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Page 1 of 21 PATANJALI’S YOGA SUTRAS. Patanjali’s yoga sutras are considered to be a central guide to yoga practice and experience. A guide that it is helpful to return to again and again as a reference point and map that can help to make sense of some of the territory we enter through yoga practice. It can give us a foothold when we first start out in our practice but perhaps much of it only starts to seem relevant and helpful after some experience and depth of practice. Just a reminder on a couple of ideas used in philosophy which may have a bearing on how we take the book: Dualism – where the nature of reality is described by separating it out into component parts: matter, energy and consciousness. Non-dualism – Where the apparent diversity of life is described as an illusion or mirage – all is ultimately connected at source – in this case consciousness. Patanjali is described as dualistic by some and non-dualistic by others! Perhaps the confusion is due to the fact that elements of nature and reality are separated to help explanation. The central question relating to this is whether there is an aspect of consciousness existing separately from matter and energy within a human being, a spiritual element if you like? This could be seen to be implied at times in Patanjali. Or does a base level of consciousness exist within us only as the deepest layer of our own mind? Personally I feel we can happily appreciate Patanjali from a Humanistic perspective as an exploration of layers of human life and depth psychology. But equally there is a question of the ‘mystery of consciousness’ which perhaps leaves a more open question as to how far consciousness permeates and what its origins are (modern physics/science is also interested in this question) . Either way the book is a useful guide to practice.

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  • Page 1 of 21

    PATANJALI’S YOGA SUTRAS.

    Patanjali’s yoga sutras are considered to be a central guide to yoga

    practice and experience. A guide that it is helpful to return to again and

    again as a reference point and map that can help to make sense of some

    of the territory we enter through yoga practice. It can give us a foothold

    when we first start out in our practice but perhaps much of it only starts

    to seem relevant and helpful after some experience and depth of

    practice.

    Just a reminder on a couple of ideas used in philosophy which may have a

    bearing on how we take the book:

    Dualism – where the nature of reality is described by separating it out

    into component parts: matter, energy and consciousness.

    Non-dualism – Where the apparent diversity of life is described as an

    illusion or mirage – all is ultimately connected at source – in this case

    consciousness.

    Patanjali is described as dualistic by some and non-dualistic by others!

    Perhaps the confusion is due to the fact that elements of nature and

    reality are separated to help explanation. The central question relating to

    this is whether there is an aspect of consciousness existing separately

    from matter and energy within a human being, a spiritual element if you

    like? This could be seen to be implied at times in Patanjali. Or does a base

    level of consciousness exist within us only as the deepest layer of our own

    mind?

    Personally I feel we can happily appreciate Patanjali from a Humanistic

    perspective as an exploration of layers of human life and depth

    psychology. But equally there is a question of the ‘mystery of

    consciousness’ which perhaps leaves a more open question as to how far

    consciousness permeates and what its origins are (modern physics/science

    is also interested in this question) . Either way the book is a useful guide

    to practice.

  • Page 2 of 21

    1. BACKGROUND AND HISTORICAL CONTEXT

    Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras were one of six systems of Indian philosophy that

    developed during the period 400 BCE - 400 CE. The dates are vague, as

    there are no clear records. This text likely had a long gestation period

    before ideas from the older books and oral teachings crystallised and

    were systematized and written down. If we take the Upanishads as

    reflecting the original enlightened wisdom of the Yogis, then the six

    systems (traditionally named ‘Darsanas’ – view points) are more

    sophisticated analyses of this wisdom and view of reality with each one

    looking from a slightly different philosophical angle. Like looking at the

    same mountain summit from a different geographical viewpoint, most

    scholars tend towards the idea that in general the 6 Darsanas are

    complementary views of a many sided reality rather than competing

    theories.

    In relation to the cultural context of the time, some scholars feel that

    the development of the 6 systems was in response to the popularity and

    intellectual clarity of Buddhism (even though they don’t contradict

    Buddhism). The lists of steps and stages of practice and lists of

    obstacles and hindrances in Patanjali perhaps reflect this. Or perhaps

    lists were just the intellectual trend of the time as memorising was a key

    element of learning as there was no printed matter as such.

    In Brief, the six systems are:

    1. Nyaya – A system of logic establishing the correct procedure for

    gaining knowledge of an object.

    2. Vashheshika – identifies an object through the characteristics

    that differentiate it from any other.

    3. Samkya – A dualist approach that separates matter and

    spirit/energy in order to analyse the nature of both, and also how

    they interrelate.

    4. Yoga (Patanjali) – the practical means of refining perception from

    matter though to our true nature as consciousness - presented in a

    clearly laid out path .

    5. Karma Mimansa – a consideration of the entire field of action to

    determine which actions and attitudes are in accordance with the

  • Page 3 of 21

    nature of consciousness; as well as philosophy and morality it

    includes the science of Vedic rituals in relation to living in harmony

    with the natural order of the elements and consciousness.

    6. Advaita Vedanta – (Based on the Upanishads) is non-dualist in that

    in the final analysis all of life is unified by being an expression of

    consciousness, underlying reality or Brahman. Put another way

    there is an underlying Unity within the Diversity.

    Patanjali – who was he? In keeping with the vagueness of the dates, was

    an enigmatic figure about which little is known. It is generally agreed that

    he was not a founder of yoga or anything like that, but someone who

    collated and systematized all the information about existing practices and

    ideas. It is important to remember that yoga had been evolving in varying

    forms in India for a long time albeit in a loosely organised culture. Much

    of what is in his work is scattered about in the Vedas, the Upanishads and

    the Bhagavad-Gita in a less orderly way.

    His Yoga Sutra’s are generally considered to be the definitive guide to

    what has become known as Classical Yoga; it is though important to

    realise that whilst they represent the mainstream of Yoga philosophy and

    theory, he could only collate what he knew about, which in the vastness of

    India (and its isolated pockets), was unlikely to be everything. Also he

    perhaps only included what he agreed with or with generally socially

    acceptable yoga practices and may have been influenced as to what to

    include/exclude by other authorities. We also need to bear in mind that

    there has always been a healthy diversity within yoga and varying aspects

    of the tradition and there is sometimes a tension between more

    conservative traditionalists and progressive modernists in any discipline

    or art, and both usually have a point. Tantric practices which are arguably

    the source of most/much hatha yoga that we practice are less included

    perhaps due to some of their practices and lifestyles at the time being

    viewed as disreputable (we look at Tantra later)

    That said, whilst there has been much creative innovation in yoga practice

    and teaching in the modern day, and useful scientific understandings, we

    might usefully reflect whether what we are doing is consistent with the

    essence of Patanjali’s message, which is generally accepted by most as

    providing a useful baseline reference point for authentic yoga practice.

  • Page 4 of 21

    2. MAIN IDEAS MEANINGS AND TERMS.

    Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras are organised into 4 books of Sutras (sometimes

    called aphorisms). Sutra means thread. A Sutra is a concise one liner

    (designed for easy memorising within the oral tradition) that requires

    commentary and interpretation by an experienced teacher and

    practitioner. The main purpose of the Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras is to

    describe the stages, developments and pitfalls of an inner journey that is

    unfamiliar to most of us.

    In looking at this text we might reconsider closely the main term; yoga

    and what our associations with the word are? In relation to Patanjali’s

    sutras yoga is described in six ways with perhaps number one being the

    primary definition:

    1. The stilling of the thought waves of the mind – and ceasing to

    identify with thoughts through incorrect identification with a

    separate sense of I.

    2. Union with the divine/core consciousness– whereby we realise our

    true nature beyond the conditioning of body and mind.

    3. Integration – of all aspects of ourselves: body, mind/emotion and

    spirit/consciousness

    4. Connection – as in to connect together ( on many levels)

    5. Relationship – to self and other.

    6. Yoke – in the sense of a harness.

    All of the meanings interrelate and arguably one is not more correct or

    definite than another. The idea of yoking or harnessing the forces or

    energies of mind and body on various levels is a useful idea to bear in mind

    for this text, in addition to the other meanings rather than instead of

    them.

    In the light of Patanjali’s text we could perhaps describe a Yogi(ni) using

    modern terminology as someone with a fully integrated personality

    gathered around a still boundless centre. This definition includes all the

    above ideas and includes the idea of a rounded personality or character

    which cannot be developed without engagement in the world as well as

    yoga practice.

    As we start to look at the path set out by Patanjali, it seems that a kind

    and generous but clear and firm, harnessing and gathering of our

  • Page 5 of 21

    attention is at the centre of the story so that we can look closely at and

    SEE CLEARLY our experience of body and mind. In practical and general

    terms it describes the path of harnessing the energy of the largely

    distracted and outwardly directed mind in various ways in order to draw

    that energy inwards to a simpler, clearer consciousness to understand our

    inner workings and realise our true essence. The texts describe the

    makeup of the mind and the psyche and how to refine our perception in

    order to see beyond our conditioned state.

    Main Terms

    Purusha – Purusha is essentially the same as Brahman, an unchanging

    underlying reality or a base consciousness underlying all. Variously

    described as ‘The knower’, ‘The seer’ or ‘The witness’ or consciousness

    that exists behind the surface activities of the mind. It is possible for

    Purusha to be reflected through the subtle quiet aspects of the mind

    allowing us clear seeing that this underlying consciousness is our true

    nature. The mind, interestingly, is classified under Prakriti or Matter (see

    below). Purusha sees things as they are without the warping filter of the

    conditioned mind that prevents us seeing and knowing clearly and directly.

    The idea of ‘The Witness’ is interesting to consider in relation to

    meditation in the form of the question: What is it that is able to

    observe our experience of thoughts, feelings and emotions without

    identifying with them?

    Prakriti – or matter/energy (on gross and subtle levels) - Described as

    ‘the Known’ – is the primal substance, the matrix of all physical life, the

    ‘matter/energy’ out of which arises the whole of objective creation

    described as ‘the world’. It also includes the physical body, the energetic

    body (physiology), The gunas (sattva, rajas, tamas) the elements of life (

    earth, water, fire, wind and space) , the psyche, the mind on various levels

    (essentially the 5 Koshas, which we look at later in Tantra and Hatha

    Yoga)

    In this way our nature is described as an interrelating continuum from

    gross to subtle – body ( anatomy) energy (physiology), various layers and

    functions of mind, feeling and emotion and pure consciousness (our true

    nature) .

  • Page 6 of 21

    The Gunas – are the core ‘energetic expressions’ arising from

    consciousness as it begins to form into matter/energy - the base

    constituents of matter/energy that can be worked with/balanced to some

    degree through lifestyle and diet choices and yoga practices:

    Rajas – Active energy.

    Tamas – inertia or restraining energy that checks the activity of Rajas.

    Sattva – Clarity or harmonizing energy that integrates and balances the

    effects of Rajas and Tamas.

    The Sattvic state is traditionally described as the ideal for Yoga

    practitioners and can be facilitated through balanced practice,

    appropriate diet and balanced lifestyle choices. The Sattvic state helps

    us prepare for meditation and brings us closer to the subtler areas of the

    mind able to reflect Purusha/consciousness. It is associated with the

    body/mind feeling light and clear.

    Excess Rajas can be exacerbated by excessive stimulation though

    caffeine, rushing around and overly driven behaviours for example .

    Excess Tamas can be due to sloth, heavy foods and alcohol for example.

    In terms of health, Sattva could perhaps equate to something like

    homeostasis - a term describing balance from western

    anatomy/physiology/medicine. Sometimes the gunas are described in

    terms of gross or subtle ‘vibration’ with the sattvic lifestyle meaning we

    ‘vibrate at a higher level or resolution’. Certainly in terms of health and

    well-being we can consider the times when we feel light, energised and

    centred (Sattva); as opposed to energised in a driven head spinning way

    which is ultimately depleting (excess rajas); or heavy, unmotivated,

    slothful and tired (excess tamas), and then relate that to our recent

    lifestyle choices. It usually adds up!

    Elements – are the next stage of development into matter . They are not

    so much mentioned in Patanjali but form the basis of most Asian

    traditional medical systems including Ayurveda ( a sister science of yoga)

    Earth, Water, Fire, Wind, Space.

  • Page 7 of 21

    Very simply: earth and water are our anatomy and fire and wind our

    physiology and space is the element within which the other elements

    function. Often in yoga parlance we talk about the need to ‘make space’ in

    body and mind – this allows the other elements to function well in a

    balanced way.

    Wind is a name given to movement and energy which is often

    interchangeable with Prana ( see later)

    Purusha and Prakriti and the interplay between the two is the central

    feature in understanding of Patanjali’s yoga and the path to liberation.

    Sometimes the language can seem a little esoteric and/or symbolic but in

    essence still describes what’s been said already.

    Purusha is the Male principle of base consciousness and Prakriti the

    Female Principle of dynamic activity and the world. ‘The world’ (Prakriti) is

    ultimately a manifestation of Purusha/consciousness. Prakriti depends on

    Purusha for her life, as the earth depends on the sun, yet Purusha

    remains unaffected by the activity of his consort, Prakriti.

    Liberation is when Purusha realises its separateness from Prakriti and is a

    silent witness to all activity including that of the body and mind. This why

    Purusha is described as ‘the knower’ and Prakriti as ‘the known’ ( this is

    also where perhaps the dualism interpretation of Patanjali comes from

    ).This is the state of freedom when we realise we are, in essence,

    unattached consciousness (or spirit), but also paradoxically -

    consciousness/spirit that animates all manifestation of energy and matter

    (which brings us back to non-dualism).

    An important implication of this is that Purusha/consciousness cannot

    know itself without the stimulation of Prakriti/Matter or the world. We

    need the world as a stimulus and reference point to see if we are on the

    right path.

    Also described in Patanjali as part of this dynamic, is that while Prakriti

    cannot influence Purusha, a mind that is operating from the subtlest level

    – clearly reflecting Purusha – can potentially influence any other relatively

    grosser level of creation – Prakriti – that it chooses. Or it may be that

    phenomena are perceived in an unusual way at this level. This is the basis

    of the ‘Siddhis’ or Supernormal Powers found in Book 3 of Patanjali.

  • Page 8 of 21

    A few words to revisit for Patanjali :

    Dukkha – The existential suffering/dissatisfaction arising out of the

    mind states and incorrect perceptions that arise due to falsely

    identifying with a separate sense of self/I. Or otherwise put: the

    existential suffering caused by resisting life as it is. This mode of

    suffering does though provide a motivation for practice and curiousity.

    Samskaras – habits,ruts, entrenched pathways in the brain; tendencies

    and patterns of behaviour or reactivity. In jargon terms: subliminal

    activators deep in the psyche. Essentially unconscious tendencies (as in,

    we are not properly aware of them) that have a significant impact on our

    attitudes, choices and responses in life.

    An analogy often given for meditation is that the distracted mind is like

    the choppy surface of a lake giving no possibility of seeing down; the

    process of meditation stills the lake surface allowing a clear view down to

    the lake bottom where old objects may be seen – these are the

    Samskaras. The increasing awareness bought about by Yoga practice can

    allow us to dive down and see clearly these old patterns, hurts and

    conflicts and resolve them, thus deactivating negative tendencies.

    Traditional language would say it something like: uprooting Karmic seeds

    that are waiting to ripen. (See section on Dyhana/Meditation later)

    Chitta – The deepest level of the conscious mind – the lakebed where the

    Samskaras lie.

    Vrittis – Fluctuations of the mind – the multitude of mental distractions

    that prevent us seeing down to the Chitta – or lakebed.

    Kleshas – literally trouble or affliction – primarily the wrong

    identification with ego and the negative emotions, thought patterns and

    tendencies that can come out of that.

    Vairagya – Non-attachment. To re-clarify this does not mean a

    detachment or disconnection from life – quite the opposite – it means

    non-attachment to identification with the ego and all the froth and mind

    stuff and reactivity that goes with it. So once all that is out the way it is

    the most direct connection to life. In its highest form it would be the

  • Page 9 of 21

    Purusha as ‘the knower/witness’ observing all the activity of Prakriti ‘the

    known’ in its proper perspective.

    Brahma Viharas – the qualities of Purusha - variously translated as

    ‘divine abidings’ or the ‘four immeasurables’ . Or highest attitudes or

    emotions. Common also to Buddhism. Each one arises naturally in the

    unconditioned consciousness state but can be practiced as meditations .

    Metta is considered the foundation for all the others. Interestingly they

    also have a ‘far enemy’ the opposite, and a ‘near enemy’ which can look a

    bit like the original but be coloured by negativity .

    1. Metta – acceptance, friendliness and active good will towards oneself

    and all of life. This quality/practice is considered to be the antidote to

    fear and is the foundation from which the following three qualities

    emerge naturally.

    Far Enemy: Hatred

    Near Enemy: Attachment

    2. Karuna – compassion – the feeling of the suffering of others as one’s

    own .

    Far Enemy: Cruelty

    Near Enemy: Pity

    3. Mudita – Empathetic Joy – the feeling of joy because others are

    happy/successful .

    Far Enemy: Envy

    Near Enemy: Insincerity , Comparison.

    4. Upekkha – Equanimity , even mindedness, an ability to stay steady and

    treat people impartially .

    Far Enemy: Anxiety/Greed

    Near Enemy: Indifference , Disassociation .

    3 PATANJALIS YOGA SUTRAS - THE 4 BOOKS/CHAPTERS IN

    SUMMARY

  • Page 10 of 21

    Book 1. – The Book on Samadhi or Ecstasy – 51 verses

    Yoga is defined and its characteristics discussed – also presented are the

    difficulties in attaining Yoga and how they may be addressed.

    The first four sutras of chapter 1 contain the whole of Patanjali’s

    message whilst the rest of the book is an elaboration of the message;

    this was the presentation style of the time.

    The first four Sutras: (In English combining various translations)

    1. And now the teaching on yoga begins.

    2. Yoga is the settling of the mind into silence (or is the stilling of

    the thought waves of the mind)

    3. When the mind has settled, we are established in our essential

    nature, which is unbounded consciousness

    4. Our Essential Nature is usually overshadowed by the activity of

    the mind and our identification with that.

    In general the settling of the mind, on whatever level is initially possible

    forms the basis of the Yogic path and practice in whatever forms it is

    taking.

    Book 1 also includes

    Obstacles to practice and causes of Dukkha – suffering/dissatisfaction.

    V 30

    Illness

    Fatigue

    Doubt

    Carelessness

    Laziness

    Attachment

    Delusion

    Failure to achieve and maintain samadhi

    V 31 - ‘These distractions make the body restless, the breathing course

    and the mind agitated. They Result in suffering.’

  • Page 11 of 21

    There is also a description of meditation as a process of increasingly

    refined awareness of more and more subtle levels of existence through to

    the threshold of pure consciousness. Full enlightenment is when the state

    of unbounded awareness is present at all times. (This doesn’t mean there

    are no thoughts – just no mistaken identification with them) Essentially

    an idea of enlightenment as a fully integrated personality gathered

    around a still quiet boundless centre.

    Book 2 – The Book on the Path – 55 verses

    Describes the necessary qualities to train the mind from a state of

    distraction to one of attention. It explains why these qualities are

    important and what the practice of them entails. In general there is an

    overview including a philosophical assessment of the human condition and

    how ignorance arises, and then the practical path of Yoga including the

    first 5 of the 8 limbs of Yoga that is the most well known exposition of

    the Yogic path.

    V2 The causes of Dukkha (suffering/dissatisfaction):

    1. Ignorance of our real nature

    2. Egoism – false identification to a sense of a separate self.

    3. Attachment – to this identification.

    4. Aversion – resisting the flow of life – based on 1,2 and 3.

    5. Fear of death – as being central in creating a clinging attitude.

    V 18 – The world is not denied but its value is seen as to provide us with

    experience and thus lead us to liberation. The world is considered as the

    manure for enlightenment in both gross and subtle ways. A progressive

    level of subtlety of the Gunas is listed – gross, subtle, causal and

    unmanifest (existing only as potential) reaffiming the idea that we need

    the world (Prakriti) to realise our true identity as Purusha/consciousness.

    THE PATH

    The eight limbs of Yoga

    The genius of Patanjali is that these 8 limbs of the path of Yoga are all

    inextricably linked; from the harnessing of the mind by paying attention

    to our actions and lifestyle choices and their consequences to how we

    feel, through the attention required for Asana and embodiment practice,

    through the slow further inward turning towards one pointed

  • Page 12 of 21

    concentration for meditation where we look through layers of the mind to

    our source consciousness. There is a consistent thread running through

    the limbs asking us to harness and gather in our distracted ‘monkey mind’

    tendencies, see clearly and to integrate and heal all aspects of ourselves,

    no less. 1 Yamas – (universal ethics and laws of life)

    Ahimsa -Non-violence - and its positive side, love and openness.

    Satya – Truthfulness and honesty.

    Asteya – Integrity/non stealing or its opposite – giving of time, energy or

    things. Recognising that any form of stealing arises out of a feeling of

    lack.

    Brahmacharya - Traditionally sometimes described as celibacy for

    ashram and intensive practice situations: but essentially to do with

    conserving life force energy and directing it towards yoga practice

    instead . In more general terms, and for most of us living in society,

    Brahmacharya refers less to celibacy and more broadly to conserving

    energy for yoga practice/study and or life’s more worthwhile activities

    and not wasting time on activities/distractions that suck your life force

    for no obvious value. We may reflect on what these are as there is

    arguably a subjective element to this – but I think we can all identify

    when we have spent time doing something that leaves us feeling in some

    way satisfied, enhanced or enriched as opposed to something that leaves

    us a bit flat or empty or drained.

    Aparigraha - Non-Attachment or Non-Hoarding - and its positive side –

    giving. Uprooting the tendency to reinforce ‘who we are’ by what we own

    or presenting a certain persona. Acceptance of our limitations and just

    being ourselves.

    The Yamas are given as universal ethical guidance – so not commandments

    or rules – more ethics to reflect on. At times when we are in touch with

    our pure consciousness the suggestion is we would live according to these

    without effort – it would just be obvious as these choices are in alignment

    with the nature of that consciousness. But they also help support practice

    in the first place, with the suggestion that if you live out of alignment

    with them, the mind will not settle and other formal structured yoga

    practices will be harder. They are practices to reflect on in that we can

  • Page 13 of 21

    notice as we go along the effects of living in alignment with these

    principles and how we feel, and the effects and feelings in relation to not

    following them.

    2. Niyama (Guidance for living and personal qualities to cultivate)

    Saucha - Purity/Simplicity – simplify life (as much as is possible in this

    society) – also part of the seeing clearly the activities of the mind

    through meditation. Keeping integrity by just being who you are.

    Santosa – Contentment and equanimity – we may usefully look at times of

    discontent and what is at the source of it. Trusting in life.

    Tapas – Fire / Purification. Variously translated as:

    1. As regards practice – it is a clear directing of our energy to practice -

    intentionally creating space in our life to practice so that it is something

    of a priority. Self-discipline.

    2. Also refers to some of the physical/mental purification effects that

    practice has in terms of releasing and clearing the conditioning and

    tension stored in the various systems and layers of the body.

    Svadyaya - Study and Refinement – traditionally study and reflection on

    the texts. But also any self-reflective or enquiring activity; active

    curiosity about life, our nature and our yoga practice.

    Isvara Prandidhana – openness to explorations of something bigger than

    our small self-concerns. A surrender into wider landscape of pure

    consciousness and an acceptance that on that level we are not in control.

    As with Yamas, Niyamas would occur naturally from the perspective of

    Purusha/Consciousness but act as a prompting guide in the meantime.

    Yamas and Niyamas 2 – V’s 33- 45 are also considered ways of living that

    will ensure safety on many levels; for self, family, community, society and

    globally. Imagine a world where most people tried to live this way. They

    most certainly aren’t to do with reward or punishment in relation living by

    certain rules or commandments; they are an experiment in cause and

    effect in how we live, how we feel in response to conscious living and how

    the world responds to us – a testing of the law of Karma if you like,

  • Page 14 of 21

    whether how we are living is a cause of mental suffering or a release from

    it. In general, as we go about life ,we can notice the movement around the

    heart centre in particular and the body in general in relation to ethical

    decisions and our general attitudes towards things – if we feel

    contraction around the chest, jaw etc – we may reconsider what we are

    about to do or reflect on how we are relating to something.

    We can consider if this kind of ethical practice as a discipline as a

    freedom in and of itself – in that we are liberated from just acting out

    every whim (a form of addiction), or just ‘joining in with the crowd’.

    The Yamas and Niyamas start to uproot and bring awareness to

    Samskaras and negative tendencies. Traditionally speaking we are also

    preventing the accumulation of negative karma in form of generating or

    giving power to more samskaras or negative tendencies.

    In this way our ‘yoga practice’ extends way off the mat/cushion into

    everything. Without our regular life we wouldn’t really have a reference

    point for our practice.

    3.Asana – Sthira (Stable and Alert) and Sukha (Ease, comfort,

    release). V’s 46 - 48

    That is all that is said about Asana for three possible reasons – one is

    that he didn’t consider them very important, another is that they require

    a teacher to be taught and another is the practice of them as we might

    recognise it was more of a later development. It’s hard to know. Perhaps

    it also just relates to our sitting position for meditation – which as we

    know – sitting still and upright with stability and ease takes some training

    for.

    The placing of Asana early in the eight limbs, though, suggests that a

    grounding of our attention/awareness in the body as part of the holistic

    process of Yoga is very important. It is the beginning of learning how to

    turn our attention inward to the felt sense of ourselves. The beginning of

    the journey from feeling/working through gross matter towards pure

    consciousness. For many of us it is a realistic and convenient place to

    start and it is perhaps part of the genius of Yoga that the body is

    included in the path rather than ignored or denigrated. A modern term

    that has arisen in relation to this is ‘embodiment’ . Embodiment trainings

    and practices are now a ‘thing’, certainly in the west.

  • Page 15 of 21

    There is much to consider with asana training. We are working with and

    harnessing universal principles of movement relating to physical laws of

    nature and the human body and mind as a whole (Gravity breath etc.) If

    we consider all the ramifications of Sthira and Sukha in Asana practice

    there is much to explore on that basis. We may ask if the physical natural

    laws we work with in Asana practice are natural laws in the same way as

    the moral ‘natural laws’ arising from Yama and Niyama? In both cases, we

    have to focus on the way things actually work and connect together in

    relation to the forces acting on us, and work harmoniously with them,

    rather than imposing our will onto the situation. On some level Asana

    practice can help as part of the clearing and healing of conditioning,

    blockages and tension stored in the various systems and layers of the

    body. Also from the yogic perspective, as part of the spectrum of

    Prakriti, the body is the mind and a useful way in to explore our deeper

    layers and tendencies.

    4. Pranayama – sometimes translated as breath control – perhaps

    more accurately as energy (Prana) awareness, management and

    expansion.

    Essentially when we develop a more refined awareness of our inner

    environment and are less distracted by muscular tensions and external

    stimuli, we can become more attuned to the sense of vitality or life force

    circulating the body. In India this is traditionally known as Prana, in the

    Far East as Chi, and sometimes in modern parlance it is known as ‘bio

    energy’.

    Somewhat inconveniently for our science orientated western minds it

    cannot be measured or seen in the way that it is described in older

    Eastern texts. But many Eastern approaches also describe these

    energetic ideas in more tangible terms such as element theories – the

    earth as body/anatomy, fire as heat in the body, water as our fluid

    systems, wind as movement on many levels including: through blood

    vessels, nerve conductivity, tendons, muscles , fascia, neuro transmitters,

    endocrine (hormonal) influences, mind movements, emotional movements,

    thoughts and then the space within which all this occurs . It’s not

    surprising that there is an overall feeling of energy – in harmony or not,

    or blocked or not. Wind is a term often used interchangeably with Prana

    in some Asian traditions and in breathing practices. It is certainly easier

    for us in the west to understand prana in terms of movement through all

  • Page 16 of 21

    the pathways described above, which produce ‘feelings of energy’ as

    opposed to some mysterious unseeable energetic force.

    Our breathing has quite an effect on this level. Breathing and our state

    of mind and physiology have a direct interrelationship that can be

    observed. I suspect this is really the heart of pranayama – the effects of

    the breath on our system and mind.

    There are a variety of pranayamas or breathing practices all designed to

    further refine our awareness and harmonise our system in readiness for

    meditation . Having worked with the breath in various ways it can then

    come to its own resting condition more easily which supports the

    quietening of the mind.

    Pranayama V’s 49 –51

    5 Pratyahara – Retirement or withdrawal of the senses, also

    translated as the return of the senses to their natural function or

    cleansing the doors of perception.

    Traditionally described as the turning inward of the attention by turning

    the direction of flow of the senses inwards. If we consider that the main

    role of the senses is to present the mind with information from the

    outside world, and that yoga practice is dealing largely with the inner life

    then this limb is to help us centre ourselves inwardly on various levels.

    Some would say this is a natural process, as the senses will be drawn

    towards what is most ultimately satisfying.

    When we consider the idea of ‘returning the senses to their natural

    function’ or ‘cleansing the doors of perception’ – this can perhaps help us

    be aware of the ‘outer’ whilst being connected to the ‘inner’ so we can

    live and respond to life in a more centred way with greater awareness

    of our inner responses to outer stimuli.

    There is no suggestion here of absence from sensory pleasures – in fact

    the more the senses are refined the greater the riches they reveal. This

    is an area where there is room for experimentation, for example we can

    compare how the world looks through narrow hard eyes as opposed to

    wide soft eyes. A related type of practice that is interesting is to try to

    live more in the back of the body, and then see how the senses feel? And

    maybe we end up living more in the centre of the body? Another

  • Page 17 of 21

    interesting area is hearing; hearing in particular is often given importance

    in Yoga and Buddhist meditation teaching – it is reputedly the first sense

    to properly awaken in the foetus and the last sense to leave at the time

    of death (hence the tradition to read sacred texts to the dying or

    ‘recently dead’). Often people in a coma, with all other senses seemingly

    suspended, report that they could hear. In some forms of Buddhist

    meditation – opened relaxed hearing is often given as one of the first

    points of attention to widen and expand the mind. In other texts where

    Prakriti is broken down more – hearing is said to be the senior sense,

    operating through the medium of space, which is the subtlest of the

    great elements from which the other four; wind, fire, water and earth

    sequentially unfold. It is interesting to experiment with hearing,

    particularly relaxed receptive hearing and sensory awareness generally

    and how we experience it in different states of mind.

    Another description is that with the practice of yoga in general, over

    time the senses provide less disturbance to the mind.

    Pratyahara v’s 52 – 55

    Book 3 – the last 3 stages of the path and the Book on the Powers –

    55 verses

    Book 3 continues into the last three stages of the eight limbs relating to

    Meditation, and is also about Samyama (The simultaneous practice of

    Dharana, Dyana and Samadhi) and the Siddhis (powers) that can arise out

    of Samyama on various object’s/experiences. The Siddhis in essence arise

    out of the relationship between the subtlest levels of mind reflecting

    Purusha and its’ ability to influence Prakriti – or how the non distracted

    mind can probe deeply into objects and concepts so that they are

    experienced in a dimension previously unknown.There are also warnings

    about the inherent dangers and distractions from the path that can arise

    from the powers and we are advised to move beyond them. In an attempt

    to understand or speculate about the Siddhis we could consider that in

    quantum physics particles and waves do not behave in the same ways as

    the grosser constituents of matter do.

    Another way to consider Samyama is that when we experience life

    through a non-conceptual meditative state we see things more clearly and

    directly for what they actually are.

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    V’s 45 - 47 give an impressive list of Siddhis that would indeed be handy!

    But we are also given various warnings about getting distracted by them

    and falling off the path just as we near completion - for example in V 51.

    6.Dharana – Concentration – not to be confused with the kind of heady

    concentration with its accompanied furrowed brow that we may be used

    to; Yogic concentration is a whole body experience free from muscular

    and other tension. The body aspect of concentration and meditation

    reaffirms the value of asana practice.

    To settle the mind we aim the attention on an object (the breath a

    mantra or whatever) and try to sustain it. The mind can be harnessed in

    this respect – learning to concentrate is not a mystery, it ‘just’ requires

    training.

    7.Dhyana – Meditation – When the mind is undistracted – a non-

    conceptual awareness arises; or when you can aim and sustain mental

    attention effortlessly for a period (some say for a minimum of 12 breaths

    for example) then awareness arises – again this is not a mystery. Over

    time we may find that attention on the chosen object of concentration is

    less necessary to stay in open non-conceptual awareness. This is where we

    would start to enter the more subtle realms of the mind – it can be

    blissful at times though we may also find some helpful trouble lurking in

    the form of the Samskaras – we may see/experience these as repeat

    thought patterns/emotions or feelings we can then investigate and let go

    of in the light of bringing them to consciousness.

    A teacher or mentor can be helpful to reflect and clarify your experience

    but essentially as we get to more refined states we try to let go each

    time we feel contraction/tightness in the body/mind . Each time we shine

    the light of awareness on a samskara or tendency and let go of it instead

    of allowing it to take hold of us – it loses its power or grip over us – or put

    another way we burn off our karma this way; you have to feel it to heal it.

    Strong emotional release is possible sometimes (though not necessarily) –

    but if there is any trouble that arises and seems unmanageable then

    professional help may be advisable. Traditionally a yoga teacher may have

    taken on this role – but in our culture this may not always be a good idea.

    Teachers who make themselves overly available in this way perhaps need

    to be viewed carefully.

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    8.Samadhi – Ecstasy or pure awareness (Purusha) - relates to further

    varying levels of deep absorption (through the subtle layers of the mind)

    so that we are connected into Purusha. According to some authors there

    are as many as twelve layers of Samadhi (though how someone would be

    counting this in non conceptual meditation, or determining when one layer

    changes to another, I’m not sure?).

    The levels relate to progressively more subtle levels of the mind until the

    final level when Purusha shines cleanly through the lens of the mind and

    you can see clearly, as when having cleaned a dirty window. These deeper

    levels are reached partly by the length of time in undistracted meditation

    and partly by the process of letting go through the deeper levels of

    conditioning stored in the mind. It is seemingly possible to become

    familiar with these deeper levels so it becomes ‘easier’ to reside in them

    and to stay with them to a degree in ‘normal waking consciousness’. It’s

    not that thoughts and normal processes stop, more that we no longer

    identify with them in an attached way that restricts us.

    Even if it is hard to maintain that type of awareness in daily living,

    experiences of this kind from deeper meditation can sustain us and stay

    with us on some level and likely they will change us in some way. In

    addition these experiences can have a significant impact on how we then

    perceive things and choose to live thus bringing us back full circle to the

    practice of Yamas and Niyamas, which may, from a changed perspective,

    seem the ‘natural’ or ‘obvious’ way to live.

    When we are able to reside in Samadhi all the time we would be in the

    enlightened state – this would not be living in some kind of daze, but

    seeing and experiencing life from the perspective of ‘the witness’ or

    Purusha or pure consciousness - so we would be involved fully in life and

    all its attending drama, but see it in its proper perspective. Someone who

    is liberated in life is known traditionally as a Jiva-Mukti.

    Book 4 – Book on liberation – 34 verses.

    This book presents the possibilities for a person who has understood

    their nature as pure consciousness – in essence the mind is the servant

    and not the master. There is further philosophical consideration of the

    path and the enlightened state.

  • Page 20 of 21

    Books

    The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali – Alistair Shearer

    How to know God – Christopher Isherwood and Swami Prabhavananda.

    Yoga Unveiled – A Users Guide to the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali – Godfrey

    Devereux.

    All books are good – some beginners to the subject prefer Shearer.

    Christopher Isherwood’s has stood the test of time, and Godfrey

    Devereux’s is possibly more Humanist in approach – but maybe a little

    harder without having read another version first.

    It is interesting to consider that all of these authors seem to interpret

    Patanjali ultimately through the filter of Vedanta (i.e. non-dualism),

    seeing that as the ultimate goal.

    Possible inquiry questions to consider for our session ( in no particular

    order) :

    Are we clear about Dualism and Non Dualism? – How do you understand

    them?

    What do you understand by the various meanings of the term Yoga. P.4

    What do you think of the Brahma Viharas and their near and far enemies

    ? p.9

    How do you feel about the external world being necessary in order to

    become liberated?

    How might we practice the Yamas and Niyamas from the perspective of

    body/mind direct experience and sensation?

    Can the same rules apply to our Asana practice?

    Do you think that the Yamas and Niyamas bring us into alignment with

    something? If so what?

    What might the Gunas tell us about our approach to Yoga Practice?

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    What do you think the Witness/Consciousness state that is able to

    observe our thoughts, emotions, feelings, sensations without identifying

    with them is ?

    How do life and objects in general appear from the perspective of the

    Witness/Consciousness, without the conceptual attatchments? – Can we

    experience life in its essence without the concepts and stories attached?

    The Purusha/Prakriti dynamic, along with the notion of the Siddhis, raises

    some interesting questions about the relationship between matter and

    energy and mind. Modern quantum physics has concluded that Energy and

    Matter are one and the same which fits with Prakriti nicely – but can

    consciousness influence matter? If so in what kinds of ways?

    Do you like the description of Liberation or Yoga as being ‘A fully

    integrated personality gathered around a silent boundless centre’? Why

    or why not?

    As we practice more deeply – do our negative tendencies or Samskaras

    seem to ‘get worse’ ? If so Why ?