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Tuesday, April 23, 2024

Awakening Through Yoga

BY DEEPAK CHOPRA, M.D.

In the past two decades, yoga has moved from relative anonymity in the West to a well-recognized practice offered in thousands of studios, community centers, hospitals, gyms, and health clubs. Although yoga is commonly portrayed as a popular fitness trend, it’s actually the core of the Vedic science that developed in the Indus Valley more than 5,000 years ago.

Yoga began as a philosophy rather than as a physical discipline. The term yoga is first mentioned in the sacred Indian text the Rig Veda, which dates to roughly 500 B.C. The Rig Veda defines yoga as a union or “yoking” of the material and spiritual worlds, and it doesn’t describe any physical postures other than the traditional cross-legged meditation pose.

Another 300 years passed before the legendary sage Patanjali composed the Yoga Sutras, where he systematically describes the eight “limbs” of yoga. The Yoga Sutras offers a clear roadmap for the evolution of consciousness from ordinary states of awareness such as waking, dreaming, and sleeping, to higher states of consciousness.

Although there are standard interpretations of the eight limbs, the Chopra Center for Wellbeing has developed more contemporary perspectives that are in alignment with our philosophy of spiritual evolution.

 

The Eight Limbs of Yoga

1.) Yamas
Standard Interpretation: Rules of conduct
Contemporary Interpretation: Spontaneous evolutionary behavior or conscious beings

2.) Niyama 
Standard Interpretation: Rules of personal behavior
Contemporary Interpretation: The internal dialogue of conscious beings

3.) Asana
Standard Interpretation: Physical postures
Contemporary Interpretation: Mind-body integration

4.) Pranayama
Standard Interpretation: Breath control
Contemporary Interpretation: Neurorespiratory integration; awareness and integration of the rhythms, seasons, and cycles of our life

5.) Pratyahara
Standard Interpretation: Control of the senses
Contemporary Interpretation: Turning into our subtle sensory experiences

6.) Dharana
Standard Interpretation: Mind control
Contemporary Interpretation: Evolutionary mastery and expression of attention and intention

7.) Dhyana
Standard Interpretation: Meditation
Contemporary Interpretation: Resonating at the junction point between the personal and the universal

8.) Samadhi
Standard Interpretation: Absorption
Contemporary Interpretation: Settled in pure awareness; the progressive expansion of the self
 

The Seven Spiritual Laws of Yoga

My colleague and friend Dr. David Simon and I developed the Seven Spiritual Laws of Yoga as a consciousness-based practice, based in India’s ancient wisdom teachings and the eight limbs of the Yoga Sutras. It is focused on integrating and balancing all the layers of our life so that our body, mind, heart, intellect, and spirit flow in harmony.

Below is a brief summary of these principles:

The Law of Pure Potentiality
Our essential nature is pure consciousness, the infinite source of everything that exists in the physical world. Since we are an inextricable part of the field of consciousness, we are also infinitely creative, unbounded, and eternal.

The Law of Giving and Receiving
Giving and receiving are different expressions of the same flow of energy in the universe. Since the universe is in constant and dynamic exchange, we need to both give and receive to keep abundance, love, and anything else we want circulating in our lives.


The Law of Least Effort
The Law of Karma (Cause and Effect)
Every action generates a force of energy that returns to us in kind. When we choose actions that bring happiness and success to others, the fruit of our karma is happiness and success.

We can most easily fulfill our desires when our actions are motivated by love, we expend the least effort, and we offer no resistance. We tap into the infinite organizing power of the universe to do less and accomplish everything.

The Law of Intention and Desire
Inherent in every intention and desire are the mechanics for its fulfillment. When we become quiet and introduce our intentions into the field of pure potentiality, we harness the universe’s infinite organizing power, which can manifest our desires with effortless ease.

The Law of Detachment
At the level of spirit, everything is always unfolding perfectly. We don’t have to struggle or force situations to go our way. Instead, we can intend for everything to work out as it should, take action, and then allow opportunities to spontaneously emerge.

The Law of Dharma
Everyone has a dharma or purpose in life. By expressing our unique talents and using them to serve others, we will experience unlimited love, abundance, and true fulfillment in our lives.

 

During our Seven Spiritual Laws of Yoga classes, students are learning postures and applying these principles to all aspects of their lives.

Even if yoga only enhanced physical fitness, the time spent in practice would be fully worthwhile ─ but yoga offers much more. The deeper meaning and gift of yoga is the path it offers us into the timeless, spaceless world of spirit. Yoga teaches us both to let go and to have exquisite awareness in every moment. We remember our essential spiritual nature and life becomes more joyful, meaningful, and carefree.

____________________________________________________________________

Deepak Chopra, M.D. is a best-selling author and the co-founder of the Chopra Center for Wellbeing in Carlsbad, California. Known as the global source for learning meditation, yoga, Ayurveda, and mind-body medicine, the Chopra Center offers a variety of signature programs, retreats, workshops, and teacher trainings. To learn about special offers and upcoming events, please visit www.chopra.com or call 888.736.6895.

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