Wednesday 28 June 2017

What, an Ashtanga class doesn't have a theme?

Krishnamacharya aged 84

A good friend was telling me about her upcoming yoga class and how she hadn't yet thought of a theme for the class.

I mentioned how alien this concept of 'theme' was to me, coming from Ashtanga.

But Ashtanga does have a theme she argued. If you go to an Ashtanga workshops, there's clearly a theme - backbend, arm balance...., floating. Primary series is basically forward bending.. Secondary series is backbends, Third series is Arm balance.......

No, I argued, that's imposing a theme upon it (often to flog a workshop or book). Primary series is nothing to do with forward bending, nor 2nd series backbending, nor are the Advanced series about arm balances although these series might be dominated by such postures.

It's a complete misunderstanding.

Ashtangi's don't give a damn about WHAT they are practicing just that they ARE practicing, they have no concern at all about whether one posture is having X effect and another Y effect.  It would be like suggesting that Christians pray to work on their kneeling or that the theme of a Monk's Zazen that morning was hip openers.

I honestly don't believe in any of the benefits Krishnamacharya mentioned in relation to any of the postures he presented (Update: Ok perhaps a few), to be honest I can't remember any of them because I have zero interest and I suspect most Ashtangi's tend to feel the same most of the time, although we probably all go through a brief period of looking at the proposed benefits to help justify our practice. Looking to justify practice, the time we spend on our mats and how we often construct our lives (and indeed relationships god help us) around our practice is something we all seem to descend into occasionally...., periodically.

No doubt we all tend believe it's probably good for us overall (except for those who make a career of telling us it isn't), that we mostly feel better for having practiced but I suspect we would continue to practice if it had no perceivable physical, mental or emotional.....(spiritual?) benefits.

It's Ashtanga for Ashtanga's sake, an end in itself, discipline for disciplines sake, practice for the sake of practice.... , for no other reason perhaps than that it grounds our lives, opens up a space, a clearing where light can, on a good day, stream through the trees.

Ramaswami stresses that there is a clear purpose to the limbs of Ashtanga, Asana reduces Rajas, pranayama, Tapas leaving us in a more Satvic state for the meditative limbs.

I suspect that is another theory imposed upon practice however old a theory it might be, another justification.

This practice we do is tapas (austerity/discipline), it's a commitment, a discipline. Practice too little and it doesn't work as discipline anymore, make our practice too short, too gentle...., too easy, and it doesn't work as tapas. To be a discipline practice needs to be a burden, at least to some degree, we may go skipping to the mat some mornings but when it's four, six,... seven days a week, at some point we're dead man walking.... but we step on the mat anyway.

Note: It's relative, to a beginner or working mum, getting on the mat for twenty minutes for some surys and a few seated postures, three or four times a week, may be just as much tapas as practicing Primary to Advanced series twice a day, seven days a week, was to me when I had nothing else going on in my life and all the time in the world to practice.

It's this discipline, I suspect, that grounds our lives. Devotion to practice, for those who have it (to teachers, a deity - or turning our teacher into a semi-deity for that matter) is, an optional extra, it's beside the point (and Patanjali I would argue may agree in this context). Dedication to practice, to constructing and maintaining the discipline is what is key. Practice and all is... well you know the rest.

The yama/niyama are a support for this discipline, for our practice. If we can simplify our lives ( effectively the role of yama/niyamas), stepping on the mat can be a little easier but it goes both ways. If my practice is disrupted, I notice I can so easily slip in the yama/niyama department, slide into old patterns, my life becomes somewhat more chaotic, disturbed, more of a distraction. Practice and the yama/niyamas go hand in hand, they support each other, support our discipline.

With the yama/niyamas observed more rather than less, the practice of asana steady and settled, pranayama consistent, I may indeed be in a more Satvic frame of mind and can settle into lesser or greater degrees of serenity, and this as Topol would say is the "greatest gift of all" but who looks to that in the morning when we shuffle towards the mat. We wash our face, we practice, we brush our teeth.

This is not to say that I'm suggesting there is anything wrong with a yoga class having a theme. Ashtanga as a discipline is not for everyone (it may indeed be a curse and "ruin your life") and no doubt postures, the practice of them, done well, mindfully, skilfully, can have great benefits for our lives. Pedagogically, having a theme for a class can be beneficial, Ramaswami takes a similar approach in his presentation of Vinyasa krama, we learn the relationships between asana via a theme before settling into daily practice. It wouldn't be a bad idea for Ashtangi's to learn to practice their asana more skilfully, make our practice safer for the long term as well as the short, more effective. I look to Simon Borg-Olivier for exactly this in his upcoming online Ashtanga course.

I hesitate to suggest that general Yoga classes and Ashtanga vinyasa Yoga are two different language games, it's like trying to introduce the rules of chess into snakes and ladders ( Ashtanga Vinyasa is snakes and ladders).

And of course this commitment to practice to daily practice can make Ashtangi's a little full of themselves, they/we can at times be judgemental, dismissive of other styles that we so often suspect as being either derivative, random or lacking in commitment...., as being less traditional. As if there is anything traditional about Ashtanga vinyasa, there isn't of course, not really but we too often impose our view on others (as I'm doing her of course), imposing ideas of tradition and lineage, parampara and paramagurus upon the practice like pretty paper and ribbons, all to help us get on the mat, to explain, justify, the practice to ourselves....., as if the practice needs any of these things, any explaining, it justifies itself.

We might just as well get up every morning and run ( or swim like a friend of mine, 365 mornings a year off the coast of Ireland), the marathon runner I suspect understands just as much about yoga as the Ashtangi, perhaps more so as they don't tend to resort to metaphysics or fairy tales, surely there must be a book, Zen and the long distance runner.

When our practice becomes the most significant part of our day, whether Running or Ashtanga, when despite those who seek to promote themselves through workshops and merchandise we realise that we are most at peace moving back and forth on a length of old rubber or cotton.... or tarmac and in our oldest, tattiest, most threadbare, much loved, favourite practice pants/shorts......, that during those one to two hours we feel at our most peaceful, serene, sufficient, then our attachments to things at hand are reduced. Then, if it has one, practice has done it's job.



*

NOTE: There's a little section in Yogasanagalu just before the table of asana, made up of three groups, upon which Jois tweaked his four series. It's interesting but I don't take it too seriously, imposed later no doubt.

"Classification
This yoganga sadhana has been divided into three series: power (strength) series, treatment series and the spiritual series.
The power series is further classified into mind and body
The treatment series is divided into kosha (sheath) and Nadi (pulse)

Essential
First series requires many yogasanas and some pranayama
Second series needs some easy asanas and three pranayamas
Third series requires pranayama, pratyahara, dharana, dhyana and samadhi
Later a table is shown that includes these.”

Excerpt From: Krishnamacharya's Yogasanagalu (Mysore 1941).



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See also perhaps....











Friday 16 June 2017

Underwater Yoga on Bhaya kumbhaka and Krishnamacharya's one kumbhaka vinyasa.

Part 1 Yoga asana underwater
Part 2  Krishnamacharya's one kumbhaka vinyasa.
Part 3. Splashtanga 200hr TT


On fb this week I saw a video of my friend Simon Borg-Olivier (http://simonborgolivier.com/) practicing his Spinal movements sequence underwater....



The video isn't on youtube but you should be able to see it on this post.



So I have this Lake.......,


Living as I do on the shore of Japan's four million year old Lake Biwa, I couldn't resist trying it myself.

The trick here is exhale fully, which allows you to sink to the bottom where you can then attempt the sequence on bahya kumbhaka (ceasing of breath when the exhalation/Rechak is complete). This ties in nicely with the work I've been doing recently on Simon's Introduction to breath control (pranayama) course See THIS LINK to my review of  course ( and this to the course itself http://simonborgolivier.com/breath-training-for-health-and-longevity/).

In the course Simon has you emphasise different aspects of the breath, so in one exercise you are inhaling for thirty seconds or longer



Above a one minute inhalation, the trick is to visualise the inhalation back and forth up the body while trying to stay as relaxed as possible.

...., in another, exhaling for thirty seconds, in a third, Antar Kumbhaka (ceasing of breath when the inhalation/Puraka is complete) for thirty seconds and in a fourth, bahya kumbhaka (ceasing of breath when the exhalation/Rechak is complete).

In Simon's underwater spinal sequence video he is practicing the sequence on a minutes bahya kumbhaka, it's challenging. I can manage a three minutes Antar Kumbhaka at a push but ceasing to breathe for a minute after exhaling is at my limit, let alone trying move through a sequence and stay sitting on the bottom of the lake in padmasana.





Simon takes this further and has a wonderful video and post on underwater yoga on his blog. Simon's father was a free diver, he could swim a length below the surface before he could swim the same on the surface, probably before he could walk.




Below a couple of shots from the video, Simon in Ardha Baddha Padma Paschimattanasana




I've just been down to the lake to try this out and had the best time. It's a beautiful day here in Shiga, the rainy season is yet to start and I have the beach to myself as usual, the lake is a little cold though, I'm looking forward to July.

Simon talks of practicing thirty asana in thirty minutes underwater...

"In my late teens my Tibetan Lama told me that traditionally (in the system he learnt) that postures where help for a long as one breath retention. So progressively I developed my underwater yoga practice know finding it the easiest place to hold the breath and be in a pose.
In this practice I take a breath in, hold my breath, go underwater and get into a posture, hold for some time floating just under the surface, then exhale fully and sink down underwater (to the bottom if it is not far!) and hold my breath out and perform uddiyana bandha, mula bandha, nauli and lauliki (rolling my abdomen with my chest expanded etc). Then, I swim to the surface (often still in pose such as the lotus as in the video here) and when I break the surface I inhale to begin the next posture. I regularly practice a 30 minute sequence of up to 30 postures in this manner".

This afternoon I just practiced, 

Dandasana
Paschimattanasana 
Ustrasana
Ardha Baddha Padma Paschimattanasana
Tiriangmukhaikapada Paschimattanasana
 Bharadvajrasana
Janu Shirshasana A
Baddha Konasana
Baddha padmasana
Padmasana

It was only really in dandasana, baddha konasana and padmasana that I stayed for around thirty seconds, the others were perhaps fifteen to twenty as I had the bind to worry about.


Why do this?

Well, I have this lake......
                                                                                                  
The Shala


The Shala
Practice this morning: a swim in place of sun salutations, standing sequence in the water, Primary series up to upavishta konasana (which doesn't seem to work) under the water - bhaya kumbhaka ( ceasing to breathe after the exhalation) while mentally chanting the pranayama mantra in every posture. (Note: peg on the nose for folding forward) Back to the tatami room for finishing - until I'm more used to the sun. This may well be my summer and make up for working nights.
Update: I was asked on Instagram how you can practice Ashtanga underwater....should you want to.
Exhale fully, allows you to bend over underwater in standing (with the help of a peg on the nose) . Again, exhale fully to drop to the bottom and fold into the pose or the bind. Hold it for 20-30 seconds ( I mentally Chant the pranayama mantra), come up to the surface between sides or postures. It works, was a nice practice this morning.

Also, Krishnamacharya indicated bhaya kumbhaka ( ceasing to breathe after the exhalation) in most primary asana in Yoga Makaranda ( Mysore 1934).

Observation: Richard Freeman talks about giving a little extra puff in his pranayama course, to push out the last of the air and automatically engage bandhas. Getting rid of that last puff of the air helps ground you on the surface of the lake. That puff is almost automatic in twists if you allow it. Re twists, mostly Krishnamacharya doesn't mention kumbhaka on twists, preferring instead to indicate long slow equal inhalation and exhalation, except for a clear mention of kumbhaka for Bharadvajrasana.

Also, the movement of the water raises challenges for the posture which are interesting to overcome, likewise challenges for the breath, the kumbhaka and Bandha work but mostly, it's just beautiful and serene there in the lake with the sun breaking through the surface.



Part 2  Krishnamacharya's one kumbhaka vinyasa.

Splashtanga™may be more 'traditional than you might think...., Krishnamacharya is said to have learned from his teacher on the shore of Lake Manasarovar 




Did you pick up on the line in the quote about Simon's Tibetan Lama....

"In my late teens my Tibetan Lama told me that traditionally (in the system he learnt) that postures where help for a long as one breath retention". 

This reminded me of something that's played on my mind for some time.

In Ashtanga we tend to stay in a posture for five breaths, it used to be eight or ten back in the day supposedly but now it tends to be five, these can be pretty speedy.... Sharath for instance takes about fifteen seconds for five breaths on his dvd's and led classes (just double checked on his Moscow led for paschimottanasana). That's three seconds a breath, one and a half seconds each for inhalation and exhalation. In interviews/talks Pattabhi Jois would speak of fifteen, even twenty seconds, each for inhalation and exhalation as an ideal ( but then lead his demonstrators though there asana just as fast as Sharath), he recognised that householders didn't have time for such a slow practice but perhaps he over compensated.

NOTE: If I follow a led Ashtanga DVD or class I tend to take one or two slower breaths to the count of five, works for me.

So these days in Ashtanga it tends to be five breaths (finishing asana tend to be longer). In Yoga Mala however, Jois would talk of breathing in an asana for as long as possible....

"(for paschimottanasana) Next, doing rechaka, grasp and hold the upper parts of the feet; this is the 8th vinyasa (as your practice becomes firm, you should be able to lock your hands behind your feet). Then, doing puraka slowly, then rechaka, straighten both legs, and place the head between the knees; this is the 9th vinyasa and the state of the asana. While in the state, do puraka and rechaka slowly and deeply, as much as possible". Yoga Mala -Pattabhi Jois.

In Ashtanga then we have mention of a number of breaths, whether, ten, eight, five or, as in Yoga mala, breathing as much as possible.

In Krishnamacharya's Yoga Makaranda (Mysore 1934), written when Pattabhi Jois was Krishnamacharya's student, we don't find this at all. Krishnamacharya stresses kumbhaka in almost every asana except for twists. He talks of practicing the kumbhaka for as long as possible while in the asana and this ties in with Simon's Tibetan Lama

"....that postures where held for a long as one breath retention".

What Krishnamacharya does talk about is TIME with regards to certain key asana that are held for a longer. He recognises that one might not be able to stay in kumbhaka for five minutes ( thank you for that K.) so suggests coming out of the posture, taking puraka (inhalation) then re entering the asana.

"While holding the feet with the hands, pull and clasp the feet tightly. Keep the head or face or nose on top of the kneecap and remain in this sthiti from 5 minutes up to half an hour. If it is not possible to stay in recaka for that long, raise the head in between, do puraka kumbhaka and then, doing recaka, place the head back down on the knee. While keeping the head lowered onto the knee, puraka kumbhaka should not be done". Yoga Makaranda - Krishnamacharya

For Krishnamacharya there are a few key asana he would have you stay in for a significant period, ten minutes or so E.G. Paschimottanasana, Maha mudra ( of which janu sirsasana is it's asana), Sarvangasana, Sirsasana, also trikonasana, mayaurasana. baddha konasana. 

But in other asana, is Krishnamacharya suggestion we stay in the asana for one (extended) kumbhaka? 

If we remember that Krishnamacharya was supposedly in Tibet with his teacher, even if not for as long as legend suggests, might he have been influenced by this suggestion of one asana one Kumbhaka, that may or may not have characterised tibetan yoga?

We would need more evidence, does one asana/one kumbhaka really characterise Tibetan yoga, is this indeed what Krishnamacharya was suggesting back in Yoga Makaranda?

It was carried forward into Jois' Ashtanga vinyasa, perhaps Krishnamacharya never taught it to the young boys of the practice, perhaps it was only how he practiced himself.

In Ramaswami we see both time and count, stay for five breaths, or , in the same key asana, stay for ten minutes. Kumbhaka was retained in Krishnamacharya's later teaching but there doesn't seem to be the suggestion of one asana/one kumbhaka, did he consider it too challenging for most students ( at this time many of Krishnamacharya's students were patients) ?


Just as I lost interest in Advanced asana after briefly practicing Ashtanga Advanced A and B, I lost interest in all the different pranayamas teachers would offer, they seemed a distraction, better to settle on Ramaswami's presentation of nadi shodhana and do more rounds rather learn and practice these endless variations.

And yet I was impressed by Simon's post on free divers (https://yogasynergy.com/blog/pranayama-at-its-highest-level-in-the-practical-sense-william-truebridges-world-record-free-dive-to-124-metres-with-only-one-breath/), on how free diving is all about relaxing...., and isn't that (one of) the objective of pranayama, calming the emotions, overcoming the growing sense of panic in bhaya kumbhaka, the fear of death.

And so with Simon's introduction to breath control I've been working on increasing the length of my inhalation and exhalation, of my kumbhaka's, not to ridiculous levels but longer than I might have considered in the past. Not so much for my pranayama practice, I'm happy with the nadi shodhana I practice, but for the kumbhaka's Krishnamacharya mentions in his asana.

Besides, Krishnamacharya talks of seeing god in the kumbhaka, kumbhaka is the infinity between two points, the two stages of the breath. 

Do we find god or the absence of god, it seems more worthy of exploration than yet another handstand variation.








Part 3. SPLASHTANGA™ 200 hour Teacher Training






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10hrs Breathing exercises

5hrs Study of Ashtanga series cheat sheets (home study).
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5hrs Review of YouTube anatomy videos (home study)

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Googling together as a group, references to water in traditional yoga texts

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eg. babababababaran
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Monday 12 June 2017

Book Review: Yoga for the three stages of Life. My 'all time favourite' book on yoga.

Despite this being my favourite book of Ramaswami's and probably the best book on yoga I've come across, I don't seem to have given the book a standalone review on the blog. Time to make amends, so coming soon a full review with all or at least many of my favourite bits....

This first post is more of an introduction to a series of posts that I'm considering for each chapter, a 'Look Inside' preview if you like, based on Ramaswami's own introduction on fb this week. I've come back to this book so many times over the last ten years, discovering something I'd missed completely each time that has frankly rocked my thinking and approach to my own practice of Ashtanga. The book reminds me of practicing to Richard Freeman's dvd's (Who's new book is called the 'Art of Vinyasa' btw)  or attending his workshops, the first few times (make that twenty) most of it goes over your head but at some point you find that it perhaps seeded anyway and the next time or the next a little more makes sense or starts to bear fruit in some aspect of your practice.

Amazon Link


Sharath Jois has, of late, has begun to refer to the Ashtanga Vinyasa he teaches as a 'Vinyasa Krama', this is also the name of the approach to asana presented by Ramaswami. This should not be surprising, Pattabhi Jois, Sharath's grandfather, studied with Krishnmacharya for twenty-five years, Ramaswami for around thrirty-three.

There was the suggestion when I first started practicing Ashtanga ten years ago that there was an early Krishnamacharya and a late Krishnamacharya, perhaps it suited students, teachers and indeed the family to perpetuate that, I hope in this blog I've gone some way to question that assumption.

On the evidence of many of the glossy self promotional videos of a few Ashtanga teachers and practitioners, of led classes perhaps, Ashtanga vinyasa can appear fast paced, flashy, dynamic, obsessed with asana and with appearance. The less glossy videos hidden away on YouTube however, show something different. If we look at videos of actual Mysore rooms, both shala and home, we see practitioners, teachers, moving through their practice at their own pace, their attention focussed on the breath, we see an honesty, a humbleness even, a dedication to developing a daily discipline through the practice of asana.

If we look to Krishnamacharya's early work, Yoga Makaranda (Mysore 1934) and Yogasanagalu Mysore 1941), written when the young Pattabhi Jois was his student and occasional assistant we find, the slowness of the breath emphasised '...like the pouring of oil', Kumbhaka ( retaining the breath in or out) indicated for almost every asana presented and, in the 1938 Mysore documentary footage, the young BKS Iyengar (also Krishnamacharya) running through a demonstration of advanced asana that were it in colour, in a fancy location and with a euromix soundtrack would garner tens of thousands of followers on Instagram today.




But we also see Krishnamacharya himself, moving through head and shoulderstand variations that aren't to be found in Pattabhi Jois' Ashtanga Vinyasa method perhaps but are presented in the books of Srivatsa Ramaswami, Krishnamacharya's student from just after he left Mysore up until Krishnamacharya's passing thirty plus years later.



There are differences between the teaching of Pattabhi Jois and Ramaswami but these tend to be pedagogic, related more to the teaching environment the student and teacher found themselves. Pattabhi Jois was a young boy when he was Krishnamacharya's student, his peers were boys, his students when he first started teaching were college students. Ramaswami practiced with Krishnamacharya from his teens to middle age when Krishnamacharya was mostly teaching on a one to one basis, people of all ages, just as he did in the side rooms of the Mysore palace. As well as asana and pranayama Ramaswami studied yoga philosophy, endless chanting, the close study of yoga texts, he studied yoga for the three stages of life.

Srivatsa Ramaswami's Yoga for the Three stages of Life is a marvellous book. If the final third of the book focusses on a seemingly different approach to asana than that which you may practice yourself or are familiar with it is still worthy of exploration, injuries happen, whether a result of asana practice or just of life generally. Ramaswami's book presents variations of asana that can be of benefit when injuries arise, or to better help us in moving towards more challenging asana, or as options for our students new to asana practice, just as Manju Jois mentions his father, like Krishnamacharya before him, would offer variations of an asana to struggling students.

As we get older we may choose to let go of the more challenging asana and look to variations and alternatives to those asana we love, as we mature mentally in our practice, not just physically, many of those fancy 'demonstration' asana may start to seem faintly ridiculous, or at least unnecessary, even a hindrance to practice. We may indeed, finally, be in a place, situation, frame of mind to look to the other limbs and adapt our physical practice accordingly.

But, if for now, we are quite happy merely exploring asana. If building that discipline through our asana practice seems quite enough thank you very much and we find ourselves somewhat irritated/frustrated by the comments on the likes of the fb Ashtanga discussion page, that what we are doing is NOT yoga, Ramaswami's Yoga for the three stages of life comes to our defence, an asana dominated practice may well be perfectly appropriate, in the mid stage of life less asana and more pranayama may be more appropriate and at a still late stage, more philosophy and the later limbs.

Photo: Three stages of life







Below I've merely slipped in a page from each chapter to illustrate Ramaswami's comments from his fb post. In coming blogs I will look more closely at each section, perhaps chapter by chapter, sharing some of the gems I continue to discover in the text.


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I wrote a book "Yoga for three stages of Life"--An Art, A Therapy, A Philosophy. I thought it was a comprehensive book of Yoga with some depth, all inspired by my studies with Sri Krishnamacharya. I followed the thought sequence of Patanjali in this book. 





The first chapter was on "My studies with Sri Krishnamacharya" wherein I attempted to bring the various subjects Sri Krishnamacharya taught. 




Then there is the story of Patanjali based on the work "Patanjali Carita" written by a Sanskrit scholar Ramabhadra Dikshitar from South India. 





The third chapter is "What is Yoga". It is based on the introduction my Guru gave when he started teaching the Yogasutras. 

Advanced Yoga contains discussion beyond Hatayoga. 





There is then a chapter on Mantra Yoga. 




Introduction to Ashtanga Yoga and the yamaniyamas is then. 

The next several chapters deal with asanas following Vinyasakrama-- 

the standing poses, 




Supine, 


Inversions,

prone poses, 


paschimatanasana, 



Padmasana. 




Then there are yogic breathing exercises and health benefits, 


then there is one section on Yoga for Women, 


then reference to Yoga texts,




followed by Internal yoga practices (antaranga sadhana--meditation) 



and finally Freedom or Kaivalya, 


in all 17 chapters. 

I enjoyed writing this book. 

The book also contains some stories and graphic illustrations like siva's dance. 



This is still available from Amazon. Here is the link
https://www.amazon.com/…/…/ref=pd_bbs_2/103-1755689-4479843…
I understand the publishers, Inner Traditions, have also a Spanish edition of this book


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See also my Srivatsa Ramaswami resource page for a look at Ramaswami7s other books and more besides.




Sunday 4 June 2017

Notes from Krishnamacharya in AG Mohan's new edition of Hatha Yoga Pradipka



Friends have been getting in touch this week to ask me if I've seen or yet have a copy of AG Mohan and Dr. Ganeseha Mohan's new edition of the Hatha Yoga Pradipka with notes from Krishnamacharya.

I don't, not yet.

I had a look on Amazon but there was no Look Inside preview feature, I mentioned this on the Svastha fb page ( LINK) and one appeared this morning, perhaps I was not the only one to ask.

So I've been having a look at the generous preview on amazon this morning and it appears to be quite marvellous, I just ordered my copy.

To be perfectly honest, I haven't been that interested in the Hatha Yoga Pradipka for some time, the texts in Mallinson and Singleton's Root's of Yoga strike me as being of more interest and besides, I generally lean more towards Raja than Hatha and have become quite dismissive of the later. 

Was hatha a wrong turn ( the turn towards tantra), a distraction?

More recently still, I've turned my gaze back to the West and the contemplative traditions that form(ed) my own horizon/worldview. Why try to appropriate another tradition when I have one of my own, learn about others surely, it's always of value, but if we seek to inquire on a deep level, look perhaps to our own ground (of being). It struck me some time ago, while listening to Ramswami lecture on Patanjali's Yoga Sutras, his weaving in of songs and chants, commentaries and illustrative stories from his grandmother, that I could never know the text on a similar level however much I studied it, the text wasn't organic for me, unlike say, the Greeks ( I originally went to Uni to study Classics, switching to single honours Philosophy after a Greek philosophy lecture but I of course also grew up with the Greek myths and legends as much as stories from the bible or Jesus of Nazareth and Ben Hur every Easter and Christmas rather than say the Ramayama and Mahabharata ). I remember too Kristina Karitinou reminding us of our own culture in my interview with her a while back Entelechy : An Interview with Certified Ashtanga Teacher Kristina Karitinou

Anthony: I noticed on your alter a small bust of Socrates do you have any thoughts regarding Ashtanga as a philosophy, yoga sutras etc and Greek philosophy?

Kristina: It is of paramount importance for the practitioners to develop awareness of the cultural heritage of the place they are in. Being in Greece we bear great responsibility towards our ancestors and our roots, so having a small bust of Socrates triggers the energy that surrounds us and constantly reminds us why we actually practice. "Knowing thyself" is the epitome of knowledge, and it should always be there in our practice, in our breathing in our everyday life. "Practice and all is coming" incorporates the true meaning of knowing oneself as this is the only way given to us to actually manage and have some results. Greek and Indian civilisations appear to be connected on a spiritual level throughout the centuries, and they have both set the foundations for the development of philosophical thinking so much in the East as well as in the West respectively. Socratic inquisitive way of approaching discourse and the mental freedom he offers to human existence match uniquely the legacy of practice Patanjali has bequeathed us. Both of them have offered a means to free the mind from the conventionality of life as they give you alternatives and they both require freedom of thought so that man can reach the higher level of existence and the ultimate point of liberation and self - fulfillment. Freedom works as a prerequisite while it is the final destination of each of these two methods. Therefore the presence of both philosophies on my alter seemed like a natural thing to do.

I may hold on to my asana and pranayama practice out of fondness and habit (although I could I suppose just as well run or swim perhaps) but I'm leaning more towards Lectio Divina as a contemplative approach of late rather than the chanting of vedic mantras, to Plotinus rather than Patanjali, Marcus's meditations rather than the Yama/Niyama's and to my old friend Heidegger rather than Shankara.

Note: Lectio Divina, the contemplative approach of the early church. Read, recite or listen to an appropriate a text (traditionally the psalms and/or gospels but it could just as well be the Enneads. There should be no sense that one needs to complete a reading, when a word or phrase strikes you, sit with it, allow it live within you for a time..... for ten minutes, an hour, a month, years.

That said, Krishnamacharya still fascinates, and inspires my practice and here he is in the pages of AG Mohan and his son's wonderful new book, I look forward to revisiting the text.

Below, a selection of pages from the Amazon preview.

Link to Amazon
Amazon intro

The Hatha Yoga Pradipika, authored in the 15th century is one of the most well-known texts on physical yoga. This translation offers unique perspectives and insight from Sri T. Krishnamacharya, who had perhaps the most influence in physical yoga in the modern era. Drawing upon extensive notes of private studies with Krishnamacharya, his long time student, A. G. Mohan, presents critical analysis unavailable in any other translation to date. This translation includes summaries, notes on which practices may be more or less useful or even harmful, and comparisons to the Gheranda Samhita. This book is a worthwhile read and companion to any serious yoga aspirant, especially those interested in knowing what one of the most influential yogis of the modern times had to say on the esoteric practices of hatha yoga: on pranayama, mudras, and bandhas.

About the Author
A. G. Mohan was a student of “the father of modern yoga,” Yogacarya Sri T. Krishnamacharya (1888-1989), for eighteen years. He is the author of several books on yoga, including Yoga for Body, Breath, and Mind; Yoga Therapy; and Krishnamacharya: His Life and Teachings. Co-founder of Svastha Yoga & Ayurveda and YogaKnowledge.net, he is respected internationally as a teacher of rare authenticity and knowledge.

Paperback: 164 pages
Publisher: Svastha Yoga (May 8, 2017)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 9811131333
ISBN-13: 978-9811131332
Product Dimensions: 6 x 0.4 x 9 inches


Link to Amazon



AG Mohan's website




Looking Inside



Krishnamacharya's practice guidelines from the introduction




Also from the introductory notes....






Layout, a nice summary of the chapter




Presented in sanskrit, it's transliteration and translation into English, notes by Mohan and in many cases Krishnamacharya.









A nice section from Chapter III



from chapter III















Not all the verses have a note from Krishnamacharya, at times the notes are short but also in some case quite long, this section from Chapter II gives a good indication perhaps.









see too 






Yoga Yajnavalkya: Trans: AG Mohan  
( My preference over Hatha Yoga Pradipka)


Amazon Link