Yoga Yoga
is a family of ancient spiritual practices dating back
more than 5000 years from India. It is one of the six schools
of Hindu philosophy. In India, Yoga is seen as a means
to both physiological and spiritual mastery. Outside India,
Yoga has become primarily associated with the practice
of asanas (postures) of Hatha Yoga (see Yoga as exercise).
Yoga
as a means of spiritual attainment is central to Hinduism
(including Vedanta), Buddhism and Jainism and has influenced
other religious and spiritual practices throughout the
world. Hindu texts establishing the basis for yoga include
the Upanishads, the Bhagavad Gita, the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali,
the Hatha Yoga Pradipika and many others.
The four
main paths of Yoga are Karma Yoga, Jnana Yoga, Bhakti Yoga
and Raja Yoga. A committed practitioner of yoga is referred
to as a yogi, yogin (masculine), or yogini (feminine).
Yoga
philosophy
In all branches of yoga, the ultimate goal is the attainment of liberation
from worldly suffering and the cycle of birth and death (Samsara). Yoga entails
mastery over the body, mind, and emotional self, and transcendence of desire.
According to the followers, the Yogi eventually reaches the enlightened state
(Moksha) where there is a cessation of thought and an experience of blissful
union. This union may be of the individual soul (Atman) with the supreme Reality
(Brahman), as in Advaita Vedanta; with a specific god or goddess, as in Dvaita
or dualistic forms of Hinduism and some forms of Buddhism.
Common
to most forms of yoga is the practice of concentration
(dharana) and meditation (dhyana). Dharana, according to
Patanjali's definition, is the "binding of consciousness
to a single point." The awareness is concentrated
on a fine point of sensation (such as that of the breath
entering and leaving the nostrils). Sustained single-pointed
concentration gradually leads to meditation (dhyana), in
which the inner faculties are able to expand and merge
with something vast. Meditators sometimes report feelings
of peace, joy, and oneness.
The focus
of meditation may differ from school to school, e.g. meditation
on one of the chakras, such as the heart center (anahata)
or the 'third eye' (ajna); or meditation on a particular
deity, such as Krishna; or on a quality like peace. Non-dualist
schools such as Advaita Vedanta may stress meditation on
the Supreme with no form or qualities (Nirguna Brahman).
This is in many ways analogous to Buddhist meditation on
Emptiness.
Yoga
and Buddhism
It is quite likely that Buddha (Siddhartha Gautama), who is estimated to have
lived 563 to 483 BC, actually studied what was known of yoga at that time as
part of his extensive education in Hindu philosophy. It is also very likely,
given the rapid growth of Buddhism after his death and before the Bhagavad
Gita and Patanjali's Yoga Sutras were composed, that Buddhism had some influence
on those works.
In either
case, there is a considerable overlap between the Hindu
yoga tradition and Buddhism. Of particular interest is
a comparison of the Buddhist eight-fold path and the eight
limbs of Patanjali's Yoga. Their moral precepts (the sila
of Buddhism, the yama and niyama of yoga) share the Hindu
principle of non-violence (ahimsa); their final steps point
towards a common goal - 6. Buddhist Samma Vayama (Effort)
vs Yogic Dharana (Concentration), 7. Buddhist Samma Sati
(Mindfulness) vs Yogic Dhyana (Meditation) and 8. Buddhist
Samma Samadhi vs Yogic Samadhi. In relation to views of
the Self, yoga's asmita-samapatti is designed to eradicate
the wrong views on the Self much in the same way Buddha
did it in Anatta-lakkhana-sutta.
Yoga
is central to Tibetan Buddhism. In the Nyingma tradition,
practitioners progress to increasingly profound levels
of yoga, starting with Maha yoga, continuing to Anu yoga
and ultimately undertaking the highest practice, Ati yoga.
In the Sarma traditions, the Annutara yoga class is equivalent.
Other tantra yoga practices include a system of 108 (number)
bodily postures practiced with breath and heart rhythm
timing in movement exercises is known as Trul khor or union
of moon and sun (channel) prajna energies, and the body
postures of Tibetan ancient yogis are depicted on the walls
of the Dalai Lama's summer temple of Lukhang.
Yoga and Tantra
Yoga is often mentioned in company with Tantra, and it is true that these traditions
have influenced one another over time. They are both families of spiritual
texts, practices, and lineages with origins in the Indian subcontinent and
both have been popularized in the West.
Tantra
has roots in the first millennium, and incorporates Shiva
and Shakti worship. It focuses on the kundalini, a three
and a half-coiled 'snake' of spiritual energy at the base
of the spine that rises through chakras until union ('samadhi')
between Shiva and Shakti is ultimately achieved. These
concepts were formally introduced into yoga with the Hatha
Yoga Pradipika, and because of the subsequent popularity
of Hatha Yoga, many Hindu and western yoga teachers now
accept these essentially tantric concepts within the yogic
philosophy, and this is the most obvious major intersection
between tantra and yoga today. The acceptance of tantric
kundalini teachings into modern yoga was reinforced by
the New Age movement which accompanied (and simultaneously
reinforced) the rise of popularity of yoga in the West.
However,
Tantra and Yoga have notable points of difference. Where
body consciousness is seen as the root cause of bondage
in Yoga, Tantra views the body as a means to understanding,
rather than as an obstruction, which bears certain similarities
with the Natya Yoga. As a result, in India particularly,
one of the two branches of Tantra often carries quite negative
connotations involving sexual misbehavior and black magic,
although it must be said most forms actually follow quite
mainstream social mores and this is simply an expression
of prejudice.
The actual
method of Tantra is quite different to traditional Raja
Yoga. It emphasises mantra (Sanskrit prayers, often to
gods, that are repeated), yantra (complex symbols and archetypal
geometric pattering or sacred geometry housing deity, manifesting
in a plethora of forms with a discernable syntactic pattern),
and rituals that range from simple murti (a statue housing
a deity) or image worship to meditation on a corpse or
of coitus in a charnel ground - which is challenging for
some, but simply an active meditation with the intention
to resolve the perceived duality of the creative and destructive
universal principle.
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