II. Niyama (Personal Observances)
Niyama
means "rules" or "laws." These are the rules prescribed for personal
observance. Like the yamas, the five niyamas are not exercises or
actions to be simply studied. They represent far more than an
attitude. Compared with the yamas, the niyamas are more intimate and
personal. They refer to the attitude we adopt toward ourselves as we
create a code for living soulfully1. Sauca - Purity
The first niyama is sauca, meaning purity and cleanliness. Sauca has both an inner and an outer aspect. Outer cleanliness simply means keeping ourselves clean. Inner cleanliness has as much to do with the healthy, free functioning of our bodily organs as with the clarity of our mind. Practicing asanas or pranayama are essential means for attending to this inner sauca. Asanas tones the entire body and removes toxins while pranayama cleanses our lungs, oxygenates our blood and purifies our nerves. "But more important than the physical cleansing of the body is the cleansing of the mind of its disturbing emotions like hatred, passion, anger, lust, greed, delusion and pride." vi
2. Santosa - Contentment
Another niyama is santosa, modesty and the feeling of being content with what we have. To be at peace within and content with one's lifestyle finding contentment even while experiencing life’s difficulties for life becomes a process of growth through all kinds of circumstances. We should accept that there is a purpose for everything - yoga calls it karma – and we cultivate contentment 'to accept what happens'. It means being happy with what we have rather than being unhappy about what we don't have.
3. Tapas – Disciplined use of our energy
Tapas refers to the activity of keeping the body fit or to confront and handle the inner urges without outer show. Literally it means to heat the body and, by so doing, to cleanse it. Behind the notion of tapas lies the idea we can direct our energy to enthusiastically engage life and achieve our ultimate goal of creating union with the Divine. Tapas helps us burn up all the desires that stand in our way of this goal. Another form of tapas is paying attention to what we eat. Attention to body posture, attention to eating habits, attention to breathing patterns - these are all tapas.
4. Svadhyaya – Self study
The fourth niyama is svadhyaya. Sva means "self' adhyaya means "inquiry" or "examination". Any activity that cultivates self-reflective consciousness can be considered svadhyaya. It means to intentionally find self-awareness in all our activities and efforts, even to the point of welcoming and accepting our limitations. It teaches us to be centered and non-reactive to the dualities, to burn out unwanted and self-destructive tendencies.
5. Isvarapranidhana - Celebration of the Spiritual
Isvarapranidhana means "to lay all your actions at the feet of God." It is the contemplation on God (Isvara) in order to become attuned to god and god's will. It is the recognition that the spiritual suffuses everything and through our attention and care we can attune ourselves with our role as part of the Creator. The practice requires that we set aside some time each day to recognize that there is some omnipresent force larger than ourselves that is guiding and directing the course of our lives. vii
III. Asanas (Body postures)
Asana is the
practice of physical postures. It is the most commonly known aspect of
yoga for those unfamiliar with the other seven limbs of Patanjali’s Yoga
Sutra. The practice of moving the body into postures has
widespread benefits; of these the most underlying are improved health,
strength, balance and flexibility. On a deeper level the practice of
asana, which means "staying" or "abiding" in
Sanskrit, is used as a tool to calm the mind and move into the inner
essence of being. The challenge of poses offers the practitioner the
opportunity to explore and control all aspects of their emotions,
concentration, intent, faith, and unity between the physical and the
ethereal body. Indeed, using asanas to challenge and open the physical
body acts as a binding agent to bring one in harmony with all the
unseen elements of their being, the forces that shape our lives
through our responses to the physical world. Asana then becomes a way
of exploring our mental attitudes and strengthening our will as we
learn to release and move into the state of grace that comes from
creating balance between our material world and spiritual experience.As one practices asana it fosters a quieting of the mind, thus it becomes both a preparation for meditation and a meditation sufficient in and of itself. Releasing to the flow and inner strength that one develops brings about a profound grounding spirituality in the body. The physicality of the yoga postures becomes a vehicle to expand the consciousness that pervades our every aspect of our body. The key to fostering this expansion of awareness and consciousness begins with the control of breath, the fourth limb – Pranayama. Patanjali suggests that the asana and the pranayama practices will bring about the desired state of health; the control of breath and bodily posture will harmonize the flow of energy in the organism, thus creating a fertile field for the evolution of the spirit. "This down-to-earth, flesh-and-bones practice is simply one of the most direct and expedient ways to meet yourself. … This limb of yoga practice reattaches us to our body. In reattaching ourselves to our bodies we reattach ourselves to the responsibility of living a life guided by the undeniable wisdom of our body."viii To this B.K.S. Iyengar adds: "The needs of the body are the needs of the divine spirit which lives through the body. The yogi does not look heaven-ward to find God for he know that He is within."ix
IV. Pranayama (Breath Control)
Pranayama is the measuring, control, and
directing of the breath. Pranayama controls the energy (prana) within
the organism, in order to restore and maintain health and to promote
evolution. When the in-flowing breath is neutralized or joined with the
out-flowing breath, then perfect relaxation and balance of body
activities are realized. In yoga, we are concerned with balancing the
flows of vital forces, then directing them inward to the chakra system
and upward to the crown chakra.Pranayama, or breathing technique, is very important in yoga. It goes hand in hand with the asana or pose. In the Yoga Sutra, the practices of pranayama and asana are considered to be the highest form of purification and self discipline for the mind and the body, respectively. The practices produce the actual physical sensation of heat, called tapas, or the inner fire of purification. It is taught that this heat is part of the process of purifying the nadis, or subtle nerve channels of the body. This allows a more healthful state to be experienced and allows the mind to become more calm.x As the yogi follows the proper rhythmic patterns of slow deep breathing "the patterns strengthen the respiratory system, soothe the nervous system and reduce craving. As desires and cravings diminish, the mind is set free and becomes a fit vehicle for concentration."xi
V. Pratyahara (Control of the Senses)
Pratyahara means drawing back or retreat. The
word ahara means "nourishment"; pratyahara translates
as "to withdraw oneself from that which nourishes the
senses." In yoga, the term pratyahara implies withdrawal of the
senses from attachment to external objects. It can then be seen as the
practice of non-attachment to sensorial distractions as we constantly
return to the path of self realization and achievement of internal
peace. It means our senses stop living off the things that stimulate;
the senses no longer depend on these stimulants and are not fed by
them any more.In pratyahara we sever this link between mind and senses, and the senses withdraw. When the senses are no longer tied to external sources, the result is restraint or pratyahara. Now that the vital forces are flowing back to the Source within, one can concentrate without being distracted by externals or the temptation to cognize externals.
Pratyahara occurs almost automatically when we meditate because we are so absorbed in the object of meditation. Precisely because the mind is so focused, the senses follow it; it is not happening the other way around.
No longer functioning in their usual manner, the senses become extraordinarily sharp. Under normal circumstances the senses become our masters rather than being our servants. The senses entice us to develop cravings for all sorts of things. In pratyahara the opposite occurs: when we have to eat we eat, but not because we have a craving for food. In pratyahara we try to put the senses in their proper place, but not cut them out of our actions entirely.
Much of our emotional imbalance are our own creation. A person who is influenced by outside events and sensations can never achieve the inner peace and tranquility. This is because he or she will waste much mental and physical energy in trying to suppress unwanted sensations and to heighten other sensations. This will eventually result in a physical or mental imbalance, and will, in most instances, result in illness.
Patanjali says that the above process is at the root of human unhappiness and uneasiness. When people seek out yoga, hoping to find that inner peace which is so evasive, they find that it was theirs all along. In a sense, yoga is nothing more than a process which enables us to stop and look at the processes of our own minds; only in this way can we understand the nature of happiness and unhappiness, and thus transcend them both.xii
VI. Dharana (Concentration and cultivating inner
perceptual awareness)
Dharana means "immovable
concentration of the mind". The essential idea is to hold the
concentration or focus of attention in one direction. "When the body has been tempered by asanas, when the mind has
been refined by the fire of pranayama and when the senses have been
brought under control by pratyahara, the sadhaka (seeker) reaches the
sixth stage, dharana. Here he is concentrated wholly on a single point
or on a task in which he is completely engrossed. The mind has to be
stilled in order to achieve this state of complete absorption."xiiiIn dharana we create the conditions for the mind to focus its attention in one direction instead of going out in many different directions. Deep contemplation and reflection can create the right conditions, and the focus on this one point that we have chosen becomes more intense. We encourage one particular activity of the mind and, the more intense it becomes, the more the other activities of the mind fall away.
The objective in dharana is to steady the mind by focusing its attention upon some stable entity. The particular object selected has nothing to do with the general purpose, which is to stop the mind from wandering -through memories, dreams, or reflective thought-by deliberately holding it single-mindedly upon some apparently static object. B.K.S. Iyengar states that the objective is to achieve the mental state where the mind, intellect, and ego are "all restrained and all these faculties are offered to the Lord for His use and in His service. Here there is no feeling of 'I' and 'mine'."xiv
When the mind has become purified by yoga practices, it becomes able to focus efficiently on one subject or point of experience. Now we can unleash the great potential for inner healing.
VII. Dhyana (Devotion , Meditation on the Divine)
Dhyana means worship, or
profound and abstract religious meditation. It is perfect
contemplation. It involves concentration upon a point of focus with
the intention of knowing the truth about it. The concept holds that
when one focuses their mind in concentration on an object the mind is
transformed into the shape of the object. Hence, when one focuses on
the divine they become more reflective of it and they know their true
nature. "His body, breath, senses, mind, reason and ego are all
integrated in the object of his contemplation – the Universal
Spirit."xvDuring dhyana, the consciousness is further unified by combining clear insights into distinctions between objects and between the subtle layers of perception. "We learn to differentiate between the mind of the perceiver, the means of perception, and the objects perceived, between words, their meanings, and ideas, and between all the levels of evolution of nature."xvi
As we fine-tune our concentration and become more aware of the nature of reality we perceive that the world is unreal. "The only reality is the universal self, or God, which is veiled by Maya (the illusory power). As the veils are lifted, the mind becomes clearer. Unhappiness and fear – even the fear of death – vanishes. This state of freedom, or Moksha, is the goal of Yoga. It can be reached by constant enquiry into the nature of things."xvii Meditation becomes our tool to see things clearly and perceive reality beyond the illusions that cloud our mind.
VIII. Samadhi (Union with the Divine)
Thus, samadhi refers to union
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