Q. To get the fortune of escaping birth and death, elders say
that Yoga is very important. What is that Yoga of which they
speak?
A. Yoga Sastra declares that certain Asanas have to be utilised in
order to remove the ever-widening circles of mental agitations and
purify the mind; also to steady faith, to establish Jnana and
arouse the Kundalini Sakthi latent in man.
Q. It is said that Yoga has certain Angas or auxiliaries. How
many are they and what are their names?
A. They are eight in all, Ashtanga, in fact - Yama, Niyama, Asana,
Pranayama, Prathyaahaara, Dhaarana, Dhyana, Samadhi - these are
the names of the eight.
Q. If Mukthi is to be attained, have all these to be practised
to perfection, or is any one of them enough?
A. Oh, Mukthi can be won if the first two, Yama and Niyama, are
mastered. Why, the universe is maintained by just these two, Yama
and Niyama!
Q. When we speak of Yoga, do we mean only this particular Yoga
with the Ashtanga, or have we many other Yogas too?
A. Yoga is not just this one; there are four in all.
Q. Which are they? What are their names?
A. Their names are popularly given as Manthrayoga, Rajayoga,
Layayoga and Hatayoga.
Q. What Angas or auxiliaries have these four, in their turn?
A. Silly fellow! For all the millions of humans, the two eyes are
the instruments of vision, are they not? So too, for all the
Yogas, Yama and Niyama are the eyes; without them, nothing can be
visualised. Purity of mind is essential for every Yogi. And for
that, Yama and Niyama are indispensable.
Q. What do you mean by Yama and Niyama? Have these also, by any
chance, auxiliaries, Angas, or characteristics which mark them
out?
A. Of course. Each of them has ten such. It is only when you are
well established in all these that you are liberated.
Q. Tell me the ten included under Yama.
A. Ahimsa, Sathya, Astheya, Brahmacharya, Daya, Aarjavam, Kshama,
Dhrthi, Mithaahaaram, Soucham; all these ten are included in Yama.
Q. May I know the ten included in Niyama?
A. Thapas, Santhosha, Aasthikyabuddhi, Daana, Iswara-puja,
Vedanthavaakyasravana, Lajja, Mathi, Japam, Vratham, these ten
form Niyama. These are the very foundations of the Mansion of
Moksha; all Yogis must be well established in these; in Yama as
well as Niyama.
Q. Yoga insists on Aasana also, you said. What exactly does
that mean?
A. They are very helpful for Atmajnanis and Yogis.
Q. Aasana too must have many varieties, is it not?
A. Yes, they too are many. But the chief are Sidhaasana,
Baddhapadmaasana, Sarvaangaasana. Besides, there are Aasanas like
Mayura and Paschimothaasana.
Q. What are the benefits that result from these Aasanas?
A. They give hardihood to the body and enable the mind to
concentrate for long.
Q. Swami! Now tell me about Pranayama also. How many types of
Pranayama are there?
A. There are many types but since in this present world most types
are impossible in practice, only those that help Dhyana have to be
adopted. They are Laghu-pranayama or simplified Systems of Breath
Control.
Q. Simplified Systems? How are they beneficial?
A. Like metals purified over fire in the crucible, the slag of
Karma is removed by Pranayama and the Mind is freed from
contamination. This and Kayasuddhi are both brought about; the
mind and the body are both rendered pure. There are two types of
Pranayama: the one with Manthra and the other without it. Without
Manthra, it can at best transform the body only, but with Manthra,
it transforms the mind also.
Q. Swami! How are we to practise it?
A. Two seconds long Purakam (inhaling), four seconds long Rechakam
(exhaling), eight seconds long Kumbhakam (holding the breath).
Pranayama has to be practised carefully for three months: later,
the duration of Purakam, Rechakam and Kumbhakam can be doubled.
When six months are spent in this steady practice, the activities
of the senses are laid low. If practised with faith and feeling,
Pranayama will tame the agitations of the mind; otherwise, it
becomes mere physical exercise, improving just physical health.
Pure food, Brahmacharya, living in solitude, moderate speech -
these conditions too have to be strictly observed.
Q. Swami! The next one you mentioned is Prathyahara. How many
are the methods of Prathyahara?
A. Three: Saakaara, Niraakaara and Atmabhava, depending on the
purpose for which the senses are controlled and the mind
concentrated. If it is for Saguna upasana, it is Saakaara; if for
Nirguna upasana, it is Niraakaara; if for realising the
Sathyam-Jnanam-Anantham Paramatma, then, it is Atmabhava.
Q. And, Dhaarana? Swami! What is meant by that? How many types
of Dhaarana are there?
A. My boy, Dhaarana is of only one type. The wise man steadily
established in the awareness of his Ishtadevatha or
Brahma-consciousness, like the earth carrying a mountain - that is
Dhaarana.
Q. The next one is Dhyana, I believe. That must be of many
varieties.
A. No, no. this also is one and only one. Whether of the Formful
or the Formless, if it is one-pointed, devoid of deviations, it is
entitled to be called Dhyana.
Q. Lastly, there is Samadhi. What does that mean?
A. Samadhi means the fixing of the mind, free from all impulses
and agitations, on the Lord, or on one's own Reality. It indicates
the state in which one is in one's own real nature. Samadhi is
when one is free from all duality. The mind will be unshaken by
dual experiences; it will shine like a flame in a wind-less room.
It is nis-chala, unmoved, un-movable.
Q. Swami! That type of mind, how will it behave? Make it
clearer, please, by some examples.
A. My dear fellow, when you have to thread a needle, you have to
be intent on the job and the end of the thread has to be kept
straight and pointed, is it not? Similarly, to enter the Grace of
God, which is subtler than the subtlest, the mind has to be steady
and the eye and the senses have to be concentrated on the same
process.