The Patanjali Yoga Sutras is the most popular influencer for wisdom, concepts, and practices of yoga even for modern yoga cultures today .Patanjali can be said as one of the finest collection of knowledge on the path of spirituality laid out in an easy and structured format for anyone seeking enlightenment. Even though yoga has been mentioned in various ancient texts, including the Vedas, Upanishads, the Bhagavad Gita etc, the credit for putting together a formal, cohesive philosophy of yoga goes to Sage Patanjali. In his Yoga Sutras, Patanjali has provided the very essence of the philosophy and teachings of yoga in a highly scientific and systematic exposition. it is created by Maharishi Patanjali, who is also considered as ‘the father of Yoga’. Although people know very little about Patanjali himself, many believe he’s thought to have lived between 200 and 500 B.C.The Patanjali Yoga Sutras are one of the nine darshanas of Hindu schools of philosophy and a very important milestone in the history of Yoga. The book is a set of 195 aphorisms (sutras), which are short, terse phrases designed to be easy to memorize. Though brief, the Yoga Sutras is an enormously influential work that is just as relevant for yoga philosophy and practice today as it was when it was written. The sutras are divided into four chapters (pada) as follows:
Samadhi Pada: The first chapter provides a definition and the purpose of yoga. various approaches that can be used to achive the objectives of yoga are provides. it has 51 sutras. in sutra 2 of the first chapter, patanjali defined the yoga as
योगश्चित्तवृत्तिनिरोधः॥२॥
“ yogascitta vritti nirodhah” (Sanskrit)
"Yoga is the restraint of the modifications of the mind-stuff"
– translation by Swami Vivekananda
Sadhana Pada: the second chapter contains the practical approach to achieveing the goals of yoga. In this chapter the author gives a description of the eight limbs of yoga called Ashtanga Yoga, which is how the yoga sutras, patanjali explains the two paths or the two forms of yoga kriya yoga and ashtanga
(Eightfold or Eight-limbed Yoga).
1. Yama
Ahimsa: Non-violence or not harming other beings
Brahmacharya: Moving into Bigness; Chastity
Aparigraha: Non-accumulation, Non-possessiveness
2. Niyama
Saucha: Cleanliness or purity of the body
Tapas – Endurance and Acceptance
Swadhyaaya – Self-awareness, and self-study
Ishwara Pranidhaana – Devotion to and love for the divine
3. Asana
4. Pranayama
6. Dharana
8. Samadhi
Vibhuti Pada: The third chapter focuses on some of the supernatural powers that an adept yogi may be able to attain . It is said, yogis achieve mystical powers (siddhi) due to the regular practice of yoga. it has 56 sutras.
Kaivalya Pada: In the fourth chapter the nature of the mind and mental perceptions, desire, bondage and liberation and what follows it are discussed. It describes how the yogi deals with the overall process and after-effects of enlightenment. it has 34 sutras.
Samadhi Pada: The first chapter provides a definition and the purpose of yoga. various approaches that can be used to achive the objectives of yoga are provides. it has 51 sutras. in sutra 2 of the first chapter, patanjali defined the yoga as
योगश्चित्तवृत्तिनिरोधः॥२॥
“
"Yoga is the restraint of the modifications of the mind-stuff"
– translation by Swami Vivekananda
Sadhana Pada: the second chapter contains the practical approach to achieveing the goals of yoga. In this chapter the author gives a description of the eight limbs of yoga called Ashtanga Yoga, which is how the yoga sutras, patanjali explains the two paths or the two forms of yoga kriya yoga and ashtanga
(Eightfold or Eight-limbed Yoga).
Ashtanga Yoga (Eight Limbs Of Yoga)*for detail go to link
1. Yama
Ahimsa: Non-violence or not harming other beings
Satya: Truthfulness
Asteya: Non-stealing
Brahmacharya: Moving into Bigness; Chastity
Aparigraha: Non-accumulation, Non-possessiveness
2. Niyama
Saucha: Cleanliness or purity of the body
Santosha: Happiness and Contentment
Tapas – Endurance and Acceptance
Swadhyaaya – Self-awareness, and self-study
Ishwara Pranidhaana – Devotion to and love for the divine
3. Asana
4. Pranayama
6. Dharana
7. Dhyana
8. Samadhi
Vibhuti Pada: The third chapter focuses on some of the supernatural powers that an adept yogi may be able to attain . It is said, yogis achieve mystical powers (siddhi) due to the regular practice of yoga. it has 56 sutras.
Kaivalya Pada: In the fourth chapter the nature of the mind and mental perceptions, desire, bondage and liberation and what follows it are discussed. It describes how the yogi deals with the overall process and after-effects of enlightenment. it has 34 sutras.
The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali are also sometimes referred as "Raja Yoga" or the "Royal Yoga" or the "yoga of mind" because mind is the king of our body if control it we can have control over all of our body all thoughts , activities all and every thing
Patanjali yoga Sutras PDF free download
Patanjali yoga Sutras PDF free download
Know more about yoga
yoga is a group of physical, mental, and spiritual practices or disciplines. Yoga has been studied and may be recommended to promote relaxation, reduce stress and improve some medical conditions . In today's age yoga is adopted as holistic health care. There are many yoga school in India.
Know more about yoga
ankush chauhan blog
Ashtanga Yoga (Eight Limbs Of Yoga)
Some time we refer yoga as the ashan or posture or physical exercise. but that asana and physical exercise are only a part of yoga which give strength to our body and makes us free from many diseases .Maharishi Patanjali define yoga in his yoga shutra as followsIn patanjali yoga shutra maharashi patanjali discribe eight limbs of yoga
Eight components or Limbs of yoga
In Patanjali yoga shutra there are eight limbs or aspects of yoga
1. Yamas
- Ahiṃsā (अहिंसा): Nonviolence, non-harming other living beings
- Satya (सत्य): truthfulness, non-falsehood
- Asteya (अस्तेय): non-stealing
- Brahmacārya (ब्रह्मचर्य): chastity, marital fidelity or sexual restraint
- Aparigraha (अपरिग्रहः): non-avarice,non-possessiveness
Patanjali, states how and why each of the above self restraints help in the personal growth of an individual.
2. Niyama
Niyama is the second limb of the spiritual path as outlined by the ancient sage Patanjali in his yoga sutras The second Limbs of Patanjali's Yoga path is called niyama, which includes habits, behaviors the niyamas are
- Saucha: purity, clearness of mind, speech and body
- Santoṣa: satisfaction ,contentment, acceptance of others, optimism for self
- Tapas: persistence, perseverance
- Svadhyaya: study of Vedas and other knowledgeable books, study of self, self-reflection, introspection of self's thoughts, speeches and actions
- Isvarapraṇidhana: contemplation of the Ishvara (God/Supreme Being, True Self)
As with the Yamas, Patanjali explains how and why each of the above Niyamas help in the personal growth of an individual
3. Asana
Asana is the physical practice of yoga, which is also commonly known as the yoga postures. Yet, asana is not just a simple exercise. It is a physical medium through which we can keep the mind calm and balanced.Patanjali begins discussion of Asana (आसन, posture) by defining it as follows
Asana is thus a posture that one can hold for a period of time, staying relaxed, steady, comfortable and motionless. Patanjali does not list any specific asana, except the suggestion, "posture one can hold with comfort and motionlessness". The posture that causes pain or restlessness is not a yogic posture. Other secondary texts studying Patanjali's sutra state that one requirement of correct posture is to keep breast, neck and head erect (proper spinal posture)
yoga scholars developed, described and commented on numerous postures. Padmasana (lotus), Veerasana (heroic), Bhadrasana (decent)
The Hatha Yoga Pradipika describes the technique of 84 asanas, stating four of these as most important: Padmasana (lotus), Bhadrasana (decent), Sinhasana (lion), and Siddhasana (accomplished).
according to some text lord shiva discribed 84 lakh ashan
4. Praṇayama
Prana is the life force, the vital energy needed by our physical and subtle layers, for us to survive. It is said that life force energy flows through thousands of subtle energy channels called the ‘Nadis’ (energy channels) and energy centers (junctions of those Nadis) called ‘Chakras’. It is very important that a good quantity and quality of prana flows through the Nadis and chakras as it determines one’s state of mind Praṇayama is made out of two Sanskrit words praṇa (प्राण, breath) and ayama (आयाम, restraining, extending, stretching)‘Prana’ refers to the universal life force and ‘Ayama’ means to regulate or lengthen. Pranayam is a yogic way of breathing to increase our prana.After a desired posture has been achieved, the next limb of yoga, praṇayama, which is the practice of consciously regulating breath (inhalation and exhalation) This is done in several ways, inhaling and then suspending exhalation for a period, exhaling and then suspending inhalation for a period, slowing the inhalation and exhalation, consciously changing the time/length of breath (deep, short breathing)
5. Pratyahara
Pratyahara is a combination of two Sanskrit words prati- (the prefix प्रति-, "towards") and ahara (आहार, "bring near")
Pratyahara is bringing near one's awareness and one's thoughts to within. It is a process of withdrawing one's thoughts from external objects, things, person, situation. It is turning one's attention to one's true Self, one's inner world, experiencing and examining self. It is a step of self extraction and abstraction. Pratyahara is not consciously closing one's eyes to the sensory world, it is consciously closing one's mind processes to the sensory world. Pratyahara empowers one to stop being controlled by the external world, and take one's attention to seek self-knowledge and experience the freedom innate in one's inner world
6. Dharaṇa
Dharana (Sanskrit: धारणा) means concentration, introspective focus
Dharana as the sixth limb of yoga, is holding one's mind onto a particular inner state, subject or topic of one's mind. The mind (not sensory organ) is fixed on a mantra, or one's breath or any part of body, or an object one wants to observe, Fixing the mind means one-pointed focus, without drifting of mind, and without jumping from one topic to another.
7. Dhyana
Dhyana (Sanskrit: ध्यान) simply known as meditation literally means "profound contemplation"
Dhyana is contemplating, reflecting on whatever Dharana has focused on. If in the sixth limb of yoga one focused on a personal deity, Dhyana is its contemplation. Dhyana is uninterrupted train of thought, current of cognition, flow of awareness.
Dhyana is integrally related to Dharana, one leads to other. Dharana is a state of mind, Dhyana the process of mind. Dhyana is distinct from Dharana in that the meditator becomes actively engaged with its focus. Patanjali defines contemplation (Dhyana) as the mind process, where the mind is fixed on something, and then there is "a course of uniform modification of knowledge". Dhyana is the yoga state when there is only the "stream of continuous thought about the object, uninterrupted by other thoughts of different kind for the same object"; Dharana, states is focussed on one object, but aware of its many aspects and ideas about the same object.
8. Samadhi
Samadhi is oneness with the subject of meditation. There is no distinction, during the eighth limb of yoga, between the actor of meditation, the act of meditation and the subject of meditation. Samadhi is that spiritual state when one's mind is so absorbed in whatever it is contemplating on, that the mind loses the sense of its own identity. The thinker, the thought process and the thought fuse with the subject of thought. There is only oneness, samadhi.
yoga is a group of physical, mental, and spiritual practices or disciplines. Yoga has been studied and may be recommended to promote relaxation, reduce stress and improve some medical conditions . In today's age yoga is adopted as holistic health care. There are many yoga school in India.
Know more about yoga
ankush chauhan blog