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ADVAITA-SAADHANAA (Kanchi Maha-Swamigal's Discourses)
ADVAITA-SAADHANAA (Kanchi Maha-Swamigal’s Discourses) Acknowledgement of Source Material: Ra. Ganapthy’s ‘Deivathin Kural’ (Vol.6) in Tamil published by Vanathi Publishers, 4th edn. 1998 URL of Tamil Original: http://www.kamakoti.org/tamil/dk6-74.htm to http://www.kamakoti.org/tamil/dk6-141.htm English rendering : V. Krishnamurthy 2006 CONTENTS 1. Essence of the philosophical schools......................................................................... 1 2. Advaita is different from all these. ............................................................................. 2 3. Appears to be easy – but really, difficult .................................................................... 3 4. Moksha is by Grace of God ....................................................................................... 5 5. Takes time but effort has to be started........................................................................ 7 8. ShraddhA (Faith) Necessary..................................................................................... 12 9. Eligibility for Aatma-SAdhanA................................................................................ 14 10. Apex of Saadhanaa is only for the sannyAsi !........................................................ 17 11. Why then tell others,what is suitable only for Sannyaasis?.................................... 21 12. Two different paths for two different aspirants ...................................................... 21 13. Reason for telling every one .................................................................................. -
Standardised Techniques of the Yoga Institute
THE ADVANCED TEACHER TRAINING COURSE (ATTC) SYLLABUS The Yoga Institute has designed the syllabus of this course to provide a strong base of yoga philosophy with a comprehensive approach to science and technology of yoga. This practical approach enables a student of yoga to develop an objective approach towards life situations and lead a fulfilling, duty bound life. Everyone here is in a Life School. After successfully completing the course, ATTC certificate holders will be qualified to conduct Yoga sessions for normal healthy individuals and groups, for people with minor ailments or disorders and for people, under the guidance of qualified medical practitioners, undergoing treatment for any physiological, psychological and psychosomatic diseases/conditions. The Yoga Institute is recognised by the Government of India (Ministry of AYUSH – QCI) and is the first Yoga school to be accredited after the AYUSH -QCI scheme was launched. The course conforms to the syllabus of Level 2 - Yoga Teacher QCI scheme– mentored by AYUSH (Govt. of India). This is RYT 500 hour course, fully accredited with the Yoga Alliance USA and the participant is eligible to apply on Yoga Alliance site as Register Yoga Teacher. 1. COURSE DETAILS: KNOWLEDGE I. SIX THEMES - THE TOPIC OF THE MONTH (TOM) These themes provide the general direction to each segment of the course. Together they equip the learner with the holistic nature of the Art, Science and Culture of Yoga. It also aims at making Yoga relevant in modern times just as much as in the archival times when it originated. The six topics covered are: a. History and Background of Yoga b. -
Jnana, Bhakti and Karma Yoga in the Bhagavad Gita
Jnana, Bhakti and Karma Yoga in the Bhagavad Gita The Bhagavad Gita - written between 600 -500 BCE is sometimes referred to as the last Upanishad. As with many Yoga texts and great literature there are many possible layers of meaning. In essence it is grounded by the meditative understanding of the underlying unity of life presented in the Upanishads, and then extends this into how yoga practice, insight and living life can become one and the same. Ultimately it is a text that describes how yoga can clarify our perception of life, its purpose and its challenges, and offers guidance as to how we might understand and negotiate them. It encourages full engagement with life, and its difficulties and dilemmas are turned into the manure for potential liberation and freedom. The Bhagavad-Gita is actually a sub story contained within a huge poem/story called the Mahabharata, one of the ‘Puranas’ or epics that make up much of early Indian literature. It emphasises the importance of engagement in the world, perhaps a reaction to the tendency developing at the time in Buddhism and Vedanta to renounce worldly life in favour of personal liberation. The yoga of the Bhagavad-Gita essentially suggests that fully engaging in all aspects of life and its challenges with a clear perspective is a valid yogic path and possibly superior to meditative realisation alone. There is an implication in this emphasis that there is a potential danger for some people of using yoga practice and lifestyle to avoid difficulties in life and not engage with the world and the culture and time we find ourselves in; and/or perhaps to misunderstand that yoga practice is partly practice for something – to re-evaluate and hopefully enrich our relationship to the rest of life. -
Nirodbaran Talks with Sri Aurobindo 01
Talks with Sri Aurobindo Volume 1 by Nirodbaran Sri Aurobindo Ashram Pondicherry NOTE These talks are from my notebooks. For several years I used to record most of the conversations which Sri Aurobindo had with us, his attendants, and a few others, after the accident to his right leg in November 1938. Besides myself, the regular participants were: Purani, Champaklal, Satyendra, Mulshankar and Dr. Becharlal. Occasional visitors were Dr. Manilal, Dr. Rao and Dr. Savoor. As these notes were not seen by Sri Aurobindo himself, the responsibil- ity for the Master's words rests entirely with me. I do not vouch for absolute accuracy, but I have tried my best to reproduce them faithfully. I have made the same attempt for the remarks of the others. NIRODBARAN i PREFACE The eve of the November Darshan, 1938. The Ashram humming with the ar- rival of visitors. On every face signs of joy, in every look calm expectation and happiness. Everybody has retired early, lights have gone out: great occa- sion demands greater silent preparation. The Ashram is bathed in an atmos- phere of serene repose. Only one light keeps on burning in the corner room like a midnight vigil. Sri Aurobindo at work as usual. A sudden noise! A rush and hurry of feet breaking the calm sleep. 2:00 a.m. Then an urgent call to Sri Aurobindo's room. There, lying on the floor with his right knee flexed, is he, clad in white dhoti, upper body bare, the Golden Purusha. The Mother, dressed in a sari, is sitting beside him. -
(1896) Vedanta Philosophy: Eight Lectures on Karma Yoga
Karma Yoga i Karma Yoga Writings Address by Swami Vivekananda on “The Ideal of a Universal Religion” Vedanta Philosophy: Lectures by the Swami Vivekananda on “The Cosmos” Vedanta Philosophy: Lecture by the Swami Vivekananda on “The Atman” Vedanta Philosophy: Lecture by the Swami Vivekananda on “The Real and Apparent Man” Vedanta Philosophy: Lecture by the Swami Vivekananda on “Bhakti Yoga” The Vedanta Philosophy: An Address Before the Graduate Philosophical Society of Harvard University Vedanta Philosophy: Eight Lectures by the Swami Vivekananda on Karma Yoga (The Secret of Work) Vedanta Philosophy: Lectures by the Swami Vivekananda on Raja Yoga and Other Subjects My Master Vedanta Philosophy: Lectures by the Swami Vivekananda on Jnana Yoga ii Vedanta Philosophy Eight Lectures on Karma Yoga The Secret of Work Delivered under the Auspices of the Vedanta Society 1896 Swami Vivekananda 1863–1902 信 YOGeBooks: Hollister, MO 2013:09:01:20:35:28 iii Vedanta Philosophy Eight Lectures on Karma Yoga Copyright YOGeBooks by Roger L. Cole, Hollister, MO 65672 © 2010 YOGeBooks by Roger L. Cole All rights reserved. Electronic edition published 2010 isbn: 978‑1‑61183‑026‑2 (pdf) isbn: 978‑1‑61183‑027‑9 (epub) www.yogebooks.com iv Contents I. ………………………………… Karma in its Effect on Character. II. ………………………………… “Each is Great in His Own Place.” III. …………………………………………………The Secret of Work. IV. ……………………………………………………… What is Duty? V. ……………………………… We Help Ourselves, not the World. VI. …………… Non‑Attachment is Complete Self‑Abnegation. VII. ………………………………………………………………Freedom. VIII. ………………………………………… The Ideal of Karma Yoga. v Vedanta Philosophy Eight Lectures on Karma Yoga vi Preface. he word Karma is fully explained in the text of this book, but possibly it may not be out of place to give a brief idea Tof what is meant by Yoga. -
An Introduction to Yoga for Whole Health
WHOLE HEALTH: INFORMATION FOR VETERANS An Introduction to Yoga for Whole Health Whole Health is an approach to health care that empowers and enables YOU to take charge of your health and well-being and live your life to the fullest. It starts with YOU. It is fueled by the power of knowing yourself and what will really work for you in your life. Once you have some ideas about this, your team can help you with the skills, support, and follow up you need to reach your goals. All resources provided in these handouts are reviewed by VHA clinicians and Veterans. No endorsement of any specific products is intended. Best wishes! https://www.va.gov/wholehealth/ An Introduction to Yoga for Whole Health An Introduction to Yoga for Whole Health SUMMARY 1. One of the main goals of yoga is to help people find a more balanced and peaceful state of mind and body. 2. The goal of yoga therapy (also called therapeutic yoga) is to adapt yoga for people who may have a variety of health conditions or needs. 3. Yoga can help improve flexibility, strength, and balance. Research shows it may help with the following: o Decrease pain in osteoarthritis o Improve balance in the elderly o Control blood sugar in type 2 diabetes o Improve risk factors for heart disease, including blood pressure o Decrease fatigue in patients with cancer and cancer survivors o Decrease menopausal hot flashes o Lose weight (See the complete handout for references.) 4. Yoga is a mind-body activity that may help people to feel more calm and relaxed. -
The Concept of Bhakti-Yoga
Nayankumar J. Bhatt [Subject: English] International Journal of Vol. 2, Issue: 1, January 2014 Research in Humanities and Social Sciences ISSN:(P) 2347-5404 ISSN:(O)2320 771X The Concept of Bhakti-Yoga NAYANKUMAR JITENDRA BHATT B-402, Ayodhya Appt., Maheshnagar, Zanzarada Road, Junagadh Gujarat (India) Abstract: Bhakti-Yoga is a real, genuine search after the lord, a search beginning, continuing, and ending in love. One single moment of the madness of extreme love to God brings us eternal freedom. About Bhakti-Yoga Narada says in his explanation of the Bhakti-aphorisms, “is intense love to God.” When a man gets it, he loves all, hates none; he becomes satisfied forever. This love cannot be reduced to any earthly benefit, because so long as worldly desires last, that kind of love does not come. Bhakti is greater than Karma, because these are intended for an object in view, while Bhakti is its own fruition, its own means, and its own end. Keywords: Bhakti Yoga, God, Karma, Yoga The one great advantage of Bhakti is that it is the easiest, and the most natural way to reach the great divine end in view; its great disadvantage is that in its lower forms it oftentimes degenerates into hideous fanaticism. The fanatical crews in Hinduism, or Mohammedanism, or Christianity, have always been almost exclusively recruited from these worshippers on the lower planes of Bhakti. That singleness of attachment to a loved object, without which no genuine love can grow, is very often also the cause of the denunciation of everything else. When Bhakti has become ripe and has passed into that form which is caned the supreme, no more is there any fear of these hideous manifestations of fanaticism; that soul which is overpowered by this higher form of Bhakti is too near the God of Love to become an instrument for the diffusion of hatred. -
Yoga in the Visnu Purana
Cleveland State University EngagedScholarship@CSU Philosophy & Comparative Religion Department Faculty Publications Philosophy & Comparative Religion Department 2017 Yoga in the Visnu Purana Sucharita Adluri Ms. Cleveland State University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://engagedscholarship.csuohio.edu/clphil_facpub Part of the Hindu Studies Commons, and the Religious Thought, Theology and Philosophy of Religion Commons How does access to this work benefit ou?y Let us know! Publisher's Statement Copyright Springer Verlag. https://link.springer.com/journal/10781 Original Citation Adluri, S. (2017). Yoga in the Visnu Purana. Journal of Indian Philosophy, 45(2), 381-402. This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Philosophy & Comparative Religion Department at EngagedScholarship@CSU. It has been accepted for inclusion in Philosophy & Comparative Religion Department Faculty Publications by an authorized administrator of EngagedScholarship@CSU. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Yoga in the Visnu Purana Sucharita Adluri Abstract Though scholarship on diverse methods of yoga in the Indian traditions abounds, there has not been sufficient research that examines the traditions of yoga in the puranas. The present paper explores yoga articulated in the Visnu Purana (fourth century CE) and argues that what seems like a unified teaching is a com posite of an eight-limbed yoga embedded within an instruction on proto-Sämkhya. An evaluation of the key elements of yoga as developed in this text as a whole, clarifies our understanding of the emergence of yoga and its relationship to epic formulations on the one hand and to the Classical System of the Yogasiitras of Patafijali on the other. -
Tantra and Hatha Yoga
1 Tantra and Hatha Yoga. A little history and some introductory thoughts: These areas of practice in yoga are really all part of the same, with Tantra being the historical development in practice that later spawned hatha yoga. Practices originating in these traditions form much of what we practice in the modern day yoga. Many terms, ideas and theories that we use come from this body of knowledge though we may not always fully realise it or understand or appreciate their original context and intent. There are a huge number of practices described that may or may not seem relevant to our current practice and interests. These practices are ultimately designed for complete transformation and liberation, but along the way there are many practices designed to be of therapeutic value to humans on many levels and without which the potential for transformation cannot happen. Historically, Tantra started to emerge around the 6th to 8th Centuries A.D. partly as a response to unrealistic austerities in yoga practice that some practitioners were espousing in relation to lifestyle, food, sex and normal householder life in general. Tantra is essentially a re-embracing of all aspects of life as being part of a yogic path; the argument being that if indeed all of life manifests from an underlying source and is therefore all interconnected then all of life is inherently spiritual or worthy of our attention. And indeed, if we do not attend to all aspects of life in our practice this can lead to problems and imbalances. This embracing of all of life includes looking at our shadows and dark sides and integrating or transforming them, ideas which also seem to be embraced in modern psychology. -
Tilak's View of Karma Yoga to Attain Salvation
Journal of Management (JOM) Volume 6, Issue 3, May-June 2019, pp. 154-156, Article ID: JOM_06_03_018 Available online at http://www.iaeme.com/JOM/issues.asp?JType=JOM&VType=6&IType=3 Journal Impact Factor (2019): 5.3165 (Calculated by GISI) www.jifactor.com ISSN Print: 2347-3940 and ISSN Online: 2347-3959 DOI: 10.34218/JOM.6.3.2019.018 © IAEME Publication TILAK’S VIEW OF KARMA YOGA TO ATTAIN SALVATION: AN ANALYSIS Dr. Hitesh Chandra Kalita HOD &Associate Professor in Philosophy MNC BalikaMahavidyalaya, Nalbari, Assam, India ABSTRACT The paper proposes to present and elaborate and critically analyze the main concept of Tilak’s view of karma yoga to attain the knowledge of salvation or ultimate goal. Karma yoga is simply the way of desireless or self-based action through the help of knowledge from jnana yoga and bhakti yoga. That knowledge is only sufficient for salvation. His karma yoga based interpretation of the is called Gita Rahasya. Keywords: Tilak, Karma Yoga and Salvation. Cite this Article: Dr. Hitesh Chandra Kalita, Tilak’s view of Karma Yoga to Attain Salvation: An Analysis, Journal of Management (JOM), 6 (3), 2019, pp. 140-149. http://www.iaeme.com/JOM/issues.asp?JType=JOM&VType=6&IType=3 1. INTRODUCTION Lokamanya Bal Gangadhar Tilak’s (1856-1920) wrote the Gita Rahasya as the interpretation of the Gita in the Mandalay Jail in March, 1911. He was a mainly freedom fighter, philosopher, social reformer and humanitarian. Its scientific philosophy finds that philosophy brings a necessary harmony between the theory of Parabrahman and its spontaneous practice. -
Shri Sai Baba
Sai Mandir USA 1889 Grand Avenue, Baldwin, NY 11510, USA Designed & Developed by : Praveen Batchu http://www.imagicapps.com SHRI SAI SATCHARITA OR THE WONDERFUL LIFE AND TEACHINGS OF SHRI SAI BABA Adapted from the original Marathi book by Hemadpant by Nagesh Vasudev Gunaji, B.A., L.L.B. 227, Thalakwadi, Belgaum. changes to the current version to make a easy reading experience to American devotees. This book is available for free to all devotees. Published by Kashinath Sitaram Pathak, Court Receiver, Shri Sai Baba Sansthan, Shirdi, ‘Sai Niketan’, 804-B, Dr. Ambedkar Road, Dadar, Bombay 400 014. This book will be available for sale at the following places: (1) Court Receiver, Shri Sai Sansthan, Shirdi, P.O. Shirdi, (Dist. Ahmednagar). (2) Shri Kashinath Sitaram Pathak, Court Receiver, Shri Sai Baba Sansthan, Shirdi, “Sai Niketan”, 804-B, Dr. Ambedkar Road, Dadar, Bombay 400 014. Copyright reserved by the Sansthan Printed by N.D. Rege, at Mohan Printery, 425-A Mogul Lane, Mahim, Bombay 400 016 and Published by Shri Kashinath Sitaram Pathak, Court Receiver, Shri Sai Baba Sansthan, Shirdi, “Sai Niketan”, 804-B, Dr. Ambedkar Road, Dadar, Bombay 400 014. DEDICATION “Whosoever offers to me, with love or devotion, a leaf, a flower, a fruit or water, that offering of love of the pure and self-controlled man is willingly and readily accepted by me.” Lord Shri Krishna in Bhagavad Gita, IX - 26 To Shri Sai Baba The Antaryamin This work with myself Editor : Laura Keller New York, USA SHRI SAI SATCHARITA CONTENTS Preface by the author Preface to the second edition Preface by Shri N.A. -
What Is Causal Body (Karana Sarira)?
VEDANTA CONCEPTS Sarada Cottage Cedar Rapids July 9, 2017 Peace Chanting (ShAnti PAtha) Sanskrit Transliteration Meaning ॐ गु셁땍यो नमः हरी ओम ्। Om Gurubhyo Namah Hari Om | Salutations to the Guru. सह नाववतु । Saha Nau-Avatu | May God Protect us Both, सह नौ भुन啍तु । Saha Nau Bhunaktu | May God Nourish us Both, सह वीयं करवावहै । Saha Viiryam Karavaavahai| May we Work Together तेजस्वव नावधीतमवतु मा Tejasvi Nau-Adhiitam-Astu Maa with Energy and Vigour, वव饍ववषावहै । Vidvissaavahai | May our Study be ॐ शास््तः शास््तः शास््तः । Om Shaantih Shaantih Enlightening and not give हरी ओम ्॥ Shaantih | Hari Om || rise to Hostility Om, Peace, Peace, Peace. Salutations to the Lord. Our Quest Goal: Eternal Happiness End of All Sufferings Transcending Birth & Death Problem: Fleeting Happiness Endless Suffering Cycle of Birth & Death 3 Vedanta - Introduction Definition: Veda = Knowledge, Anta = End End of Vedas Culmination or Essence of Vedas Leads to God (Truth) Realization Truth: Never changes; beyond Time-Space-Causation Is One Is Beneficial Transforms us Leads from Truth Speaking-> Truth Seeking-> Truth Seeing 4 Vedantic Solution To Our Quest Our Quest: Vedantic Solution: Goal: Cause of Problem: Ignorance (avidyA) of our Real Eternal Happiness Nature End of All Sufferings Attachment (ragah, sangah) to fleeting Objects & Relations Transcending Birth & Death Problem: Remedy: Fleeting Happiness Intense Spiritual Practice (sadhana) Endless Suffering Liberation (mukti/moksha) Cycle of Birth & Death IdentificationIdentification &&