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SeySorciere
Seychelles
1571 Posts |
Posted - Aug 05 2022 : 08:22:34 AM
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Dear all,
In the mode of sharing (especially for you, Interpaul) on this forum, below is my take on what the Samyama sutras currently mean to me in the results they have brought to my life. I say 'currently' because the meaning and perceived results have evolved over the years.
Love = Agape (a spontaneous outpouring of compassion - the Lake of Light pours itself out into the physical world using my body as a vessel. I introduce here the term "Lake of Light" as an analogy where we are all whirlpools in the lake of light)
Radiance = Transfiguration of the physical and mental into Light
Unity = a merging of my inner and outer world until "I" die and only reality is.
Healing = healing of all sentient beings
Inner Strength = for all sentient beings to face the challenges of this physical world
Abundance = Abundance of all the qualities of the other nine words
Inner Sensuality = the ability to see /hear/ smell/feel within
Wisdom = Understanding through direct seeing
Akasha,, Lightness of Air = development of Inner Space and becoming un-bounded by gravity; set free
"I" - thought, what am I? = Gaining insight into my true nature
I am not in anyway attached to these meanings and I expect that they will continue to evolve. Gentle reminder that during the practice itself, we are not to attach any meaning to the words.
I invite others to share their journey with Samymama
Sey
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interpaul
USA
551 Posts |
Posted - Aug 05 2022 : 7:38:28 PM
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Sey, Thanks for honoring me with engagement. I continue to see a gradual evolution in the meaning of my sutras. What is most meaningful in the last year is the ability to truly release the word in/from my head. I didn't realize how profound that simple mental task is and how fundamental it is to the practice. This truly is one of the most subtle of the practices and most profound. An area that requires letting go on a level which changes our relationship with our thinking mind. |
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Dogboy
USA
2294 Posts |
Posted - Aug 09 2022 : 11:14:49 PM
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quote: I didn't realize how profound that simple mental task is and how fundamental it is to the practice. This truly is one of the most subtle of the practices and most profound. An area that requires letting go on a level which changes our relationship with our thinking mind.
Agree wholeheartedly. Simplicity and Surrender. |
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SeySorciere
Seychelles
1571 Posts |
Posted - Dec 05 2023 : 11:19:45 AM
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I had imagined that the practice of samyama had refined as much as it had room to for me, only to discover - not so. I believe it was triggered by a recent post by someone (sorry can't recall who and I can't find the post) where Yogani's emphasis on resting your attention on the sutra for a split second. I started really paying attention to this, leading to gaining meaningful insight to the beauty of this practice. When I start the practice, I am already in empty clarity. Mind is still. Casting in a sutra causes a ripple in the mind that automatically wants to draw 'you' in i.e. Awareness is set into motion as mind; sucking Awareness into mind. A thought is sticky. Not easy to let go off it. The skill being learned, I believe, is to let mind move /do its thing without letting it drag Awareness with it. Awareness remains still and dissociated from the moving mind. Mind moves, 'you' remain... still. In that way, 'you' learned to let life do its thing (perception & experience in constant flux) while you are still.
Sey
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Dogboy
USA
2294 Posts |
Posted - Dec 05 2023 : 10:52:10 PM
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quote: The skill being learned, I believe, is to let mind move /do its thing without letting it drag Awareness with it. Awareness remains still and dissociated from the moving mind. Mind moves, 'you' remain... still. In that way, 'you' learned to let life do its thing (perception & experience in constant flux) while you are still.
Sey, unbelievable you put this into words, I seem to be here, now. I have been watching in DM how thoughts tip-toe in and out. Sometimes it is guru and others intent to distract from the mantra. I have learned to do nothing but return to the mantra. After all, thought is no thing. |
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SeySorciere
Seychelles
1571 Posts |
Posted - Dec 06 2023 : 05:37:44 AM
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How does this lead to the sutra manifesting in your life? Why do we call Samyama the purest form of prayer? I propose - a sutra is a single, short thought that you drop and pick up from the empty, still field of "things yet to be" (potentiality). It moves mind into life - one simple clear vibration that moves from Nothingness...becoming.. to Is-ness.
Sey |
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interpaul
USA
551 Posts |
Posted - Dec 06 2023 : 5:19:09 PM
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Sey, On a rational level I can't imagine it having any value at all. The practice however has opened me up to the subtle realm. In my prior explorations into self hypnosis I became familiar with my subconscious mind. I believe samyama functions from similar territory. If there is a space in which unmanifest becomes manifest, a territory of spirit, it is there. |
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Dogboy
USA
2294 Posts |
Posted - Dec 07 2023 : 03:11:40 AM
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quote: If there is a space in which unmanifest becomes manifest, a territory of spirit, it is there.
This resonates, as does a sutra, swallowed in silence. |
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SeySorciere
Seychelles
1571 Posts |
Posted - Dec 07 2023 : 09:52:34 AM
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On a rational level, I agree with you, expect the nine words listed above have become a reality for me, un-deniably. I have also logically tried to attribute them to the other practices - SBP, DM etc?. But I can?t conclusively say - the sutras had nothing to do with it.
Sey |
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SeySorciere
Seychelles
1571 Posts |
Posted - Feb 26 2024 : 07:50:19 AM
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I had a "revelation" about samyama last night. Samyama is the practice that allows Inner Silence to permeate our daily life. Else, we would be sitting in the eighth chakra or even higher, well above our turbulent minds and this physical world and we would be un-touched by the world and its shenanigans. We may perceive this as "being spiritual" But that is only half of the equation, says Yogani. We need to bring it all back down to the physical world (the heart) and operate from here in an outpouring of divine love and service to others. This realization came to me as I sat in the higher chakras yesterday, blissed out, and watching the swirling of mind.
Sey |
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SeySorciere
Seychelles
1571 Posts |
Posted - Feb 26 2024 : 08:41:40 AM
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There appears to be two ways to disentangle Awareness from mind - move above and gain higher clarity (although, I would argue you are still 'in Mind' there but just less turbulence and stickiness (less gravitational pull??)) or disentangle from wherever you are by releasing thoughts and attachment and judgement (state of dispassion) I may be talking nonsense here (building wrong concepts).
Sey
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TensorTympani
Sweden
100 Posts |
Posted - Mar 07 2024 : 11:40:55 AM
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Dear Sey, it's interesting to see your thoughts on the samyama practice, and it's also wonderful to see that a discussion on these topics can lead to a deepening (rather than a distraction from) the practice.
I actually have never thought much about the meaning of the sutras, except for "Akasha - Lightness of air". Already the fact that Yogani chose Akasha, rather than Inner Space, but at same time emphasized that we can translate sutras to our own language and that Inner Space would have been just as good, made this one stick out. Not to mention that this is also the sutra that we are invited to repeat for 5 minutes, with people reporting jumping, sensations of floating, and of course Yogani's teasing with levitation. So there seems to be a certain sense of importance and mystery that Yogani wanted to instill for this particular sutra.
I haven't thought much about the other sutras because I thought it would be make it even harder to let go of them immediately.
Currently I don't see any evidence that particular sutras have had specific effects in my life, or short term, such as floating sensations during the Akasha sutra. The samyama practice in general certainly makes the ability to act from and release into stillness feel more and more like a normal mode of operation rather than something that needs a lot of effort. But then I guess this ability could be also practiced with any type of thought, rather than just these particular sutras.
Regarding the specific meanings of the sutras, I find it plausible that subliminal messages or affirmations have some psychological effect, and that samyama is likely an effective way of getting these affirmations deep into the subconscious. Thus dropping positive affirmations into the subconscious mind twice a day might have some additional effect on top of just training the ourselves to act from and release into stillness.
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interpaul
USA
551 Posts |
Posted - Mar 07 2024 : 6:01:46 PM
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"Regarding the specific meanings of the sutras, I find it plausible that subliminal messages or affirmations have some psychological effect, and that samyama is likely an effective way of getting these affirmations deep into the subconscious. Thus dropping positive affirmations into the subconscious mind twice a day might have some additional effect on top of just training the ourselves to act from and release into stillness"
Tensor, As I noted in my response back in December I definitely experience samyama in this way. It is very similar to the release that comes with hypnosis, that is the willingness one places on surrendering to the process without any clinging. It is a subtle shift when one truly releases the sutra into stillness. This is why I've always felt this is one of the most subtle yet powerful practices as it can't be understood by dissecting it intellectually. It is nearly the exact opposite, surrender to the process without any control. I believe this is a process just like returning to the mantra in DM that shapes our very way of engaging in the world. We program our expectations of the outcomes with the pre-work of giving meaning to the sutra. I believe this is why Yogani cautions against doing any conscious processing of meaning during the releasing of the sutra. |
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Dogboy
USA
2294 Posts |
Posted - Mar 08 2024 : 02:15:47 AM
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quote: Regarding the specific meanings of the sutras, I find it plausible that subliminal messages or affirmations have some psychological effect, and that samyama is likely an effective way of getting these affirmations deep into the subconscious.
This is what I believe, as well as being open to the expansion of felt silence in the very ritual itself. |
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