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Yoga and the Bear in the Forest
Dec 11th, 2009 by JonathanCline

There is an old joke:

Two campers see a bear, and one immediately puts on his running shoes.

“You can’t outrun the bear,” the other says.

The first one replies, “I don’t have to outrun the bear. I just have to outrun you.”

Is there competition in yoga?  I invite you to ask this question now.

In yoga, do we compete against each other? Some do; let this go. Yoga is about the self, it is only about your own body and your own mind and your own spirit with the union of all.

In yoga, do we compete against ourselves?  Some do; the self of yesterday, or the expected self of tomorrow.  Let this go.  yoga is about the moment.  In that moment, is there competition still?  Sometimes, there is: go further, go faster, go deeper; let this go as well.

When all these forms of competition, between others and between our many selves, drop away, then we can merge into the flow.

BBC news: Heart Disease Patients who Practice Meditation have Nearly 50% Lower Rates of Heart Attack, Stroke, and Death
Dec 6th, 2009 by JonathanCline

I am positive that most forms of meditation will do the same work, including those performed as part of regular yoga practice.

Woman meditating

Heart patients saw a big risk reduction from practising meditation

Heart disease patients who practise Transcendental Meditation have reduced death rates, US researchers have said.

At a meeting of the American Heart Association they said they had randomly assigned 201 African Americans to meditate or to make lifestyle changes.

After nine years, the meditation group had a 47% reduction in deaths, heart attacks and strokes.

The research was carried out by the Medical College of Wisconsin with the Maharishi University in Iowa.

It was funded by a £2.3m grant from the National Institute of Health and the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute.

‘Significant benefits’

The African American men and women had an average age of 59 years and a narrowing of the arteries in their hearts.

TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION
Introduced in India in 1955 by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi
In the 60s the Beatles popularised it by travelling to India to learn the technique from the Maharishi
The Maharishi Foundation says TM is a programme for the development of consciousness
Courses are only available through the foundation
They cost from £190 for students to £590 for people with incomes over £40,000

The meditation group were asked to practise for 20 minutes twice a day.

The lifestyle change group received education classes in traditional risk factors, including dietary modification and exercise.

Over nine years, there were 20 events (heart attacks, strokes or death) in the meditation group and 31 in the health education group.

Dr Robert Schneider, lead author and director of the Centre for Natural Medicine and Prevention at the Maharishi University in Iowa said:

“At the end of the 9 years, 80% of the meditation group were still practising at least once a day.

“But there was very little change in the health education group.

“Their lifestyle was much the same in terms of diet and exercise – it’s a very difficult thing to make those changes.”

As well as the reductions in death, heart attacks and strokes in the meditating group, their average blood pressure was significantly lower (5mm Hg), and there was a significant reduction in psychological stress in some participants.

Dr Schneider said other studies had shown the benefits of Transcendental Meditation on blood pressure and stress, irrespective of ethnicity.

“This is the first controlled clinical trial to show that long-term practise of this particular stress reduction programme reduces the incidence of clinical cardiovascular events, that is heart attacks, strokes and mortality,” he said.

Dr Schneider said that the effect of Transcendental Meditation in the trial was like adding a class of newly discovered drugs for the prevention of heart disease.

He said: “In this case, the new medications are derived from the body’s own internal pharmacy stimulated by the Transcendental Meditation practice.”

Ingrid Collins, a consultant educational psychologist at the London Medical Centre, said: “I’m not at all surprised that a change of behaviour like this can have enormous benefits both emotionally and physically.

“Physical and emotional energy is on a continuum and whatever happens to us physically can affect our emotions and vice versa.”

British Heart Foundation Cardiac Nurse Ellen Mason said: “This is a fascinating area and the results were impressive.

“However, in order to fully assess the difference transcendental meditation could have on heart patient’s lives, we need to see research confirming it in a far bigger study and with other ethnic groups.”

Gāyatrī Mantra: The “Great Mystical Phrase” Song, bhūr bhuvaḥ svaḥ
Jul 23rd, 2009 by JonathanCline

Gāyatrī Mantra

ॐ भूर्भुवः स्वः ।
तत् सवितुर्वरेण्यं ।
भर्गो देवस्य धीमहि ।
धियो यो नः प्रचोदयात् ॥

We meditate on the glory of that Being who has produced this universe; may He enlighten our minds.

Swami Vivekananda

Read the rest of this entry »

Prayer mantra, commonly sung by students prior to study
Jul 3rd, 2009 by JonathanCline

ॐ सह नाववतु |

सह नौ भुनक्तु |

सह वीर्यं करवावहै |

तेजस्विनावधीतमस्तु मा विद्विषावहै ||

ॐ शान्तिः शान्तिः शान्तिः ||

OM Let both of us protect each other together
May both of us enjoy together
May both of us work together
Let our study become radiant, unite us
OM Peace, Peace, Peace.

oṃ saha nāvavatu
saha nau bhunaktu
saha vīryaṃ karavāvahai
tejasvināvadhītamastu mā vidviṣāvahai
oṃ śāntiḥ śāntiḥ śāntiḥ

Anusara Mantra – Beginning of Practice
Feb 14th, 2009 by JonathanCline

Om Namah Shivaya Gurave
Saccidanda Murtaye
Nisprapancaya Shantaya
Niralambaya Tejase

I offer myself to the Light, The Auspicious One who is the True Teacher within and without.
Who assumes the forms of Reality, Consciousness and Bliss
Who is ever present and is full of peace
Independent in existence, the vital essence of illumination

धारणा dhāraṇā
Dec 3rd, 2008 by JonathanCline

Dhāraṇā is the sixth stage, step or limb of eight elucidated by Patanjali’s Ashtanga Yoga or Raja Yoga: “holding”, “holding steady”, “concentration” or “single focus”. Dhāraṇā is the initial step of deep concentrative meditation, where the object being focused upon is held in the mind without consciousness wavering from it; the object of meditation, the meditator, and the act of meditation itself remain separate.

The meditator or the meditator’s meta-awareness is conscious of meditating (that is, is conscious of the act of meditation) on an object, and of his or her own self, which is concentrating on the object. In the subsequent stage of Dhāraṇā, as the meditator becomes more advanced, consciousness of the act of meditation disappears, and only the consciousness of being/existing and the object of concentration exist (in the mind).

Bhagavad Gita, ~Ch. 6, V34:

The mind is restless, turbulent and strong, as difficult to curb as the wind.

Ashtanga Asana Practice – Beginning Mantra
Sep 19th, 2008 by JonathanCline

vande gurūṇāṁ caraṇāravinde saṁdarśitasvātmasukhāvabodhe

niḥ śreyase jāṅ̇galikāyamāne saṁsāra hālāhala mohaśāntyai

ābāhu puruṣākāraṁ śaṅ̇khacakrāsi dhāriṇam

sahasra śirasaṁ śvetam praṇamāmi patañjalim

I bow to the lotus feet of the gurus,
The awakening happiness of ones own self revealed,
Beyond better, acting like the jungle physician,
Pacifying delusion, the poison of samsara.

Taking the form of a man to the shoulders,
Holding a conch, a discus, and a sword,
One thousand heads white,
To Patanjali, I salute.

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