Sunday, March 27, 2016

Yoga: Moving Meditation

I have written on the relevance of meditation (Dhyana) - the sixth limb of ashtanga yoga. Meditation is a stepping stone to Dharana (realization) and Samadhi. In transformative meditation, perception gives way to realization; its ability to disconnect the mind, the body and the spirit is an exercise to recognize them. Meditation is like dismantling a machinery, clean them and reassemble to enhance its function. Thirty minutes of asana practice, ten minutes pranayama and twenty minutes of meditation used to be the formula for holistic wellness. Things have changed now; asana practice dominate yoga practice; and meditation sidelined. Most yoga classes in the west end with savasana. We have now changed corpse pose, passively, to a time to rest. In a yoga class once I attended, after instructing the class to get into this last active pose, the teacher left the scene saying, “lie down as long as you want in this pose, get up and go.” Really?

It is not easy to get participants into the meditative stage after an intense vinyasa practice. At the same time, we need to consider the power of three limbs of ashtanga yoga – Asana, Paranayama and Prathyahara- as an opportunity to train the mind and body to get into the meditative stage. Yoga practice is a time to bring the mind back to your body; it could be a prelude to meditation; yoga could well be positioned as a moving meditation.

Meditation requires focus. How to get focus into the yoga practice? If we are able to “quantify “focus, like any other measurable, we will be able to optimize it. There are four ways to quantify focus in a yoga practice:

1. During inhalation: Imagine the air going through your pharynx, larynx, filling the lungs, pushing the diaphragm down, lifting the navel up and (imagine) air hitting the pelvic floor.
2. During the exhalation: Imagine to empty the abdomen as much as you can, imagine to squeeze the lungs by sternum, diaphragm and collar bone. Listen to the “Oceanic voice” of breath by squeezing the glottis. Listen to that majestic symphony!
3. Make the holding phase as long as possible: This is the time to engage the internal locks (bandhas) and sensitize chakras.
4. Measure your pose. Imagine the Body part, figure out the Energy flow, reinforce the Action and Direction, Elaborate the pose as instructed and seek the Dynamic stability. Make your poses BEADED

What are the other benefits of meditation?

1. Meditation improves immunity by protecting the body defense.
2. Twenty minutes of deep meditation is compared to two days of deep sleep.
3. Meditation helps to reduce stress and anxiety in general.
4.  Meditation Improves learning, memory and creativity; and enhances the ability for information processing, memory recall and decision making.
5. Low blood pressure and psychosocial stress factors associated with meditation reduces the risk of heart diseases.

Hope to work with you on this moving mediation- the theme of my class for next few weeks.


Jay

2 comments:

  1. Thank you for this blog on meditation and the importance of acknowledging the varios aspects of including the chakras and deep breathing to assist in getting into the meditative state.
    I continue to gain deeper knowledge of so many building blocks to my yoga practice, and I thank you immensely for your guidance.
    Namaste.

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