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Posted - Jul 07 2005 : 05:35:18 AM
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329 From: "jim_and_his_karma" <jim_and_his_karma@yahoo.com> Date: Tue Mar 15, 2005 6:36pm Subject: Starting in the Middle jim_and_his_... Offline Send Email I came to AVP from decades of hatha yoga, meditation, Zen, and a short stint of Microcosmic Orbit work. I've found absolutely fantastic tools and insights here, and Yogani is to be congratulated and thanked. But I'm having trouble cobbling it all together for myself. There's a danger of diving into too many practices, and it's worse when they're from too many from different traditions (while there are similarities between traditions, they don't precisely "map" up with each other). The old adage applies: you can dig many small holes or one deep one.
Anyway, I'm loving AVP, though (as I'll explain in a long posting I'm currently composing) excessive kundalini pressure in the head made me turn to Taoist practices for draining energy down the front body. AVP pranayama conflicts with some of the Iyengar-style pranayama I've been involved with. And I have issues with the "I am" mantra (which I won't articulate because I don't want to contaminate others with my doubts!). I'm trying to refine my somewhat conflictive practices and traditions into a package that works for me. My standard approach has been to gather tools - pluck them like plums and add them to my larder. But the problem is that I very strongly resonate with Yogani's instruction to favor the practice when you hit obstructions/distractions (it's a great technique for evading ego traps), but...shoot, that means having a core, clear practice. I guess I'm having a spiritual identity crisis!
Let me boil this down into a question. is there anyone who came to AVP after serious work in other practices, and has found a way to put it all together without 1. starting from scratch with AVP and abandoning all other work or 2. turning yourself into a tangle of loose ends? 334 From: "obsidian9999" <obsidian9999@yahoo.com> Date: Tue Mar 15, 2005 8:06pm Subject: Re: Starting in the Middle obsidian9999 Offline Send Email Jim and your Karma :),
there's a lot to be said for the plums-in-your-larder approach, and a significant response from the practices is a great thing to have.
I don't know if I am qualified to answer your question, since I have never had a stable, prescribed practice. But maybe I can give some ideas from the opposite point of view --- from the point of view of someone who has been eclectic always and done well from it.
If you are getting dizzy from so much choice, is that a problem? If you are running into issues with some of the practices, is it a problem?
Perhaps the situation is good --- you are working them out. Your brain is in gear.
What is wrong with an identity crisis? Do you need a fixed position to operate from?
Spiritual teachers often tell us to stick to specific practices. That idea can be helpful to people. Some people seem to need structure. But that constrains some people, especially people who have some gifts with mixing and matching.
They say to dig one deep hole rather than many shallow ones. But analogies can be misleading. What if each shallow hole is at the bottom of the last, each dug with a different tool according to the nature of the terrain? Then many holes do add up to a deep one.
A bit of confustion or disorientation at times about which tool to use is all an inevitable part of the process for those who can work eclectically. All I can suggest is relax into this condition and enjoy it. Identify your specific problems (which you are about to do) and see if you can get guidance on them.
Best regards,
-D
--- In AYPforum@yahoogroups.com, "jim_and_his_karma" <jim_and_his_karma@y...> wrote: > > > I came to AVP from decades of hatha yoga, meditation, Zen, and a short stint of > Microcosmic Orbit work. I've found absolutely fantastic tools and insights here, and Yogani > is to be congratulated and thanked. But I'm having trouble cobbling it all together for > myself. There's a danger of diving into too many practices, and it's worse when they're > from too many from different traditions (while there are similarities between traditions, > they don't precisely "map" up with each other). The old adage applies: you can dig many > small holes or one deep one. > > Anyway, I'm loving AVP, though (as I'll explain in a long posting I'm currently composing) > excessive kundalini pressure in the head made me turn to Taoist practices for draining > energy down the front body. AVP pranayama conflicts with some of the Iyengar-style > pranayama I've been involved with. And I have issues with the "I am" mantra (which I won't > articulate because I don't want to contaminate others with my doubts!). I'm trying to refine > my somewhat conflictive practices and traditions into a package that works for me. My > standard approach has been to gather tools - pluck them like plums and add them to my > larder. But the problem is that I very strongly resonate with Yogani's instruction to favor > the practice when you hit obstructions/distractions (it's a great technique for evading ego > traps), but...shoot, that means having a core, clear practice. I guess I'm having a spiritual > identity crisis! > > Let me boil this down into a question. is there anyone who came to AVP after serious work > in other practices, and has found a way to put it all together without 1. starting from > scratch with AVP and abandoning all other work or 2. turning yourself into a tangle of > loose ends? 338 From: victor yj <vic@yahoo.com> Date: Tue Mar 15, 2005 10:52pm Subject: Re: Re: Starting in the Middle vic Offline Send Email I have been reading thsi thread and thinking on this and wonder if it maybe too much worry over too little. If you were trying to mix shaolin kung fu with kundalini yoga and native american shamanism and had studied personally with teachers who told you to do specific practices then I would understand. I don't believe that this is the case however. In my own case having studied Iyengar Yoga and Ayurveda I see this as basically some parts of the same tradition that had not been shared before. Personally I have never had a teacher tell me to do certain practices in a specific personal and organised fashion. When I went to a Yoga class I was given (with the other students) what the teacher had to share in class with the hopes that we would practice it. my practice has always been my own selectionand never a strict regimen that was planned for me. As such I have choices. In regards to the differences between Yoganis pranayama vs Iyengar I can easily speak on that. In Iyengar pranayama once you have progressed to a sitting position you take padmasana, siddhasana or other comfortable crosslegged position. Yogani suggests Siddhasana. No problem. In Iyengar you are told to keep the chin down in jalandhara bandha. Yogani also speaks of teh bandhas but introduces "dynamic jalandhara". Ok, so after doing static jalandhara for years why not take a leap of faith and try a dynamic variety. it is not strange and foriegn, it just introduces a movement to the static pranayama.It makes it "dynamic" but it does not tell you to do something completely different, it is simply a vaiation. Iyengar suggests 20 minutes a day of pranayama. Yogani suggests 10 minutes of pranayama twice a day with teh addition of mediatation. Ok, so you cut back a littel on teh pranayama and add mediatation and increase teh practice. Or you can dpo as I do which is 15 minutes of pranayama twice a day with meditation added. Yogani suggest kechari. Iyengar talks of kechari in Light On Yoga but doesn't specifically teach it. Iyengar respects kechari enough to include it in his great text on Yoga. So Yogani gives specific instructions on kechari.......... You see where I am going with this. I have practiced Iyengar style pranayama for decades and see absolutely no conflict whatsoever. It is just as if I had taken the beginner and intermediate course and now my new professor Yogani is here to teach the advanced course with new material in the SAME SUBJECT. So in myopinion if yoiu ahve been doing iyengar or Integral Yoga or Shivananda or Kundalini yoga or Ayurveda from an Indian tradition there really should be no conflict UNLESS you have a personal teacher who you respect who wants you to do specific practices under their guidance and suggests to you not to do other practices. In that case I would respect or discuss it with your teacher. Otherwise I see noproblem.
obsidian9999 <obsidian9999@yahoo.com> wrote:
Jim and your Karma :),
there's a lot to be said for the plums-in-your-larder approach, and a significant response from the practices is a great thing to have.
I don't know if I am qualified to answer your question, since I have never had a stable, prescribed practice. But maybe I can give some ideas from the opposite point of view --- from the point of view of someone who has been eclectic always and done well from it.
If you are getting dizzy from so much choice, is that a problem? If you are running into issues with some of the practices, is it a problem?
Perhaps the situation is good --- you are working them out. Your brain is in gear.
What is wrong with an identity crisis? Do you need a fixed position to operate from?
Spiritual teachers often tell us to stick to specific practices. That idea can be helpful to people. Some people seem to need structure. But that constrains some people, especially people who have some gifts with mixing and matching.
They say to dig one deep hole rather than many shallow ones. But analogies can be misleading. What if each shallow hole is at the bottom of the last, each dug with a different tool according to the nature of the terrain? Then many holes do add up to a deep one.
A bit of confustion or disorientation at times about which tool to use is all an inevitable part of the process for those who can work eclectically. All I can suggest is relax into this condition and enjoy it. Identify your specific problems (which you are about to do) and see if you can get guidance on them.
Best regards,
-D
--- In AYPforum@yahoogroups.com, "jim_and_his_karma" <jim_and_his_karma@y...> wrote: > > > I came to AVP from decades of hatha yoga, meditation, Zen, and a short stint of > Microcosmic Orbit work. I've found absolutely fantastic tools and insights here, and Yogani > is to be congratulated and thanked. But I'm having trouble cobbling it all together for > myself. There's a danger of diving into too many practices, and it's worse when they're > from too many from different traditions (while there are similarities between traditions, > they don't precisely "map" up with each other). The old adage applies: you can dig many > small holes or one deep one. > > Anyway, I'm loving AVP, though (as I'll explain in a long posting I'm currently composing) > excessive kundalini pressure in the head made me turn to Taoist practices for draining > energy down the front body. AVP pranayama conflicts with some of the Iyengar-style > pranayama I've been involved with. And I have issues with the "I am" mantra (which I won't > articulate because I don't want to contaminate others with my doubts!). I'm trying to refine > my somewhat conflictive practices and traditions into a package that works for me. My > standard approach has been to gather tools - pluck them like plums and add them to my > larder. But the problem is that I very strongly resonate with Yogani's instruction to favor > the practice when you hit obstructions/distractions (it's a great technique for evading ego > traps), but...shoot, that means having a core, clear practice. I guess I'm having a spiritual > identity crisis! > > Let me boil this down into a question. is there anyone who came to AVP after serious work > in other practices, and has found a way to put it all together without 1. starting from > scratch with AVP and abandoning all other work or 2. turning yourself into a tangle of > loose ends?
For the AYP Lessons and Books, go to: http://www.geocities.com/advancedyogapractices
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[Non-text portions of this message have been removed] 335 From: "PParry" <pparry@img.net> Date: Tue Mar 15, 2005 10:06pm Subject: Re: Re: Starting in the Middle hermes_chela Offline Send Email All I can suggest is relax into this condition and > enjoy it. Identify your specific problems (which you are about to > do) and see if you can get guidance on them.
Dear Karma (and his Jim) ,
It strikes me that there is some real wisdom in what -D has written. EAch path is truly individual, when it comes down to it. There will have been a reason why you have had the variety of exposure that you have. IMHO of course.... Seems to me if you spend time in the Silence that Yogani's technique can bring, that the right way will automatically emerge from that Silence. Like -D says, trust the process :-) There are too many "shoulds" in the world, even or maybe especially under the spiritual aegis. Simplicity and sincerity of heart is a good synthesis for all approaches you have embraced and it seems to me you have those qualities :-) (not that i am an authority or anything)
Looking forward to your longer posting, love, patricia 336 From: "Adam West" <adamwest1@iprimus.com.au> Date: Tue Mar 15, 2005 10:14pm Subject: Re: Re: Starting in the Middle fraterandros1 Offline Send Email Greetings my brother,
From my perspective, I have had a similar back ground in terms of huge variability of practice sources, I feel this is appropriate to be well educated in this area, so as to not become narrow minded and fanatical about one practice or tradition ;-) What I do is simply carry out my own systematic experimentation with the techniques, and take the insights and learning from all traditions and theories. In time, as a result, one does seem to specialize, this comes from the above process and ones intuition as to what best works for you and direct realization and contact with the Guru with in :-)
In kind regards,
Adam. ----- Original Message ----- From: obsidian9999 To: AYPforum@yahoogroups.com Sent: Wednesday, March 16, 2005 11:06 AM Subject: [AYPforum] Re: Starting in the Middle
Jim and your Karma :),
there's a lot to be said for the plums-in-your-larder approach, and a significant response from the practices is a great thing to have.
I don't know if I am qualified to answer your question, since I have never had a stable, prescribed practice. But maybe I can give some ideas from the opposite point of view --- from the point of view of someone who has been eclectic always and done well from it.
If you are getting dizzy from so much choice, is that a problem? If you are running into issues with some of the practices, is it a problem?
Perhaps the situation is good --- you are working them out. Your brain is in gear.
What is wrong with an identity crisis? Do you need a fixed position to operate from?
Spiritual teachers often tell us to stick to specific practices. That idea can be helpful to people. Some people seem to need structure. But that constrains some people, especially people who have some gifts with mixing and matching.
They say to dig one deep hole rather than many shallow ones. But analogies can be misleading. What if each shallow hole is at the bottom of the last, each dug with a different tool according to the nature of the terrain? Then many holes do add up to a deep one.
A bit of confustion or disorientation at times about which tool to use is all an inevitable part of the process for those who can work eclectically. All I can suggest is relax into this condition and enjoy it. Identify your specific problems (which you are about to do) and see if you can get guidance on them.
Best regards,
-D
--- In AYPforum@yahoogroups.com, "jim_and_his_karma" <jim_and_his_karma@y...> wrote: > > > I came to AVP from decades of hatha yoga, meditation, Zen, and a short stint of > Microcosmic Orbit work. I've found absolutely fantastic tools and insights here, and Yogani > is to be congratulated and thanked. But I'm having trouble cobbling it all together for > myself. There's a danger of diving into too many practices, and it's worse when they're > from too many from different traditions (while there are similarities between traditions, > they don't precisely "map" up with each other). The old adage applies: you can dig many > small holes or one deep one. > > Anyway, I'm loving AVP, though (as I'll explain in a long posting I'm currently composing) > excessive kundalini pressure in the head made me turn to Taoist practices for draining > energy down the front body. AVP pranayama conflicts with some of the Iyengar-style > pranayama I've been involved with. And I have issues with the "I am" mantra (which I won't > articulate because I don't want to contaminate others with my doubts!). I'm trying to refine > my somewhat conflictive practices and traditions into a package that works for me. My > standard approach has been to gather tools - pluck them like plums and add them to my > larder. But the problem is that I very strongly resonate with Yogani's instruction to favor > the practice when you hit obstructions/distractions (it's a great technique for evading ego > traps), but...shoot, that means having a core, clear practice. I guess I'm having a spiritual > identity crisis! > > Let me boil this down into a question. is there anyone who came to AVP after serious work > in other practices, and has found a way to put it all together without 1. starting from > scratch with AVP and abandoning all other work or 2. turning yourself into a tangle of > loose ends?
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[Non-text portions of this message have been removed] 343 From: "jim_and_his_karma" <jim_and_his_karma@yahoo.com> Date: Tue Mar 15, 2005 11:50pm Subject: Re: Starting in the Middle jim_and_his_... Offline Send Email Just replying to myself here to thank everyone for interesting, illuminating answers. Really good stuff. But let me clarify.
I'm a maverick, I hate to color inside the lines. I go seat of pants in most everything. But, again, i'm won over by Yogani's instruction to favor the practice rather than the experience. There's wisdom in that (especially as the experience starts getting denser), and I see it as a bridge over the extroardinarily treacherous waters of spiritual materialism. As Yogani put it, if Jesus Christ shows up and asks you to go for a ride in his chariot, you politely thank him for the invitation and return to the mantra, etc. That's a really great, clear image. And while I'm not experiencing the Panavision kundalini ecstatic visions thing, I do see the usefulness of having a concrete core practice to center upon when the way gets confusing...lest I wind up like this dude: http://www.zakairan.com (load his photo on the "about" page at your peril).
Practice has always been a vague thing for me. My practice was my life, seasoned with touches of this or that actual tradition. Asana binges, meditation binges, etc. It wasn't any one single concrete thing I always did. But, again, Yogani's suggestion calls to me, and at this point in my life I think i'd like to have literally a practice - in the classical sense - which I commit to doing intensely every day. Touchstone, gravity, focal point. Post- kundalini, I'm feeling some pretty peaceful waters, and I want to keep my feet wet and not let this feeling recede. I don't want to come down this time. I'm sick of being a spiritual yo-yo, I want to bring it all closer and really stoke the fire.
I'm kind of surprised to see so many of my fellow mavericks here. I mean, Yogani has fashioned a very concrete, tidy batch of procedures. Very scientific, very smooth-edged. So, with all due respect and fondness, what the heck are you guys doing here? Is everyone just plucking plums for their larders? Are any of you actually sitting down and DOING the actual practices every day? (this is being said with giggling mock drama...please don't get offended, anybody!) 344 From: victor yj <vic@yahoo.com> Date: Wed Mar 16, 2005 0:05am Subject: Re: Re: Starting in the Middle vic Offline Send Email I do the practice twice a day every day. OK, on some days when I am tired I may skip the evening practice. This has become my basic yoga practice and it works well for me.
jim_and_his_karma <jim_and_his_karma@yahoo.com> wrote:
Just replying to myself here to thank everyone for interesting, illuminating answers. Really good stuff. But let me clarify.
I'm a maverick, I hate to color inside the lines. I go seat of pants in most everything. But, again, i'm won over by Yogani's instruction to favor the practice rather than the experience. There's wisdom in that (especially as the experience starts getting denser), and I see it as a bridge over the extroardinarily treacherous waters of spiritual materialism. As Yogani put it, if Jesus Christ shows up and asks you to go for a ride in his chariot, you politely thank him for the invitation and return to the mantra, etc. That's a really great, clear image. And while I'm not experiencing the Panavision kundalini ecstatic visions thing, I do see the usefulness of having a concrete core practice to center upon when the way gets confusing...lest I wind up like this dude: http://www.zakairan.com (load his photo on the "about" page at your peril).
Practice has always been a vague thing for me. My practice was my life, seasoned with touches of this or that actual tradition. Asana binges, meditation binges, etc. It wasn't any one single concrete thing I always did. But, again, Yogani's suggestion calls to me, and at this point in my life I think i'd like to have literally a practice - in the classical sense - which I commit to doing intensely every day. Touchstone, gravity, focal point. Post- kundalini, I'm feeling some pretty peaceful waters, and I want to keep my feet wet and not let this feeling recede. I don't want to come down this time. I'm sick of being a spiritual yo-yo, I want to bring it all closer and really stoke the fire.
I'm kind of surprised to see so many of my fellow mavericks here. I mean, Yogani has fashioned a very concrete, tidy batch of procedures. Very scientific, very smooth-edged. So, with all due respect and fondness, what the heck are you guys doing here? Is everyone just plucking plums for their larders? Are any of you actually sitting down and DOING the actual practices every day? (this is being said with giggling mock drama...please don't get offended, anybody!)
For the AYP Lessons and Books, go to: http://www.geocities.com/advancedyogapractices
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[Non-text portions of this message have been removed] 351 From: "azaz932001" <richardchamberlin14@hotmail.com> Date: Wed Mar 16, 2005 8:04am Subject: Re: Starting in the Middle azaz932001 Offline Send Email --I do the practice at least twice a day sometimes three times if the need seems to arise , and verry satisfying it is too.
Blessings R.C. > > > Just replying to myself here to thank everyone for interesting, illuminating answers. Really > good stuff. But let me clarify. > > I'm a maverick, I hate to color inside the lines. I go seat of pants in most everything. But, > again, i'm won over by Yogani's instruction to favor the practice rather than the > experience. There's wisdom in that (especially as the experience starts getting denser), > and I see it as a bridge over the extroardinarily treacherous waters of spiritual materialism. > As Yogani put it, if Jesus Christ shows up and asks you to go for a ride in his chariot, you > politely thank him for the invitation and return to the mantra, etc. That's a really great, > clear image. And while I'm not experiencing the Panavision kundalini ecstatic visions thing, > I do see the usefulness of having a concrete core practice to center upon when the way > gets confusing...lest I wind up like this dude: http://www.zakairan.com (load his photo on > the "about" page at your peril). > > Practice has always been a vague thing for me. My practice was my life, seasoned with > touches of this or that actual tradition. Asana binges, meditation binges, etc. It wasn't any > one single concrete thing I always did. But, again, Yogani's suggestion calls to me, and at > this point in my life I think i'd like to have literally a practice - in the classical sense - > which I commit to doing intensely every day. Touchstone, gravity, focal point. Post- > kundalini, I'm feeling some pretty peaceful waters, and I want to keep my feet wet and not > let this feeling recede. I don't want to come down this time. I'm sick of being a spiritual > yo-yo, I want to bring it all closer and really stoke the fire. > > I'm kind of surprised to see so many of my fellow mavericks here. I mean, Yogani has > fashioned a very concrete, tidy batch of procedures. Very scientific, very smooth-edged. > So, with all due respect and fondness, what the heck are you guys doing here? Is everyone > just plucking plums for their larders? Are any of you actually sitting down and DOING the > actual practices every day? (this is being said with giggling mock drama...please don't get > offended, anybody!) 370 From: "nearoanoke" <nearoanoke@yahoo.com> Date: Thu Mar 17, 2005 1:59pm Subject: Re: Starting in the Middle nearoanoke Offline Send Email >>As Yogani put it, if Jesus Christ shows up and asks you to go for a ride in his chariot, you politely thank him for the invitation and return to the mantra, etc.
Wow. Thats the best quote/saying I ever heard in my life.
--- In AYPforum@yahoogroups.com, "jim_and_his_karma" <jim_and_his_karma@y...> wrote: > > > Just replying to myself here to thank everyone for interesting, illuminating answers. Really > good stuff. But let me clarify. > > I'm a maverick, I hate to color inside the lines. I go seat of pants in most everything. But, > again, i'm won over by Yogani's instruction to favor the practice rather than the > experience. There's wisdom in that (especially as the experience starts getting denser), > and I see it as a bridge over the extroardinarily treacherous waters of spiritual materialism. > As Yogani put it, if Jesus Christ shows up and asks you to go for a ride in his chariot, you > politely thank him for the invitation and return to the mantra, etc. That's a really great, > clear image. And while I'm not experiencing the Panavision kundalini ecstatic visions thing, > I do see the usefulness of having a concrete core practice to center upon when the way > gets confusing...lest I wind up like this dude: http://www.zakairan.com (load his photo on > the "about" page at your peril). > > Practice has always been a vague thing for me. My practice was my life, seasoned with > touches of this or that actual tradition. Asana binges, meditation binges, etc. It wasn't any > one single concrete thing I always did. But, again, Yogani's suggestion calls to me, and at > this point in my life I think i'd like to have literally a practice - in the classical sense - > which I commit to doing intensely every day. Touchstone, gravity, focal point. Post- > kundalini, I'm feeling some pretty peaceful waters, and I want to keep my feet wet and not > let this feeling recede. I don't want to come down this time. I'm sick of being a spiritual > yo-yo, I want to bring it all closer and really stoke the fire. > > I'm kind of surprised to see so many of my fellow mavericks here. I mean, Yogani has > fashioned a very concrete, tidy batch of procedures. Very scientific, very smooth-edged. > So, with all due respect and fondness, what the heck are you guys doing here? Is everyone > just plucking plums for their larders? Are any of you actually sitting down and DOING the > actual practices every day? (this is being said with giggling mock drama...please don't get > offended, anybody!) 375 From: "Kathy" <nagoyasea@yahoo.com> Date: Thu Mar 17, 2005 4:11pm Subject: Re: Starting in the Middle nagoyasea Offline Send Email Dear Jim and Karma,
Your posts are so interesting---you're a great addition to the group. Yes, I'm actually doing the practices daily. But I only do the pranayama and the meditation. Sporadically I do the asanas but I'm trying to be disciplined to do them daily. Not there yet, because, I don't like doing them!
I have a mixed background as well. I did TM for years, had wonderful results but then got sidetracked when I had my kids and career got started. The youngest is off to college this year, and so the past couple of years, I have been returning to my spiritual studies. I am a Rosicrucian, but I am greatly drawn to Yogani's teachings, more so than the TM, which I won't return to.
I am self-pacing, so I only do the pranayama and meditation. After years in corporate america, I apparently have a lot of 'obstructions' to release!! But the difference in my outlook and my vision of world is so remarkably changed after doing my practices for a few months that I am compelled to continue them and add more in time....
Blessings, Kathy
--- In AYPforum@yahoogroups.com, "jim_and_his_karma" <jim_and_his_karma@y...> wrote: > > > Just replying to myself here to thank everyone for interesting, illuminating answers. Really > good stuff. But let me clarify. > > I'm a maverick, I hate to color inside the lines. I go seat of pants in most everything. But, > again, i'm won over by Yogani's instruction to favor the practice rather than the > experience. There's wisdom in that (especially as the experience starts getting denser), > and I see it as a bridge over the extroardinarily treacherous waters of spiritual materialism. > As Yogani put it, if Jesus Christ shows up and asks you to go for a ride in his chariot, you > politely thank him for the invitation and return to the mantra, etc. That's a really great, > clear image. And while I'm not experiencing the Panavision kundalini ecstatic visions thing, > I do see the usefulness of having a concrete core practice to center upon when the way > gets confusing...lest I wind up like this dude: http://www.zakairan.com (load his photo on > the "about" page at your peril). > > Practice has always been a vague thing for me. My practice was my life, seasoned with > touches of this or that actual tradition. Asana binges, meditation binges, etc. It wasn't any > one single concrete thing I always did. But, again, Yogani's suggestion calls to me, and at > this point in my life I think i'd like to have literally a practice - in the classical sense - > which I commit to doing intensely every day. Touchstone, gravity, focal point. Post- > kundalini, I'm feeling some pretty peaceful waters, and I want to keep my feet wet and not > let this feeling recede. I don't want to come down this time. I'm sick of being a spiritual > yo-yo, I want to bring it all closer and really stoke the fire. > > I'm kind of surprised to see so many of my fellow mavericks here. I mean, Yogani has > fashioned a very concrete, tidy batch of procedures. Very scientific, very smooth-edged. > So, with all due respect and fondness, what the heck are you guys doing here? Is everyone > just plucking plums for their larders? Are any of you actually sitting down and DOING the > actual practices every day? (this is being said with giggling mock drama...please don't get > offended, anybody!) 377 From: "jim_and_his_karma" <jim_and_his_karma@yahoo.com> Date: Thu Mar 17, 2005 4:40pm Subject: Re: Starting in the Middle jim_and_his_... Offline Send Email Kathy, that's really nice, thanks!
In the Indian tradition, the time to really relish and bump up practices is right where you are: after having packed off the kids. I hope you experience your practices as pure enjoyment. Many people talk about enlightenment, but walking the path (with feeling!) is, to me, the end-all and be-all, regardless of progress. My motivation is inexhaustible curiosity and a deep magnetic attraction; it's not about striving for a goal. I've been climbing ladders in every facet of my life for years, and I know what that's all about (as do you, I'm sure!). This stuff I do without striving, without ambition. I'm not looking for merit badges!
Anyway, the above is my take, fwiw, on self-pacing. Enjoy the ride, and don't check your odometer! Oh, and Karma sends her best! :)
JIM
--- In AYPforum@yahoogroups.com, "Kathy" <nagoyasea@y...> wrote: > > Dear Jim and Karma, > > Your posts are so interesting---you're a great addition to the > group. Yes, I'm actually doing the practices daily. But I only do > the pranayama and the meditation. Sporadically I do the asanas but > I'm trying to be disciplined to do them daily. Not there yet, > because, I don't like doing them! > > I have a mixed background as well. I did TM for years, had wonderful > results but then got sidetracked when I had my kids and career got > started. The youngest is off to college this year, and so the past > couple of years, I have been returning to my spiritual studies. I am > a Rosicrucian, but I am greatly drawn to Yogani's teachings, more so > than the TM, which I won't return to. > > I am self-pacing, so I only do the pranayama and meditation. After > years in corporate america, I apparently have a lot > of 'obstructions' to release!! But the difference in my outlook and > my vision of world is so remarkably changed after doing my practices > for a few months that I am compelled to continue them and add more > in time.... > > Blessings, > Kathy > > > > --- In AYPforum@yahoogroups.com, "jim_and_his_karma" > <jim_and_his_karma@y...> wrote: > > > > > > Just replying to myself here to thank everyone for interesting, > illuminating answers. Really > > good stuff. But let me clarify. > > > > I'm a maverick, I hate to color inside the lines. I go seat of > pants in most everything. But, > > again, i'm won over by Yogani's instruction to favor the practice > rather than the > > experience. There's wisdom in that (especially as the experience > starts getting denser), > > and I see it as a bridge over the extroardinarily treacherous > waters of spiritual materialism. > > As Yogani put it, if Jesus Christ shows up and asks you to go for > a ride in his chariot, you > > politely thank him for the invitation and return to the mantra, > etc. That's a really great, > > clear image. And while I'm not experiencing the Panavision > kundalini ecstatic visions thing, > > I do see the usefulness of having a concrete core practice to > center upon when the way > > gets confusing...lest I wind up like this dude: > http://www.zakairan.com (load his photo on > > the "about" page at your peril). > > > > Practice has always been a vague thing for me. My practice was my > life, seasoned with > > touches of this or that actual tradition. Asana binges, meditation > binges, etc. It wasn't any > > one single concrete thing I always did. But, again, Yogani's > suggestion calls to me, and at > > this point in my life I think i'd like to have literally a > practice - in the classical sense - > > which I commit to doing intensely every day. Touchstone, gravity, > focal point. Post- > > kundalini, I'm feeling some pretty peaceful waters, and I want to > keep my feet wet and not > > let this feeling recede. I don't want to come down this time. I'm > sick of being a spiritual > > yo-yo, I want to bring it all closer and really stoke the fire. > > > > I'm kind of surprised to see so many of my fellow mavericks here. > I mean, Yogani has > > fashioned a very concrete, tidy batch of procedures. Very > scientific, very smooth-edged. > > So, with all due respect and fondness, what the heck are you guys > doing here? Is everyone > > just plucking plums for their larders? Are any of you actually > sitting down and DOING the > > actual practices every day? (this is being said with giggling > mock drama...please don't get > > offended, anybody!) 349 From: "Danny" <danny@metalhosts.com> Date: Wed Mar 16, 2005 4:52am Subject: Re: Starting in the Middle mysticaldan Offline Send Email Namaste Jim, Somehow i feel like i was typing this down rather than you. Yes I have walked the same path as have you. From starting with Shiv Mantras to Kali Mantras to having read the Vedic texts and so much more I just came to one conclusion that the mind plays its game and i had fallen a victim to it. I still do Yoga cause i know that it keeps the body healthy and one of the first things that i leaarnt was that the body was a temple to the soul and had to be kept healthy. Everything else followed after this.
I still do BK Iyengar's Yoga and pranayama but am concentrating mostly on Nadhi Shodhana to clean out my energy meridians to a large extent. Pranayama is like a dbl edged sword and it can also harm ones energy system if done incorrectly which is probably what is causing you distress as of now.
Yogani's method of tracing the breath is laid down in the Shiv Samhita as follows :
" Yoni Mudra. The Sacred Drink of the Kaulas.
1. First with a strong inspiration fix the mind in the adhar lotus [Muladhara]. Then engage in contracting the Yoni, which is situated in the perineal space.
2. There let him contemplate that the God of Love resides in that Brahma Yoni and that he is beautiful like Bandhuk flower (Pentapetes Phoenicia) - brilliant as tens of millions of suns, and cool as tens of millions of moons. Above this (Yoni) is a very small and subtle flame, whose form is Intelligence. Then let him imagine that a union takes place there between himself and that flame (the Shiva and Shakti).
3. (Then imagine that) - There go up through the Sushumna vessel, the three bodies in their due order (i.e., the etheric, the astral and the mental bodies). There is emitted in every chakra the nectar, the characteristic of which is great bliss. Its colour is whitish rosy (pink), full of splendour, showering down in jets the immortal fluid. Let him drink this wine of immortality which is divine, and then again enter the Kula (perineal space). Note - While these subtle bodies go up, they drink at every stage this nectar, called Kulamrita.
4. Then let him go again to the Kula through the practice of matra Yoga (i.e., pranayama). This Yoni has been called by me in the Tantras as equal to life.
5. Again let him be absorbed in that Yoni, where dwells the fire of death - the nature of Shiva, etc. Thus has been described by me the method of practicing the great Yoni-Mudra. From success in its practice, there is nothing which cannot be accomplished."
Its a little different than this but the idea is the same to trace out the length of the Sushumna with your thoughts and imagination.
I have also always stuck to the OM beej mantra and the I AM is something that is a little difficult to take to.
In any case i am also going through the same turmoil that you are going through Jim but only very recently i realised that all tools are inside me and i need not go anywhere. I am just strting at the very basics of everything and that is my link to my breath and my life nd just learn to identify with the breath. I am just going to sit with watching my breath for sometime till I am comfortable with that nd then proceed to move that breath up my spine. I am sure once i have hit the tranquility of breath things will become clearer with each day. I dont know if all the plums that I have collected are of any use. Gita mentions that to reach God you need to know the HOW and for that its important tht we learn the techniques, without that we will find it very difficult to reach Him. In all the Births we move ahead a little and that little is by way of help to us in knowing and walking the way.
Om Tat Sat Dan
> Date: Tue, 15 Mar 2005 23:36:51 -0000 > From: "jim_and_his_karma" <jim_and_his_karma@yahoo.com> > Subject: Starting in the Middle > > > > I came to AVP from decades of hatha yoga, meditation, Zen, and a short stint of > Microcosmic Orbit work. I've found absolutely fantastic tools and insights here, and Yogani > is to be congratulated and thanked. But I'm having trouble cobbling it all together for > myself. There's a danger of diving into too many practices, and it's worse when they're > from too many from different traditions (while there are similarities between traditions, > they don't precisely "map" up with each other). The old adage applies: you can dig many > small holes or one deep one. > > Anyway, I'm loving AVP, though (as I'll explain in a long posting I'm currently composing) > excessive kundalini pressure in the head made me turn to Taoist practices for draining > energy down the front body. AVP pranayama conflicts with some of the Iyengar-style > pranayama I've been involved with. And I have issues with the "I am" mantra (which I won't > articulate because I don't want to contaminate others with my doubts!). I'm trying to refine > my somewhat conflictive practices and traditions into a package that works for me. My > standard approach has been to gather tools - pluck them like plums and add them to my > larder. But the problem is that I very strongly resonate with Yogani's instruction to favor > the practice when you hit obstructions/distractions (it's a great technique for evading ego > traps), but...shoot, that means having a core, clear practice. I guess I'm having a spiritual > identity crisis! > > Let me boil this down into a question. is there anyone who came to AVP after serious work > in other practices, and has found a way to put it all together without 1. starting from > scratch with AVP and abandoning all other work or 2. turning yourself into a tangle of > loose ends?
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Edited by - AYPforum on Jul 07 2005 05:39:56 AM |
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