primary group) it's personal preference and I hear Sharath adjusts less and less. I have been assisted/adjusted in the past, I've attended Ashtanga yoga London on a couple of Sundays, workshops with Richard Freeman, Norman Sjoman, John Scott, two teacher trainings with Manju Jois based on adjustments and assists and I spent three months with Kristina Karitinou in Crete. All excellent teachers, I've learned a lot from all of them, but I still don't wish to be physically adjusted.


I do have affection for the romantic image of the Mysore teacher practicing in an empty shala before everyone arrives, inspiring the shala attendees to similar devotion in their daily practice, it's the approach I would personally like to take. But I also like and have great respect and admiration for the teachers who 'go to the student', meeting them in studios, in gyms, in their homes, their offices, going to them rather than waiting, hoping...., expecting students to come to a shala.  Here In Japan I have come across so many who practice their yoga for an hour once a week, it doesn't seem enough, we need to inspire more home practice, ten, twenty minutes, in their homes, several mornings or evenings a week, a place to start perhaps on top of their visit to a shala or studio once or twice a month.

Krishnamacharya, was all about spreading yoga, rather than making it exclusive, his books were published free by the Mysore palace, the idea was to spread yoga not hide it away. As much as we might like to think so, the Ashtanga shala can hardly be considered traditional, it was an anomaly. As well as the unusual circumstance that brought about Krishnamacharya teaching the boys of the palace he would also teach his 'Mysore yoga', his Vinyasa Krama, in the side rooms of the palace, private students that he no doubt taught in a similar way to Ramaswami when he would go Ramaswami's family's house and give different asana for each member of the Ramaswami family (we see the same approach to shoulderstand and headstand vinyasa in the 1938 documentary video of Krishnamacharya practicing as he taught to Ramaswami).

A fixed sequence is a excellent tool perhaps in a shala but outside of the shala, we need to adapt, modify, make our Mysore yoga accessible to the student, just as Krishnamacharya always did, in Mysore and later.

see this post
http://grimmly2007.blogspot.com/2012/10/yvonne-millerand-student-of.html
Krishnamacharya teaching Yvonne Millerand in his house - note the old Yoga Makaranda photos
that used to hang in the shala in the Mysore palace.
As long as a teacher has spent some time doing the work of an ashtanga practice then I figure they 'get it', they don't have to be getting up at 4am every morning now, this is a householder practice. Jois himself mentioned in his book Yoga Mala that our practice would change over time, that we might practice less, Krishnamacharya wrote the same '...we don't need to practice all the asana but some should, to stop them from being lost again'. Likewise, I don't see that a teacher needs to be practicing a strict by-the-book Ashtanga or a full ashtanga series necessarily right now. Pattabhi Jois supposedly wasn't himself practicing any of the series when David Willams and Nancy Gilgoff first came to Mysore. In all the time he was teaching he supposedly never practiced a single Primary series.

In fact, I raised the question in a post as to whether Pattabhi Jois ever practiced any of the sequences he shared with his students.

http://grimmly2007.blogspot.com/2015/08/did-pattabhi-jois-practice-some-or-all.html

Pattabhi Jois was instructed by Krishnamacharya who taught more in 'groups of asana' rather than fixed sequences. Looking at the early photos of Jois, it's questionable as to whether he ever practiced many of those intermediate and advanced postures daily.

Kumbhaka options from Krishnamacharya's Yoga Makaranda  Mysore 1934

Were I to seek an Asana teacher, a Mysore yoga teacher, I would want a teacher who has practiced Mysore derived yoga with sincerity and dedication for an extended period at some point in their lives, who has good anatomy and physiology awareness, who has explored their asana in workshops perhaps with inspiring, and equally inquisitive, teachers who break asana apart and rebuild them rather than teaching fancy tricks and flourishes. I'd want a teacher who has reflected on their practice undogmatically, who has taught for a number of years, who is held in esteem and affection and strongly recommended by their long term students, preferable somebody who is a little older (though not necessarily older than me) who has had to deal with changes in their body, in their life experiences and yet still have a practice that is important to them, whatever time of day they happen to fit in their practice and however many asana they choose to include that day. I'd expect them to have explored some pranayama, have begun to Sit, long enough at least to decide if these other limbs feel of value to them.

You are as likely, to find such a teacher in a gym, a studio, a home practice room, as in an exclusively Ashtanga shala. It's always worth remembering that a flexible approach to asana sequencing is MORE authentic, more in keeping with Pattabhi Jois' teacher Krishnamacharya than the fixed series Jois employed as a tool for his Sanskrit college boys to learn (and be tested on) Asana.


Note: I may be rebuilding my Primary for the retreat but afterwards, I'm likely to go back to Simon's Spinal sequence for standing, four or five Proficient Primary postures and Krishnamacharya's shoulderstand and headstand vinyasas.

Review Mysore Yoga traditions Documentary. Also. Attending the related retreat in Mysore (feb 2019)

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Reposting from this time last year

UPDATE Oct 9th 2018


Looking forward to attending this...


Mysore Yoga Traditions Retreat and Conference

February 8-22  2019

https://www.mysoreyogatraditions.com/mysore-retreat

https://www.mysoreyogatraditions.com/

I like the thought of broadening our perspective of Ashtanga vinyasa out from one scene, one teacher, one family to that of Mysore itself, to the practice, practitioners and teachers the city has inspired, to the philosophical traditions from which it derives. This is, for me, personally at least, perhaps a way back to a practice I loved for so long after the upheaval of the last year.

It's no coincidence that Ashtanga vinyasa arose in that city and at that time, we can look to the Royal family and their patronage of Krishnamacharya, we can look to the Sanskrit college where Krishnamacharya and later Pattabhi Jois, taught. Ashtangi's know their practice is a Mysore practice but If you practice Iyengar yoga be reminded that Iyengar learned his yoga here, Iyengar yoga is as much Mysore as Pune. The Vinyasa Krama of Ramaswami, Mohan, Desikachar? We can see in Krishnamacharya's inversion vinyasas, in the 1938 Mysore documentary footage, the same vinyasas that these students of Krishnamacharya would later teach (we also see Krishnamachrya practicing Acroyoga with his kids in the same documentary).



***

"And by the time I got to 16, I was able to do some 300 asanas with all the variations of course, because Sri krishnamacharya believed in a kind of innovating. There was nothing like a set, fixed kind of postures. So he would not insist that everyone has to follow the same regime, the same series of asana. One thing is , he was very particular about surya namaskara, you start your yoga with surya namaskara, after that the world is free. You are free to sort of innovate on postures. But Surya namaskara is an important thing. IT's kind of an introduction to the entire thing." 
T.R.S. SHARMA Mysore Yoga Tradition 2017

This quote by T.R.S. SHARMA in the excellent new documentary Mysore Yoga Traditions, released last month, was a bit of a game changer for me. Up until now I had tended to think that Krishnamacharya was perhaps somewhat dismissive of the practice of Surya namaskara, perhaps considering them little more than a fitness fad of the time (see my earlier post
 http://grimmly2007.blogspot.jp/2012/05/balasahibs-original-1928-suya-namaskar.html ). And that it was Krishnamacharya's young student Pattabhi Jois (said to have been asked to teach a three or four year course at the Sanskrit college) who added the Surya namaskara's to the beginning of the practice of the asana we find in Krishnamacharya's table of asana (Yogasanagalu (Mysore 1941). That Surya namaskara practice, along with practicing Krishnamacharya's table as fixed series rather than flexible groups that constituted Pattabhi Jois' main contribution to the formation of Ashtanga Vinyasa. I was mistaken, T.R.S. SHARMA is clear, Surya namaskara WAS important for Krishnamacharya. After their inclusion we are free to choose our practice, as well as to innovate, what is appropriate for us that morning.  This of course ties in with how Krishnamacharya continued to teach throughout his life, how Ramaswami , who encountered Krishnamacharya soon after the later left Mysore, presents his studies with his teacher.

Note: As much as I love and respect Manju, I strongly disagree with him here when he argues in the movie that it was his father Pattabhi Jois who researched and constructed the sequences of asana that make up Ashtanga Vinyasa. We have Krishnamacharya's table of asana in his Yogasanagalu (Mysore 1941) 
http://grimmly2007.blogspot.jp/p/yogasanagalu-translation-project.html, the first two series of Ashtanga closely follow the layout of asana in the table, with only minor reordering. The difference, as T.R.S. Sharma points out, is that for Krishnamacharya the practice of the asana was flexible, for Pattabhi Jois more fixed (See this recent post http://grimmly2007.blogspot.jp/2017/09/manju-jois-new-workshop-video-q-and.html). 

Manju stresses that there were originally only three series, Primary, Intermediate and Advanced, I would argue that it is with the advanced asana that Pattabhi Jois had the most input, arranging Krishnamacharya's jumble of proficient group asana into first one series 'Advanced', then two, 'Advanced A and B' and then finally four advanced series 3rd to 6th series (note: We can see most of the Advanced asana found in Ashtanga's 3rd to 6th series demonstrated by Iyengar in the 1938 documentary footage of Krishnamacharya, his family and students).

Of course Pattabhi Jois also mentioned that advanced asana were merely for demonstration, just as Krishnamacharya had suggested they were unnecessary for most but that some should practice them if only for the sake of preservation.

Ashtanga Vinyasa, it's origin and continuation is but one part of the story the documentary Mysore Yoga Traditions has to tell, I strongly recommend watching it, it is no coincidence that Ashtanga vinyasa evolved in Mysore, this is a city that has a long tradition of of investigating, preserving and teaching the history of yoga and it's texts through, among others, the venerable institution of the Sanskrit college and Mysore library.

Below. the trailer for the movie along with some info from the website and some more clips, the 

Mysore Yoga Traditions Official Trailer 

"Mysore Yoga Traditions! It is a tale to tell. Our original intention was to make a film about the life and teachings of our teacher Sri BNS Iyengar in honor of his 90th birthday. I had been asking for 3 years. But at the last moment, he changed his mind and flatly refused. An important part of his teachings has always been about rejecting fame and fortune, self-promotion and the egotism that goes with it. We knew better than to press the issue. But we went to Mysore anyway to see Guruji and see what would happen with the documentary idea. What happened totally blew our minds! Through luck, chance, good fortune and the tireless efforts of Kanchan Mala we were able to interview Her Royal Highness Sri Satya Pramoda Devi, the Queen of Mysore, as well as Bhashyam Iyengar, the principal of the Maharaja's Sanskrit College in Mysore (the college where Krishnamacharya and Pattabhi Jois taught) several of the professors there including MA Alwar, Gangadhar Bhat, Satya Nariana, Jayashree and Narasimhan of the Ananta Research Institute,TRS Sharma, Yamini Muthana, Sri Laxmi Thathachar the President of the Samskrti Institute, and many others. Guruji finally agreed to an interview in the end - he just didn't want to make a documentary only about himself. Becuase of this our documentary broadened exponentially and we owe it all to him! That level of detachment is why we call him Guruji.


What we came up with was a deep look into the yoga tradition in Mysore, how it has evolved and the philosophy that it rests upon. Our documentary will be an unbiased collection of statements from the intellectual community in Mysore about how they see their own yoga tradition. We were able to ask the questions that have always been in the back of our minds such as....How old is the Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga we are practicing in the west today and how did it evolve into it's current state? How do they feel about the idea that western exercise systems have influenced it? And how do they feel about the way yoga is being taught and practiced around the world today, among many other topics.

We left Mysore with our hearts full and tears in our eyes at the warmth, generosity, astounding level of knowledge, and deep sincerity of the great men and women we interviewed. We are extremely grateful to all of them! These interviews could never have happened without the help of Kanchan Mala who worked tirelessly to arrange them and convinced people who normally would never be interested in such things to give us interviews.

Also, I have to express my deep gratitude to Dallos Paz, our video man, Joey Paz who did nearly all of the long tedious job of transcribing these interviews, Kelly O'Roke who has been extremely generous and took so many amazing still shots, and Bryce Delbridge who supported all of us with utmost sincerity. Without these beautiful souls, this documentary could never have taken place".


MYSORE

Pattabhi Jois: Asthanga finds its Way to the West

Sri K. Pattabhi Jois was certainly the person who communicated Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga to the west. Without even speaking English fluently, he managed to create huge enthusiasm and dedication in his students. In my eyes, he was a creative genius. He systematized the asanas in a way that made sense and that many people could practice and memorize. To this day, his sequencing and approach is very influential in many forms of yoga throughout the world. His method of teaching turned out some of the finest western practitioners ever, and really ignited a fire in many people. And true to his culture, the way all good Indian teachers do, Sri K. Pattabhi Jois handed all the credit back to his teacher and the tradition that he came from. He never said a word about any of his own contributions.
I think that is where the confusion comes in. He insisted that yoga is ancient, that he was teaching a good method, and that his students should stick to it. What’s wrong with that? There is a lot of humbleness and dedication expressed there. To me, it is endearing! Especially in the yoga scene of today where everyone is trying so hard to think of any possible new twist to put on yoga. The moment anyone thinks of a good idea to add to yoga, they will usually try to brand it, copyright it, and take it to the bank! We have every kind of yoga imaginable now. We are so attached to the material aspects of the practice that we miss the point of the whole thing. We bicker and quarrel about asana sequences that are very modern in light of yoga’s long history, and fail to see the deep, beautiful community and culture that gave them to us.

 As David Williams used to say “Before practice the theory is useless, and after practice the theory is obvious.” Theory and practice: “Before practice the theory is useless, and after practice the theory is obvious.”

'Never changed anything' (said to be Krishnamacharya and Pattabhi Jois's reply when asked about the 'system they taught): Why does every teacher insist on having been giving precisely this sequence from his teacher, who received it from his teacher (and from his teacher and from his teacher…)?

Not every teacher does. My teacher, Sri BNS Iyengar, who just turned 90, teaches a slightly different sequence of Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga. He can be very innovative when working with advanced students. In fact, no two teachers teach every nuance of yoga exactly the same. No matter how hard we try, it is impossible. I think there is a good reason for fixed sequences. Having an underlying system in common is a brilliant thing and has had a very positive impact on yoga, in my view. The fixed sequences are like the scales a classically trained musician must learn. Anyone trained in the Ashtanga sequences of Sri K. Pattabhi Jois or Sri BNS Iyengar has a particular grace and competency gained through repetition of movement that is very noticeable. I think Sri K. Pattabhi Jois may have made a bigger contribution than anyone else in this regard. When the sequences are fixed, the practice becomes much more concentrated and the standard goes up exponentially.

So in my view, the asanas we are practicing do come from a long tradition. And the yoga community  they come from is very old indeed. They just happen to be a little more recently formatted than we would have liked to think. Yoga has been around forever and taken many forms.



Appendix


Here are some screenshots of the scene with T.R.S. SHARMA quoted above.










A short introduction to TRS Sharma from a recent workshop


"Ashtanga Yoga Studio is very honored to host a Skype lecture with TRS Sharma! This is an amazing opportunity to hear the thoughts and views of someone who studied extensively with T. Krishnamacharya during his early days in Mysore. TRS Sharma began to practice yoga with Krishnamacharya at the age of 12. Krishnamacharya is considered by many to be the father of modern yoga. Mr. Sharma grew up in the heart of the yoga tradition in Mysore. He comes from a long line of Sanskrit scholars and priests. Experts are now saying that at least half of the yoga postures practiced outside of India have been directly influenced by Krishnamacharya. Because he was educated in America, Mr. Sharma has a unique insight a very articulate view of how yoga has unfolded into Western culture. Mr. Sharma is particularly interested in the way Indian and Western culture have blended together, and the parallels as well as the stark differences in our views. He will be speaking about the history of the yoga we are practicing today, as well as the cultural and philosophical background that it has come from. There will be time for questions and answers at the end.
Have you have ever been curious about the origins yoga we are practicing today? Just who are the keepers of this knowledge? What do they think about the way we practice yoga today? Mysore holds those secrets. This is a rare and special opportunity!
Everyone is welcome!"

https://www.ashtangayoga.info/ashtangayoga/tradition/170314-tradition-vs-innovation/


*

More photos from the Life magazine photo shoot, see this post for the full series of photos of Krishnamacharya's students. http://grimmly2007.blogspot.jp/2017/02/krishnamacharyas-mysore-yoga-students.html


I like the thought of broadening our perspective of Ashtanga from one scene, one teacher, one family to that of Mysore itself. It's no coincidence that Ashtanga vinyasa arose in that city and at that time, we can look to the Royal family and their patronage of Krishnamacharya, we can look to the Sanskrit college where Krishnamacharya and later Pattabhi Jois, taught. We can also make ourselves more aware of the great work being done in Mysore to preserve ancient texts and palm leaf manuscripts. If the fabled Yoga Korunta ever existed, these may well be the people to discover, digitise, translate and preserve....., as well as other equally fabulous works.




Ashtavakra - November 2018 newsletter from Srivatsa Ramaswami

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I am sending this monthly letter early as I am scheduled to teach a weeklong yoga program-various vinyasakrama asana sequences and the Yoga Sutra- at Yoga Kanda in Santiago Chile from Oct 29th to November 3rd 2018

In October I taught a five day yoga program at Liz Richard's Ananta Yoga in Wicklow, Ireland. The program was well organized and well attended. Several topics--asanas and vinyasa sequences and many other discussions that would be of interest to serious yoga practitioners formed the contents of the program

Ireland 1.jpg


Ireland 2.jpg



I also taught a weekend yoga program at   Yoga la Source  in Luxembourg on five different yoga topics. Nice compact group attended the program.  

Lux Pix 2.jpg


Ashtavakra

One of the ways to impress others with asanas is to perform Ashtavakra asana named after the sage Ashtavakra. The adorable asana of contorsions named after Ashtavakra means an asana with eight deformities. Nobody knows how he looked like but some yogis came out with this unique posture that has caught the imagination of many yogasana experts.

Ashtavakra was a great vedic scholar. His work, 'Ashtavakra Samhita' is a vedantic masterpiece, bold and sweeping following the advaita school, like the Mandukya Karika of Gaudapada. Here a is a story about the sage

Ashtavakra's story is found in the itihasas, the Ramayana and the Mahabharata and also in the vedas. Uddalaka was a great Rishi belonging to the Sama Veda clan. He is credited with the great mantra "Tat tvam asi" or "That thou Art". He taught the Truth that the individual self and the supreme self are one and the same to his son Svetaketu. Uddalaka had another student by name Kahola.After completion of Kahola's  studentship, sage Uddalaka offered his daughter Sujata in marriage to his disciple Kahola. Both the young coupe set up then an ashram in a forest,where Kahola was performing his vedic duties. In due course Sujatha was in the family way. Once when Kahola was chanting some vedic mantras, it would appear he made some errors in the recitation of the mantras. The infant in the womb having heard the recitation of his father pointed out aloud the errors in his father's chants. In a fit of uncontrolled anger Kahola cursed the foetus to be born with eight deformities in his body.
"Rishayah satyavachasah". Rishis are those who speak the truth or whatever they say become true. Because they are truth speakers, whatever they say come true, whether it is anugraha or blessing or saapa or curse.

 Then there was drought. The sage and his wife struggled in the ashram and then Sujata suggested that Kahola go to a vedic debate then organized by King Janaka in the city of Mithila. He could with his scholarship  win the debate and earn some gift from the King. That was the plan. Kahola went to the King's chamber and offered himself as a contestant in the debate. At that time a member of the Varuna loka had taken the guise of a Brahmana and was defeating all the contestants and Kahola was pitted against him. The debate started and towards the end, the Varuna kula Brahmana asked the meaning of the eight mantras that the foetus had found fault with the recitation of Kahola earlier even while in the womb. Kahola having not corrected his understanding repeated the same mistake and thus was defeated. He was arrested and taken to Varuna loka and submerged in water.

In due course Sujatha gave birth to a child deformed in eight places  Uddalaka took his daughter and grandson under his care.The child, known as Ashtavakra (ashta= eight, vakra= deformity) because of the 8 bodily deformities grew up as a brilliant vedic scholar.He considered Uddalaka as his father. Until he was about 10 he did not know about his biological father or his fate. Then he came to know about his father and what happened to him. He decided then to liberate his father from the clutches of Varuna.
The young Ashtavakra reached Mithila after a very arduous journey made more painful because of the physical challenges. As soon as he reached the palace to meet the King, he was stopped by the gatekeeper. But Ashtavakra convinced him that he was a genuine contestant. When he reached the King's court and  declared that he was a contestant and ready to meet anyone on a debate on Vedas, the whole court burst into derisive laughter--looking at Ashtavakra's body and his youth.
The next moment Ashtavakra himself laughed and loudly declared that the scholars in the King's court were just like cobblers who look only at the skin (hide) and not what is within. The cobblers know a lot about the skin(hide) like its smoothness, flexibility and other characteristics but not what was covered  the skin. Likewise these scholars only look at the outward deformities of him and not the wisdom and nature of Self within him. They did not see the atma. They have no realization of the Atman  and the Supreme Soul  the Paramatma and their oneness.. They were simply seeing the skin and they were making their judgements on this basis of their skin deep knowledge only. This attitude was that  of the shoemakers; they only looked at skin.  He derided them as no more wise than an ordinary cobbler from the spiritual or vedic viewpoint.  He concluded by saying that the assembly is incapable of any worthwhile discussion and he had wasted his time and energy to reach the King's court to debate with unwise shallow people.

Janaka and everyone in the assembly were deeply moved and cringed on hearing the words of Ashtavakra.  Simple and direct were his words, but absolutely true. Janaka bowed down to Ashtavakra in reverence. He escorted Ashtavakra to his own throne and washed his feet and profusely apologized.
 The King without participating in the light hearted attitude of others asked him a few questions and felt that the  boy was not a pushover and asked him to debate the reigning champion at that time, the Brahmana from Varuna loka. 

The debate started in right earnest.

 Vandin, the scholar from Varunaloka  and Ashtavakra began the debate. Finally to explain their thesis each one would have to alternately compose slokas or verses until one stumbles.  They alternately composed six extempore verses on the numbers upto twelve. Then Vandin could only compose the first half of a verse on the number thirteen. Ashtavakra completed the verse by composing the second half and thus won the debate against Vandin.

The condition of the contest was that if Vandin were to lose he would grant any wish of his vanquisher and if Ashtavakra would lose the contest he would meet the same fate as his father which was that he would be arrested and submerged in the waters of Varuna loka. . Ashtavakra having won his debate demanded his pound of flesh. He demanded that Vandin be drowned in water just as he had done his vanquished opponents. Vandin then revealed that he was the son of Varuṇa (the Lord of all water bodies), and was sent incognito to earth to get rishis to conduct a ritual that Varuṇa wanted to perform. By this time Varuṇa’s ritual had been completed. On Vandin’s request, Varuṇa ordered the sages and brahmins be brought to the surface of the waters they had been held in.

The father, Kahola was immensely pleased with his son, he no longer saw the deformity but the wisdom and  shining pure Atman within him. On the way home Kahola asked his son to take a dip in a sacred river and as the story goes Ashtavakra's curse given by his father was removed and Ashtavakra shone beautifully, both outwardly and inwardly.

Ashtavakra became famous by his immortal work, Ashtavakra Samhita  a very popular text even among modern day scholars interested in vedanta philosophy. It is forthright and breathtaking in its freshness and candour.  While Yogis know Ashtavakra by his outward form in Ashtavakra asana, those interested in his work are able to fathom his incisive insight about Atman  that is deep within the deformed bodies.

Srivatsa Ramaswami

https://groups.google.com/forum/?hl=en#!forum/vinyasa-krama-announce


***

I have a an old post

Ashtanga Rishi Series made up of Rishi asana?

http://grimmly2007.blogspot.com/2012/11/this-interesting-comment-on-one-of-my.html

"Our ancients, the great rishis, followers of their sanatana dharma (ancient eternal path) from the beginning of time, became experts in yama, niyama, asana, pranayama, pratyahara, dharana, dhyana, and samadhi, stopped all external movements of the mind, and through the path of raja yoga attained a high state of happiness in this world and beyond. And they continue until this day to experience this. But during ancient times, all were skilled yoga practitioners and therefore had good health and strength, were blessed with a long life and were able to serve society". 
Krishnamacharya Yoga Makaranda (Mysore 1934).





Ganglion Cyst, wrist pain and alternatives to Sun Salutations, jump backs and through.

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I currently have a Ganglion cysts on the top of my left wrist making jump back and through as well as Sun salutations uncomfortable at best. I was reminded of these alternatives to sun salutations from my friend Simon Borg-Olivier.

I occasionally used to do the standing version as a warm up and am now practicing this daily in place of my Surys. I tend to practice Simon's spinal movements, his sun salutation alternative ( the third one on the video below 2:44) followed by Simon's short on one leg sequence. I'll then practice a few standing postures before moving on to a short Vinyasa krama Seated and Asymmetric sequence (along the lines of the first half of Ashtanga primary but without transitions) and finish with head and shoulder-stands and finally Simon's Pranayama and a Sit.

Link to Simon and Bianca's Yoga Synergy website here.


As for the ganglion Cyst, it should go away on it's own.
*banging with a book, supposedly not recommended.





Third Sun salutation Alternative method.

"
METHOD 3:
Standing 'Salute to the Sun' (Supta Surya Namaskar):

This is potentially the simplest version of the 'salute to the sun' but it may be the best for most people to practice as it is the safest and least stressful, yet it safely moves the spine through its full range of flexion and extension movement and thus nourishes the spine, trunk and internal organs".


Tricky to get the snapshots just right but this should give the idea. Captions from Simon's YouTube notes - see my appendix 2 for the full notes.


samasthiti
(standing erect with neutral spine)


Ekam, 
inhale, urdhva hastasana ('arms above head' posture) (trunk and neck in extension)

Dve, 
exhale, uttanasana ('hands to the floor, head to knee' posture) (trunk and neck in flexion)

 Trini, 
inhale, lolasana (raise the head and perhaps lift the feet off the floor to handstand) (trunk in flexion, neck in extension)

Chatvari, 
exhale, chataranga dandasana ('push-up' position) (straight trunk)
 

 Pancha, 
inhale, urdhva mukha svanasana ('upward-facing dog' posture) (trunk and neck in extension)

Shat, 
exhale, adho mukha svanasana ('downward-facing dog' posture)

Sapta, 
inhale, lolasana ('jump' or 'balance on arms') (trunk in flexion, neck in extension)

Astau,
exhale, uttanasana ('hands to the floor, head to knee'' posture) (trunk and neck in flexion)

Nava, 
inhale, urdhva hastasana ('arms above head' posture) (trunk and neck in extension)

Dasa, 
exhale, samasthiti (standing erect with neutral spine)


Link to Simon and Bianca's Yoga Synergy website here.


Simon's own page here


All the courses there are excellent but check out too Simon's courses on Omstars, his yoga fundamentals is I think an excellent overview and introduction to his approach






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Appendix 1

This Vinyasa Krama lead-in to dandasana option is perfect for moving to seated practice although I don't turn the hands out so much with the cyst. from my earlier post on coping with wrist pain
http://grimmly2007.blogspot.com/2015/10/practicing-with-wrist-strain-how.html






*

Appendix 2

from Simon's yoTube post.
from the youTube post

There are many ways of doing posture and movement. I think it is important to always check you can get into any position without the help of external forces such as gravity. In this video I demonstrate three ways to do the main spinal movements of the Salute to the Sun (Surya Namaskar) using the same breathing sequence, the same spinal movements and the same postures but with different orientations to gravity.

GENERAL INSTRUCTIONS FOR SURYA NAMASKAR: *** 1. Ekam, inhale, urdhva hastasana ('arms above head' posture) (trunk and neck in extension) *** 2. Dve, exhale, uttanasana ('hands to the floor, head to knee' posture) (trunk and neck in flexion) *** 3. Trini, inhale, lolasana (raise the head and perhaps lift the feet off the floor to handstand) (trunk in flexion, neck in extension) *** 4. Chatvari, exhale, chataranga dandasana ('push-up' position) (straight trunk) *** 5. Pancha, inhale, urdhva mukha svanasana ('upward-facing dog' posture) (trunk and neck in extension) *** 6. Shat, exhale, adho mukha svanasana ('downward-facing dog' posture) *** 7. Sapta, inhale, lolasana ('jump' or 'balance on arms') (trunk in flexion, neck in extension) *** 8. Astau, exhale, uttanasana ('hands to the floor, head to knee'' posture) (trunk and neck in flexion) *** 9. Nava, inhale, urdhva hastasana ('arms above head' posture) (trunk and neck in extension) *** 10. Dasa, exhale, samasthiti (standing erect with neutral spine) METHOD 1: Supine 'Salute to the Sun' (Supta Surya Namaskar): This is one of the variations of the supine Salute to the Sun I used to practice a lot when I broke my arm a few years ago and I could not put my hands on the floor for 5 months. This version uses the core to move the entire body and makes the entire body work against gravity in a way that prepares the body with active movements to eventually lift to handstand effortlessly. METHOD 2: Regular 'Salute to the Sun' (Supta Surya Namaskar): This is the usual method that people use for surya namaskar but the difference I demonstrate here is that for Trini (inhale) the trunk remains flexed (instead of becoming extended as many people teach and practice) while the head lifts to extension. This was as Sri K Pattabhi Jois intended, and this is a very strong core-activating posture that once mastered in the supine version of surya namaskar is a key to developing the ability to lift slowly into handstands as well as the key to relieving lower back pain. METHOD 3: Standing 'Salute to the Sun' (Supta Surya Namaskar): This is potentially the simplest version of the 'salute to the sun' but it may be the best for most people to practice as it is the safest and least stressful, yet it safely moves the spine through its full range of flexion and extension movement and thus nourishes the spine, trunk and internal organs. These three methods of practicing Surya Namaskar constitute one of the best ways to work to develop bandha, drishti and ujjayi pranayama for Ashtanga vinyasa yoga. You can also use these practices to develop the ability to be 'firm but calm' ('sthira sukham asana), and learn to do energising but potentially stressful activities in a peaceful, relaxing and loving way. If you would like to learn more please join our live or online training at http://yogasynergy.com/training . We have many online courses you can do from anywhere in the world and also live 200 hour teacher training courses in Goa India, The next courses are scheduled for November 2016 (200 hour) and March 2017 (300 hour) in Goa, India, where this video of me was filmed. Please also check out our blog at http://blog.yogasynergy.com for over a hundred articles with video links and you can also download our free 108 page e-book on 'How to Enhance your Health and Longevity'.


*

Appendix 3

One 12 minute version of Simon's Spinal Sequence



Along the lines of the one leg sequence I do for the hip joint complex, part 10 of 28


...and a later example/demonstration of these hip movements at 1:24 in this excellent video shot by Alessandro Sigismondi ( https://alessandrosigismondi.com/about/) for https://www.ohmme.com/





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Appendix 4


Below this is from a year ago and seems to be the practice (with some degree of refinement I hope after a year) that I keep coming back to. It includes one of these sun salutation variations 13 minutes in.


December Newsletter from Srivatsa Ramaswami--The Subject

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December Newsletter from Srivatsa Ramaswami--The Subject

Again I am sending this December 2018 newsletter early as I am leaving for India for an extended stay. Early November  I completed teaching a well attended six day program for Yoga Kanda in Santiago, Chile. It was organized by  Andrea Silva Maccioni   who attended my 200 Hr Teacher Training program a few years back at Loyola Marymount University, Los Angeles. It was a very heart warming experience. I taught several Vinyasakrama yoga sequences around several well known asanas.In the evenings I taught Yoga Sutras. Andrea and Pablo took turns to translate my talks and instructions to Spanish. I do not know Spanish, but it is a great pleasure listening to people talking in Spanish.  it sounds very nice, does it not?  "si"


Chile VK group 2018.jpg

Chile with pablo and andrea.jpg

Chile YS group 2018.jpg







For 2019 I have a few programs lined up. I will be teaching a 5 day program of Upanishad Vidyas at Yoga Vahinin Chennai in early January. I am scheduled to teach 100 hr Vinyasakrama yoga TT program at Yoga Vahini Chennai, One Yoga In Victoria (with Yogayagnyavalkya), Canada and Loyola Marymount University Los Angeles. I am also scheduled to teach Nathamini's Yoga Rahasya a rare text of Sri T Krishnamacharya at Yoga Chicago in Chicago. I may  also be teaching a 6 day program of vinyasas and samkhya Karika in Salt Lake City, Utah
For details and contact info visit my website


The Subject

When you have a basketful of green grass and extend it towards a cow, it will approach you but when you with an angry face and a raised arm wielding a big stick approach the cow, it will instinctively run away from you. Similarly I approach people who are friendly and helpful to me but run away from those or factors that are harmful and cause pain to me. Yes all creatures,animals and human being, spend the entire time working towards getting happiness (Pravritti) and avoid unhappiness (nivritti).  Then what is the difference between human beings and other animals. Human beings constantly invent new methods to humour themselves and avoid unhappiness like better clothes, housing, entertainment and newer and more powerful medicines and treatments. And some, not satisfied with the incremental happiness of mundane existence, would like to a quantum leap in happines by going to heaven hereafter.  But basically both animals and human beings are focussed on getting happiness and avoiding unhappiness 
But a few human beings sit back and ask a question that normally nobody asks and try to find answer to it. "All my life I am trying to keep myself happy and avoid unhappiness, sometimes I succeed and sometimes I do not. Who am I, what is my real nature,for whose happiness this person, this me works so hard? Then we may have a different body of knowledge, a vidya, called adhyatma vidya, knowing the nature of one Self or what constitutes the Self. 
Sages of Samkhya Yoga and Vedanta schools all try to help answer this question. The answer they provide  is awesome

"That the object (Vishaya) and the subject of those  objects (Vishayin) are two distinct entities is pretty obvious. They  are within the range of the meaning of the words ‘Yushmat (You)’ and ‘Asmat’ (I) respectively, and have natures as opposed to each other as light and darkness. It is clear and well established that they  cannot transform themselves into each other. That being the case the attributes of  these two also , cannot transform themselves into the nature of each other.  

And therefore, the superimposition or mixing up of the  object, on the subject which  is denoted by word ‘Asmat’  or 'I"and has pure awareness as its self,  is necessarily unreal (Mithya) or incorrect. All the same, it is a natural course of worldly conduct resulting from false-ignorance (Mithyajnana) (in a person) , to superimpose or mix up the object and the subject which are absolutely different from each other.  Mixing up or superimposing their respective attributes, mutually on each other, through failure to discriminate or distinguish either of them from each other, and by coupling truth and untruth together. This  leads to imagine thus — ‘I am this’, ‘This is mine’.  This is on the lines of the introduction to Brahma sutra by Adi Sankara

The body mind complex which is made up of organic matter and biological energy (prana )is identified erroneously by everyone from time immemorial as the Self. But it is an object for the  the Self whose only attribute is consciousness/awareness which is ever present without undergoing any change. This pure awareness is the one that is really the subject and is aware of the objects presented to it by the senses, coordinated by the manas ,analyzed by the buddhi and presented to the Subject for experience. The object includes, it is important to note, not only those presented through the senses but also the whole body mind complex. Thus the object will be both the body mind complex of the individual and the sense objects experienced. So superimposing   the body mind complex on  the subject which is only pure awareness is avidya. Likewise considering the pure awareness the never changing one which is the subject as having a physical body is to mistakenly attach a characteristic not belonging to the subject.  It will mean that all things, actions, associated with the physical person does not belong to the subject at all.

Yoga and Vedanta help us to understand and clearly see the separation of the real subject and the object.  The default understanding that the subject is the conscious individual with a body brain indriyas complex is a fundamental mistake. Looking at it differently, considering the brain body senses complex has consciousness is a mistake. Samkhya yoga and vedanta help us to recognize this fundamental mistake about the subject object dichotomy, humanity has been making from time immemorial. Every creature in one of the innumerous lives as a human being --after many many lives spent in pursuit of fleeting pleasures and happiness-- contemplates to realize that the subject is pure consciousness and is distinctly different from  whole universe observed through the senses along with the individual(erroneously considered as the subject) made up of the mind body indriyas complex as part of the observed universe.

-- 
http://groups.google.com/group/vinyasa-krama

2018 - My Year in Posts (Inc. food in Japan).

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Last year I went with local photos of Shiga, I thought  this year I would go with photos of some of the food I've been so lucky to have here in Japan this year. Thank you to M. and and also to my Father-in-law for many of these.

ITADAKIMASU


Lotus bulb


"In its simplest form, Itadakimasu 頂きますいただ    is used before receiving something. That's why the most common itadakimasu translation is:

頂きます(いただきます)
TO RECEIVE; TO GET; TO ACCEPT; TO TAKE (HUMBLE).
This explains why you say it before you eat. You're "receiving" food, after all.

Itadakimasu (and its dictionary form itadaku 頂くいただ ) comes from Japan's roots in Buddhism, which teaches respect for all living things. This thinking extends to mealtime in the form of thanks to the plants, animals, farmers, hunters, chefs, and everything that went into the meal".


2018 (38)

I've highlighted/recommended a post each month, Ramaswami's monthly newsletters are always recommended.


December (1)


Crab Nabe

Crab Nabe risotto




November (2)


Vegetable teriyaki

Ozoni



October (3)


grilled mackerel (saba shioyaki)


Korean Nabe





September (6)


Ishiyaki bibimbap




Unagi

Aubergine Unagidon style

Matcha ice cream


Cremia soft cream with a dusting of matcha

Tempura night

Aubergine with ponzu




Upanishad Vidyas - June 2018 Newsletter from Srivatsa Ramaswami June 2018 Newsletter from



May (1)


?

Shime Saba Oshizushi ( pressed marinated mackerel sushi)

Norimaki





April (4)


lentil pasta with fennel

caramel gelato






Bhagavad Gita as taught to Srivatsa Ramaswami by his teacher T. Krishnamacharya.



An Asana Tool Chest - The Ten main sequences of Vinyasa Krama Yoga.... in ten minutes.


Dhruva - March 2018 Newsletter from Srivatsa Ramaswami-



February (7)


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Previous years.


January 2019 Newsletter from Srivatsa Ramaswami--Practice - plus Three Appendix on How to practice Vinyasa Krama, Pranayama and Meditate.

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Ramaswami's New Year newsletter plus, based on Ramaswami's previous newsletters,....

Appendix 1: How to practice Vinyasa Krama
Appendix 2: How to practice Pranayama
Appendix 3: How to practice meditation


January 2019 Newsletter from Srivatsa Ramaswami--Practice

Wish you a very happy and prosperous year 2019.

I gave a one hour talk on Factors for developing a personal yoga practice to the participants of Saraswathi Vasudevan's (Yoga Vahini Chennai) two week workshop on "Developing a Personal Practice". 

Yoga Vahini Practice 2018.jpg
                                                                                                      
 I will be teaching a five day 20 hour workshop on Upanishad Vidyas at Yoga Vahini Chennai from January 2nd to 6th 2019.

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Practice

There are three important factors that should be considered for an appropriate personal yoga practice that can be sustained. Firstly the routine should be consistent with the stage of life. The second factor would be the condition of the individual, both physical and mental conditions. Thirdly it  would be 'what is the goal ' the aspirant has in mind.

Generally speaking during the early part of life when one is growing up, the yoga practice should aid the proper development of mind and body. A solid vinyasa krama practice doing a number of judiciously selected vinyasas with synchronized breathing will help exercise all the skeletal muscles and joints.This would help both rakta sanchara (blood circulation) and prana sanchara. In a matter of about 30 minutes one can do about 100 vinyasas including rest pauses. Further in the olden days even young children when they were initiated into vedic studies with upanayana they would be required to do mantra pranayama with nadi shodhana. In a day they may do about 40 pranayamas or so. This would help to reduce the tamas and clear the mental cobwebs and also remove effectively much of waste products in the system. About 15 minutes of pranayama in a good yogasana, strictly as taught by a competent and confident teacher, may be done daily. One of the practices that was done even from young age is some meditation procedure. Even simple japa of gayatri for say 108 times daily in the morning may be done by youngsters. It helps the young people to maintain a good concentration or ekagrata so very useful during the early student life. Japa is a very effective way to keep the mind to be able to concentrate easily, lest one loses the ability or samskara to remain focussed (ekagrata) and become easily distracted (vikshepa). It is good to be able to pay some attention to yama, niyamas also. While this procedure, known as vridhi krama,may be followed during the growing years a few variations may be brought in to take care of individual variations. Obese, stiff youngsters may use long exhalation in the vinyasa practice-- the langhana kriya. Youngsters who tend to be highly rajasic may do more asanas and vinyasas. On the other hand a tamasic person may concentrate on more pranayama practice and the one that tends to have problem with concentration may spend more time on mantra japa and chanting. 

But what about the rare young person who gets interested in the philosophy of yoga. Sometimes you find a sixty year old wanting to learn hand stand (viparita vrikshasana) like his grandson whereas a youngster may show enormous interest in the esoteric aspects of yoga, may be achieve kaivalya or jivan mukti. Such youngsters may start studying the rich yogic literature available like the sutras, samkhya karika, upanishads and other books. Asanas, vinyasas, pranayama, dharana meditation and japa and chanting may still be necessary for the philosophy interested youngster but should start to study these texts regularly and with intensity

The mid part of the life is important as one achieves whatever one can achieve during this phase of life. Very rarely much is achieved in old age, take it from me. so the yoga one practices should be helpful to maintain good mental and physical health. Hatayoga is a very comprehensive system to maintain good health. The three aspects of hatayoga, the asanas, pranayama and then the mudras facilitate reaching every part of the body. Yoga is a sarvanga sadhana--a practice for all parts of the body-- according to my Guru. It is able to benefit all parts (sarvanga). So in general middle aged people will do well to practice vinyasas in asanas and then spend a good amount of time in static asanas and in some of them like seated poses may practice appropriate pranayama practice. Pranayama is one of the most innovative procedures of yoga. It is thorough and is especially useful for  the two vital organs in the thoracic cavity, the lungs and the heart, svasakosa and hridayakosa. It is also said to reduce tamas or laziness. Then one should practice the mudras. The viparitakarani mudra also  is an outstanding innovation of hatayogis. It is the classic inversions, headstand or sirsasana and its variant Sarvangasana or what is known as shoulderstand. In both the asanas the head is on the ground. Staying in these poses for a significant amount of time say five to fifteen minutes is considered very beneficial. One may also take advantage of the inversion and practice long exhalation followed by mula bandha and uddiyana bandha for a short period of time.  In this way the fluids in the lower part of the body flow to the upper portion. The cerebrospinal fluid moves to the head and the venous blood in considerable quantity returns to the heart due to gravity and the bandhas. The inversions also help the various vital organs the heart, lungs, and other pelvic organs like the uterus return to the original position and the bandhas help to gently massage these organs and improve vascularity. These procedures, asanas with vinyasas, pranayama and static postures especially the inversions and other powerful asanas  like paschimatanasana mahamudra all help to access the internal organs and help to maintain their positional integrity and health. According to my Guru when the internal organs get displaced from their intended positions due to gravity, laxity, postural defects,  become less efficient and in due course become diseased and these inversions and special asanas with good recaka and the bandhas could be very helpful in maintaining health of different systems during middle age.. A few minutes of meditation would also help to improve one pointedness or concentration. Additionally chanting and study of the philosophy may be helpful. So this general approach will be stithi krama or maintenance of health during the mid part of the life.

 These may have to be modified for people with specific conditions. For instance people with upper respiratory problems may find some help with procedures like Kapalabhati  Nadisodhana and neti. Those who suffer from bronchial problem may find ujjayi breathing and headstand useful and bhastrika pranayama may be of help for people with lung problems like dry cough. These which will come under cikitsa krama or therapeutic approach may be learnt from a yoga therapist with the concurrence of the medical doctor whom  normally people consult nowadays. Medical profession is more tolerant to yoga these days.

The krama to be followed in old age will have to be different and is branded laya krama. People work less or completely retire during the last stage of life. Simple asanas and vinyasas. a few rounds of pranayama and japa will form the basic practice. Chanting and study and equally important contemplation on the concepts and truths enunciated in the texts like yoga sutra and vedanta may bring considerable peace and quiet to the mind. If one is religiously inclined prayer and bhakti yoga may be immensely helpful to keep the mind peaceful as one approaches the end.

Again, Happy New Year.
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Appendix 1

How to practice Vinyasa Krama




This months Newsletter from Ramaswami reminded me of an earlier newsletter of his from ten years ago that I put into bullet points upon request.

See this page that sits at the top of the blog perhaps for more.



How to practice Vinyasa Krama yoga 

(Ramaswami's September 2009 Newsletter in bullet points)


  • (Many who) have read the “Complete Book of Vinyasa Yoga” book... ask the question, what next? How can I do a daily practice from these sequences? 
  • There are more than 700 asanas/vinyasas and I normally recommend doing each vinyasa three times. At the rate of about 4/5 movements per minute (it could be even 3 per minute for good breathers), it could take about 8 to 9 hours to do the complete vinyasakrama. 
  • Then my Guru would commend doing a short stint of Pranayama, say for about 15 to 30 mts and then chanting or meditation  for another 15 to 30 mts, daily. 
  • We also have to consider that in asana practice, there are a few heavy weight poses which require one to stay for a long time. 
  • So it is almost impossible to practice all of it everyday even by a full time ‘practice-live-and-sleep-in yoga mat’ yogi. 
  • The book was written to give as complete as possible, a presentation of all the vinyasas  in a series of sequences that is logical and easy to learn, as I learnt from my Guru. 
  • It is a book for learning the system. 
  • Any serious student of yoga who would spend years studying and teaching yoga should have in one’s repertoire as many  asanas, vinyasas and logical sequences (krama) as possible. So, one  should firstly study the entire range of asanas and vinyasas of the  vinyasakrama system from a teacher say in the 60 hr vinyasakrama program. Then note down all the vinyasas that are a bit difficult to do. 
  • One should practice daily for half hour to one hour as many vinyasas as possible following the recommended sequence, with special emphasis on the difficult ones. 
  • In about six months to one year of consistent practice one would be comfortable with the system, the  sequences and especially the required synchronous breathing. This would complete the learning process. 
  • Then one may prepare a green list of asanas and vinyasas one would be able to do and wants to practice regularly. 
  • There will be another list, amber list which would contain  those vinyasas which are difficult now but one would like to practice them even if they are somewhat imperfect. 
  • Then there would be another red list which will contain procedures that are not appropriate or possible for the practitioner—which could probably be taken up in the next janma. 
  • Then it would be time for concentrating on using vinyasakrama for daily practice and also teaching to individuals for their daily yoga practice. 
  • However, as a general rule, for the serious mid-life yogi, a daily practice of about 90 mts to 2 hrs will be necessary and sufficient.
  • Here is modifiable one. 
  • After a short prayer, one could do a brief stint of Tadasana doing the main vinyasas two or preferably three times each. It should take about ten minutes. 
  • Then one subsequence in the asymmetric could be taken up, say Marichyasana or Triyangmukha or the half lotus. The choice may be varied on a daily basis. 
  • Five minute stay in Paschimatanasana and the counter poses may be practiced. 
  • Then one may do preparation of Sarvangasana and a brief stay in it, followed by headstand stay for about 5 to 10 minutes or more and then  staying in Sarvangasana for 5 to 10 more minutes, if one can do  inversions. 
  • Paschimatanasana, Sarvangaana and Headstand are to be practiced preferably daily for their health benefits.  
  • If time permits one may do few vinyasas in these inversions. 
  • One may do a subsequence of Triangle pose like warrior pose and /or one sequence in one legged pose.  
  • Mahamudra for about 5 minutes each on both sides can then be practiced.  
  • Then sitting in Vajrasana or Padmasana after doing some movements one should do a suitable variant of Kapalabhati, say for about 108 times  and then an appropriate Pranayama, Ujjayi, Nadisodhana or Viloma with or without mantras for about 15 minutes to be followed by five minutes Shanmukhimudra and then chanting or meditation of about 15 minutes.
  • The efficacy of Pranayama on the whole system and mind cannot be overemphasized. Please read the article on “Yoga for the Heart”, in an  earlier newsletter... It refers to the benefits of Pranayama to the  heart and the circulatory system. 
  • If interested, one may allocate an additional 30 minutes (or practice at another time in the day, say, in the evening) during which time one may practice a few subroutines from the other scores of sequences that have not been included in this core yoga practice.
  • Everyday before the start of the practice the yogi should take a minute and decide on a definite agenda and as far as possible try to stick to the agenda. What asanas and vinyasas, which pranayama and how many rounds and other details should be determined before hand and one should adhere to it. It brings some discipline and coherence to one’s practice. 
  • It is customary to end the practice with peace chant. 
  • One reason why people nowadays look for a definite  routine is because a few of the more popular vinyasa systems have a very small number of regimented sequences which are taught over and  over again almost to all students. So there is a mindset that there  should be a rigid sequence that is applicable for everyone, but that is not the way we learnt yoga from my Guru. 
  • Firstly the teacher should learn the whole system and then apply it to individuals as per the  requirements -- pick and choose those vinyasa sequences, pranayama and meditation practices, dietary requirements, etc.
  • The question that is to be answered is what does the practitioner want/need and how should the yoga routine be designed to get the required benefit. 
  • Vinyasakrama is like a yoga supermarket, and each one should put into the cart what one needs. 
  • And the term Vinyasakrama includes not just asanas but also other aspects of yoga like pranayama, meditation, etc. It is a progression of different aspects of Yoga. 
  • The Vinyasakrama  has a huge collection of asana vinyasas, a well stocked section on Pranayama, then the meditation department and a spiritual study/contemplation section as well. So a lot of initiative should be taken by the individual consumer, like our practitioner who should take the responsibility of working out with the teacher how to design an intelligent purposeful yoga practice pertaining to oneself. 
  • To reduce Vinyasakrama to a standard routine as is done with several other contemporary Vinyasa systems and put it in a straight jacket is not desirable. I have explained these ideas to many participants of the longer versions of the programs and thought to touch upon them for the general reader who would be wondering how to force the VK elephant (or a camel) into the needle’s eye of daily practice. 
  • There are a few serious practitioners who have their daily routine cut out, but then do the complete vinyasakrama separately say in the evening for about an hour so that they could go through all the vinyasa sequences in a span of one week. 
  • You have myriad possibilities. 
  • There is no one rigid universal daily practice routine in Vinyasakrama as I have explained.
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Appendix 1a

Note: though presented as 'Sequences' for pedagogic purposes, in practice one would select from the sequences appropriate asana, vinyasa, subroutines for each practice



The Ten main sequences of Vinyasa Krama Yoga.... in ten minutes.







The individual sequences - Overview



TADASANA





Practice Sheets - HERE



TRIANGLE




Practice Sheets - HERE



ON ONE LEG







Practice Sheets - HERE


ASYMMETRIC




Practice Sheets - HERE



SEATED




Practice Sheets - HERE


BOW






Practice Sheets - HERE



MEDITATIVE





Practice Sheets - HERE



SUPINE





Practice Sheets - HERE



INVERTED





Practice Sheets - HERE



LOTUS





Practice Sheets - HERE

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Resources


My Vinyasa Krama Sequences Site
(Practice sheets and links to videos of subroutines.)



My Vinyasa Krama Practice Site
(this includes all the tips hints, cautions etc that ended up in my book)



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Appendix 2

How to practice Pranayama


Introduction - Simon Borg-Olivier

I highly recommend these two articles by Simon Borg-Olivier with his background in Molecular biology as well as Physiotherapy (along with thirty odd years teaching)  as an introduction to pranayama.

"In this blog I will be discussing the the physical and physiological effects of breathing. There are two main reasons we breathe. The main reason is the physiological reason of getting oxygen into our cells. Perhaps surprisingly to many people the best way to achieve this is to safely breathe as little as possible (hypoventilation) to stimulate the Bohr effect which says significant carbon dioxide must be present for oxygen to be able to enter the cells (see our recent blog). The other reason we breathe could be called physical reason and it includes the effects on joints, muscles, nerves, the mind, emotions, blood floor, digestion, reproduction and immunity. In this blog on breathing (Part 1) I will be focusing on the physical effects of breathing. If you breathe, or use the muscles of breathing in certain ways you can radically improve and/alter strength, flexibility, nerve function, blood flow and internal organ health. Many people inadvertently only focus on this reason for breathing and in their enthusiasm and often lack of knowledge they over-breathe (hyperventilate) and thus miss the primary purpose of breathing. In the next blog on breathing (Part 2) I will be focusing on how to achieve the physiological effects of breathing. The advanced practitioner can control their breath in such a way the both the physical and physiological benefits of breathing are achieved at the same time".




*

Along the lines of how I was taught by Srivatsa Ramaswami

I've just posted a bunch of Pranayama videos on Youtube for the sister blog , Vinyasa Krama Sequences and subroutines and thought I'd make the most of them and make this Pranayama week here too. They basically outline stages in developing a practice, I've broken them down so you can start wherever you feel most comfortable.

The videos aren't great, the sound quality is poor, sorry, but if you crank up the volume I think you can get an idea of what's going on. Also, my chanting is quite awful, sounds a lot better in my head which is where it tends to stay. Mostly I give instruction and a count for the first round and then just do it for the next couple. I'd hoped the recording would pick up the sound of my breathing but it doesn't really catch it. In the later videos I try recording a voice over but that's a nightmare to sync. They are what they and if anyone is curious or had wanted to start building a practice they might be something to be going on with. I'll go into a little more detail on each video over the next couple of days but if your tempted to dive in right away here's a suggestion.

Start off with some Kapalibhati HERE and then move on through the main Pranayama videos. Try Pranayama 1 and 2 and see how comfortable that is, you might want to keep the exhale at an eight count rather than ten, that's fine. If your comfortable there give Nadi Shodana a try, videos 5 & 6, they have the same ratio. At this point you might want to try learning the Pranayama mantra (see the chant page at the top of the blog, it printed out as well as some MP3's of Ramaswami teaching it ) and chanting along, it has the same ratio as the first ujaii video. After a couple of days, sessions or weeks start increasing the ratios with videos 3 & 4 and/or 6 & 7. When your ready you might like to try and increase the retention of the breath long enough to chant the full mantra 15-20 seconds depending how fast you go. I tend to start off fast and then settle down to a slower chant half way through my practice.

If your linking here from the Youtube videos and aren't an Ashtangi then I should probably say something about bandhas. You could give them a miss at first and just go through the videos missing that part out altogether although some would argue it's not pranayama without them. Start with what feels comfortable, a nod in their direction perhaps. So three bandhas here, very very simply put Mula bahanda (rectal lock, just lightly clench and lift the rectal muscles for now, it gets more subtle as you go on), Uddiyana is where you see me draw in my belly and lift. Mine is a little extreme here, it's how I tend to practice but also makes clear what's going on for the video. To start with you might like to imagine a thread that draws your belly button back towards your spine, it's a start. The third lock is Jhalandara, throat lock, just bring your chin down towards your chest, ideally the space between your clavicle

The first four videos are straight forward Ujaii breathing (constrict the throat to make yourself sound a little like Darth Vader) building up the ratios. The first one is 1;1;1, five seconds inhale, five holding the breath and five exhaling. The second one has the same ratio but includes the bandhas so 1;1;1;1. The next one doubles the exhale 1;1;2;1 and the fourth doubles the holding of the inhale so 1;2;2;1 thats 5 second inhale/ 10 seconds hold /10 seconds exhale/ 5 seconds for the bandhas.

The next group, five, six and seven are basically doing the same thing, building up the ratios, but employ Nadi Shodana, alternating the nostrils.

Pranayama 8 is one of my favourites. It's Ujaii Pranayama but with mantra. While inhaling you chant in your head the first part of the Pranayama mantra then chant the second part while holding the breath and chant the final part as you exhale. I've made it 1;1;1;1; but you can slow down the speed of your chanting to change the ratio.

Pranayama 9 is my standard, everyday, Pranayama practice. The ratio is 1;4;2;1 and I chant the full pranayama mantra while retaining the breath after the inhale.

The final video is Viloma Ujaii with mantra and at the same ratio 1;4;2;1. This alternates the nostrils as in nadi Shaodana but also includes ujaii breathing. It's tricky but quite something once you get the hang of it.

I should also mention the Kapalibhati I put up a couple of weeks ago as I always do that before starting my Pranayama, kind of the link between my asana practice and the Pranayama.


123. yogic postures for `breathing exercises p247
The following Pranayamas are taken from Ramaswami's other book 'Yoga for the three stages of life'.
126. The Locks ( Bandhas) p250


2. LEARNING THE PRANAYAMA MANTRA

Pranayama Mantra


This is the original I received from Ramaswami



And cleaner version I made myself



Here it is again so you can format it as you wish


Pranayama Mantrah

प्राणायाम मन्त्रः 

ओं भूः  ओं भुवः  ओं सुवः 
ओं महः  ओं जनः  ओं तपः   ँ् सत्यं 

Om bhUh . Om bhuvaha . Ogm suvaha . 
Om mahaha . Om janaha . Om tapaha . Ogm satyam 

ओं तत् सवितुर्वरेण्यं भर्गो देवस्य धीमहि 
धियो यो नः प्रचोदयात् 

Om tat savitur varENiyam bhargO dEvasya dhImahi .
dhiyO yO nah pracOdayAte ..

ओमापो ज्योती-रसोऽमृतं-ब्रह्म भूर्भुवस्सुवरोम् 



OmApO jyOti rasO’amRutam brahma bhUrbhuvassuvarOm


Learn more chants by Srivatsa Ramaswami HERE




A TRANSLATION OF  THE PRANAYAMA MANTRA


And here's a link to a page that translates (below) and explains the mantra

AUM bhUH, AUM bhuvaH, AUM svaH, AUM mahaH
AUM janaH, AUM tapaH, AUM satyam

AUM, the primordial sound, resides in all elements of the universe. It permeates the earth (-bhUH), water (-bhuvaH), fire (-svaH), air (-mahaH), ether (-janaH), intelligence (-tapaH) and consciousness (-satyam).

AUM tatsaviturvarenyM bhargo devasya dhImahi
dhIyo yo nH prachodayAt.h.

We pay homage to Gayatri, the one who shines like the sun (tat savitur), the one who destroys all our sins through her everlasting and effulgent light. Dear Goddess Gayatri, please illuminate our path towards our higher consciousness and lead us to our true purpose in life

AUM Apo jyotiH rasomRRitaM
brahma bhUR bhuvaH svar AUM..

Please shine your light (-jyotiH) in our path so we may partake of the everlasting nectar (rasomRRitaM) of brahman while chanting the primordial sound, AUM'!


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Appendix 3

How to practice 'Meditation'



DRISHTI: Ashtanga and Meditation. How should one meditate in 33 bullet points. 

Download a pdf version of this whole post from my google docs page for later viewing
http://tinyurl.com/pcqkn2ehttp://tinyurl.com/pcqkn2e

"Ah! Meditation. The Yoga world is divided into two camps. On one side we have enthusiastic hatha yogis who specialize in asanas and the other group which believes fervently in meditation as a panacea for all the ills". Ramaswami Nov. 2009

A couple of years ago I put together what I like to think of as a short Yoga Meditation Manual for my own personal use ( I don't think I ever posted it and can't find my original), it's based on Ramaswami's  November 2009 newsletter  Meditating on Meditation (below), it's pretty much a numbering of the sentences outlining practice in the newsletter. I'd wondered why it was that we turn to the yoga tradition for asana and perhaps pranayama but when it comes to meditation often turn to , Zen, Vippasana...... This then was an attempt to make yoga meditation a little more accessible.

There is of course a more in depth yoga meditation manual,  Patanjali's Yoga Sutras,

Here is my own personal copy...







3.

Meditating on Meditation by Srivatsa Ramaswami 

Newsletter Nov 2009

I was watching a live television program in India some 30 years back when TV had just been introduced in India. It was a program in which an elderly yogi was pitted against a leading cardiologist. It was virtually a war. The yogi was trying to impress with some unusualposes which were dubbed as potentially dangerous by the doctor. Almost everything the yogi claimed was contested by the non-yogi and soon the dialogue degenerated. The yogi stressed that headstand will increase longevity by retaining the amrita in the sahasrara in the head and the medical expert countered it by saying that there was no scientific basis for such claims and dubbed it as a pose which was unnatural and dangerous and will lead to a stroke. The Yogi replied by saying that Yoga had stood the test of time for centuries; it had been in voguemuch before modern medicine became popular. Thank God it was a black and white program; else you would have seen blood splashed all over the screen.
Things have become more civil in these three decades. Now neti pot, asanas, yogic breathing exercises and yogic meditation have all become part of the medical vocabulary. There is a grudging appreciation of yoga within the medical profession. Many times doctors suggest a few yogic procedures, especially Meditation, in several conditions like hypertension, anxiety, depression and other psychosomatic ailments.
Ah! Meditation. The Yoga world is divided into two camps. On one side we have enthusiastic hatha yogis who specialize in asanas and the other group which believes fervently in meditation as a panacea for all the ills.
But how should one meditate? Many start meditation and give it up after a few days or weeks as they fail to see any appreciable benefit or perceivable progress. The drop out rate is quite high among meditators. The mind continues to be agitated and does not get into the meditating routine. Or quite often one tends to take petit naps while meditating. Why does this happen? It is due to lack of adequate preparation. Basically one has to prepare oneself properly for meditation.
The Yogis mention two sadhanas or two yogic procedures as preparations. They are asanas and pranayama. Asanas, as we have seen earlier, reduce rajas which manifests as restlessness of the mind, an inability to remain focused for an appreciable amount of time. But another guna, tamas also is not helpful during meditation, manifesting as laziness, lethargy and sloth and this also should be brought under control if one wants to meditate. Patanjali, Tirumular and several old Yogis advocate the practice of Pranayama to reduce the effects of Tamas. Patanjali says Pranayama helps to reduce avarana or Tamas. He along with conventional ashtanga yogis also mentions that Pranayama makes the mind capable of Dharana or the first stage of meditation.
Pranayama is an important prerequisite of meditation.There is evidence that pranayama has a salutary effect on the whole system. In an earlier article I had explained the beneficial effects of deep pranayama on the heart and the circulatory system. Further, when it is done correctly, it helps to draw in anywhere between 3 to 4 liters of atmospheric air compared to just about ½ liter of air during normal breathing. This helps to stretch the air sacs of the lungs affording an excellent exchange of oxygen and gaseous waste products. These waste products are proactively thrown out of the system by deep pranayama, which yogis refer to as reduction of tamas. Thus soon after pranayama, the yogi feels refreshed and calm andbecomes fit for the first stage of meditation which is called Dharana.
What should one meditate on? Several works talk about meditating on cakras, mantras, auspicious icons, various tatwas and on the spirit/soul etc. But, the method of meditating, only a few works detail. Perhaps the most precise is that of Patanjali in Yoga Sutras. Patanjali details not only a step by step methodology of meditation but also the various objects of prakriti and ultimately the spirit within to meditate on. Hence his work may be considered as the most detailed, complete and rigorous on meditation
For a start Patanjali would like the abhyasi to get the technique right. So he does not initially specify the object but merely says that the Yogi after the preliminary practices of asana, pranayama and pratyahara, should sit down in a comfortable yogasana and start the meditation. Tying the mind to a spot is dharana. Which spot? Vyasa in his commentary suggests going by tradition, a few spots, firstly inside the body, like the chakras as the Kundalini Yogi would do,, or the heart lotus as the bhakti yogi would do, or the mid-brows as a sidhha yogi would do or even an icon outside as a kriya yogi would do.
The icon should be an auspicious object like the image of one’s favorite deity. Many find it easier to choose a mantra and focus attention on that. Thousands everyday meditate on the Gayatri mantra visualizing the sun in the middle of the eyebrows or the heart as part of their daily Sandhyavandana** routine. It is also an ancient practice followed even today to meditate on the breath with or without using the Pranayama Mantra.
 (** Namarupa published my article “Sandhyavandanam-Ritualistic Gayatri Meditation” with all the routines, mantras, meanings, about 40 pictures, and also an audio with the chanting of the mantras in theSep/Oct 2008 issue).
What of the technique? The Yogabhyasi starts the antaranga sadhana or the internal practice by bringing the mind to the same object again and again even as the mind tends to move away from the chosen object of meditation. The active, repeated attempts to bring the mind back to the simple, single object again and again is the first stage of meditation (samyama) called dharana. Even though one has done everything possible to make the body/mind system more satwic, because of the accumulated samskaras or habits, the mind continues to drift away from the object chosen for meditation. The mind starts with the focus on the object but within a short time it swiftly drifts to another related thought then a third one and within a short time this train of thoughts leads to a stage which has no connection whatsoever with the object one started with.
Then suddenly the meditator remembers that one is drifting and soon brings the mind back to the object and resumes remaining with the “object”. This process repeats over and over again. This repeated attempts to coax and bring the mind to the same object is dharana. At the end of the session lasting for about 15 minutes, the meditator may (may means must) take a short time to review the quality of meditation. How often was the mind drifting away from the object and how long on an average the mind wandered? And further what were the kinds of interfering thoughts? The meditator takes note of these. If they are recurrent and strong then one may take efforts to sort out the problem that interferes with the meditation repeatedly or at least decide to accept and endure the situation but may decide to take efforts to keep those thoughts away at least during the time one meditates.
If during the dharana period, the mind gets distracted too often and this does not change over days of practice, perhaps it may indicate that the rajas is still dominant and one may want to reduce the systemic rajas by doing more asanas in the practice. On the other hand if the rajas is due to influences from outside, one may take special efforts to adhere to the yamaniyamas more scrupulously. Perhaps every night before going to sleep one may review the day’s activities and see if one had willfully violated the tenets of yamaniyamas like “did I hurt someone by deed, word or derive satisfaction at the expense of others’ pain”. Or did I say untruths and so on. On the other hand if one tends to go to sleep during the meditation minutes, one may consider increasing the pranayama practice and also consider reducing tamasic interactions, foods etc.
Then one may continue the practice daily and also review the progress on a daily basis and also make the necessary adjustments in practice and interactions with the outside world. Theoretically and practically when this practice is continued diligently and regularly, slowly the practitioner of dharana will find that the frequency and duration of these extraneous interferences start reducing and one day, the abhyasi may find that for the entire duration one stayed with the object. When this takes place, when the mind is completely with the object moment after moment in a continuous flow of attention, then one may say that the abhyasi has graduated into the next stage of meditation known as dhyana. Many meditators are happy to have reached this stage. Then one has to continue with the practice so that the dhyana habits or samskaras get strengthened. The following day may not be as interruption free, but Patanjali says conscious practice will make it more successful. “dhyana heyat tad vrittayah”. If one continues with this practice for sufficiently long time meditating on the same object diligently, one would hopefully reach the next stage of meditation called Samadhi.
In this state only the object remains occupying the mind and the abhyasi even forgets herself/himself. Naturally if one continues the meditation practice one would master the technique of meditation. Almost every time the yagabhasi gets into meditation practice, one would get into Samadhi. Once one gets this capability one is a yogi—a technically competent yogi– and one may be able to use the skill on any other yoga worthy object and make further progress in Yoga. (tatra bhumishu viniyogah)
The consummate yogi could make a further refinement. An object has a name and one has a memory of the object, apart from the object itself (sabda, artha gnyana). If a Yogi is able to further refine the meditation by focusing attention on one aspect like the name of the object such a meditation is considered superior. For instance when the sound ‘gow” is heard (gow is cow ), if the meditiator intently maintains the word ‘gow’ alone in his mind without bringing the impression(form) of a cow in his mind then that is considered a refined meditation. Or when he sees the cow, he does not bring the name ‘gow’ in the meditation process, it is a refined meditation.
The next aspect-after mastering meditation— one may consider is, what should be the object one should meditate upon. For Bhakti Yogis it is the Lord one should meditate upon. According to my teacher, a great Bhakti Yogi, there is only one dhyana or meditation and that is bhagavat dhyana or meditating upon the Lord. There is a difference between a religious person and a devotee. A devotee loves the Lord and meditates on the Lord, all through life. The Vedas refer to the Pararmatman or the Supreme Lord and bhakti yogis meditate on the Lord.
The Vedas also refer to several gods and some may meditate on these as well. By meditating on the Lord one may transcend the cycle of transmigration. At the end of the bhakti yogi’s life one reaches the same world of the Lord (saloka), the heaven. Some attain the same form as the Lord. Some stay in the proximity of the Lord and some merge with the Lord. The Puranas which are the later creation of poet seers personify the Lord and the vedic gods. Thus we have several puranas as Agni purana, Vayu purana and then those of the Lord Himself like the Bhagavata Purana , Siva Purana , Vishnu Purana. Running to thousands of slokas and pages the puranic age helped to worship the Lord more easily as these stories helped to visualize the Lord as a person, which was rather difficult to do from the Vedas. Later on Agamas made the Lord more accessible by allowing idols to be made of the Lord and divine beings and consecrating them in temples. Thus these various methods helped the general populace remain rooted to religion and religious worship. So meditating upon the charming idol/icon of theLord made it possible for many to worship and meditate .
Of course many traditional Brahmins belonging to the vedic practices stuck to the vedic fire rituals, frowned upon and refrained from any ‘form worship’, but millions of others found form worship a great boon.
Meditating on the form of the chosen deity either in a temple or at one’s own home has made it possible to sidestep the intermediate priestly class to a great extent. One can become responsible for one’s own religious practice, including meditation. The ultimate reality is meditated on in different forms, in any form as Siva Vishnu etc or as Father, Mother, Preceptor or even a Friend. Some idol meditators define meditating on the whole form as dharana, then meditating on each aspect of the form as the toe or head or the arms or the bewitching eyes as dhyana and thus giving a different interpretation to meditation. Some, after meditating on the icon, close the eyes and meditate on the form in their mind’s eye (manasika).
Darshanas like Samkhya and Yoga which do not subscribe to the theory of a Creator commended ‘the understanding of one’s own Self’ as a means of liberation. The Self which is non-changing is pure consciousness and by deep unwavering meditation after getting the technique right, one can realize the nature of oneself and be liberated. Following this approach, the Samkhyas commend meditating on each and every of the 24 aspects of prakriti in the body-mind complex of oneself and transcend them to directly know the true nature of oneself, and that will be Freedom or Kaivalya. Similarly the Yogis would say that the true nature of the self is known when the mind transcends(nirodha) the five types of its activities called vrittis to reach kaivalya, by a process of subtler and subtler meditation.
The Upanishads on the other hand while agreeing with the other Nivritti sastras like Yoga and Samkhya in so far as the nature of the self is concerned, indicate that the individual and the Supreme Being are one and the same and meditating on this identity leads to liberation. They would like the spiritual aspirant to first follow a disciplined life to get an unwavering satwic state of the mind. Then one would study the upanishadic texts (sravana), by analysis (manana) understand them and realize the nature of the self through several step by step meditation approaches (nidhidhyasana). The Vedas, for the sake of the spiritual aspirant, have several Upanishad vidyas to study and understand it from several viewpoints. For instance, the panchkosa vidya indicates that the real self is beyond (or within) the five koshas (sheaths). It could also be considered as the pure consciousness which is beyond the three states of awareness (avasta) of waking, dream and deep sleep, as the Pranava(Om) vidya would indicate. The understanding and conviction that Self and the Supreme Self are one and the same is what one needs to get, before doing Upanishadic meditation following the advaitic interpretation.
Summarizing one may say that traditional meditation warrants proper preparation so that the mind becomes irrevocably satwic and thus fit for and capable of meditation. Secondly it requires practice on a simple object until the meditation technique is mastered and such meditatin samskaras developed. Then the Yogi should set the goal of meditation based on the conviction of a solid philosophy—bhakti, samkhya, yoga, vedanta, kundalini (or if comfortable, nirvana) or whatever.

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See also perhaps these pages

Yama/Niyama
Yoga Reading List
Chanting yoga Sutras

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