Sensibilità sinergica sensoriale. 
				
				
				( Sensire = Sentire contemporaneamente attraverso l'insieme dei 
				sensi )
				
				
				                    
				Percezioni sensoriali
				
				
				Il cavaliere 
				Jedi tiene presente ogni stimolo proveniente dalle fonti della 
				conoscenza sensoriale, consapevolmente e permanentemente. Ogni 
				momento i canali percettivi, 
				ricevono stimoli sia interni che esterni richiamando 
				l'attenzione dei neuroni specifici sulle diverse porzioni della 
				realtà, attraverso sistemi coscienti predeterminati. Coloro che 
				sono in grado di sensire avvertono pienamente, mutamenti 
				interiori come esteriori, consapevolmente. E' imperativa 
				categorica la conoscenza di quei fenomeni che possono produrre 
				variazioni dei campi, tali da creare ingerenza, interferenza o 
				altri condizionamenti propri e impropri che possono produrre 
				forzatura, limitazione, incapacità, inabilità, o per mezzo di 
				programmi senzienti precedentemente installati, innescare 
				risposte multiple consequenziali di tipo pre configurato senza 
				che l'ospitante ne sia pienamente consapevole, ma solo strumento 
				di reiterazione clonata al servizio dei protocolli. Ci si 
				appresti quindi allo studio e alla pratica dell'attenzione, e ci 
				si concentri costantemente sui seguenti campi.        
				
				
				
				1    TATTO
				
				
				2    OLFATTO
				
				
				3    VISTA
				
				
				4    GUSTO
				
				
				5    UDITO
				
				
				6    MOVIMENTO CINESTESICO   ( 
				
				radiale, lineare, velocità.... 
				)
				
				
				7    EQUILIBRIO
				
				
				8    CAMPO ELETTROMAGNETICO
				
				
				9    SENSO DEL TEMPO
				
				
				10  SENSO DELLO SPAZIO
				
				
				11  PERCEZIONE VISCERALE ( 
				
				fame, sazietà, sete... 
				)
				
				
				12  DOLORE, PIACERE, PRURITO
				
				
				13  SENSAZIONE TERMICA
				
				
				14  INTUIZIONE
				
				
				15  PESO E LEGGEREZZA 
				
				
				16  DIMENSIONE ( 
				
				padronanza, goffo... 
				)
				
				
				17  TELEPATIA ( 
				
				Risonanza ritmo sintonia induzione empatia 
				)
				
				
				18  ORDINE
				
				
				19  MNEMONICA ( 
				Analitica, 
				esperienziale, deduttiva, analogica, coincidente 
				) 
				
				
				20  SENSO DEL COMPORTAMENTO ANIMALE ISTINTIVO
				
				
				21  SENSO DI PRESSIONE TIMPANICA, EPIDERMIDE
				
				
				22  SENSO DI PERCEZIONE DELL’ESSERE
				
				
				 
				
				
				23  SENSO DI NUTRIMENTO E BENESSERE
				
				
				24  FORO PERCETTIVO ( 
				
				Zone cieche, mancanze, fori, invisibilità comandata, mimetismo... 
				)
				
				
				25  SENSO DI MANCANZA O DI  VUOTO
				
				
				26  SENSO DI APPAGAMENTO E INSODDISFAZIONE
				
				
				27  SENSO DI SOLLIEVO
				
				
				28  SENSO DI MERAVIGLIA
				
				
				29  SENSO DI LIBERTA
				
				
				30  SENSO DELL'UMORISMO
				
				
				31  SENSO DI COLPA
				
				
				32  SENSO DI ATTRAZIONE E REPULSIONE
				
				
				33  SENSO DI ELEVAZIONE E CADUTA GRAVITAZIONALE   
				
				
				34  SENSO DI ACCELERAZIONE E DECELERAZIONE
				
				
				35  SENSO DEL PRINCIPIO E DELLA FINE
				
				
				36  SENSO DEL VERO E DEL FALSO
				
				
				37  SENSO DI RISPETTO
				
				
				38  SENSO DI INADEGUATEZZA
				
				
				39  SENSO MORALE
				
				
				40  SENSO DEL PUDORE
				
				
				41  SESTO SENSO
				
				
				42  COMMON SENSE
				
				
				43  SENSO DI INUTILITA
				
				
				44  SENSO DI IMPOTENZA
				
				
				45  SENSO DI ONNIPOTENZA
				
				
				46  SENSO DI PULIZIA
				
				
				47  SENSO D'ORDINE
				
				
				49  SENSO DI MALATTIA
				
				
				50  SENSO DI VERGOGNA  
				
				
				 
				
				
				Gli organi di senso sono strutture fisiche 
				presenti nei corpi degli esseri viventi del regno animale che 
				servono essenzialmente a permetterci di interagire con il mondo 
				circostante.
				
				
				Essi sono composti da strutture più o meno 
				complesse specializzate nella ricezione di stimoli provenienti 
				dall’esterno o dall’interno, di trasformarli in 
				
				
				impulsi nervosi 
				e infine di trasmetterli al 
				
				
				sistema nervoso centrale.
				
				
				Questi recettori si classificano in base alla 
				provenienza dello stimolo:
				
					- 
					
					
					
					Telecettori: 
					sensibili a forme di energia provenienti da lontano.
- 
					
					
					
					Esterocettori: 
					sensibili a forme di energia originate da fonti esterne 
					vicine al corpo.
- 
					
					
					
					Interocettori: 
					sensibili a fenomeni provenienti dall’interno 
					dell’organismo.
- 
					
					
					
					Propriocettori: 
					sensibili a stimoli provenienti dalle articolazioni, dai 
					muscoli e dai tendini. Servono a sentire dove si trova il 
					nostro corpo nello spazio.
				
				Dal tipo di stimolo:
				
				
				
				E in base al loro Adattamento sensoriale 
				cioè alla possibilità di far diminuire la frequenza di uno 
				stimolo prolungato nel tempo.
				
					- 
					
					
					
					Fasici 
					o 
					
					
					Dinamici: 
					Si adattano facilmente. Ad esempio l'olfatto.
- 
					
					
					
					Tonici 
					o 
					
					
					Statici: 
					Si adattano poco o per niente. Per esempio i termocettori.
				
				 Trasmissione dello stimolo
				
				
				Lo stimolo è, in realtà, una variazione della 
				polarità della 
				
				
				membrana. 
				Normalmente, l'interno del 
				
				
				derma 
				ha 
				
				
				polarità 
				negativa. Questo perché gli 
				
				
				ioni 
				negativi Cl-(cloro) 
				sono molti di più di quelli positivi K+ (potassio). 
				L'ambiente esterno, invece, è carico positivamente perché ricco 
				di 
				
				
				ioni 
				Na+ (sodio). 
				Quando c'è uno stimolo, i Cl- escono e i Na+ entrano invertendo 
				la polarità (depolarizzazione). I K+ escono molto più lentamente 
				e, quando ciò avviene, ristabiliscono l'equilibrio riportando la 
				polarità della 
				
				
				pelle 
				al negativo (ripolarizzazione). Lo stimolo recepito si trasforma 
				in potenziale recettoriale che si trasmette ai 
				
				
				neuroni 
				sensoriali afferenti (che portano al 
				
				
				sistema nervoso centrale). 
				I neuroni, prima di inviare il messaggio, lo trasformano in
				
				
				
				potenziale d'azione 
				(trasduzione). 
				N.B.: se uno stimolo è prolungato nel 
				
				
				tempo, 
				aumenta la 
				
				
				frequenza 
				di trasmissione dello stimolo, e non l'intensità.
				
				
				   Anatomia umana
				
				
				Sette sono gli organi di senso umani canonici 
				nonostante spesso si limiti a citare solo i primi cinque:
				
				
				
				Altri organi di senso sono presenti nel corpo 
				umano (vedi 
				
				
				corpuscoli) 
				tuttavia sono considerati secondari rispetto a quelli citati e 
				solo gli specialisti ne conoscono il nome e la rispettiva 
				funzione. 
				
				
				Chemocettori
				
				
				Fra i chemocettori si trovano i 
				
				
				glomi, 
				l'apparato gustativo e l'apparato olfattivo.
				
				
				Glomi:
				
				
				Sono interocettori che sono situati in presenza 
				delle grandi 
				
				
				arterie 
				(carotide, aorta, sacrale media), hanno la funzione di 
				registrare le alterazioni dei tassi di O2 (ossigeno) 
				e di CO2 (anidride 
				carbonica) 
				nel sangue.
				
				
				Apparato gustativo:
				
				
				È formato dai calici gustativi che sono presenti 
				nelle 
				
				
				papille linguali 
				Circumvallate (si trovano a forma di V nella parte più interna 
				della 
				
				
				lingua), 
				Foliate, e, in piccola parte anche nelle Fungiformi. Le 
				Filiformi, invece, sono papille tattili. Ogni calice è formato 
				da tre tipi di 
				
				
				cellule:
				
					- 
					
					Basali
- 
					
					di 
					Sostegno
- 
					
					
					Gustative: sono i veri e propri recettori chimici, fornite 
					di 
					
					
					microvilli 
					che recepiscono le 
					
					
					
					molecole 
					disciolte nella saliva.
				
				Ogni calice gustativo non riconosce una singola 
				categoria di gusto anche se ci sono aree specializzate come, ad 
				esempio, la punta della lingua che riconosce meglio il 
				
				
				
				dolce, 
				i lati della stessa che riconoscono l'acido e il 
				
				
				salato 
				e la parte più interna della lingua che è specializzata per l'amaro.
				
				
				Apparato olfattivo:
				
				
				Il tessuto specializzato per riconoscere gli
				
				
				
				odori 
				è l'epitelio olfattivo che si trova nella parte superiore della 
				cavità nasale. Esso è ricoperto di 
				
				
				muco 
				dove si trovano le molecole da analizzare. L'epitelio olfattivo 
				è formato da tre tipi di cellule:
				
					- 
					
					Basali
- 
					
					di 
					Sostegno: sono attorno alle cellule olfattive, hanno dei 
					microvilli usati per spostare il 
					
					
					
					muco.
- 
					
					
					Olfattive: sono le 
					
					
					
					cellule 
					atte a ricevere lo stimolo. Hanno delle ciglia immerse nel
					
					
					
					muco. 
					Sono le stesse cellule a portare l'informazione al 
					
					
					
					sistema nervoso 
					centrale, invece di affidare il messaggio ad un 
					
					
					
					neurone 
					specializzato.
				
				Meccanocettori 
				
				
				Tatto:
				
				
				I meccanocettori presenti sull'epidermide 
				sono vari e sono sensibili alla 
				
				
				pressione 
				e al 
				
				
				dolore. 
				Si dividono in due:
				
					- 
					
					Dischi di
					
					
					
					Merkel: 
					sono sensibili alla 
					
					
					
					pressione 
					e sono 
					
					
					tonici.
- 
					
					
					Corpuscoli: che a loro volta si dividono in 
					
					
				
				Orecchio: apparato uditivo e vestibolare:
				
				
				L'orecchio 
				è costituito da tre parti:
				
				
				
				L'apparato uditivo è formato dalla coclea e dai 
				tre ossicini. Il martello è a contatto con la membrana del
				
				
				
				timpano 
				e trasmette le vibrazioni all'incudine e alla staffa. Attraverso 
				la finestra ovale, le 
				
				
				vibrazioni 
				si trasmettano alla coclea. Qust'ultima è formata da tre 
				
				
				
				canali, 
				di cui il primo e il terzo sono collegati e contengono 
				
				
				
				perilinfa:
				
					- 
					
					Canale 
					vestibolare: collegato alla staffa attraverso la finestra 
					ovale.
- 
					
					Canale 
					medio: si trova in mezzo agli altri due, contiene l'endolinfa 
					e l'organo del 
					
					
					
					Corti.
- 
					
					Canale 
					timpanico: collegato alla finestra rotonda.
				
				Il 
				
				
				suono, 
				quindi, si trasmette dal 
				
				
				timpano 
				ai tre ossicini, passa nella coclea attraverso la finestra ovale 
				e comprime la perilinfa che trasmette le 
				
				
				vibrazioni 
				al canale vestibolare, quindi al canale timpanico e da questo al 
				canale medio. In quest'ultimo canale si trova l'organo del
				
				
				
				Corti 
				dove si trovano le cellule sensoriali. Queste cellule sono 
				ricoperte da una membrana tettoria. Le loro ciglia, sfregando 
				sulla membrana tettoria, trasmettono le vibrazioni al 
				
				
				
				nervo 
				uditivo.
				
				
				L'apparato vestibolare, invece, è composto dai 
				tre canali semicircolari che hanno all'estremità un'ampolla che 
				è in contatto con l'utricolo 
				e il 
				
				
				sacculo, 
				due cavità a forma, appunto, di sacco. Nell'utricolo e nel 
				sacculo ci sono le cellule sensoriali dell'equilibrio 
				che hanno delle ciglia immerse in una gelatina in cui sono 
				immersi degli 
				
				
				otoliti. 
				Gli otoliti sono sassolini di 
				
				
				carbonato di calcio 
				che, con il movimento, sfregano le ciglia dei recettori. Se il 
				movimento è rotatorio (angolare), l'endolinfa 
				presente nei tre canali semicircolari preme sulla 
				
				
				gelatina 
				presente nell'ampolla facendo muovere le ciglia delle cellule 
				sensoriali immerse in essa (nella gelatina).
				
				
				Termocettori 
				
				
				I termocettori sono di due tipi:
				
					- 
					
					
					Corpuscoli di 
					
					
					Ruffini: 
					per il caldo.
- 
					
					
					Corpuscoli di 
					
					
					Krause: 
					per il freddo.
				
				 
				
				
				            Uno Jedi percepisce sincronicamente e 
				sinergicamente. 
				
				 Egli "Sensice". Conosce e riconosce, e non si lascia ingannare 
				da certi trucchetti. 
				
				
				Avverte il movente prima dello stimolo, e ne 
				riconosce la frequenza sottile che sta per generare la sua 
				manifestazione.
				
				
				Ciò significa che uno Jedi avverte gli stimoli 
				prima ancora che essi si manifestino.
				
				
				E questa è una delle forme più antiche di 
				saggezza. Per questo uno Jedi non si lascerà ingannare da alcuna 
				sostanza capace 
				
				
				di ottundere la sua sensibilità, sia essa di 
				origine animale, minerale o vegetale, quindi si terrà lontano da 
				ciò che alteri
				
				
				le proprie 
				percezioni e le altrui. Non ricorrerà quindi a bevande tossiche 
				come droghe di sorta, che alterino la sua coscienza. 
				
				
				
				Non ricorrerà altresì ad alcuna droga che lo 
				possa aiutare, risvegliandolo momentaneamente in modo 
				artificiale,
				
				
				accelerandolo o rallentandolo, e creando 
				divergenze reali fra il sensito e i treni di impulsi ricevuti, 
				in modo da non alterare i 
				
				
				delicati 
				equilibri. Come un arpista, tratterà il proprio strumento e la 
				sua accordatura curandosi che essa non venga alterata.
				
				
				Ciò che
				
				
				momentaneamente innalza, o crea dimenticanza, poi 
				torna a far ricadere e ad essere presente. 
				
				
				Uno Jedi non danneggerà cosi, il proprio veicolo, 
				assumendo sostanze lecite o illecite, che mescolate in modalità 
				sinergica
				
				
				per produrre 
				disergia all'interno dell'organismo che le assume, 
				
				
				possano 
				
				danneggiarlo, 
				temporaneamente o permanentemente.
				
				
				Ogni qual volta egli si troverà innanzi a 
				sostanze tossiche, non ne dovrà accettare, in modo cortesie e 
				gentile.
				
				
				Ogni cosa che tocca lascia un segno, ogni colpo 
				una ammaccatura.  Come un frutto che venga battuto, porta 
				il livido sulla
				
				
				propria scorza, così uomo che ha sofferto, non si 
				faccia la pena che ha vissuto e smetta di portarla con se 
				immedesimandosi
				
				
				con errati 
				costumi. 
				Via quindi ove fosse possibile: alcool, tabacco, caffè ed 
				eccitanti, zucchero, oppiacei, acidi, antibiotici,
				
				
				funghi curativi come di sintesi, e a tutte quelle 
				sostanze buone e giuste, che se assunte in maniera smodata, si 
				tradurranno 
				
				
				in veleno nel 
				proprio organismo. 
				
				Niente coloranti, addensati, conservanti, 
				additivi e esaltatori di sapidità. Che ciò che non è 
				
				
				
				cibo, resti fuori dal corpo. Meglio un sano 
				digiuno. Quel che intossica non sfama, ma apre la strada ai 
				grandi vermi che 
				
				
				prendono 
				possesso del corpo. Parco, misurato e proporzionale sia il suo 
				pasto. Meglio frugale e vario che d'una sola sorta.
				 
				
				
				Uno Jedi conosce la misura della misura. Si 
				chiama bastanza. Senza di essa c'e' bramosia e avidità, ma 
				quando la bastanza è 
				
				
				presente, non esiste cifra che possa comperarlo. 
				Nessuna tentazione può sviare quello Jedi che conosce e pratica 
				quanto ho
				
				
				chiarito esplicitamente in poche righe. Nessun 
				valor può equipararsi a quanto non ha prezzo.  Uno Jedi 
				persegue la via 
				
				
				dell'equilibrio, e quanto è funzione sufficiente 
				non diviene disfunzione. 
				
				
				 
				
				
				Uno Jedi è capace di attivare sostanze 
				morfinogene in presenza di dolore, come di attivare endorfine, 
				per ravvivare stati 
				
				
				percettivi 
				
				e 
				l'attenzione, quando essa sia carente, o 
				
				alterata secondo il nostro metro usuale. Sostanze 
				autacoidi per guarire
				
				
				il corpo indebolito da batteri, virus ed altre 
				malattie sono a disposizione di ognuno. Quel che ho detto e' già 
				miracolo
				
				
				sufficiente a che 
				
				colui che 
				ospita un male, ospiti pure la sua propria guarigione. I grandi 
				vermi sfruttano le cattive abitudini
				
				
				per 
				instaurare il loro governo. Il passo da compiere quindi è verso 
				tale chiarezza, e si ricordi che ogni volta che sorga un 
				
				
				
				dubbio, 
				l'azione corretta da compiere e' quella di rinunciarvi per 
				meditare meglio.
				
				
				  La percezione allargata di uno stimolo 
				offre, informazioni circa la sua origine e la provenienza, il 
				movente, il motivo, 
				
				
				la direzione, la velocità, la misura, lo 
				spostamento spaziale, il suono, la tendenza, la somma dei 
				vettori, i deflettori,
				
				
				i mascheratori, l'energia che lo ha prodotto, il 
				meccanismo di rilascio, la frequenza, lo smorzamento, la 
				traiettoria, 
				
				
				la permanenza, la temporalità, e le concause 
				karmiche che lo hanno generato e prodotto. Questo e' quanto in 
				un solo
				
				
				secondo, 
				riposta l'attenzione su un fatto, il Cavaliere Jedi e' in grado 
				di percepire simultaneamente su più livelli 
				
				
				
				contemporanei, e se il dettaglio fuori posto che solo l'occhio 
				attento percepisce, condisce una qualsiasi situazione, per farne
				
				
				
				piatto 
				prelibato a chi l'offre, non partecipi a quel pranzo,  ma 
				anzi si levi e non perda tempo in discorsi, ( dis- corsi = acque
				
				
				
				stagnanti ), 
				che dal dialogo fra le parti, si tradurranno ben presto in 
				diatriba, dissertazione saccente e scontro. Mai rimestare,
				
				
				qui e ora, 
				ricorda. Contratto, che in bella posta pare offrire, reca in 
				minuscolo la verità di quanto dice. 
				
				
				Questo e altro, fa parte della percezione 
				simultanea di uno Jedi. Volutamente la lista che vi ho oggi 
				riportata non è completa, 
				
				
				ma mancante e 
				carente, 
				
				nell'ordine scorretto, e puramente 
				indicativa. Eppure dice assai più di quanto, a coloro che sono 
				in 
				
				
				grado di 
				ascoltare. 
				
				  
				
				
				 
				
				
				  Colui che fa orecchie da mercante non sente che 
				la cifra che lo smuove. Eppure quanto fa, vive e soffre, è senza 
				senso.
				
				
				La sua bocca sporca di lamentazioni. Le sue 
				tasche ricolme di cianfrusaglie. Guardati da costoro.
				
				
				Procedi e consenti. Cogli e migliora. Cosa da un 
				senso alle cose, al mondo, a quello che fai? 
				
				
				Legittimazione e giustificazione bastano a quei 
				poveri che s'accontentano di spettacolo, e agiscono per se.
				
				
				Altro è la Gloria, la Via e il suo svolgimento, 
				libero, puro e non condizionato. 
				
				
				 Rammenta le 8 vie che illuminano il 
				sentiero:  
				who? why? when? where? what? which? whose? how? whom? 
				
				
				
				e saprai già qualcosa. Fare incetta di sapere, 
				non rende saggi. Perdersi nelle filosofie, non dona chiarezza ma 
				apre il passo al 
				
				
				labirinto. Carezzali ed esci. Maestri, Profeti di 
				sventura, come Gerarchie Salde, intessute nel mondo, non possono 
				esserti 
				
				
				d'aiuto, 
				
				poiché ogni
				
				
				protocollo d'intesa è un patto, e chiede in 
				cambio la tua vita. 
				 
				
				
				Domandati chi sei, e sii la carne che sei, 
				incarnare altro da te corrompe la tua grandezza. 
				
				In nome di 
				posizione, potere e
				
				
				reggenza, 
				troppi falliscono la prova. Ai ministri del 
				
				limite come dei confini, il Cavaliere Jedi 
				s'accosta sfiorandoli appena, e
				
				
				senza tangirli, ne infliggere tocco 
				d'avvertimento, di misura come di rispetto, apre al cuore e 
				all'esempio del perdono, 
				
				
				che è mossa più onorevole e degna dello sguainar 
				la spada, angelica che sia. Colui che serve perché gli serve 
				qualcosa, s'e' 
				
				
				già venduto. 
				
				 
				
				
				Ogni colpo che fende genera Due parti, non fare 
				l'errore di prestare sponda. Realizza l'unione dei principi in 
				te, e la risposta 
				
				
				come la domanda cesseranno.
				
				
				Una colpa, e la metà del mondo è nel peccato. 
				Vivi, che ad ognuno tocca quel che gli compete.
				
				
				Brama chi non è e serra il pugno quello che vuol 
				mantenere i suoi domini. Lascia quando il tempo è venuto. 
				
				
				
				Mura che sicure riparano, non valgono 
				l'incertezza di un abbraccio. 
				
				
				Sappi e ricorda quel che l'esperienza t'insegna. 
				Pratica quanto sei, che di scimmie e 
				
				di 
				
				
				pappagalli è pieno il mondo. 
				
				
				Impara a 
				Sensire da te, che la trasparenza non s'insegna. Quando il velo 
				svanisce, tenebre e mente più non sono.
				
				
				Quando s'apre 
				il varco, china il capo e fatti avanti.
				 
				
				
				Jedi Simon  
				
				 
				 
				 
				Questa via, e gli insegnamenti 
				qui elencati, dal Maestro Jedi Simon, chiamati in modo 
				collettivo "Jedi Yoga", a significare l'unione degli 
				insegnamenti Jedi con quello degli antichi insegnamenti che 
				riunivano la conoscenza Vedica, sono finalmente un tentativo 
				concreto di riunire quanto è stato fatto a pezzi dai vari 
				maestri dello Yoga occidentale. Troppi hanno preferito svoltare, 
				chi prima, chi dopo, e si sono persi lungo il sentiero. C'e' chi 
				l'ha fatto perche' era senza lavoro, chi per arricchirsi, chi ci 
				credeva ( ma non proprio sino in fondo ), e chi non ci credeva 
				davvero, ma ha funzionato lo stesso. Poi sono arrivati quelli 
				dei diplomi, e allora si e' passati dagli idealisti degli anni 
				sessanta ai nuovi diplomati. Tutti insieme appassionatamente, 
				alla sagra dell'ipocrisia, che se cercate "maestri Yoga" per 
				immagini su Google, scoprirete quale sorriso da telline mistiche 
				hanno tutti costoro, e capirete meglio cosa vi sto dicendo.
				Si raffronti la stessa ricerca per immagini con quella su i 
				"contadini" del terzo mondo o dell'asia, e si comprenderà ancor 
				meglio la cosa. Chi sono costoro gli si legge in faccia.
				Il kali yuga purtroppo non 
				risparmia nessuno, tantomeno coloro che si nutrono di queste 
				operazioni, perlopiù commerciali, vestiti di bianco spirituale, 
				un pò consunto dalle asana.
				A parte le palestre che fanno bene alla gente sedentaria 
				dell'occidente, quindi nulla di nuovo sul fronte della coscienza 
				e tantomeno su quello della lotta contro l'ego, tralasciando 
				naturalmente di parlare di quella contro il possesso del "mio". 
				
				
				Nulla di 
				quanto l'occidente ha prodotto  sulla via del degrado 
				mentale, culturale e vitale è stato seriamente riconsiderato da 
				questi maestri, che si danno da fare massimamente per il 
				mantenimento di uno status quo che non dia fastidi ne ad uno ne 
				all'altro. Ho sentito il bisogno di riunificare in una sola via, 
				i contenuti smembrati e fatti a pezzi di quegli insegnamenti, 
				anche se ormai, mi paiono cosi distanti che non è quasi più il 
				tempo di dedicarsi alle ripetizioni ma di passare alla pratica.
				 Qui di ritualità ormai 
				ce ne e' tanta e tale, che non basterebbero 100 vite a 
				percorrere tutte le varianti. L'unico problema e' che queste 
				strade non mirano 
				nella giusta direzione, e probabilmente, grazie anche a editori 
				e fautori delle deviazioni appartenenti ad ordini 
				religiosi che non vorrebbero vedersi sfilate certe questioni, si 
				assiste in termini di concetto, metodo e falsi insegnamenti, 
				allo sfacelo di discipline chiave che tanto hanno dato ed 
				aiutato coloro i quali le hanno seguite.
				
 Non è un mistero il fatto palese che le maggiori istituzioni sportive 
				consorziate in multinazionali private che stanno dilagando in 
				tutti gli stati  ove possano trovare una collocazione 
				territoriale consona ed economicamente proficua, ( lascio a voi 
				i nomi di tali entità ) stiano offrendo pacchetti di tipo 
				commerciale riguardo alle discipline antiche completamente 
				snaturati, e privati di qualsiasi contenuto filosofico, di 
				pensiero e di fede e religioso, che queste discipline 
				incarnavano, per vendersi come pura forma estetica, fisica, e 
				superficiale senza dare alcun disturbo alle istituzioni che 
				detengono i monopoli della fede, discreditando nel contempo gli 
				insegnamenti antichi.
				Il fatto che attraverso gli 
				eccessi parossistici di un rito fisico composto da una somma di 
				sforzi eccessivi, non equilibrati e indubbiamente accolti in 
				modo masochistico da parte dei clienti, i contenuti di una 
				lezione di un paio di ore al massimo, non facciano che giovare a 
				quei poteri che attraverso il sadismo e il condizionamento di 
				gruppo saldano la loro presa al comando, al guadagno e al 
				mantenimento delle clientele, è una derivazione certa di questa 
				deriva che l'occidente ha presa, è indice del fatto che per 
				vantaggio chi corrompe e plagia per rivendere depauperati quegli 
				insegnamenti che si traducono in sola forma senza sostanza, ha 
				in mente solo i danari e null'altro.    
				Si ricordi che quando essi non 
				gettano nell'oblio una cosa, l'hanno già contaminata e passata 
				attraverso il grande nulla, in modo da renderla innocua. 
				Mille particolarismi 
				personali, e varianti sul tema, congeniali ai requisiti che 
				ricercano singoli maestri a seconda della scuola, non fanno 
				onore ad una scienza-arte cosi antica. 
				Ho immesso nel circuito dei 
				saperi quindi 
				alcuni concetti fondamentali dello Yoga 
				e non, definendoli 
				Jedi 
				Yoga, e non dilungandomi troppo sugli insegnamenti stessi, 
				( anche se ne ho rivelati i contenuti degli studi del primo anno 
				in dettaglio, e nulla più... ) dato che 
				non li volevo vedere degradati, perché ero certo che sarebbero stati 
				"lauto 
				pasto dell'esercito delle scimmie", sono stato ad aspettare, e 
				dopo aver immessa nero su bianco la lista ordinata dei semi, come al 
				seminario, ho lasciato che la copiassero in toto, e guardate cosa salta 
				fuori dal cappello....? 
				
					
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						YogaFestival: dall'8 al 10 ottobre a Milano | 
					
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						Nella sede del 
						SuperStudio
						Più di via Tortona, tre 
						giornate dedicata all'antica disciplina orientale per 
						unire benessere fisico ed equilibrio mentale | 
				
				
				Argomenti trattati nell'ordine :
				interessante argomento pienamente centrato 
				sullo Yoga!!!
				
				
				Una full immersion nel mondo dello yoga, la disciplina che 
				unisce benessere fisico ed equilibrio mentale. È quanto propone 
				il Milano  
				
				Yogafestival
				in programma 
				
				
				dall'8 al 10 ottobre 
				al 
				
				SuperStudio Più 
				di 
				
				via Tortona.
				
				
				Oltre i Sensi 
				è il tema di questa quinta edizione: nella nostra cultura 
				occidentale, i sensi conosciuti sono cinque ma per le discipline 
				orientali, 
				
				i sensi sono molti di più. 
				Occorre 
				
				imparare a riconoscerli 
				per arrivare all’essenza superiore dell’uomo.
				
				
				
				Per molti milanesi lo yoga è scudo efficace 
				
				contro i ritmi frenetici della città: 
				fermarsi ad ascoltare se stessi e il proprio corpo per 
				riscoprire un nuovo modo, più positivo e rilassato, di 
				rapportarsi al mondo. Ogni anno, in occasione di questo 
				festival, la città diventa punto di riferimento per molti 
				appassionati dell’antica pratica orientale e offre la 
				possibilità di approfondirne la conoscenza attraverso 
				
				lezioni,
				
				
				seminari 
				e 
				
				conferenze 
				tenuti da 
				
				maestri noti a livello internazionale.
				
				Al festival si accede con una
				
				
				tessera 
				del valore di 
				5 
				euro, 
				valida un anno e per i tre giorni di evento, acquistabile presso 
				l'ingresso dell'evento. La tessera dà diritto all'accesso 
				a tutte le freeclass gratuite 
				(senza prenotazione), alle conferenze, alle attività musicali 
				non a pagamento, all'area espositiva, allo spazio Ayurveda, al 
				ristorante e ai vari servizi del festival. 
				
				Alcuni seminari dedicati a chi già pratica lo Yoga sono a 
				pagamento e su prenotazione: si prenotano online (www.yogafestival.it) 
				e si pagano alle casse del festival. Quest'anno sarà disponibile 
				una 
				Special Card 
				di 
				
				100 euro 
				per frequentare tutti i seminari da 
				
				25 euro.
				
				 
				E ora vediamo nel dettaglio: 
				vi elenco qui di seguito i dettagli del programma e degli 
				insegnamenti.
				
					
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								IL PROGRAMMA 
								
								
								Venerdì 8 ottobre
 Ore 17.15-20.15 - Sala 1
 Il senso dello 
								spazio
 La sorgente del gesto e della sensazione 
								corporale
 Livello avanzato – Per insegnanti - Contributo 
								40 Eu
 
 Ore - 15.30-18.30 - Sala 2
 Il senso della vista 
								interiore, la 
								chiaroveggenza
 Dai sensi all’intuizione
 Livello intermedio - Contributo 40 Eu
 
 Ore 18.45-20.30 - Sala 2
 Il senso motorio, 
								l’energia in movimento
 Lo Yoga in Forma Liquida
 Yoga Contemporaneo – Conduce
 Livello intermedio - Contributo 25 Eu
 
 Ore 15.00-18.00 - SALA 3
 Yoga e libertà. Il senso 
								termico
 La Saggezza dell’Età Matura
 Per Insegnanti - Contributo 40 Eu
 
 Ore 18.15-20.00 - Sala 3
 Il senso dell’equilibrio 
								(interno ed esterno)
 Pratyahara - affrancarsi dai condizionamenti per 
								espandere il proprio spazio interiore
 Ashtanga Yoga di Patanjali -
 Livello intermedio - Ingresso libero su 
								prenotazione
 Portare tappetino per la pratica e cuscino per 
								la meditazione
 
 Ore 18.00–20.00 – Sala conferenze
 Conferenza 
								- 
								
								Qi e Prana Zen e Yoga, due tradizioni a 
								confronto
 Seguono esercizi energetici di consapevolezza 
								Zen e Hatha Yoga
 Multilivello - Ingresso libero
 
 Ore 17.00–20.00 – Sala Yantra
 I sensi viscerali
 Shodhanam e Moksha - Shatkarman - Purifcazione e 
								Liberazione
 Per Insegnanti - Contributo 40 Eu
 
 Ore 17.00-20.00 - Sala Mandala
 GiocaYoga
 Metodi basati su un antica disciplina per 
								crescere bambini sani e felici
 Per insegnanti – Contributo 40 Eu
 
 Ore 17.00–19.00 – Sala Om (Basement)
 Il senso dell’udito 
								esteriore ed interiore
 Curarsi con la Musica secondo l'Antica Filosofa 
								Vedica
 Nada/Mantra Yoga (LoYogadell’Energia) – 
								IlPoteredelMantra byKrishnaDas
 Multilivello - Contributo 25 Eu
 
 Ore 20.30 – Sala Yantra
 Shanty Raga
 Melodie di Pace - Mantra Meditation
 
 Sabato 9 
								ottobre
 
 Ore 9.30-11.30 - Sala 1
 Il senso del 
								tatto
 L'espansione tattile - Tattilità e creatività 
								nello shivaismo del Kashmir
 Yoga Tantrico Kashmiro
 Multilivello - Contributo 25 Eu
 
 Ore 11.45-13.45 - Sala 1
 Il senso 
								della vibrazione sonora
 Sentire, ascoltare, divenire - L'universo non è 
								altro che vibrazione
 Multilivello - Contributo 25 Eu
 
 Ore 14.00-16.00 - Sala 1
 Il senso 
								psicocinetico
 Iyengar Yoga preliminari e fondamenti della 
								Pratica
 Principianti - Contributo 25 Eu
 Ogni allievo ha bisogno di: 4/5 coperte, 2 
								cinture, 1 mattone di legno
 
 Ore 16.15-18.15 - Sala 1
 Oltre il corpo
 Bandha, oltre il corpo fsico -Tecniche 
								preparatorie per la Meditazione
 Multilivello - Contributo 25 Eu
 
 Ore 18.30-20.30 - Sala 1
 Il senso 
								della vista
 Gli occhi, lo sguardo, la lucidità
 Multilivello Contributo - 25 Eu
 
 Ore 9.45-11.45 - Sala 2
 Il senso 
								della libertà
 Oltre i Sensi per raggiungere lo stato di 
								liberazione Moksha
 Multilivello - Contributo 25 Eu
 
 Ore 12.00-14.00 - Sala 2
 Il senso del 
								tatto
 Yoga del Tocco - Prendere coscienza della 
								relazione corpo-mente attraverso il respiro e la 
								percezione tattile
 Multilivello - Contributo 25 Eu
 
 Ore 14.15-16.15 - Sala 2
 Il senso 
								della gravità
 L'intelligenza del corpo
 Multilivello Contributo 25 Eu
 
 Ore 16.30-20.30 - Sala 2
 I sensi
 Le percezioni sensoriali nello Yoga Ratna
 Per insegnanti ed avanzati - Contributo 50 Eu
 
								
								
								Ore 9.30-12.30 - Sala 3Il senso della vista 
								interiore
 L'Astrologia evolutiva nella pratica dello Yoga 
								Ratna
 Multilivello - Contributo 30 Eu
 
 Ore 12.45-14.45 - Sala 3
 Yoga al maschile
 La necessaria trasformazione e la ricerca di un 
								migliore equilibrio fra il maschile ed il 
								femminile nell'uomo dei nostri giorni
 Hatha Yoga -
 Riservato ai soli uomini - Principianti - 
								Contributo 15 Eu
 
 Ore 15.00-17.00 - Sala 3
 Il senso del 
								gusto interno
 Il cibo della Dea
 Multilivello - Contributo 15 Eu
 
 Ore 17.15-19.00 - Sala 3
 Il sutra del cuore
 Scuola Maestri Calligraf -
 Multilivello
 Ingresso libero con prenotazione
 
 Ore 19.15-20.30 - Sala 3
 Il senso del 
								movimento
 Siva - Shakti
 Danza Bharata Natyam e Kuchipudi -
 Principianti - Incontro aperto al pubblico su 
								prenotazione
 
 Ore 10.00-11.30 - Sala conferenze
 Conferenza - L'espansione delle 
								percezioni sensoriali: le Radici dell'anima
 Hara Yoga - Incontro 
								Ingresso libero
 
 Ore 11.45-13.00 - Sala conferenze
 Conferenza - La mente e la meditazione
 Le basi neurofsiologiche dello Yoga, della 
								Meditazione e dei processi creativi
 Ingresso libero
 
 Ore - 13.30-14.45 - Sala conferenze
 Conferenza - Ascolto.biz
 Attivare l'ascolto nella catena del fare. "Ogni 
								mattina risveglia il mio orecchio, perché io 
								possa ascoltare come gli iniziati".
 Pratica d'ascolto - Ingresso libero
 
 Ore 15.00-16.00 - Sala conferenze
 Conferenze - Salute ed Armonia attraverso 
								i Sensi secondo la visione dell'Ayurveda
 Pratica d'ascolto - Ingresso libero
 
 Ore 16.15-17.45 - Sala conferenze
 Conferenze - 
								Oltre i sensi
 La scoperta dell'ultima frontiera della scienza. 
								La coscienza dell' invisibile, oltre la materia 
								dei sensi -
								Pratica d'ascolto - Ingresso libero
 
 Ore 18.00-19.30 - Sala conferenze
 Conferenza - Pratyahara e "corpo" 
								emozionale
 Tradizioni Svami Sivananda - Svami Chidananda - 
								Svami Krishananda - Svami Dayananda
 Pratica d'ascolto
 
 Ore 15.00-16.00 - Sala ayurveda
 Presentazione libro - L'Ashtanga Yoga
 di Patanjali del Yogamaharishi dottor Swami 
								Gitananda Giri Guru Maharaj
 Pratica d'ascolto
 
 Ore 10.00-12.00 - Sala Om (Basement)
 Il senso 
								dell'appetito sessuale
 Arrendersi al sì - Osho Kundalini Meditation 
								Tradizione Osho
 Multilivello - Contributo 25 Eu
 
 Ore 12.00-14.00 - Sala Om (Basement)
 Il senso 
								dell'olfatto
 Risveglia il tuo senso dell'olfatto
 Yoga Sistemico
								Multilivello - Contributo 25 Eu
 
 Ore 14.30-16.30 - Sala Om (Basement)
 Lo yoga del 
								suono 1
 Mantra Yoga
 Tantrismo Shivaita del Kashmir, Buddismo 
								Tibetano, sufsmo Persiano
 Multilivello - Contributo 25 Eu
 
 Ore 16.45-18.45 - Sala Om (Basement)
 Il senso 
								dell'espressione 
								vocale
 Trova la tua voce. Applicazioni artistiche e 
								terapeutiche
 Multilivello - Contributo 15 Eu
 
 Domenica 10 
								ottobre
 
 Ore 07.00-10.00 (orario indicativo) - 
								Sala Yantra
 Trekkinh Yoga in bicicletta
 Meditazione in Movimento
 Multilivello - Contributo 15 Eu
 Obbligatorio presentarsi con bicicletta, 
								possibilmente mountain bike, e abiti comodi
 
 Ore 9.45-11.45 - Sala 1
 Il senso 
								dell'udito interiore
 "Il terzo orecchio" - Introduzione teorico 
								pratico a Pratyahara ed iniziazione al Kriya 
								Yoga
 Kriya Yoga -
								Multilivello - Contributo 25 Eu
 
 Ore 12.00-14.00 - Sala 1
 La pratica del pranayama
 Un sottile processo di trasformazione della 
								coscienza per predisporsi al risveglio della 
								visione del corpo di energia
 Hatha Yoga -
								Multilivello - Contributo 25 Eu
 
 Ore 14.15-16.15 - Sala 1
 Il senso dell'allineamento
 Il "cosmo" del corpo umano
 Moga DaoYoga -
								Multilivello - Contributo 25 Eu
 
 Ore 16.30-18.30 - Sala 1
 Il senso 
								dell'udito interiore
 La vibrazione cosmica sonora
 Jivamukti Yoga -
								Multilivello - Contributo 25 Eu
 
 Ore 10.00-12.00 - Sala 2
 Il senso del 
								dolore
 La natura dei sensi, la loro funzione e 
								percezione
 Tradizione Gitananda -
								Multilivello - Contributo 25 Eu
 
 Ore 12.15-14.15 - Sala 2
 Il sesto 
								senso
 Nutrirsi dall'interno
 Multilivello - Contributo 25 Eu
 
 Ore 14.30-16.30 - Sala 2
 L'irradazione 
								sensoriale
 Le pratiche di incinerazione
 Iyengar Yoga -Insegnanti ed allievi intermedi - Contributo 25 
								Eu
 
 Ore 16.45-18.45 - Sala 2
 Il senso 
								della libertà
 Oltre i Sensi per raggiungere lo stato di 
								liberazione Moksha
 Hatha Yoga -
								Multilivello - Contributo 25 Eu
 
 Ore 9.45-11.45 - Sala 3
 Il senso 
								dell'equilibrio
 Lo Yoga sul Tappeto Volante
 Acroyoga -Multilivello - Contributo 25 Eu
 
 Ore 12.00-14.00 - Sala 3
 I cinque 
								sensi
 Esplorare i fussi di energia armonica attraverso 
								il TriYoga
 Livello intermedio - Contributo 25 Eu
 
 Ore 14.30-16.30 - Sala 3
 Il senso 
								della vista
 L'arte di vedere le cose come sono
 Multilivello - Contributo 25 Eu
 
 Ore 16.45-18.45 - Sala 3
 Speciale Africa Yoga Project
 Yoga Asana, l'espressione della forza interiore 
								attraverso il linguaggio del corpo
 Power Yoga -
								Multilivello - Contributo 15 Eu
 
 Ore 10.00-12.00 - Sala conferenze
 Le 
								neuroscienze e la meditazione
 Riprendere i sensi - La pratica di Mindfulness
 Psicoterapia Cognitiva -
 
 Ore 12.15-14.00 - Sala conferenze
 Psicosomatica e antroposofia
 Il corpo Astrale come veicolo della sensazione -
 
								
								
								Ore 14.30 - 16.30 - Sala conferenzeIl senso del gusto
 Le dimensioni sottili degli alimenti
 Ananda Yoga -
								Multilivello Contributo - 15 Eu
 
 Ore 16.45 - 18.30 - Sala conferenze
 Talk Show
 Come lo Yoga ha cambiato la mia vita
 Pratica d'ascolto - Ingresso libero
 
 Ore 10.00 - 12.00 - Sala Om (Basement)
 Lo Yoga del suono 2
 NadaYoga
 Tantrismo Shivaita del Kashmir, Buddismo 
								Tibetano, sufsmo Persiano
 Multilivello - Contributo 25 Eu
 
 Ore 12.15 - 14.15 - Sala Om (Basement)
 Il senso del ritmo
 Hari 
								Yoga'n'Soul
 Hari Yoga - Tradizione Tantrica -
								Multilivello - Contributo 25 Eu
 
 Ore 14.30 - 16.30 - Sala Om (Basement)
 Il senso dell'udito e la meditazione
 L'unità oltre il suono - Meditazione corporea e 
								terapia del suono attraverso le Campane Tibetane
 Multilivello- Contributo 25 Eu
 
 Ore 16.45 -18.45 - Sala Om (Basement)
 Il senso 
								dell'udito
 Il potere curativo del suono
 Yoga Sistemico -
								Multilivello - Contributo 15 Eu
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				Dal quale si evince 
				come, data la pertinenza specifica dei precipui argomenti 
				riguardanti "i sensi", appartenenti a campi estranei
				o prossimi
				all'approccio Yogico, ma quasi mai trattati in tale ordine e in tal guisa, che gli argomenti quivi 
				elencati, siano stati correlati secondo
				un tipo di ordinamento e una lista non facente direttamente 
				parte dei modelli usuali di riferimento, per quanto già la 
				psicologia della percezione negli anni sessanta aveva 
				investigato la maggior parte degli elementi qui riportati, ma in 
				modo completamente diverso. 
				
				Secondo l'ordinamento Jedi, quindi, 
				gli stessi argomenti trattati dai vari relatori paiono essere 
				stati inseriti secondo la lista che riporto di seguito, 
				e il 
				fatto che siano stati accolti pienamente, come argomenti di 
				discussione ed insegnamento da parte dei relatori, ci conferma 
				che il festival e chi lo ha organizzato per 
				fini di lucro, 
				abbia assorbito il format del 
				primo anno di studi dello Jedi Yoga, 
				implicitamente ed in modo esplicito sbandando da quelle che sono 
				le direzioni dello YOGA classico, che trattano di altre materie 
				e non pongono tanta e tali attenzioni circa il frutto dei sensi, 
				il sentire ed in sensire, che qui non viene neppure menzionato.
				
				Riporto qui di seguito i sensi che uno Jedi nella modalità 
				risvegliata del Sensire al servizio degli uomini, della 
				coscienza e della presenza, deve avere chiari ed attivi al fine 
				di non cadere addormentato fra le braccia di Morfeo.
				
				
				1    TATTO
				
				
				2    OLFATTO
				
				
				3    VISTA
				
				
				4    GUSTO
				
				
				5    UDITO
				
				
				6    MOVIMENTO CINESTESICO   ( 
				
				radiale, lineare, velocità.... 
				)
				
				
				7    EQUILIBRIO
				
				
				8    CAMPO ELETTROMAGNETICO
				
				
				9    SENSO DEL TEMPO
				
				
				10  SENSO DELLO SPAZIO
				
				
				11  PERCEZIONE VISCERALE ( 
				
				fame, sazietà, sete... 
				)
				
				
				12  DOLORE, PIACERE, PRURITO
				
				
				13  SENSAZIONE TERMICA
				
				
				14  INTUIZIONE
				
				
				15  PESO E LEGGEREZZA 
				
				
				16  DIMENSIONE ( 
				
				padronanza, goffo... 
				)
				
				
				17  TELEPATIA ( 
				
				Risonanza ritmo sintonia induzione empatia 
				)
				
				
				18  ORDINE
				
				
				19  MNEMONICA ( 
				Analitica, 
				esperienziale, deduttiva, analogica, coincidente 
				) 
				
				
				20  SENSO DEL COMPORTAMENTO ANIMALE ISTINTIVO
				
				
				21  SENSO DI PRESSIONE TIMPANICA, EPIDERMIDE
				
				
				22  SENSO DI PERCEZIONE DELL’ESSERE
				
				
				 
				
				
				Dei primi, a parte l'elettromagnetismo, per il quale le scuole 
				occidentali non sanno cosa fare, ma che nel periodo degli uomini 
				macchina e dell'elettronica dovrebbe essere assai più 
				sviluppato, saltano qui a piè pari tempo spazio, sui quali non 
				hanno nulla da dire. Di ordine, neppure
				a parlarne, e quindi è meglio soprassedere piuttosto che esporsi 
				in una esplicita riformulazione delle cose, come fecero 
				Pantanjali e altri.
				
				Animale e' la modalità, probabilmente istintiva, e 
				incontrollata, come quella della fame, sete, bisogni sessuali, 
				bisogni culturali, ecc... mentre gli ultimi due vengono spostati 
				su tatto e su coscienza interiore.  
				
				
				
				Della seconda lista, altresì dettagliata, ma di impatto 
				inferiore, se ne considerano qui solo 3 su 27, e a torto poiché 
				nel periodo della massima espansione di alcuni corpi, su altri, 
				quello causale volitivo, per esempio, come quello astrale 
				bramante, e mentale condizionante, nonché quello eterico, 
				interessato ai prossimi cambiamenti di carattere vibratorio, dal 
				puto di vista delle distorsioni elettromagnetiche 
				spazio-temporali, si capisce come tali concetti avrebbero potuto 
				produrre resistenza, e non solo.
				
				
				La seconda lista qui in basso, la aggiungo per darvi modo di 
				comprende meglio di cosa stia parlando. ( Arriviamo a 50 ).
				Rendo noto comunque 
				che i sensi che uno Jedi ha attivi in piena coscienza sono 240, 
				ma questi insegnamenti esulano dalla comune divulgazione, e 
				pertanto 
				
				
				
				non li ritroverete trascritti da nessuna parte, perché 
				rientranti nella tradizione orale e
				diretta, detta marziale di alcuni eserciti, scuole e ordini 
				dell'antichità come del presente, e che non andranno divulgati 
				che a persone consone, di valore, rispetto, dignità e nobiltà 
				provate. Ogni offerta che di tali conoscenze si facesse a coloro 
				i quali sono di basso livello e bieche intenzioni, produrrebbe 
				danno, e quindi questa precauzione sensata si spiega e si 
				giustifica chiaramente in tale maniera. Riporto quindi di 
				seguito, i sensi interni leggeri, e non quelli marziali, 
				affinché a qualcuno che non ne ha ancora avuto abbastanza non 
				venga la malsana idea di rivenderli con il proprio brand, logo, 
				e pacchetto. Sensi leggeri interni:
				
				
				23  SENSO DI NUTRIMENTO E BENESSERE
				
				
				24  FORO PERCETTIVO ( 
				
				Zone cieche, mancanze, fori, invisibilità comandata, mimetismo... 
				)
				
				
				25  SENSO DI MANCANZA O DI  VUOTO
				
				
				26  SENSO DI APPAGAMENTO E INSODDISFAZIONE
				
				
				27  SENSO DI SOLLIEVO
				
				
				28  SENSO DI MERAVIGLIA
				
				
				29  SENSO DI LIBERTA
				
				
				30  SENSO DELL'UMORISMO
				
				
				31  SENSO DI COLPA
				
				
				32  SENSO DI ATTRAZIONE E REPULSIONE
				
				
				33  SENSO DI ELEVAZIONE E CADUTA GRAVITAZIONALE   
				
				
				34  SENSO DI ACCELERAZIONE E DECELERAZIONE
				
				
				35  SENSO DEL PRINCIPIO E DELLA FINE
				
				
				36  SENSO DEL VERO E DEL FALSO
				
				
				37  SENSO DI RISPETTO
				
				
				38  SENSO DI INADEGUATEZZA
				
				
				39  SENSO MORALE
				
				
				40  SENSO DEL PUDORE
				
				
				41  SESTO SENSO
				
				
				42  COMMON SENSE
				
				
				43  SENSO DI INUTILITA
				
				
				44  SENSO DI IMPOTENZA
				
				
				45  SENSO DI ONNIPOTENZA
				
				
				46  SENSO DI PULIZIA
				
				
				47  SENSO D'ORDINE
				
				
				49  SENSO DI MALATTIA
				
				
				50  SENSO DI VERGOGNA  
				 
				Dei Sensi  elencati dallo 
				Jedi Yoga, 18 di quelli segnalati in rosso, sono rientrati nel format 
				delle giornate dello Yoga, tenute a Milano, a parte l'argomento 
				sulla sessualità che tira sempre, che non è solo una appendice 
				del tatto. Con tali puntualizzazioni e 
				studio si vuole semplicemente affermare quanto in questo periodo ci sia 
				bisogno di Padri Generativi e di Ordinatori, che pongano le basi 
				per un miglioramento delle cose. Se costoro possedessero però 
				tali capacità, dubito che le metterebbero al servizio di qualcun 
				altro, a parte loro stessi o per esporsi in prima persona dinnanzi 
				alle ingiustizie ed iniquità del mondo. 
				
				Ci si espone con sorrisi 
				ipocriti per farsi conoscere e riconoscere, e vendersi, 
				attraverso la vanità e la pubblicità per danaro, e l'esposizione di 
				tali soggetti al pubblico e' vanitosa vetrina, edonismo e mostra di se 
				che il 99% delle volte è stata intesa come esca per raccogliere 
				profitti. 
				
				I sensi, qui ancora 
				vezzeggiati e giudicati positivamente, ricordo ai lettori, 
				secondo la cultura Indiana di quel periodo, come pure le 
				Siddhi, 
				tanto ricercate dai bramosi dell'occidente, 
				risultano essere
				puro impedimento, 
				e sono considerati dai maestri alla stregua di
				freni,
				deviazioni, 
				motivo di disergie, 
				di involuzione, e 
				di impedimento 
				spirituale, 
				concausa delle tentazioni più basse, figlie dei sensi 
				grossolani, quivi mai citati come
				condizionanti verso la 
				fase animale.
				Basti pensare a quante volte compaiano le parole 
				potere, power, energia, ecc... associate al termine Yoga e 
				concetti vicini, deviandone il senso, la direzione e sviando per 
				divagazione interi percorsi.
				
 Conoscerli per redimerli,...e cosa altro diceva 
				l'anello?....Insomma, quando il maglio del grande nulla colpisce 
				il mondo facendolo in pezzi, non ci si meravigli che le cose 
				vadano fuori posto, e che al posto di queste vi si dell'altro e 
				che ai nomi antichi corrispondano in realtà altri concetti.
				
				Carpe Diem. L'estetica non cerca l'essenza, ma la "non-permanenza" 
				dell'attimo fuggente, al quale segue immediatamente il bisogno instaurato di un altro 
				attimo uguale al precedente, in un rituale senza fine chiamato 
				ipnosi. Imprinting, nella parola moderna. Neuro programmazione 
				linguistica, se volete, o ipnosi.
				
				Aspettarsi che un clone prenda coscienza e' 
				chiedere troppo. 
				
				Che Smith arrivi a sensire Neo 
				in Matix, è cosa estremamente rara e che non capita per un caso 
				fortuito, ma solo se ci si è elevati e si sia raggiunta tale 
				elezione e livello, o se si sia nati per questo o con tali doni. 
				Shaktipat è il termine antico. 
				
				Una 
				certa Cabala sulla quale è riportato l'ordine dei disordini, al 
				quale i sistemi vigenti si confanno, 
				come le lancette di un orologio, millimetricamente precise e 
				costrette, è strumento di questi governi dell'ombra, che 
				attraverso disfunzione, scarsità, dolore e sofferenza, piegano 
				il mondo al loro volere.
				
				Vi esorto quindi ad andare a cercare tali liste con tutte le 
				vostre forze, al fine di chiarire quale sia il nuovo ordine
				che da secoli, riesce ad ingannare tutti gli inconsapevoli, facendo passare cose 
				che sono per altro, e cose che non sono per verità.
				
				Tirare in causa la sincronicità, in merito alla presenza 
				simultanea di una scoperta o un modo di presentare le cose in 
				questo caso, allorché ci si trovi dinnanzi agli stessi 
				insegnamenti, o alla stessa scoperta in due punti distinti e 
				separati del mondo, va benissimo, 
				specialmente in frangenti che vorrebbero appropriarsi dell'idea 
				o dire che l'hanno avuta prima loro.
				
				Sotto intendere che certe 
				cose siano nell'aria, si può fare, ma bisogna riconoscere che se 
				uno ha percorso18 gradini uno dopo l'altro, vano sarà il suo 
				giustificare la sua presenza al primo piano di un palazzo, 
				dicendo che ci è arrivato per caso. 
				
				Si tratta di percorsi intenzionali e somme di vettori, che sono 
				cosa chiara e certa, derivate e consecutive, come pure 
				scientificamente e scientemente relazionate, ordinate e 
				descritte chiaramente secondo liste che esulano dal sapere 
				comune, e che nelle radici stesse dei fondamenti trovano 
				spiegazione, giustificazione, senso e realtà inerente.     
				Sappiamo che esiste 
				un certo numero di Opinion Makers, come venivano chiamati tempo 
				addietro, e di 
				uomini pagati e stipendiati per formare menti fuligginose 
				cariche di contenuti deviati, secondo bisogni preconfezionati. 
				Si chiamava cultura una volta, ma oggi, i programmatori che 
				appartengono ai sotto sistemi di controllo e di induzione, 
				gestiti dai poteri consolidati, non fanno altro che plagiare 
				attraverso l'inserimento di impianti di memoria esterni, 
				concetti e comportamenti programmati, le menti di quelli che si 
				lasciano abbindolare dal gioco. 
				
				Di qui il passo successivo è stata una tragica conseguenza della 
				via ricorsiva dell'errore, che ha gettato le fondamenta 
				permanenti del vizio, al sevizio delle istituzioni e dei privati 
				che disponevano di forza condizionante derivata dal plagio, e 
				che hanno standardizzati comportamenti, e prodotto ciclicità 
				programmate delle quali non si trova traccia che nell'opera 
				Dantesca della Divina Commedia.
				
				Contraddistinti da un marchio di fabbrica e protocollati, come 
				garantiti e al di sopra delle parti, gli 
				inviati di queste scuole di pensiero che sono stati formati 
				nelle Università più eccellenti, sono fin dai tempi antichi stati mandati in giro 
				a controllare, sviare, condizionare, e governare ambiti che 
				nulla hanno a che spartire con la veste che indossano, di volta 
				in volta, diversa e di parte, in un teatrino che il burattinaio 
				conosce e gestisce perfettamente. 
				
				Bisogni indotti e plagio 
				universale sono le modalità della clonazione elementale, che 
				vive di tensione sensoriale il più delle volte collegata a bassi 
				emozionali, istintuali, quali dolore, sofferenza, pena, paura...ed altre 
				nefandezze che potrete trovare in rete facilmente...legate all'illusione del dualismo.
				
				 Pensavamo 
				sarebbe stata rose e fiori questa avventura nel Kali yuga? Non 
				ci aspetta forse il giudizio universale, la fine dei tempi e 
				l'apocalisse? E' un bene che la 
				Consapevolezza Multiversale  
				si stia finalmente manifestando per quello che è, smascherando 
				coloro i quali non hanno alcun rispetto nè sono degni. 
				
				Senza sofferenza "costoro" 
				non comandano, senza paura non possono, senza incutere terrore 
				non riescono a guidare e condizionare quelli che loro chiamano 
				bestie, e se gli uomini li trattano come animali, si vede che 
				loro sono di un altra razza, e gli si dovrebbe insegnare il rispetto.    
				In merito al controllo dei 
				sensi quindi, considerati come colpevoli di distogliere 
				l'attenzione dalle cose più importanti e spirituali, si vedrà 
				qui cosa ne pensano gli Indiani, quindi prendete il dizionario 
				di sanscrito, il vocabolario di inglese, il testo degli aforismi 
				di Patanjali e ricominciamo da capo. E ogni volta che ricadete 
				nell'errore, lo rileggeremo nuovamente, sempre più velocemente, 
				sino a ricordarlo a memoria, qualora ve ne fosse bisogno. Della 
				sua traduzione e delle spiegazioni che sono state date al testo, 
				però, non essendo stato troppo felice di come siano state 
				distorte, vi rimando quindi alla seguente lettura, al fine di 
				chiarirvi meglio le idee sull'argomento.
				Brahmacharya has two main meanings. In 
				the broad sense it means control of the senses or indriyas. More 
				specifically it refers to celibacy or chastity. Like all 
				traditional spiritual traditions, yoga advocates restraining 
				from indulging in sensual gratification. One of the many reasons 
				is that practicing the higher limbs of ashtanga yoga - dharana, 
				dhyana, samadhi - requires a tremendous amount of energy or 
				prana. This energy is built up through the practices of yoga 
				such as asanas, pranayama and japa but is dissipated during 
				sensual enjoyment. Of all the sensual activities, sex is the one 
				that will be the most depleting to the psychic and nervous 
				system. Most people don't like to hear this but, like the other 
				yamas, everyone should practice brahmacharya to the best of 
				their ability. It is a fact that the more people gratify their 
				senses, the less energy they have and the less ability they have 
				to meditate on the absolute.
				The more broad definition of 
				brahmacharya also includes conduct that leads to the realisation 
				of the Self, or Brahman, study of the Vedas and scriptures, and 
				contemplation on Brahman.
				
				Benefits of Brahmacharya: There 
				are many benefits to health and spiritual life that come from 
				the practice of brahmacharya.
				Dal quale si evince come, a dispetto 
				delle raffigurazioni sacre riguardanti infiniti congiungimenti 
				carnali, animali e misti, apposte su migliaia di templi ancora 
				in piedi oggi in India, queste sensazioni e sensualità, 
				"facciano male", e quindi vadano represse e controllate, gestite 
				dalla mente e comandate a piacimento per aumentare potenziali 
				spirituali capaci di fare innalzare al di sopra....ma come 
				spesso accade, purtroppo la semplicità delle cose evidenti si 
				deve nascondere con mistiche e filosofiche spiegazioni e 
				dissertazioni riguardanti il valore simbolico di cose che non 
				vorrebbero intendere quello che mostrano ma sottintendere altro 
				da quello che ci dicono e da quello che mostrano. Sicuri? 
				proprio sicuri? non e' che qualcuno disturbato da qualcosa che 
				non gradisce, interpreta e spiega come meglio crede cose cosi 
				distanti da noi temporalmente e culturalmente che e' obbligato a 
				distorcerne senso e significato nella direzione a lui consona. 
				Il fatto che vi sia una sola interpretazione e spiegazione verso 
				la quale coincidono e concordano interpretazione e spiegazione, 
				rende certa la manipolazione.
				 Brachmacharya is considered one 
				of the cornerstones of a serious yoga practice. The conservation 
				of energy that comes from practicing celibacy is converted into 
				Ojas and Tejas (spiritual energy). Eventually yogic powers can 
				also manifest by the perfect practice of brahmacharya. There are 
				many famous yogis and spiritual leaders who were established in 
				this yama. Some of them are Sankara, Jesus, Gandhi, Hanuman, 
				Lakshmana, and Bhishma from the Mahabharata. From their practice 
				of brahmacharya they had incredible 
				amounts of energy, will-power and thought-power 
				to do great works for the world. 
				La parola Leader potente che 
				usi incredibili quantità di energia, potere della volontà e 
				potere mentale, calza qui piuttosto male a personaggi spirituali 
				indicati come maestri illuminati, che avrebbero cosi facendo 
				dato prova non di vera e pura essenza, nella forza, ma nello 
				sforzo, poiche' ciò che e' di propria natura non pesa a chi è se 
				stesso, mentre a quello che indossa una veste e un comportamento 
				pesa massimamente e richiede perciò incredibile fermezza per non 
				essere sviato dai mondi della sensualità. 
				Many people mistakenly believe that 
				practicing brahmacharya means suppression of the natural sexual 
				instincts. Suppression is not what is wanted, because anything 
				that is suppressed will eventually be released with redoubled 
				force when an opportunity arises, the will becomes weak or when 
				sadhana slackens.
				The proper way to practice brahmacharya 
				is to sublimate these natural urges into Ojas by a strong yoga 
				practice that includes meditation, asanas, pranayama, japa, 
				kirtan, satsang, and reading of scriptures or yogic texts. 
				Contrary to some popular ideas and incorrect psychological 
				beliefs, celibacy improves health and all aspects of life when 
				practiced in the proper context.
				It is worth noting that most religions 
				place emphasis on brahmacharya, considering it a higher state of 
				religious practice, and have nuns and monks who take vows of 
				chastity. While not everyone wants to take vows and enter a 
				religious order, there are also guidelines for householders to 
				practice brahmacharya within their personal relationships.
				 Non 
				soppressione ma sublimazione, anche se evidente a chiunque che 
				la via della ritenzione passa per un nodo, e solo il corretto 
				fluire di ciò che siamo e' cosa sana e giusta, quindi siamo in 
				presenza di una fattura probabilmente apposta successivamente 
				all'intero impianto filosofico, religioso, culturale per 
				piegarlo a immagine e somiglianza di quanto vige qui.
				moderation should be practiced  
				ci consigliano moderazione, 
				It is beyond all doubt that a life of 
				Brahmacharya is glorious and marvellous. At the same time, a 
				life of moderation in the household life is equally good and 
				helpful for spiritual growth. Both have their own advantages. 
				You must have great strength to tread the path either way.
				
				Questa è la posizione intermedia, piu 
				saggia e corretta da mantenere secondo l'usanza e il pensiero 
				Indiano, La forza è da entrambe le parti, poichè in realtà la 
				differenza serve solo quelli che cercano una sponda e vivono 
				della forza del dualismo.
				Classical Period
				The Classical Period is marked by another 
				creation - the Yoga Sutra. Written by Patanjali around the 
				second century, it was an attempt to define and standardize 
				Classical Yoga. It is composed of 195 aphorisms or sutras (from 
				the Sanskrit word which means thread) that expound upon the Raja 
				Yoga and its underlying principle, Patanjali's Eightfold path of 
				Yoga (also called Eight Limbs of Classical Yoga). These are: 
				
 
					- Yama, which means social 
					restraints or ethical values;
- Niyama, which is personal 
					observance of purity, tolerance, and study;
- Asanas or physical exercises;
- 
					Pranayama, 
					which means breath control or regulation;
- Pratyahara or sense withdrawal in 
					preparation for Meditation;
- Dharana, which is about 
					concentration;
- Dhyana, which means Meditation; 
					and 
- Samadhi, which means ecstasy.
Patanjali believed that each individual is 
				a composite of matter (prakriti) and spirit (purusha). He 
				further believed that the two must be separated in order to 
				cleanse the spirit - a stark contrast to Vedic and Pre-Classical 
				Yoga that signify the union of body and spirit.
				
				Patanjali's concept was dominant for some centuries that some 
				Yogis focused exclusively on Meditation and neglected their 
				Asanas. It was only later that the belief of the body as a 
				temple was rekindled and attention to the importance of the 
				Asana was revived. This time, Yogis attempted to use Yoga 
				techniques to change the body and make it immortal. 
 Pratyahara literally means ‘withdrawal’, 
				like a turtle withdrawing into its shell. It refers to various 
				‘internalization’ exercises designed to control the senses and 
				motor organs and introvert the mind. Such are 
				closing ones eyes 
				and ears 
				to look and listen within 
				or mauna, the practice of silence 
				and not speaking 
				in order to control
				the vocal organ. However, there are common and more physical 
				forms of Pratyahara, which are mainly ‘relaxation exercises’; 
				tightening and releasing the energy in
				various muscles and joints, which affects related marmas. This 
				also clears the energy in the organs and system that the related 
				marmas control.
				Nodi ancora, e controllo sulla natura, 
				senza aver purificato la mente, incapace ormai di riconoscere il 
				reale delle convinzioni, il tutto in un meccanismo funzionale 
				applicabile perfettamente alla materia, ma qui traslato a 
				difetto, in ambito spirituale, fatto che a pensarci bene, suona 
				stonato, quando comprendiamo che se una cosa produce un suono 
				armonico per sua natura, la sua forma segue naturalmente una 
				qualche simmetria, ma se questa risulta fessa, e incapace di 
				riverbero come di persistenza, e sorda, rumorosa e dal timbro 
				povero, nulla potrà mai convincerla a suonar bene, per quanto 
				una volontà condizionante possa sforzarsi mai.
				Dalla corretta manifestazione ed 
				espressione del Se, equilibrato e armonico, nasce il libero 
				fluire della vita. Cio che riguarda le funzione dell'ego, come 
				dell'io e del mio, sono fenomeni ricorsivi e ripetitivi, nodi, 
				definiti vizi, che sottendono il ritorno a medesime circostanze, 
				attaccamenti e procedimenti che invischiano e non consentono di 
				essere in essenza, puri e non permanenti come la realtà 
				cangiante e mutevole richiede. Asserire il contrario, significa 
				porre il mantenimento al massimo valore, ma purtroppo, il sogni 
				di essere immortali, per quanto bello, non consente a chi lo 
				vive vita eterna checche se ne dica. Ciò che principia finisce, 
				e al riguardo la vita che degnamente si è vissuta non manca di 
				nulla, mentre quella che affannosamente corre appresso a 
				qualcosa, s'e' persa per strada.
				Pratyahara
				Yoga Nidra is one of the practices of Pratyahara. The word 
				“Pratyahara” means abstracting, leaving
				something, distancing or letting go. (Janakananda 1992) It 
				involves the process of withdrawing the
				mind from distracting sensory impressions like sounds, smells, 
				sights and thoughts so that the mind
				remains in a calm and undisturbed state of silent witnessing. 
				(Miller 2002) This is done by
				surrendering to the experience of the sensory impression and 
				saturating the mind with it. The
				experience becomes the object of meditation. In Pratyahara, we 
				constantly observe the process of
				perceiving; we observe the sensory impression and the reactions 
				of the mind to it. We do not try to
				change anything. (Janakananda 1992) “Any sensory impression that 
				is allowed to be in awareness
				without either the movement of repression or expression, 
				dissolves back into the ever-present
				background of awareness and disappears.” (Miller 2002) 
				Conversely, when we try to suppress a
				sensation, we prevent the mind from studying it. The mind is 
				unable to conclude whether the sensation
				is dangerous or useful. It is thus unable to let go and the 
				disturbance remains, consciously or
				unconsciously. (Janakananda 1992) Hence, trying to withdraw from 
				anything ultimately ends in
				failure. It is only when we are able to be with things as they 
				are that we are able to go beyond them.
				Qui vediamo come la mente ingannata dal 
				dualismo non può nulla contro il disturbo che e', 
				indipendentemente da quanto potrebbe impugnare saldamente al 
				fine di non sopprimere ma neppure inseguire i pensieri. Colui 
				ilquale conosce la Talità, non cade in questo tranello. Ma 
				questa, come pure la bastanza, non sono modalità apprezzate da 
				coloro che fanno della colpa il movente delle cose del mondo, 
				sita sovente, nella memoria di un dolore impresso nella psiche. 
				Queste forme larvali elementali, dovrebbero essere spiegate 
				degnamente da Maestri puri, e cioè in grado di ricondurle al 
				padrone che avevano, e non, a farle rivivere settimanalmete e 
				reiteratamente al povero soggetto che vi e' rimasto invischiato.
				
				Patanjali says  Nonlust (brahmacharya). 
				Avoid lust for anything and see divinity in all your deeds and 
				thoughts. Posizione mediana corretta secondo il pensiero e la 
				filosofia Indiana. Nota quando la cosa pende, e comprenderai che 
				è storta, quindi è di parte e condizionante, in termini di fini 
				che coloro i quali la usano, conoscono bene, a dispetto di chi 
				non sa neppure cosa s'e' fatto mettere in testa e da chi, che lo 
				fa tale.
				Pratyahara
				Pratyahara involves rightly managing the senses and going beyond 
				them instead of simply closing and suppressing them. It involves 
				directing the concentration inward. With the withdrawal of the 
				senses, one no longer feels itch or hear or smell anything 
				around or feel hungry. Practice of pratyahara helps to forget 
				everything around and concentrate on meditation.
				Andare oltre i sensi a parte il suono 
				poetico della cosa, non significa che, 1 abbandonarli, e la 
				rinuncia in questo caso pesa verso la non partecipazione, che 
				significa evitare un problema che si riaffaccerà karmicamente 
				subito dopo. 2 sublimarli per sentire cosa altro? e' un modo per 
				rendere innocuo un concetto, collegandolo ad uno dalla vaghezza 
				proverbiale, 3 o interpretare mentalmente quanto accade? c'e' 
				poco da interpretare con le spiegazioni funzionali, c'e' il 
				soggetto, il movente, il metodo, la maniera, e le modalità, 
				l'agente e la cosa agita, quindi fruitivo è il mentale di 
				costoro, e quel che non aggrada vien trattato da impedimento e 
				tirato giù.    
				Pratyahara is the fifth limb of 
				Ashtanga Yoga and is defined as “withdrawing the mind from the 
				objects of the senses”. It is the bridge towards the inner
				quest of Yoga to concentration, meditation, and absorption in 
				spiritual states of awareness that take one beyond the notion of 
				a separate self, called
				Samadhi.
				Ecco il premio che infanga 
				l'equilibrata e armonica visione, comprando cosi col risultato 
				favorevole, e atteso, le attenzioni di coloro che muovono dal 
				desiderio per brama, d'essere, d'avere, o di soddisfazione, e 
				qui consentono a lasciarsi educare pagando maestri con in danari 
				sonanti e sforzando la loro natura, piegano se stessi. Ma 
				Patanjali afferma: Here it is the practice which reveals. It is 
				our experience which educates our beliefs. Our beliefs must 
				conform to "reality", not the other way around. Such then are 
				mutual synergists. Patanjali warns against domination of the 
				vrtti of preconceived beliefs (no matter how authoritative), and 
				tells us to be present in our experience.= La pratica che  
				rivela, che nasce  dalla nostra esperienza ( non da quella 
				altrui o per interposta persona ). Il credo conforme alla 
				realtà, ( talità evidente ) e non una realtà compresa secondo un 
				credo, di tipo funzionale e legittimante, e organizzante il 
				senso logico cartesiano secondo modelli psicologici e deduttivi 
				semplicistico lineari. Il termine qui usato è "mutual synergists" 
				come concetto seme, e Patanjali mette in guardia contro il 
				dominio delle Vritti delle fedi preconfezionate, non importa 
				quanto autorevoli, e ci dice di essere presenti alla nostra 
				esperienza. Quindi nulla di fuori posto, il passato al passato, 
				e la sinergia sinestesica attiva permanentemente nella lettura e 
				comprensione di quanto accade.
				 Vyasa no matter how ingenuous 
				himself, offers a specific direction of interpretation which has 
				subsequently become standard, amassing a vast corpus of 
				interpreters, commentators, and glosses. Most subsequent 
				translators or interpreters translate what the commentators have 
				said, rather than what Patanjali has said. No matter how 
				creative or innovative such tactics have corrupted the original 
				intent and created what is now an institutionalized academic/intellectual 
				and religious non-yogic bias. Thus this new interpretation goes 
				back to the source, what Patanjali, himself has said, as the 
				authoritative basis of the translation. Taken in this way the 
				Yoga Sutras affords an intelligent and coherent integrity 
				capable of standing by itself in a way that has not been 
				presented in English previously.
				Tattiche che corrompono le traduzioni, 
				il senso, il significato, interpretazioni, secondo periodo, 
				correnti di pensiero, idee in voga, mode ecc... non sono, come 
				direbbe uno Yogi, nella corretta postura, rendono l'equilibrio 
				di questo lavoro, d'insegnamento e di sintesi, scorretta 
				posizione. 
				It appears to this translator that at 
				least five qualities must be present in order to be at least 
				half way successful in the translation of the Yoga Sutras into 
				English. They are: Sanskrit knowledge, English knowledge, yogic 
				experience, knowledge of the Western mind and terminology, and 
				knowledge of the Indian era, cultural assumptions, language, 
				style, and mindset when the Yoga Sutras were written.
				The following translation of the Yoga 
				Sutras however will show that yoga is aimed at universal truth, 
				beyond any one religion, culture, era, or nation -- certainly 
				beyond all concepts, ideology, religion, or language. This is 
				the Universal Truth that Patanjali (and authentic yoga) intends. 
				Here we make the assumption that the yogis of old were 
				individuals living mostly in forest hermitages, caves, in 
				nature, along rivers, a simple and natural meditative life - the 
				ancient rishis and Munis of India. Their teachings were strictly 
				oral in nature -- that is it was not knowledge gained through 
				book study. They did not go to temples to worship external gods, 
				they did not memorize and recite the ancient texts -- they did 
				not go to the caves and hermitages to train in grammar and 
				philosophy, but rather lived a very simple spartan (appearing 
				ascetic to the materialist) way of life. Rather they studied 
				with teachers who themselves were yogis living reclusive in 
				caves or forests. They studied in what was called the living 
				oral tradition which although involved some oral teachings, the 
				teachings were passed down through a living energetic yantra 
				composed of gestures, gazes, sounds (such as mantras or chants), 
				as well as other methods of non-verbal energetic wisdom 
				transmission. There was however one pre-requisite; i.e., the 
				student (sadhak) had to practice (sadhana). In such living 
				traditions, it is not the tradition. lineage, or the guru (the 
				one who removes the darkness) who is important, but rather that 
				this innate teaching/teacher be recognized and evoked from 
				within, and then outwards. When one's eyes opened -- all is seen 
				as truth. This is approximated in the ancient idea of the 
				gurukula. Here if we take the guru to reside within as the param 
				purusha (the teacher of even the most ancient teachers) then one 
				can glimpse the profundity and depth of the yogic teachings.
				
				Sadhaks actively sought out teachers 
				and teachers tested the sadhak as to their sincerity, capacity, 
				and worthiness. If a physical teacher was not available, the 
				energy body/subtle body teachers appeared to the sincere seeker. 
				Sadhaks naturally took up such a life as a joyful liberation, 
				rather than as a willful act of self abnegation or sacrifice (we 
				will discuss in more detail the difference between tapas and 
				self abnegation/self hatred later). The practices consisted of a 
				simple way of life embracing ahimsa, satya, aparigraha, tapas, 
				vairagya, isvara pranidhana, (and the rest of the yam/niyams), 
				which all worked synergistically and naturally toward fulfilling 
				their practice of asana, pranayama, pratyhara, concentration (dharana), 
				contemplation, and especially meditation (which will be 
				discussed later). Here there was one aim only, not to master the 
				techniques nor the practices themselves -- not to master the 
				body or the lower self, but rather to gain ultimate 
				unconditional liberation -- kaivalyam.
				
				Yoga sadhana has been practiced in the Indian subcontinent 
				(India, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Tibet, Nepal, Mongolia, China, 
				Ceylon, and parts of Russia) for thousands
				of years. For example Buddha was a well known practitioner of 
				this yoga, which he most likely learned from the yogis Alara (Arada) 
				Kamala (Alar Kalam) and Udraka Râmaputra (Uddaka Ramaputta). 
				This type of yoga was taught many years before Buddha's birth 
				from an ancient oral tradition/transmission. Buddha's disciples 
				were the first to write down some of these teachings in the 
				sixth century BC, much of which which were incorporated in what 
				today is known as the Pali Canon. This is not say that Buddha 
				did not make some significant contributions to yoga in his 
				formulation of the middle way free from extremes, the 
				elimination of caste distinction, the rejection of blood 
				sacrifice, trans-theism, and so forth in comparison to the Vedic 
				religion of his time (Hinduism). However it must be brought into 
				question whether or not the Yogic tradition itself was rooted in 
				Vedism or simply co-existed in its dominant milieu. It will be 
				the assumption of this study that the yoga as taught by Buddha 
				and written down by Patanjali had the same roots in the munis 
				and sages of the indigenous pre-Aryan India. Approximately five 
				hundred years after the Buddha's parinirvana (somewhere between 
				250 BC and 250 AD) Patanjali practiced yoga and then after 
				realizing siddha he compiled the Yoga Sutras which were threads 
				(sutra means thread) of this same ancient teaching, being 
				entirely devoid of any sectarianism, religionism, 
				authoritarianism, or theism and containing much the same general 
				principles and practices of that which Buddha practiced and 
				taught himself.
				
				Authentic spiritual teachings are teachings from direct 
				experience. Worse dead oral teachings and/or the written 
				teachings learned by memorization and obedience are prisons and 
				traps. Dead teachings act as poison, while true living dharma 
				liberates because they are designed to defeat and go beyond 
				ordinary ways of simple obsequiousness, conformity, 
				unquestioning faith, memorization, and mere intellectual ways of 
				knowing -- beyond words and definitions. They are deeper than 
				mere technical, grammatical, and reductionist analysis; because 
				such teachings recognize that these very same things are most 
				often corruptive forces. Thus the large differences in the terms 
				"spiritual" and "religious" must be pointed out where spiritual 
				refers to the universal spirit and teacher not bounded to place 
				or time; while religion is usually created by men most often 
				being species dependent based on temporal language, race, 
				nationality, philosophical systems, and other such non-universal 
				bias. External ideological structures created by the ideologues, 
				dogmatists, academicians, intellectuals, and religionists would 
				only lead to the expropriation, co-option, and corruption of 
				universal spirit. As such religion as an institution is the 
				antithesis of true self inquiry (swadhyaya), which leads to 
				"self" realization. Patanjali was aware of this tendency to 
				become seduced by words, symbols, neurotic objectified images, 
				and the like -- he specifically warned people against it, albeit 
				with less effect upon the human population than he may have 
				liked. But once something is written down with words, the 
				philosophers, intellectuals, and academicians take it as their 
				own possession and then claim authority over it. Here by the 
				word, "corruption", it is meant simply that the context becomes 
				corrupted simultaneously when the bias of the translator is 
				added. Yoga teachings are not dependent upon words or concepts, 
				but rather they are designed to eliminate such superficial and 
				limited ways of living. Yoga teachings are designed for us to 
				touch the heart of life and live from that non-dual omnipresent 
				universal core consciousness. In one sense, all translations 
				will be so corrupt, and this is true only if we do not affirm a 
				universal context. So for example if one has a Vedic and samkhya 
				bias, then one would interpret the Sutras with this slant being 
				predominant. That is unfortunately the norm, but it does not 
				work well for a truly spiritual interpretation. A universal 
				context is almost impossible to adhere to, but in this case we 
				have a unique opportunity because the Yoga Sutras were meant to 
				be Universal -- they are set in the Universal Eternal as will be 
				demonstrated, and thus the Yoga Sutras does not belong to any 
				one ideology, belief system, religion, nation, race, man made (artificial) 
				system, boundary, or separation as the context is all inclusive 
				(non-exclusive). We will show in plain language that the yoga 
				that Patanjali had advocated aims at the universal, immeasurable, 
				and unlimited -- the Timeless and Unbiased.
				
				Regarding the various interpretations of Patanjali, I think it 
				is refreshing to assume that Patanjali was a yogi (versus a 
				scholar or grammarian), who wrote down threads that formed an 
				integral fabric (yoga). The Yoga Sutras reveal a profound 
				internal integrity sutra by sutra by themselves. They are not 
				random fragments as proposed by those whose eyes are still 
				closed. . To take his words as they are without the aid of Vyasa 
				is something not commonly published, but I feel it is of value. 
				Since Vyasa is usually dated around the 5th century AD, and 
				Patanjali about five centuries earlier, the author has decided 
				to then take that possibility further and see what came up as a 
				meditator and yoga practitioner. Such a possibility has yielded 
				rewards beyond trying to interpret Patanjali through Vyasa‘s 
				lens or through samkhya. After all yoga is yoga and samkhya is 
				samkhya – even the traditional classification of the Six 
				Darshanas recognize their differences. Maybe Patanjali expects 
				one to be well versed in samkhya first, but really, such is not 
				necessary, if we assume that the Yoga Sutras are a complete 
				system (its revelation coming through practice (abhyasa). It is 
				more than refreshing not having to interpret every sutra in 
				terms of a samkhya lens which leads to far reaching 
				possibilities. Although Patanjali uses some terms that samkhya 
				also uses, but it doesn't mean that he uses them the same way. 
				For example understanding samkhya is not essential to 
				understanding Buddhism or the teaching of Shakyamuni Buddha (unless 
				one wants to study Buddhism historically, philosophically, or 
				academically. Such may be useful for those with a historical 
				and/or intellectual/philosophical bent to study samkhya or the 
				Vedic backdrop. Buddha was also influenced by Mahavir and 
				Jainism, but also again it is not necessary to study Jainism in 
				order to understand the Buddhist teachings (except as a 
				historical or academic way) . rather Buddha and Patanjali taught 
				transconceptional knowledge and understanding, independent of 
				such (or at least that is their own words). Of course the reader 
				is welcome to view these teachings anyway they like, but both 
				Buddha and Patanjali taught practice – the main practice being 
				transconceptual meditation. Once the veil is lifted from in 
				front of the EYE, then all becomes clear/revealed through 
				practice. As we assume that the Yoga Sutras have a similar 
				connection to the yoga that the Buddha practiced prior to his 
				enlightenment, then the author here is making the fresh 
				assumption that it was not a teaching that required a library, 
				commentaries, glosses, book knowledge, and/or a heavy 
				grammatical emphasis or analysis. Simply then this translation 
				assumes that Patanjali wrote down the basic outline of the yoga 
				practice of his day with all the essential and basic teachings 
				included, albeit lacking in detailed instruction wherein he 
				believed that continued practice would be self instructing. No 
				one can say for certain, but this has been this author‘s 
				admitted assumption. Such a reading is more refreshing and more 
				useful than reading traditional commentaries which often seem to 
				miss the essential points of meditation entirely. I think many 
				other interpreters don‘t give Patanjali as much credit as he 
				deserves. The majority, of course take Patanjali as a 
				philosopher, a scholar, or even a grammarian, but from his own 
				words, such a reading does him justice. Some even worship him 
				and chant his sutras, which appears to this author antithetical 
				to his teachings. So occur the many abrogations of history.
				
				In summary then, this author does not feel that it is necessary 
				to interpret Patanjali through a samkhya or orthodox lens nor as 
				a dualist. One can do so and of course and come up with the well 
				known ―classic‖ result, but if one does not, then one comes up 
				with another result. For example, it seems that Patanjali lived 
				during the tantric cusp. The tantric literature of hatha and 
				kundalini yoga did not just appear all at once, but cooked for 
				awhile as a proto-tantric soup. It has been useful to entertain 
				this possibility for the Yoga Sutras – that such realization was 
				realized by Patanjali, but not specifically elaborated nor 
				articulated upon. Here the translator admits then to a tantric, 
				Buddhist, and even dzogchen bias, but it is an honest bias, as 
				this interpreter is assuming that Patanjali was intimately 
				familiar in his spiritual experience with such experiences, even 
				though the philosophic terminology to fully express these views 
				had not yet been formulated. This interpretation does not claim 
				authority or superiority over the "other" interpretations, but 
				it is rather the translator's sincere attempt to suggest that 
				the Yoga Sutras is far deeper than traditional scholars have yet 
				given it its due. Patanjali's job thus was daring. It was to put 
				these sutras (threads) down as written words, while at the same 
				time warning the reader of the limitations and folly of words, 
				concepts, analytical dualistic thought processes, mere logic, 
				theories and beliefs (pramana), symbolic reality, and the 
				manifold artifices of the alienated/conditioned mind, while not 
				feeding those dualistic tendencies of the mind. From this 
				vantage point I think that was his clear intent -- an attempt to 
				avoid mis-interpretation and corruption by the religionists as 
				an authoritative scripture, by the academics as law, or the 
				samkhya dualists as a samkhya restatement. Thus he placed many 
				warnings about this kind of corruptive extrinsic interpretation 
				throughout the Yoga Sutras (as we have taken pains to point 
				out). Patanjali had scrupulously avoided the possibilities of 
				interpretations that fed the religionist or academic 
				expropriation of yoga. Despite this effort, history has shown 
				that so far Patanjali has been widely misappropriated, and hence 
				misunderstood (in my humble opinion). The religionists and 
				intellectual orthodox tradition have studiously succeeded in 
				institutionalizing their bias and color to the Sutras because 
				they felt threatened by it. This has occurred in India, but this 
				perversion doesn't have to be repeated elsewhere. So this all 
				the more reason to offer this nontraditional indigenously based 
				translation which is both inter-lineal and literal 
				re-establishing its yoga context. This translation is literal, 
				because we will not be reading in from the colorings of other 
				traditions (such as the Bhagavad Gita, Vedas, Upanishads, 
				Vedanta, etc.) nor will be reading through the eyes of the 
				traditional "experts" and commentators. Rather here will be 
				found an attempt to let the sutras stand on its own i.e., that 
				Patanjali is saying exactly what he means without putting words 
				into Patanjali's mouth. If there be any slant in the following 
				translation, it is due to the prejudice of the translator which 
				admits to an indigenous, tantric, and mother positive bias. One 
				thing will be true, that this translation will be fresh. The 
				objection by the orthodox that the sutras were intended to be 
				commentated upon and philosophized to death is a miscreant 
				contention, since sutra does not mean terse, but rather thread. 
				Sutras such as the Buddhist Sutras or Brahma Sutras can be long 
				and can stand on their own. This translation is also 
				inter-lineal because it addresses the silence, emptiness, 
				stillness, and ineffableness of which Patanjali centered his 
				compendium.
 
				The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali Chapter 
				One: Samadhi Pada
				Samadhi Pada (chapter one) is an overview of Raj Yoga describing 
				the situation of how the Unlimited Infinite Mind, Source of 
				Consciousness, causal spiritual essence, beginningless eternal 
				spirit, or seed of the Intelligent Consciousness Principle (called 
				citta) becomes obscured, distorted, corrupted, modified, 
				fragmented, covered, disconnected, interrupted and/or 
				discontinuous to the individual "mind", and then how the limited 
				individual mind is again re-united/connected through yoga (union). 
				In short, man's spiritual milieu is that his cognitive faculties 
				are disconnected from the Great Web of Creator/Creation. This 
				disconnection or spiritual self alienation is called ignorance (avidya) 
				and is the cause of his suffering (dukha).
				Thus yoga is the process of taking us back home to our 
				unobscured true nature. In the Yoga Sutras, the modifications or 
				bias of the mind is called vrtti in Sanskrit. The state, called 
				citta-vrtti, is mankind's ordinary/normal (but not natural) 
				condition, rather it is a distorted and impaired state of 
				disturbed or agitated (vrtti) consciousness (citta) which 
				manifests as a wavelike ripple, a colored filter, pattern, 
				and/or limited skew which is habitually imposed (as normality) 
				upon the natural unobstructed, vast, and profound panorama of 
				pure natural unconditioned consciousness (citta). Vrtti attach 
				to the citta producing vrtti-citta; that is, producing 
				artificial, biased, skewed, prejudicial, and limited thought 
				patterns -- in short, a spin -- which solidifies the stagnant 
				and coarse state of chronic separation and spiritual self 
				alienation which characterizes common dualistic thinking. This 
				citta-vrtti, characterized by specific thought patterns and 
				activities, are our past programs and patterns of conditioning 
				which limit our experience of the now and hence it is the vrtti 
				(with its concomitant samskaras, kleshas, vasana, and karma) 
				which are the operating principles of avidya (ignorance) which 
				are the causal constituents of the spiritual disconnect/discontinuity. 
				Authentic yoga practice in turn cancels out and annuls (nirodha) 
				these vrtti and then we are thus enabled to reconnect -- 
				reuniting eternal spirit with our embodiment -- as a 
				manifestation of living love in the present, thence it is said 
				that we abide in our own true self nature (swarupa). Thus yoga 
				is defined as the process which removes the vrtti while the 
				corpus of yoga are the processes and applications of the 
				techniques (sadhana) which attenuate and remove (nirodha) the 
				acquired component stains upon pure consciousness (citta), thus 
				allowing a balance, harmony, and synchronicity to occur between 
				our consciousness and our actual state of being or rather the 
				unitive state of pure consciousness, pure beingness, and pure 
				bliss co-arise (satchitananda). Then yoga is a process of 
				bringing us back into our natural true state (swarupa). Yoga is 
				the process, the action, verb, technique, and cause; while 
				samadhi (reunification) is the object, fruit, result. Simply 
				put, this is what the entire Yoga Sutras are about and which is 
				the essential statement of chapter I, sutras 1-3 of the Yoga 
				Sutras. "The chitta, by its own nature, is endowed with all 
				knowledge. It is made of sattva particles, but is covered by 
				rajas and tamas particles; and by pranayama this covering is 
				removed." -----Vivekananda, page 181 Raja Yoga
				Thus the many practices (sadhana) of yoga can be described as "processes" 
				and procedures of deprogramming this negative conditioning -- 
				liberating the individual's modified consciousness from the 
				conditioned matrix of limited"reality" back into this Original, 
				Natural, and Unmodified state -- Source of inspiration, genius, 
				and creativity. This is described as the realization of the 
				non-dual state (where eternal
				spirit is no longer absent) of Union (as Yoga). Thus the Yoga 
				Sutras describe processes how a confused, lonely, alienated, 
				nihilistic, and fragmented existence can be reunited, harmonized, 
				and integrated with natural order and thus unite in forming a 
				natural and intimate sense of belonging in the world, of 
				profound well being, contentment, fulfillment, peace, and joy 
				devoid of fear or attachment. In the first three sutras (sutra 
				means thread) Patanjali weaves a concise definition of Yoga. 
				Concisely, he says; "Yoga is a process of becoming free from 
				limited definitions of the field of consciousness. Then the 
				unfettered Source of all Seeingness -- of pure consciousness 
				itself -- abides as the seer inside. To complete this union and 
				make it whole is to realize our true nature (Sutra I.2 and I.3). 
				This is the natural alignment and integration of beingness and 
				consciousness --Sat and Chit, which brings about absolute 
				fulfillment, completion, and peace (ananda). In a tantric 
				non-dual sense then, yoga becomes the culmination of love where 
				creator and creation (as shiva/shakti) join together in this 
				evolutionary creative action, spirit and nature are joined, sky 
				and earth, mind and body, sahasrara and muladhara, manifesting 
				as a continuous self abiding living implicate order of pure 
				integrity -- of All Our Relations. Through functional yoga 
				practice this "reality" is integrated more completely and 
				continuously -- increasingly shining through not only in 
				meditation and "spiritual" practices, but also in our daily 
				lives -- in all our relationships. Yoga is thus the process 
				which brings us into samadhi (the experience of transpersonal 
				and non-dual union/absorption), or rather more specifically into 
				the final stage of self realization called nirbija samadhi (samadhi 
				without seed), wherein even the seeds of future vrttis have 
				become eliminated and dissolved (nirodha) in the state of 
				citta-vrtti-nirodha.
				
				The scene of Pada I, Sutra 1 is (as it always has been) the 
				underlying all pervasive Eternal Now, which is beyond words, 
				name, and form; yet includes and underlies all form. The 
				speaker, Patanjali, emerges out of this eternal now to break the 
				profound silence and describe in words for the benefit of the 
				present and future generations that all pervasive Great All 
				Inclusive Reality of Integrity in All Our Relations - That 
				Boundless Reality which is beyond the power of words to define 
				or describe. These teachings of yoga differ vastly from book 
				knowledge, where before Patanjali wrote them down they were part 
				of a living oral tradition passed on from generation to 
				generation into fit vessels, where the practice itself is 
				designed to reveal the teachings -- to activate the inner 
				teacher. Patanjali says in many places that success in yoga is 
				dependent upon going beyond the individual human process and 
				beyond words. For example in sutra 9, Patanjali says: 
				shabda-jnanaupati vastu-shunyo vikalpah (true wisdom where the 
				ordinary monkey mind stops its spinning is when the words and 
				concepts cease). Hence this translation will necessarily remain 
				an interlineal
				interpretation, where the true and most profound teachings 
				awaits the sincere seeker in the more subtle and silent spaces 
				in-between the lines. Patanjali tells us right from the start in 
				pada One, that the context of yoga is all inclusive and lays 
				beyond the grasp of the intellect (conceptual mind), and thus he 
				tells us that we must develop the innate wisdom in order to 
				successfully "understand" the subject. Thus the way to study the 
				sutras is to read them and then to mediate and reflect upon them, 
				rather than to approach it as an intellectual exercise. 
				Christopher Chapple, in "The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali", Satguru 
				Publication, New Delhi, 1990, says in his introduction: "To 
				understand Patanjali's success, we must keep in mind that the 
				text is one not of positions but of practices. Furthermore, the 
				telos of the various practices, whether described as nirodha, 
				kaivalyam, or samadhi, lies beyond language, beyond intellectual 
				speculation: and this experience, which is itself beyond 
				syncretism or synthesis hold the text together. The text has 
				meaning in that its practice obliterates all meaning. Patanjali 
				has no point to prove: he does not advance one practice above 
				another. The practice which is effective is the one to be used, 
				as indicated in Sutra I:39; yatnah abhimata dhyanad va (or from 
				meditation as desired). Patanjali provides us with an important 
				clue regarding his method in the first pada. When listing all 
				the practices to be undertaken, he uses the connecting particle 
				va (or), not ca (and)... This method is similar to that employed 
				in the Bhagavad Gita where again and again Arjuna asks Krishna 
				for one truth and again and again Krishna offers Arjuna yet 
				another perspective, another chapter, another yoga. Each view, 
				whether that of a god being sacrificed to or a yogic discipline 
				being practiced, is given life as long as it proves effective. 
				Multiplicity is the rule, without one perspective, one god, or 
				one yoga gaining ascendancy. The culmination of yoga comes when 
				all differentiations are obliterated in nirodha or samadhi. This 
				is not to say that life ends, but a state of being is attained 
				wherein, paraphrasing Sutra I.41, 'like a crest jewel, one has 
				unity among the grasper, grasping, and grasped,' a state of yoga 
				wherein totality is embraced without denying multiplicity." This 
				translation will try to keep those wise words, in mind.
				
				The Yoga Sutras begin by Patanjali breaking the silence -- the 
				roar of the great stillness, so to speak, to tell us how the 
				universal flux of pure consciousness and pure beingness becomes 
				corrupted, fragmented, restricted, rigidified, distorted, and 
				oppressed (by the action of vrtti -- causing one to experience 
				the vagaries of cit) -- and about the path called yoga, which 
				leads us back into direct communion, integration, wholeness, and 
				complete wholesome fulfillment - to our core center which is the 
				heart of hearts -- into our eternal home once again -- back into 
				sacred synchronicity - which intimately connects us to our true 
				authentic Self and Source.
				INTERLINEAR TRANSLATION OF SAMADHI PADA 
				Samadhi Pada: Sutras 1-3 Sutra I Atha yoganushasanam From the 
				portal of the Eternal Now (atha) -- freed from the structure of 
				linear time and space -- from the non-ending beginningless 
				ineffable stillness -- the eternal truth -- the Universal 
				Intelligent Source from which all traditions and written laws 
				are mere poor substitutions-- from HERE -- emanates the 
				authentic instruction of the transcendental non-dual method that 
				restores integrity called yoga (the process of joining together 
				and making whole) -- unfettered by temporal limitation and 
				corruption. In Pure Integrity in All Our Relations, yoga is 
				all-ways available here and now (in the sacred present), and as 
				such, it is at once, the arrival, the abiding, and the unborn 
				universal presence which when experienced is recognized 
				instantaneously as our true spiritual home. We will then truly 
				know when we have arrived home. Sutra 1. 2 yogash 
				citta-vrtti-nirodah Yoga occurs when the machinations, 
				vacillations, perturbations, whirlings, spinning, and agitations 
				(vrtti) of the mind-field (citta) dissolve, cease, and become 
				still (nirodha) Commentary: Yoga is the process of dissolving (nirodha) 
				the wavelike operations or machinations of the ordinary thinking 
				processes (vrtti) of the dualistic mind which colors, limits, 
				and distorts the originalness Pure Universal Mind (citta). Yogic 
				processes are designed to annihilate, annul, still, or dissolve 
				(nirodha) the fractual and limited wavelike patterning and 
				conditioning (vrtti) of the perceiver's mind field (citta) so 
				that the unconditioned clarity can shine forth illuminating the 
				darkness and stilling all anxiety and stress continuously -- 
				without interruption. Thus vrtti can be defined as the 
				interruptive patterns and wavelike operations which occlude the 
				continuous flow of citta from manifesting.
				
				Here vrtti are defined as the wavelike movement of thought 
				patterns, thought processes, wavelike operations, mental 
				machinations, or oscillations which are the beginning of mental 
				turmoil, agitations, swirlings, revolutions, or spinning's that 
				occur in the ordinary restless, disturbed, or dulled mind field. 
				In short the vrtti evince the whirlpool of ordinary thinking 
				processes which create a turbulence, a directive spin, or bias 
				-- which condition, program, color, and distort the original 
				unobstructed true pure nature of the unbiased and universal 
				clear light of consciousness or Infinite Mind (citta). Thus 
				vrtti muddle, color, distort, and obscure that sweet wholiness 
				of consciousness (citta-prasadanam) from penetrating and 
				manifesting into everyday consciousness. The presence of 
				habitual vrtti upholds the fragmentary or corruptive mind which 
				thus becomes habituated to the secondary traumatic spiritual 
				rend of separation from our true Self (the primal trauma). In 
				yoga it is that compensatory habit, bondage, or attachment 
				formed to that afflictive state (klesha) which is the cause of 
				our suffering (dukha) as elucidated by Patanjali in Sutra I.5. 
				When the vrtti cease or become dissolved (nirodha) then the 
				clear light of absolute reality shines forth as our true nature 
				(swarupa). That is the process of yoga. The word, nirodha, means 
				cessation, dissolution, stillness, or extinguished. Literally it 
				presupposes a pre-existing blockage of some pre-condition. 
				Translators often confuse the word nirodha as being active as in 
				the act of stilling or even worse as the act of controlling, but 
				rather the word, nirodha, is definitely passive i.e., it is 
				stillness not stilling, dissolution not dissolving, cessation 
				not the act of restraint. Of course there is an object that is 
				being transformed from activity to stillness (the citta-vrtti), 
				but it is salient that it is not the mind-field (citta) that is 
				being stilled or controlled, but rather the machinations (vrtti) 
				which have become attached to it and have been revolving the 
				afflicted mind in circles, In yoga such machinations come to a 
				halt, then the larger Mind's eye is opened. The wisdom eye is 
				activated and shines forth inside out and then "Reality" is seen 
				as-it-is in its true nature (swarupa). Thus it is the vrtti 
				which occludes-- it causes distortion. obstruction, bias, 
				obscuration, and restlessness of the citta (pure consciousness) 
				which eventually ceases (nirodha). When such limited 
				associations, self identifications, or attachments with the 
				thought processes (vrtti) cease (nirodha), then the self resides 
				in its true non-biased abode -- as the True Self or natural 
				unconditioned mind (citta). Nirodha, as cessation is thus 
				passive to an extreme, yet yogic processes (sadhana) themselves 
				are activities (active) as we shall see. They are designed to 
				bring upon this effect (dissolution) of the vrtti. The ordinary 
				person who does not meditate has much to look forward to as 
				meditation practice reveals the truth and true happiness 
				contained herein, because meditation is the act of dissolution/cessation 
				of the citta-vrtti. As this dissolution occurs the practitioner 
				(sadhak) has the opportunity to know their own mind (the 
				instrument and window of consciousness) directly, thus becomes 
				clear and from inside out wherein the true nature of Self and 
				existence is revealed. What could be more empowering and direct?
				
				When we meditate we become aware of the instrument of our own 
				mind, its wavelike operations, and mechanisms. This awareness 
				allows us to see more clearly -- fine tuning the instrument so 
				to speak and bestows upon the sadhak (practitioner of yoga)
				great liberation. This is greatly empowering, because we now 
				have the opportunity to see how the mind mechanisms and habits 
				work to color and distort "reality-as-it-is. When the dirt and 
				obstructions from the lens is removed (shuddhi), perception 
				becomes unclouded and expanded as heightened awareness. After we 
				start to meditate, we notice that the "ordinary mind-field " (victimized 
				by the vrtti) is moving constantly from "place" to "place". We 
				can call that the monkey-mind which moves through the action of 
				vrtti. In Sanskrit there are many words for mind depending upon 
				what is governing the mind. The "normal" ordinary mind (called 
				manas) as well as intellectual function (buddhi) are a dim 
				reflections of pure citta. All intelligence depends upon the 
				pure citta (or as we will see in later sutras upon purusha) as 
				its source. Indeed the mind comes from citta, but it is severely 
				limited and distorted because the pure citta has become modified, 
				biased, taken on a spin, and conditioned (by the vrtti). 
				Meditation is the process where the vrtti reach cessation, 
				subside, and rest in stillness and complete dissolution. When 
				the cessation (nirodha) occurs, then samadhi begins -- the clear 
				light (the light that brings forth clarity) of pure universal 
				transpersonal consciousness (citta) dawns. At first there exits 
				small glimpses as the clouds of vrtti dissipate, while later the 
				experience of samadhi becomes increasingly integrated and 
				continuous as All Our Relations (culminating in nirbija samadhi). 
				Water, if you don‘t stir it, will become clear; the mind, left 
				unaltered, will find it own natural peace.‖ Sogyal Rinpoché
				
				Thus nirodha can be interpreted as dissolution, removal, 
				purification, annihilation, stilling, quieting, the elimination, 
				or simply as cessation. Thus yogic practices (sadhana) 
				consistemntly applied (abhyasa) are designed to bring about 
				nirodha (cessation), which is devoid of any activity of the 
				individual conditioned dualistic mind. This doesn't mean that 
				the mind loses consciousness, rather the opposite. The entire 
				organism is connected with the Source of Goodness (Siva the 
				param purusha). It is filled with unlimited consciousness as 
				unobscured citta shines forth. The vrtti can take many shapes 
				and forms. Dynamically, the vrtti's wavelike operations form 
				patterns and vortices of manifold modifications, fluctuations, 
				movements, oscillations, agitations, disturbances, perturbations, 
				spins, disruption, revolvings, swirlings, or mental turmoil 
				which are at the root of our anxieties, bio-psychic and 
				spiritual tensions, conflicts, stress, afflictions (kleshas), 
				distortions of reality, and confusion. Vrtti can be described as 
				a corruptive agency or fractuous unsteady condition that 
				attaches itself to the citta (pure consciousness) and thence 
				obscures the individual's mind-field. This is the state of 
				ordinary dualistic fragmented and afflicted consciousness (the 
				ordinary mind called manas), where corruptive influences such as 
				spin, bias, taint, kleshas, vasanas, samskaras, karma, and 
				ignorance have become dominant and taken their toll in samsaric 
				(fragmented dualistic existence) as dukha (suffering). All that 
				is necessary is to still the vrtti. The following sutras 
				identify the five general categories of the vrtti and then 
				methods such as abhyasa and vairagya which allow us to become 
				free from the influences of vrtti. Devoid of vrtti, pure citta 
				is all inclusive and pervasive than any one isolated discrete 
				mind-scene consisting of a separate seer (the one who sees), the 
				object seen, and the process of seeing (See Sutra I.41), because 
				pure citta (when the vrtti has ceased) is universal -- it is not 
				defined within the dualistic context of a separate ego ("I" 
				sense) or the normal framework of object relations (pratyaya). 
				When this natural unmodified/unconditioned stage of citta 
				becomes churned, distorted, traumatized, rendered, disjointed, 
				perturbed, dis-continuous, or distorted into fragmented patterns, 
				then disharmony, conflict, anxiety, disturbance of the 
				mind-field, disease, discomfiture, and "lack" occur. In this 
				corrupted state of vrtti-citta the mind-stream is traumatized, 
				disrupted, and rended discontinuous.
				
				Thus citta-vrtti-nirodha is accomplished (as yoga) when the self 
				limited thought patterns, biased programming, corruptive 
				fragmenting fluctuations, and negative conditioning on the 
				mind-stream, its mental faculties, and their bio-psychic 
				processes are de-stressed and all remediated. When that veil is 
				lifted, one's field of consciousness no longer being self 
				limited, distorted, nor inhibited, then citta shines forth as 
				inherent self luminous wisdom and lucidity allowing one to 
				arrive home to sacred ground of indigenous self abiding -- of 
				All Our Relations -- our natural state. Another way of saying 
				this is that functional yogic processes create 
				citta-vrtti-nirodha, yoga being both the process and the result. 
				(For more on nirodha, see nirodha parinama in Pada III-9).
				Again when this yogic process is continuous, integrated, aligned, 
				and synchronized in All Our Relations -- synergistically in 
				delicate balance and harmony in the light of experiencing our 
				true nature (swarupa) then yoga is easily understood as the 
				process of interconnecting, reintegrating, and synchronizing 
				with our natural unconditioned true self. Then that result is 
				called samadhi (union/absorption, re-integration). Yoga being 
				the process while samadhi is the result, however Vyasa says that 
				yoga is samadhi. When our intimate alignment of pure 
				consciousness and pure being is artificially modified, 
				obstructed, made discontinuous, fragmented, interfered with, 
				strained, distorted, skewed, stressed, or agitated into 
				fragmented or disparate patterns, then we can recognize that the 
				vrttis are dominant. Then we can apply the remedy of yoga 
				sadhana (for example meditation, the eight limbs (ashtanga 
				yoga), samyama, etc. Thus once we have awareness of the true 
				nature of our afflictive conditions, we will naturally desire 
				release and then learn how to implement the remedies of yoga 
				effectively. Thus the practice of true authentic yoga eliminates 
				the vrtti (modifications of the citta) and establishes the 
				reunification of seer, seen, and process of seeing back into its 
				natural unconditioned, unconstructed, non-dual, uncontrived, 
				harmonious, and naturally interactive dynamic alignment with 
				creator, creation, and creativity (creative spirit). That 
				unification bears ultimate fulfillment in Nirbija Samadhi 
				without containing any seeds that allows one to fall back into 
				samsaric existence. Thus Patanjali defines at the end of Samadhi 
				Pada, nirbij samadhi as such. One thus aligns with all of 
				creation/creator and enters into that sacred realm, no longer 
				bearing the seed of further suffering stemming from the illusion 
				of a separate "self" (ego). Sutra I. 3 tada drashtuh sva-rupe'vasthanam 
				So that (tada) the original clear light (drashtuh) of our 
				inherent original true nature as-it-is (swarupa) can shine 
				through. We then strongly and firmly abide (vasthanam) and 
				become consummated in our original true nature (swarupa) of pure 
				consciousness [without being uprooted in false identification, 
				dissipation, dissuasion, distraction, or disease of 
				consciousness by action of the vrttis].
				Commentary: It must be emphasized again that the term, nirodha, 
				is passive. Thus yoga is not the restraint, suppression, nor 
				control of the mind (as is too often mistranslated), but rather 
				it is the cessation, elimination, dissolution, or remediation of 
				the vrtti (which restrains, colors, conditions, and limits the 
				citta). When the vrtti cease, the mind field is silent and self 
				liberated, allowing space for a greater intrinsic intelligence 
				to appear -- the innate dormant wisdom that is not misidentified 
				to dawn. This is the realm of sat-chit-ananda (pure beingness, 
				pure consciousness, and absolute bliss). This experience is 
				gradually and increasingly experienced through effective yoga 
				practiced as one result. Such naturally calls out to the 
				practitioner who seeks integration/yoga. Swarupa, means 
				what-is-as-it-is, residing in its own abode or in its true 
				natural form without modification, distortion, or artificial 
				conditioning. Swa means as-it-is by itself, while rupa means 
				form. Thus swarupa can likewise be defined as being in its own 
				true form as-it-is or natural true "self". In yoga the true form 
				devoid of the modifications (vrtti) is not an existential, 
				indifferent, catatonic, nor neutral state, but rather a profound 
				transpersonal realization and expression of the unconditioned 
				natural mind. The universal mind stuff shines forth out of 
				Source and as such, beingness and existence are unified, One 
				then sees Reality and all things as-it-is in their true form 
				without distortion or spin. There is no externally imposed 
				limitation of a separate, limited, or biased viewpoint, viewer, 
				or seer, because one's eyes have been opened in this 
				transpersonal non-dual profound sense (as a Seer (Rishi or Rsi) 
				to see Self in all-- in the sacred sphere of All Our Relations. 
				Drastr in this context then is the seer (the one who sees), but 
				disclosing the principle behind seeing, the process of seeing, 
				the light behind the process because now the seer is resting in 
				its true abode, where vasthanam means simply to abide within -- 
				resting as-it-is without any restlessness. Where the common 
				man's consciousness ordinarily wanders from object to object 
				through the attachment of the vrtti -- through attachment to 
				apparently separate "selves" through processes of limited false 
				identifications or in short through ignorance (avidya), here the 
				seer is not so attached, but rather rests in its true nature or 
				authentic self without delusion. HERE the seer "rests" (vasthanam) 
				in their own inherent true nature (swarupa). So this, yoga, is a 
				union of consciousness with beingness, then the seer rests in 
				his/her own true nature. In a tantric sense this is when siva 
				(the consciousness principle) and shakti (as the creatrix or 
				manifesting process) are wedded in shiva/shakti -- in the 
				profound union of satchitananda -- of pure consciousness, pure 
				being, and pure fulfillment and completion. Similarly we can say 
				that yoga is the process that brings us into this completeness 
				-- this resting in our natural unalienated and universal 
				timeless state where the machinations of the citta-vrtti have 
				ceased.
				
				Yoga thus is the liberation of the individual mind from its 
				ordinary habitual illusory prison of fragmented estrangement, 
				held together by grasping onto conditioned imprints of 
				discontinuous past experiences framed in duality and 
				separateness; so it can abide again and dwell in its rightful 
				spotless natural abode (swarupa). In later day tantric terms the 
				practice of yoga then becomes the processes of clearing out the 
				pathways within the body/mind (nadis) and pranic sheaths for 
				unconditioned citta-shakti to evolve and manifest. When the 
				karmic obstacles are removed through applied yoga practice, the 
				prana that flows through the nadis will become balanced
				and strong -- they will work together in mutual harmony 
				activating the dormant potential of transpersonal non-dual 
				knowledge and bliss. Eventually the alignment of the inner 
				ecology of the body/mind synchronizes with the outer ecology of 
				the universe and then the non-dual and trans-rational 
				synchronicity of yoga occurs in harmony with formless Source. In 
				hatha yoga terms this occurs when the pingala and ida nadis are 
				strong and synchronized so that they perfectly activate the 
				evolutionary energy in the central column (sushumna) which in 
				turn unites consciousness and being.-- sky and earth, spirit and 
				nature, sahasrara and muladhara, siva and shakti, eternal love 
				with embodied love, undifferentiated consciousness with 
				differentiated consciousness, creator/creation -- as a 
				continuous whole in All Our Relations. In hatha and tantric yoga 
				this is a gradual process that comes about through a balanced 
				and skillful practice (sadhana).
				Sutra I. 4 Vrtti-sarupyam itaratra When 
				we are not "home" or not present (itaratra) -- not abiding in 
				our true self nature (swarupa) -- then consciousness (citta) is 
				colored and modified (vrtti). It assumes the form (sarupa) that 
				is shaped by the modifications of consciousness (vrtti) rather 
				than as unmodified universal citta (consciousness) as it truly 
				is in reality. Commentary: Otherwise or at other times (itaratra) 
				when the vrtti operate then our body/mind energetics will be out 
				of synch -- the citta (consciousness) will be distorted, 
				disturbed, agitated and fluctuate as it becomes swept up 
				identifying with objects (sarupa) and we will be out of sorts so 
				to speak. Sa, means with, while rupa means, form. When we are 
				not united, aligned, or connected in our true authentic nature (swa-rupa) 
				through yoga, then disharmony and distortion (vrtti) will appear 
				catching us up in "our fragmented dualistic world" where 
				phenomena appear disconnected (sa-rupa) or disjointed - a 
				separation between creation/creator, mother nature/father sky, 
				earth and heaven, root and crown, existence and consciousness, 
				natural manifest order and divine order, the weave of the 
				universe and the universal source obstruct and restrict our 
				synchronistic joyful participation.
				Without previously recognizing our corrupted or perverse 
				condition, and without having taken up any expedient, proficient, 
				or skillful method of remediation or reintegration [such as 
				yoga], we become habitually lost identifying with the 
				modifications and aberrations (vrtti) of the mind as an 
				ingrained way of corruption (as "reality") to a point of 
				unconsciously reinforcing our own imprisonment and illusion at 
				the hellish altar of familiarity. Thus in this way, the 
				dualistic false identification and spiritual self alienation (as 
				existing separate as an ego) thus become our solidified as our 
				"reality".
				In the sacred sense, our everyday experiences are best 
				approached as sacred grounds where authentic yoga is to be 
				practiced all the time, while identifying the forms that the 
				vrttis take, realizing how they distort and color our "reality", 
				and then taking this opportunity to remediate/transform the 
				fragmented situation into completeness and integrity -- so that 
				we abide in swarupa (true nature). In other words there truly 
				exists in reality our sacred true experience as-it-is within the 
				context of eternal Infinite Mind. On the other hand the"thinking 
				mind" which extracts us from Living Spirit thinks "about" 
				specific limited situations habitually revolves about one object 
				of thought to another object attachment to another. It gets lost 
				in simple fragmented object relationships. That way the ordinary 
				mind has become conditioned to skirt Reality, rather than to 
				abide within it. Normally the ordinary mind spins/whirls 
				outwards into various false identifications (sa-rupa) with the 
				vrtti unless we practice yoga that attenuates and eliminates the 
				vrtti -- unless we are graced to recognize and rest in our true 
				self nature -- in the great Unlimited and Absolute Integrity of 
				All Our Relations Pabhassarm 'idam' bhikkhave cittam 'tan' ca 
				kho 'agantukehi' upakkilesehi 'upakkilitthan' ti pabhassaram 
				idam bhikkhave 'cittam tan' ca kho 'agantukehi' upakkilesehi 
				vippamuttan ti Oh! 'Bhiksus'. The mind is pure! It is defiled by 
				the adventitious defilement. Oh! 'Bhiksus'. The mind is pure! it 
				obtains liberation through the adventitious defilement. Here in 
				the Anguttara-nikaya (1:5) the practice of meditation leads to a 
				luminous and inherently pure mind (pabhassar citta) devoid of 
				vrtti. Here also a secret of meditation is disclosed which 
				Patanjali later elaborates upon as well. In yogic practices such 
				as meditation we learn how to come back home to swarupa -- 
				Reality-as-it-is. As we meditate we see how the interpretive 
				mind has the tendencies to get caught up in objects (either 
				physical objects or mental) and we learn how to let them go (through 
				vairagya and abhyasa as will be presented in I.13). Thus the 
				vrttis are at first lessened, recognized, then remediated, let 
				go, and eventually they cease. Sutras 5-11 then identify the 
				specific vrtti (modifications,spins, disturbances, fractuals, 
				agitations, and corruptive influences of the mind-field). Then 
				sutras 12 to the end provide their attenuation and removal (cessation) 
				so that one can eventually stabilize the realization of seedless 
				samadhi (nirbija samadhi). Sutra 5 Vrttayah panchatayah 
				klishtaklishtah
				
				These vrttis (wavelike distortions, spins, and aberrations of 
				our psychic field of consciousness) are of two types (tayah) 
				i.e., those which lead to pain and suffering (imbued with klesha 
				or emotional defilement producing afflictions), and those which 
				are devoid of such emotional defilement and affliction, not 
				necessarily leading to pain or suffering being neutral (aklishta). 
				They can be classified and broken down into five (pancha) broad 
				categories (tayyah). Commentary: Here Patanjali broadly 
				classifies the vrttis in five broad categories each of which may 
				be afflictive (kleshas which cause suffering) or be neutral 
				(free of afflictive results). We remember from the previous 
				sutras that yoga is the removal of the influences of all vrttis 
				(fragmentary, conditioned, and biased thought patterns) so that 
				reconnection with spirit in All Our Relations is made whole and 
				continuous. The kleshas are defined as emotional defilements or 
				negative afflictive activities which cause suffering (dukha) are 
				generally agreed upon to stem from the primary ignorance/confusion 
				(avidya), of which a separate sense of self existence or ego 
				delusion (asmita), attachment (raga), aversion (dvesa), and fear 
				of discontinuity or "death" are also associated. They can be 
				broken down further in many permutations of the above such as in 
				lust, greed, pride, jealousy, hatred, anger, etc., but the major 
				point is that the kleshas are taints which poison and enslave 
				our mind and behavior, thus our liberation is dependent upon its 
				purification (cessation). Patanjali here does not attempt to 
				delineate which kleshas are caused by which vrtti or conversely 
				which vrtti add to which klesha. Suffice it to say that they are 
				associated in holding together the spiritual malaise of 
				alienation, disconnection and separation. Later we shall see 
				that Patanjali suggests tools as yoga processes/practices (called 
				sadhana) which are designed to remove these fragmentary 
				fluctuations of the mind (vrtti) by practices which remove the 
				kleshas, samskaras, vasana, and negative karma. Again as such, 
				this is a process of purification or cessation (nirodha). A 
				practitioner of authentic yoga can thus gauge their success in 
				practice, by asking if we are less enslaved and burdened by the 
				oppressions of the vrttis, kleshas, samskaras, vasana, and karma 
				or not? Are we less agitated, more empowered, more creative and 
				fulfilled, not only in our yoga practices, but also in our daily 
				activities as well? Do we notice (viveka) the disturbances 
				coming up sooner and do we stay in awareness residing inside of 
				our core energy, our true nature, our center, or heart ever more 
				increasingly? We may ask what helps remove (nirodha) the vrttis 
				and their manifest distractions, dissipations, cravings, anger, 
				grief, jealousies, greed, and other kleshas fall away and cease?
				Patanjali says that some vrttis are associated with klesha and 
				others are neutral in respect to klesha (aklishta). The word, "klishta" 
				is most often misinterpreted as pain or suffering, but the 
				Sanskrit word, dukha, is the term used by Patanjali to mean pain 
				or
				suffering. Also "aklishta" is sometimes misinterpreted as 
				something desirable or beneficial, but it is valuable to point 
				out that aklishta merely means the absence of afflictive emotion 
				(klesha) or neutral in this regard. This common 
				misinterpretation of klishta/aklishta occurs because of the bias 
				of the ideologues, religious fundamentalists, and academicians 
				attempting to exhort the "goodness" of pramana (the first vrtti 
				translated as proven theories or "right" knowledge). The common 
				confusion of pramana will be cleared up in the immediately 
				preceding sutras. What Patanjali simply states in I.5 is that 
				the following five categories of vrttis are capable of 
				reinforcing or exacerbating klesha (afflictive emotions and 
				defilements) or they simply may be neutral in this regard. In 
				the reverse way, it could be said that the kleshas, especially 
				ignorance (avidya), amplify the whirling of the mind (vrtti). In 
				any case when the vrtti cease, so do the kleshas, but one way to 
				get HERE is to abandon the kleshas (we will see how in later 
				chapters). Sutra 6 Pramana-viparyaya-vikalpa-nidra-smrtayah 
				Ordinary consciousness is full of a myriad combination of vrttis 
				(that which distorts the mind field preventing us from seeing 
				clearly); hence Patanjali breaks them up by the five 
				mind-vagaries (citta-vrittayas) of: 1) Pramana -- The filtering, 
				modification, and patterning of consciousness due to belief 
				systems, "conventional theories", so called proven theories or 
				so called right knowledge held together by ordinary dualistic 
				perception (pratyaksha), deductive reasoning or inference (anumana), 
				consensus reality, and the testimony of external authorities (agama) 
				is pramana. Pramana (so called accepted or politically correct 
				views/beliefs) is thus a vrtti (modification consciousness) and 
				thus a hindrance which must be eliminated (nirodha) in order for 
				the process of Yoga to be realized (see sutra I.2). A proven 
				theory or belief is just that, not the Reality, just like a map 
				is not the actual territory. It may or may not lead us to the "Real 
				thing". In fact, stubborn fixations upon belief systems is a 
				pervasive filter creating a strong barrier to the realization of 
				samadhi as we will show in detail later. Especially when people 
				believe strongly in their tradition, religion, ideology, 
				provincial prejudice, or "righteousness", these type of pramanas 
				are very difficult to surrender. HERE Patanjali says pramana has 
				to be surrendered up on the altar of truth. Further this is the 
				crucial statement that separates yoga from philosophical systems; 
				i.e., yoga is based on experiential practice which informs the 
				sadhak (practitioner) and transforms fragmented dualistic 
				consciousness back to its profound natural unconditioned state (swarupa). 
				It is not based on memorizing facts nor conforming to external 
				belief systems.
				
				2) Viparyayah (Filtering and modifications of consciousness due 
				to mistaken beliefs based on errors of perception, lies, 
				propaganda, dis-information, confusion, ignorance, perversity, 
				false identification. falling into this category is anything 
				that may be proved to be wrong as well as incoherent, schizoid, 
				hypocritical, and/or corruptive thinking). This is similar to 
				pramana except there is an error in the process of perception, 
				the process of inference and/or deduction, and/or in the process 
				of the external confirmation (agama). 3) Vikalpa (Filtering and 
				modifications of consciousness due to fanciful thought processes, 
				contrived and artificial thinking methods, hallucination, day 
				dreaming, imaginary conditioned cognition, conceptionalization, 
				fabricated thought, and in general the monkey mind discursive 
				mentations of the ordinary mind, based on frontal cortex 
				processes). 4) Nidra (Filtering and modifications of 
				consciousness due to dullness of mind, inattentiveness, sleep, 
				being in a daze, torpor, stupor, and alike) 5) Smrti (Filtering 
				and modifications due to past memories, past legacies, residues, 
				impressions, experiences, nostalgia, grief, trauma, etc.) 
				Commentary: In everyday life these five vrttis usually do act 
				individually, but rather in combination with each other forming 
				and shaping the many obscurations, patternings, and 
				modifications of the citta-vrtti Hence we can have half truths, 
				inter-acting with stupor , logical reasoning, past conditioning, 
				and trauma which combine together as a karmic activity that was 
				activated by an afflictive emotion, which in turn was colored by 
				these vrttis. These five vrttis (fractious modalities) can be 
				either innocent distractions and dissipations possessing no 
				negative karmic effect (aklishta) or they may be part of a seed 
				bearing cycle of negative karma (with klesha) such as the vrttis 
				caused by negative propensities and reactions (the kleshas due 
				to ignorance, i.e., attachment, pride, anger, hatred, fear, 
				greed, jealousy, and similar) depending upon how occluded our 
				mind stream (chitta) has become and whose purification 
				eventually provides the antidote as the field of consciousness 
				expands.
				The very wavelike operations of the citta-vrttis are always the 
				result of past negative karma (conditioning) and hence an 
				element of avidya (the chief klesha) is thus present. Here 
				though Patanjali is saying that the citta-vrtti can and do 
				produce more kleshas (literally poisons) and as in sutra I. 2 
				the goal of yoga is reached when the citta-vrtti cease (nirodha) 
				their operations. Then there is unalloyed. uninterrupted, 
				unfiltered, and unbiased continuity of cosmic consciousness. As 
				we will learn at the end of this chapter, it is the vrtti which 
				occlude the self luminous light (prakasa) of
				consciousness which comes forth when the bonds of the intuitive 
				insight (prajna) is loosened. Yes, so yoga answers the question 
				of what is consciousness itself and what are the processes which 
				reveal it as well as what are the processes which occlude it. At 
				first we will discuss what it is that occludes and colors it 
				(the vrttis). Then how through practice (sadhana) how to see (vidya). 
				Yoga answers these questions through practice, not by giving 
				people ready made up answers or texts to memorize or chant. The 
				very process of perception is dealt with. The errors occur not 
				only how we interpret what we perceive such as assigning meaning 
				to a sense object through the filters of proven belief systems (pramana), 
				misconstrued beliefs (Viparyayah), contrived ideation processes 
				(vikalpa), through the limited interpretation filters based on 
				our past experiences (smrti), or through subconscious habits of 
				partial sleep (nidra), but more so than removing these clogged 
				filters *vrtti), yoga practice alters the way we perceive itself 
				-- the process of perception by rearranging the relationships of 
				the object which is observed, the observer, and the process of 
				observing. This new way of non-dual perception goes further than 
				the perception of ordinary sense objects as discrete self 
				existing objects through the agency of the five or six senses, 
				but rather yoga teaches the awakening to our evolutionary nature 
				-- to the true nature of Universal Mind. Sutra 7 
				Pratyakshanumanagamah pramanani The vrtti (spinning operations 
				of the mind) called pramana is constituted of pratyaksha (spinnings 
				around a sense object, then anumana or inference (operations of 
				the mental processes around the input of the sense object, and 
				finally the wavelike operation of the mental processes around 
				the validation process from scripture, authoritative teachers, 
				gurus, accepted authority, trusted friends, or even consensus 
				reality (agama) all of which externalize one's attention and 
				energy. Commentary: Some common English translations of the 
				word, pramana are valid cognition, valid proof, valid theory, 
				proven theory, proven conclusion, judgment, or right knowledge. 
				Pramana is most often the essential or core building block in 
				forming fixed belief systems (which is another vrtti of course). 
				As stated the problem of vrttis in general is that they agitate 
				and churn the mental processes providing a limited bias thus 
				occluding the full spectrum of mind-field possibilities. Thus 
				the pure citta, pure underlying source of intelligent awareness 
				(or param purusha) which lies at the Source of consciousness is 
				occluded, interrupted, and disrupted which is the opposite of 
				the goal of yoga practice.
				
				As any experienced meditator knows such a biased mind has no 
				place in dhyana (meditation) as described by Patanjali. When we 
				meditate we must let go of all such vrttis or suffer the 
				negative consequences. "Right knowledge" or "proven theory" is 
				often is used in daily life to rigidify the mind stubbornly 
				fixated upon biased beliefs and creeds colored by culture, 
				geography, race, sex, religion, sect, nation, and species. In 
				other words, it is a veil/filter that man grasps upon stubbornly 
				because he/she finds their ego in "it" -- it reinforces their 
				view of separate self. When any true spiritual seeker (sadhak) 
				becomes so fixated, they only reinforce their alienation from 
				the universal Self -- they stand off their spiritual progress. 
				Especially when it it is colored by the belief that their creed 
				is right, good, superior, or better, thus it holds one back from 
				the universal citta. Pramana then is indeed another coloring of 
				the mind. Pramana is the conclusion or judgmental processes of 
				what is right (and thus what is wrong). It forms the basis of 
				assumptions, firmly held (stubborn or fixated) belief systems 
				and similar constructs of the mind which are supported and 
				upheld by the glue (proofs) of external authority (agamah), 
				inference and reductionist logical methods or proofs (anumana) 
				governed by the intellect, and by pratyaksha (dualistic 
				perception and ordinary provincial awareness) which may appear 
				true within a limited situation or context, but which if applied 
				elsewhere serves only to bolster bias, prejudice, pride, and/or 
				further confusion and limited dualistic false identification 
				which most often serves to reinforce straight plane left brain 
				thinking, but at the same time extracts us further from the 
				simultaneously arising universal ground of being. This is a key 
				sutra where Patanjali makes it clear that yoga is neither a 
				religion nor a philosophical system. It is not based on right 
				knowledge nor wrong knowledge, rather yoga is an empirical grass 
				roots inner experiential system based on practice (sadhana) or 
				direct experience. This direct experience is not pratyaksha as 
				ordinary dualistic perception, but rather a deeper kind of 
				non-dual wisdom (prajna) beyond subject/object duality. Nirbija 
				samadhi (as the goal of yoga) is also not based on pramana 
				(right knowledge), inference (anumana), or philosophical 
				speculation. Although philosophers and scholars are free to 
				speculate on the yoga Sutras, something that they have perhaps 
				over done, Patanjali says repeatedly that it is through practice 
				that the inner wisdom will shine forth and that this occurs when 
				the vrttis are dropped such as in dhyana or samadhi. Dropping 
				pramana then is a necessary step, albeit one of the hardest, 
				because most people have become fixated to external belief 
				systems. They find themselves in external structures and then 
				defend their ego fixation vehemently through argument. Indeed 
				this is the stuff that taken to the extreme religious arrogance, 
				bigotry, crusades, holy wars, pogroms, and jihads are made from 
				where even the murderers deny that they are doing anything 
				"wrong" or harmful, rather they believe that they are doing 
				God's work as interpreted by "authorities" from their holy book.
				
				As such this sutra is most often left ignored, left unchallenged 
				critically, or misinterpreted by scholars, academicians, 
				intellectuals, ideologues, religionists, and philosophers, who 
				themselves have contributed to the plethoric morass of 
				traditional biased written interpretations (who also do most of 
				the translations). They are themselves addicted to pramanas and 
				if one dialogues with them they can not imagine dropping pramana. 
				It is unthinkable to them. Thus they most often translate 
				pramana as "right knowledge" and deny/ignore that Patanjali 
				considers it a vrtti (a coloring). Thus they "interpret" this 
				particular vrtti as being some how beneficial, despite 
				Patanjali's clear statements to the contrary. One can just pick 
				up most any translation of the yoga sutras and check out how 
				academicians and others who are frontal lobed dominated 
				translate and interpret this key sutra. Even the very idea of 
				valid cognition is dependent upon an object of cognition. This 
				is not meditation (dhyana) as Patanjali describes where one has 
				to let go of even the most subtle thought process. Reading 1.7 
				in other translations will let you know if the translator is a 
				parrot, ideologue, and/or traditionalist on one hand, or on the 
				other hand, an authentic yogi who is guided by inner wisdom and 
				light -- by their own genuine practice and direct yogic 
				experience. Parroting traditional authority without honest 
				critical or creative insight indicates little yogic experience 
				and integration which in turn creates a disservice to the 
				earnest student as it is misleading. "There are two kinds of 
				knowledge to be acquired – the higher and the lower; this is 
				what, as tradition runs, the knower's of the import of the Vedas 
				say. Of these, the lower comprises the Rig-Veda, Yajur-Veda, 
				Sama-Veda, Atharva-Veda, the science of pronunciation etc., the 
				code of rituals, grammar, etymology, metre and astrology. Then 
				there is the higher (knowledge) by which is attained that 
				Imperishable. (By the higher knowledge) the wise realize 
				everywhere that which cannot be perceived and grasped, which is 
				without source, features, eyes, and ears, which has neither 
				hands nor feet, which is eternal, multiformed, all-pervasive, 
				extremely subtle, and undiminishing and which is the source of 
				all. As a spider spreads out and withdraws (its thread), as on 
				the earth grow the herbs (and trees), and as from a living man 
				issues out hair (on the head and body), so out of the 
				Imperishable does the Universe emerge here (in this phenomenal 
				creation). Through knowledge Brahman increases in size. From 
				that is born food (the Unmanifested). From food evolves Prana (Hiranyagarbha); 
				(thence the cosmic) mind; (thence) the five elements; (thence) 
				the worlds; (thence) the immortality that is in karmas."
				Mundaka Upanishad , Translated by Swami Gambhirananda
				
				As we are beginning to see, yoga is based on direct yogic 
				experience that emanates from yogic practice (sadhana), not 
				theory (valid or not). It is this practice (called sadhana or 
				abhyasa) applied wisely which awakens the innate wisdom. In 
				order for
				that journey to bear fruit, theory, ideology, theology, and even 
				logic must conform to the evidence -- it must be tempered by 
				yogic experience. For the average intellectual dominated by the 
				frontal lobe of the brain, the external locus of authority must 
				be shifted, eventually being surrendered upon the altar of 
				universal truth. Theory and the world of objective facts, 
				finally being seen as the stagnant matrix separating the 
				practitioner to the organic universal flux of where universal 
				spirit acts as the universal being. Patanjali is saying very 
				straightforwardly that what we tenaciously defend and grasp onto 
				as "right knowledge" -- what is politically correct; what we 
				believe to be right, true, or good -- is a coloring of Universal 
				reality -- is a vrtti, as long as it is supported by outside 
				authority, consensus reality of our trusted peers, scripture, or 
				any external source which we have become dependent upon (agama); 
				reductionist logic, inference, or reasoning methods (anumana); 
				and ordinary mental faculties of dualistic perception (pratyaksha). 
				This vrtti like the rest must ceased in order for the yogic 
				practitioner to realize the higher states of union (or samadhi). 
				Patanjali makes a very salient point in this profound sutra; 
				i.e., that people are suffering from the spin of ideology, 
				top-down mental processes, and theories imposed upon our moment 
				to moment experience by the imbalances and over dominant 
				processes of the cerebral cortex, where normal judgment and 
				decision making processes occur.In short the cognitive process 
				requires an object of cognition and the cognizer, thus creating 
				a dualistic separation from the process of consciousness itself. 
				Cognitive based people are constantly objectifying their 
				"reality" -- constantly placing a separate "it" from the 
				separate observer (I), thus dualistic bias is unfortunately 
				fixated upon. This escape from reality is really an aversion -- 
				a pushing aside the subjective side of consciousness. Fear and 
				the other kleshas exacerbate this imbalance. The imposition of 
				fear and excess fixated pramana upon the rest of the 
				neurophysiology of the living human organism creates both 
				neuro-physiological as well as psycho-neurophysiological 
				impairment. 
				
				Although pramana may be a theory "proven" through certain 
				methods, one must also take into consideration the limitations 
				of the methods of proof. This glue which often forms the "apparently" 
				benign stagnant fortresses of fixated, opinionated, and stubborn 
				firm belief systems, dogma, ideology, radical fundamentalism, 
				prejudice, and prideful identifications actually is a self 
				limiting vrtti as false identification, a wedge of separateness 
				that separates us from the universal consciousness. Indeed 
				pramana it is a limited manmade, artificial thought construct, 
				bias -- a mind prison produced by preconceived notions, 
				prejudice, and institutionalized fear. -- all of which reinforce 
				false identification and avidya, is perhaps one of the most 
				tenacious and insidious of all the vrttis, because the adherents 
				of pramana, cling helplessly upon the very instrument which is 
				drowning them. The proofs of the theory which such people
				who cling upon pramana hold as "right belief" winds up as the 
				justification of their own false identification with artifice 
				and continued methods of "Self" denial. We all know superficial 
				people who are walking encyclopedias of external knowledge, 
				experts or "authorities" in various fields of philosophy, 
				semantics, or religion, but who have no self knowledge or wisdom 
				-- who have no realization -- who have not brought this 
				knowledge into the heart. Patanjali doesn't say that "correct" 
				views or right knowledge are all "bad" or afflictive (klishta), 
				only that such can and often does get in the way obstructing the 
				complete realization of yoga. These vrtti given the right 
				circumstances create klesha, which in turn creates further 
				negative karma and suffering (dukha) such as aversion, hatred, 
				condemnation, fear, etc). Some vrttis may be neutral in relation 
				to being associated with afflictions (aklishta), but regardless 
				all vrtti, must be let go of and cease in order to walk into the 
				clear light of original deathless mind (in satchitananda). 
				Through practice uncomplicated, unbiased, and clear observation 
				will reveal that it is more difficult for some one to give up 
				their beliefs, valid theories, ideology, judgments, and prideful 
				attachment to false identifications which have become familiar 
				and comfortable veils and filters of reality because they are 
				rigidified through surface evidence (pratyaksha), logic or 
				inference (anumana), external authority (agama and smrti) or 
				consensus reality. Anyone who has tasted meditation knows that 
				such superficiality is a coloring (vrtti) and obscuration to the 
				full dawning of the inner light. It must be surrendered at the 
				altar of direct experience. Rather the type of "Realization" 
				that Patanjali is presenting is not dependent upon such 
				superficial and external dualistic means, but rather their 
				extinction. He is saying that such methods have to be given up 
				in order to realize citta vrtti nirodha. Here Patanjali 
				discusses the glue (proofs) that holds together the fixation of 
				pramana. Pramana, because it is assumed to be "right" knowledge" 
				and/or is otherwise most often reinforced by the group illusion 
				of the time, group prejudice, group pride, and temporal 
				authority and beliefs becomes more difficult to let go of than 
				knowledge or belief that can be proved to be wrong or perverse (viparyaya). 
				Classically the tenacious glue of pramana (fixated belief 
				systems, conclusions, judgments, theories, rigid mindsets, and 
				so forth) are glued together through the three agencies of: 
				pratyaksha (observation) is often defined as form of perception 
				undertaken by the five senses based on the dualistic assumption 
				that there exists a separate observer, an object of observation, 
				and the process of observation as being discrete. Pratyaksha 
				also assumes that the separate object is "real" and truly exists 
				in and by itself. This is the basic assumptive tool of the 
				Vaisesika
				
				Darshana (along with anumana or logic). It is interesting to 
				note that Vaisesika differs from Nyaya only in so far as Nyaya 
				uses agamah (as well as comparative analysis) for determining 
				pramana (right knowledge). Pratyaksha holds true only in a 
				dualistic sense of a separate object and observer, i.e., the 
				objectified "I-it" world, as opposed to the yogic non-dual/transpersonal 
				world. In studying the Yoga Sutras Patanjali considers 
				pratyaksha and pratyaya limited forms of cognition which the 
				meditator must eventually abandon. Later in Pada II of the Yoga 
				Sutras Patanjali presents the practice of pratyhara (the fifth 
				limb of astanga yoga) which is designed to remediate the 
				dualistic limitations of pratyaksha (or mind grasping onto empty 
				objects). Here we must also recognize that modern physics and 
				linguistics also supports Patanjali's low regard of basing 
				pratyaya on pratyaksha. See Physicist David Bohm (River of Truth) 
				and also Bohm's dialogue with Krishnamurti,
				anumana (inference) or logical, deductive, reductionist, 
				analytical, or intellectual machinations of the ordinary mind 
				which validate, support, or otherwise confirm the conviction or 
				conclusion (pramana) as appearing real, true, or substantive. 
				agamah authoritative witnesses, scripture, parents, expert 
				testimony, and others who testify toward the formation of the 
				conclusion (pramana). Agamah can be very insidious as every 
				race, country, religion, sect, time, and village has the 
				potential for reinforcing a mass illusion/delusion built on 
				prejudice, fear, and pride. Especially religious pride can be 
				very entrenched as is transgenerational pride, ignorance, 
				prejudice, aversion, anger, and violence especially found in 
				radical fundamentalist traditions. No where in the Yoga Sutras 
				does Patanjali advocate following tradition (sampradaya) for to 
				do so would contradict his purpose.
				
				Following are a few examples. They can be broken down into two 
				categories; i.e., one where the pramana is later proven to be 
				false, but one at first thinks it to be true, and the second 
				category is that the pramana appears to be true, but it is still 
				limits our consciousness and spiritual experience (chit and sat).
				A common example is that the world was once thought to be round 
				because people observed (pratyaksha) that the horizon appeared 
				to be flat, then inferring (anumana) that the earth was flat, 
				and this was then confirmed by the church and kings (agama). 
				Later some one came along and "proved" that the earth was round 
				and thus people fixated on that. In reality the earth is not 
				round but spherical and even that has many
				subtle "anomalies", twists and turns to it. That is the theory 
				or picture of it still does not conform to what it really is. 
				Not even modern scientific theory can account for the shape of 
				the earth and its many changes, yet the earth is as it is 
				despite our many theories of it. That is-as-it-is is direct 
				non-dual perception known when the dualistic tendencies of the 
				mind are put to rest. Similarly at one time in Europe it was 
				considered to be proven that the universe revolved around the 
				earth. Advocates used certain observations (pratyaksha), 
				reasoning (anumana), and the church and kings (agama) to back 
				them up. If you disagreed you ran the risk of being tortured and 
				killed. Of course today we know that was a "mistaken view" (viparyayo), 
				but one may ask how many mistaken views do we hold today that 
				are generally considered pramana and how is that holding us back 
				from vital and functional living? A young Palestinian boy 
				observes that an Israeli bomb and soldiers have killed one's 
				mother, brother, sister, and father. That Israelis are occupying 
				his town and beat, arrest, and order around his few remaining 
				friends creating fear and poverty. Through inference, he sees 
				Israelis as the enemy. His religious authorities and town mayor 
				validates this. His hatred and anger (kleshas) toward the 
				Israelis thus reinforced and he decides to be a terrorist 
				killing Israelis and those who support their evil ways. In 
				Gujarat India, there has just been a murderous riot. One's 
				entire family and village has been murdered. You observed it and 
				saw the perpetuators (pratyaksha). Through inference (anumana) 
				it deduced to be Moslems and the tribal chieftain arrives and 
				declares that all Moslems are our enemies. Out of fear and 
				hatred a belief is validated (pramana) that all Moslems must be 
				killed in order to feel safe and survive. His parents, peers, 
				and leaders confirm that belief. Hence mob hysteria is fed from 
				a proven theory (proven by pratyaksha, anumana, and agama). One 
				can go on with a myriad examples of false generalities, 
				stereotyping errors, and false conclusions based on limited 
				observation, inference, and validation which are mistaken. Are 
				the above pramana or viparyaya? Now for the second category, 
				pramana which are not necessarily false, but are still limiting 
				-- still producing fractual modifications of the citta. It is 
				not only that relative observation through the sense organs can 
				be faulty, that logic can be faulty, but also what authority is 
				absolutely trustworthy except the Sat Guru? According to 
				Patanjali there is no external teacher separate from the innate 
				teacher, the teacher of the most ancient teachers (isvara as 
				purvesham). Even a theory which actually corresponds to the 
				Truth, if not derived from direct experience too often may 
				prevent such. 
				For example: "I am not the body". True 
				statement? It is stated in the negative and thus can create 
				limitation. In one sense we are not just the body, the ego, or 
				separate from the all, but who in truth am I 9the true seeker 
				asks)? If the "I" atman is one with Brahman, then it is all 
				inclusive and not separate (according to a certain school of 
				advaita), thus it includes the body (there being no place where 
				Brahman is not). One can use observation, inference, and 
				authority to validate neti, neti (not I, not I), but this is not 
				the same as experiencing its truth. One may be filled with pride 
				that one has this knowledge, but it is merely pramana, it did 
				not come from direct experience. The above is very similar to 
				the Buddhist negative pramana of proving that there is no 
				independent self. After all where does the ego abide? But 
				pramana based on observation, inference, and external validation 
				should never substitute for the spiritual experience itself 
				which is a more widespread mistake of academicians, 
				fundamentalists, philosophers, and intellectuals than they might 
				presume. One could go even further by categorizing pramana as to 
				being positive or negative, religious or scientific, partial and 
				contingent, or true and objective, but its common limitation to 
				a yogi is that pramana is both fractualizing and spiritually 
				dysfunctional as it blocks the natural flow of citta -- it holds 
				us back in practice. The larger spiritual knowledge beyond the 
				vrttis is not dependent upon the processes of mere observation, 
				rational inference, and external validation. Take it or leave it, 
				but don't stop there. Pramana is not labeled a vrtti only 
				because the processes of observation, inference, authority, and 
				validation may be limited or faulty, but rather pramana is a 
				very limited and fractional dualistic veil in which the common 
				man peers out into the world with a " spin" on life. It colors 
				the world and reinforces bias (avidya) and bondage preventing us 
				from going further into true spiritual experience, awakening, 
				and liberation (avidya being the major klesha). Patanjali is 
				really making a profound point here in categorizing pramana as a 
				vrtti precisely because of the common fixation of most of the 
				religious "authorities" and bigots of his day. As such this kind 
				of fundamental questioning forms the basis of heresy. Patanjali 
				is profoundly telling us that yoga sadhana is a search for truth 
				-- where theory and belief are derived from our own direct 
				experience. For this fundamentally spiritual search to be 
				successful it is necessary to first admit our ignorance by 
				saying that we do not know. Secondly yoga sadhana demands that 
				we do not adopt nor hide behind some one else's system, no 
				matter how politically correct it appears, but rather we must 
				find the truth within. Adopting an objectified world based on 
				agama and anumana spells death to the authentic spiritual 
				pursuit. There exists no dark soul of the night for those who 
				have given up their attachment to separateness.
				Yes, orthodoxy will tell us that pramana is necessary, valid 
				cognitions, proven theories, belief systems, religion, and 
				ethics keeps us from going too far astray. "It
				keeps us out of trouble", they say, but Patanjali is saying that 
				it also separates us from genuine spiritual sadhana and as such 
				it is the cause of spiritual affliction (klesha). Patanjali is 
				not attacking the "other" philosophical systems, but rather he 
				says that those who adhere to fixed beliefs or simply belief 
				systems (BS) in general that are not based on direct experience 
				will maintain spiritual stagnation. Thus they can not reach the 
				direct experience of universal consciousness -- of All Our 
				Relations. On the other hand, yoga sadhana such as advocated in 
				Sadhana Pada (Chapter 2) and in particular, meditation, takes us 
				considerably further beyond the limitations of fixations on any 
				belief systems (pramana) based on dualistic perceptions (pratyaksha), 
				authoritative testimony from books or authority figures (agama), 
				and logical or intellectual methods (anumana). So in sutra I 
				-12, Patanjali says not to get caught up with any vrttis, 
				because they reinforce the vrtti of pramana. Especially not 
				those things (such as agama, anumana, and pratyaksha) that 
				uphold the vrtti of pramana, because in the authentic yoga that 
				is being taught here, that is not where liberation or samadhi 
				comes from, rather they hold one back. Those methods may be 
				helpful for studying engineering, mathematics, law, mechanics, 
				or construction, but they should be put aside (vairagya) when 
				practicing yoga -- especially so when applied to the main method, 
				the practice of meditation. The point is that the theory is not 
				the experience, while rigid theories (even though not erroneous) 
				too often precludes it because it is severely "limited". Granted 
				a good theory may lead us eventually to the experience (and the 
				experience may even prove that the theory was correct), but in 
				truth the reductionist objectification process which is pramana, 
				must in either case cease altogether if we are to get to the 
				universal boundless Mind which is the true nature of Mind. 
				Pramana is like a theory, principle, or "derived" law while 
				agama, anumana, and pratyaksha are its apparent operators of 
				proof; but Patanjali says that as such this will reinforce the 
				vrtti. In other words walking around with such constructs in the 
				mind (mindsets), we superimpose artificially a very severe 
				limitation upon the potential and very profound/sacred innate 
				depth of our experience, i.e., Reality-As-It-Is -- or swarupa. 
				This filter, matrix, or veil serves as an obstruction, which 
				yoga meditation is designed to utterly destroy. When this 
				dissonance between consciousness and beingness (between sattva 
				and purusha) is destroyed the underlying profound non-dual 
				transpersonal and trans-conceptional REALITY is revealed. Thus 
				in the end of Pada III in Sutra 55, Patanjali says: III. 55 
				sattva-purushayoh shuddhi-samye kaivalyam. Translated: "By 
				perfectly balancing (samye) pure beingness (sattva) with pure 
				undifferentiated universal consciousness (purusha) the 
				obstructions are removed (shuddhi) thus disclosing and opening 
				the gate to kaivalyam (absolute liberation)."
				
				Pramana as a surrogate or adopted belief system, ideology, 
				mindset, or "ism" may be difficult to let go of, especially so 
				when we have not been brought up to do our own critical/creative 
				thinking and true self inquiry; but rather to become dependent 
				upon the "boss", master, experts, or consensus external 
				prejudice of our culture or times (so called "reality"). This is 
				where the limitations of dogma and ideology become rigidified as 
				well. This is another good reason to drop it, because real yoga 
				can not be achieved in such a sorry state. This is also the 
				defect of religion, where it demands conformity to behavior, but 
				fails to provide revelation. In fact the dogma compensates for 
				authentic experience and most precludes such. Rather, genuine 
				spiritual discipline is based on providing direct communion. 
				Thus Patanjali quite clearly says that pramana, that which are 
				dependent upon the proofs of pratyaksha (observation), anumana (inference), 
				and agama (authority), may be at best neutral in some situations, 
				but for a yogi whose intention is to realize the Truth in 
				samadhi, all vrtti must be dropped. It should be mentioned that 
				some advanced spiritual souls may want to point out another kind 
				of belief or world view (which some may call a pramana but is 
				not so defined by Patanjali) which is not a theory, judgment, or 
				conclusion based upon observation (pratyaksha), anumana (inference), 
				and agama (external authoritative sources), but rather which is 
				derived from direct yogic experience of All Our Relations. Then 
				would that be the kind of pramana which Patanjali calls a vrtti? 
				No, Patanjali is defining pramana in his own way (as a theory 
				proven by agama, anumana, and pratyaksha), and as such it is a 
				vrtti (all of which are to be discarded). If however our view of 
				reality and self is conditioned by our yogic experience, that 
				understanding taught by the direct experience of the Great 
				Continuum is neither pramana nor vrtti according to Patanjali.
				Ordinary people limit their experiences, sometimes quite 
				severely, through limited belief systems. In the past accepted 
				authoritative beliefs like: "the world is flat, the sun rotates 
				around the earth, such and such is impossible, and so forth held 
				people back". Likewise today many conventional beliefs supported 
				by apparent observation, inference, and authority severely 
				constrict people back (on and off the meditation cushion). This 
				limitation is due to the imposition of beliefs (right or wrong) 
				upon present experience so that we do not allow ourselves to 
				experience anything outside the box (except in dream or 
				fantasy). The opposite way to go is to have our experiences 
				inform the neo-cortex (where the conceptual functions reside) as 
				to what is going on instead of the neo-cortex dictating to the 
				neurology what is real and what is not. If our experiences can 
				actually feed the entire nervous system as a whole -- without 
				distortion, resistance, or conditioned interpretation born from 
				the imprints and adaptation of childhood games, fear of 
				punishment, desire, ego, pride, jealousy -- in short the kleshas, 
				then a greater sense of inter-connectedness is experienced, 
				greater wholistic function, health and creative expression is 
				realized. This in turn sparkles over into a deeper kind of 
				direct profound experience -- a deepening of the ordinary 
				modality of sense perception or mind perception to a synchrony 
				of both inner and outer worlds -- the inner and outer ecology 
				pulsate as one -- experience and consciousness --heaven and 
				earth -- are merged. It is this profound inner non-dual 
				transpersonal interconnection which then informs, leads the 
				mind, and shapes the view, not ordinary perception, logic, or 
				the testimony of others. When we acknowledge and honor our 
				deepest spiritual experiences as our guide in everyday life and 
				are open to this in All Our Relations, then we have no need of 
				the dictates or guideposts of beliefs that are born from books, 
				authority, the process of ideation, conceptional fabrication, 
				rational constructs, or ordinary dualistic methods of perception 
				for we have gained insight. Now the above statements may sound 
				bizarre to most people, but it is the common language of the 
				trade in meditation circles, which is my main practice. Also in 
				these same circles it well known through experiencing/practicing 
				meditation that the conceptual tendencies of the frontal cortex 
				(in its function of mental fabrication and rationalizing) 
				gratefully ceases, rests, or is stilled. Meditation may or may 
				not be the common man's game, but it is designed to provide this 
				fruit. That is why I recommended Patanjali's "Yoga Sutras". In 
				this non-dual "reality" which is not constructed by man, but 
				exists by itself from the very beginning then -- this profound 
				or sacred non-dual state, then even the process of feeling other 
				people's grief or simply -- of being empathic, is also not being 
				inter-connected with all beings and all things -- with the grand 
				integrity of everything, but rather it is a fixation on one 
				event or person at the sacrifice of everything else.
				
				An example may reveal the common plight of those afflicted by 
				pramana. One may gather "right knowledge" and facts and has even 
				been taught how to organize these facts "correctly", so that for 
				instance, one may believe that God is omnipresent, Eternal, Pure 
				Love, and other similar details that may be true in one sense, 
				but still one is not closer to realization really. Unfortunately, 
				here we have even taken a step backwards if our acquired 
				external knowledge creates pride, delusion, false identification, 
				and even greater over-objectification and alienation, which is 
				often the case. Such beliefs are based simply on facts and logic, 
				not the experience. It is rather an objective theory, not the 
				experiential truth or realization. Part of the spiritual malaise 
				is that mankind (especially in the West has already become over 
				objectified -- lost in mental theories, abstraction, and mental 
				processes (vrtti) which have not been reconciled with his 
				everyday experience, but rather tend on the most part to 
				preclude or diminish subjective experience. This is not the way 
				to experience direct spiritual truth.
				
				It does not matter much if these theories coincide with the way 
				things "really are" or on the other hand if they are a 
				miscalculation (viparyaya), dream, hallucination, etc., because 
				one still remains separate and estranged from experiencing 
				Reality directly if we become rigidified around it -- unable to 
				let it go, so that we can experience the universal reality which 
				awaits us HERE. One can try to put all these facts and beliefs 
				in one's pocket or computer or even learn to memorize them and 
				recite them at will, but that is not the enlightenment that 
				authentic yoga aims toward. The bigger danger here, is that such 
				walking encyclopedias of politically correct belief systems (BS) 
				too often confuse their external knowledge from spiritual wisdom 
				and thus self perpetuate their own spiritual stagnation 
				unknowingly. Rather it is far more expedient to skip this 
				neurotic behavior from the start as Patanjali recommends, 
				emphasizing the value of developing direct experience through 
				yogic practice, revealing the inner wisdom, or innate buddha 
				nature. This is why yogis always say, that yoga is neither a 
				philosophy nor a religion. It is not based on theory, on books, 
				nor words, but on direct experience through yoga sadhana. In 
				practice, we may find ourselves ignorant and not knowing. It is 
				far better to humbly acknowledge our ignorance and thus humbly 
				say to ourselves that we do not know, than to act in acts of 
				defensive/offensive denial and justification. By saying that we 
				do not know in humility, we bequeath upon ourselves the ability 
				to learn and become expanded. This way we seek out the truth and 
				reinforce our passion for self understanding. It would be 
				counter-productive to instead to adopt some one else's belief 
				system (BS), no matter how authoritative (agama), logical (anumana), 
				or seemingly objective (pratyaksha). Rather it is this very 
				humble search of the true seeker who is not afraid to say that 
				"I do not know" -- who is not satisfied with patented answers, 
				that serves as the flame that rekindles the eternal and 
				authentic spiritual fire within.
				
				Another practical example which is relevant to our daily sadhana 
				occurs where one has acquired special or expert relative/dualistic 
				temporal "knowledge" that holds true (as real) in a limited 
				sense -- only conditionally (true for a given place, time, or 
				special condition), but which holds one back from Universal 
				Gnosis. Such relative fixation especially can create stagnation, 
				blockage, and disturbances in our meditation practice unless it 
				is identified and let go of. For instance, it may be true in a 
				relative sense that the body is sitting is a room meditating and 
				that one is witnessing one's body sitting thusly, but if one 
				holds onto this belief held together by ordinary perception of a 
				separate self perceiving apparently separate sense objects (pratyaksha), 
				one will miss the universal reality of one residing in all 
				places, at all times, with form and beyond form -- one will 
				continue to miss nirbij-samadhi. Here the real yogi must 
				constantly attempt to place oneself within the overall context 
				of yoga (continuity) -- in unity with the Great Continuum where 
				all is in creative flux when the practitioner aligns, abides in 
				and is in unity with the core/heart center (hridayam). This is 
				antarika (from the bottom of our heart) sadhana and as such it 
				destroys the vrtti. All vrtti then must enter into stillness, 
				become nullified, suspended, and cease because they have the 
				potential to produce further hindrances (kleshas) for yogis - 
				further obscuring the field of consciousness. This is at first 
				to be practiced in dhyana (meditation practice) which proves 
				Patanjali correct from our own experience. The practicing yogi 
				must go beyond ordinary pramana to Direct Inner Non-Dual 
				Experience -- to awaken the inborn self effulgent intelligence 
				within (Rtambhara -- see Sutra 48). Later on in the sutras 
				Patanjali elaborates the methods of yoga that destroy the vrttis 
				by destroying ignorance (avidya) itself, but this can not be 
				accomplished without giving up pramana in practice. It is this 
				basic ignorance which obstructs our essential self nature -- our 
				self existing innate natural wholeness called swarupa. For a 
				true yogi, any "view" which is not universal, eventually must be 
				surrendered into the fire of yoga -- all limited views based on 
				time and place must be thoroughly challenged, melted down, 
				purified, disengaged from, and surrendered -- this is the deeper 
				meaning of which the authentic practice of vairagya, isvara 
				pranidhana, tapas, and swadhyaya reveals by itself (through 
				practice). Now this is easier in meditation but the problem is 
				how do we extend that to all our relationships? If you are 
				working, driving an automobile, engaged in complex mathematical 
				calculations, or running dangerous machinery you have to depend 
				on your senses, reasoning, trusted indicators of course. Even 
				then though we can maintain as much awareness/communion with 
				transconceptional consciousness as possible as use it as a 
				guide, but such "demanding' everyday circumstances tend to draw 
				our energy and awareness outward and dissipate it. Living in 
				retreat and/or in nature it more easy to see the one in the many, 
				to live in a non-dual state where dualistic perception, 
				reasoning, and agama are irrelevant -- where sacred presence is 
				immanent. Thus in yoga we try to continue to extend that 
				non-dual realization (samadhi) into All Our Relations all the 
				time. Eventually we can throw out all of that "philosophy" thing, 
				all of good and evil, all of belief systems, dogmatic faith, 
				ideology, the imposition of a straight plane rigidity upon the 
				innate creative healing and beauty way of life, once we have 
				realized to some degree the living reality of the organic world 
				as being a reflection of the creator once we see its true nature 
				and how it is an obstruction.
				
				But no, a beginner usually can not effectively throw out all 
				structure before they establish a trusted or firm grounding in 
				some true clarity of the nature of the unconditioned mind (IM), 
				but we can practice at least in meditation letting these 
				structures go (vairagya) while seeing what comes up. This doesn't 
				mean that we are losing anything, but rather we may be gaining 
				something by creating space, just as one clears out old junk 
				from the shelves, then something new that has more functionality 
				may fit there. This suspension of belief is the same as to 
				entertain asking for guidance -- surrendering to isvara. That is 
				part of the practice. If we are playing a game or buy into some 
				common rules, then within that framework there exists at least a 
				temporary or conditional belief system that has concluded a 
				right and wrong or good/bad, but if two people are of a 
				different religion or value system, how would anyone be able to 
				conclude good or bad or right or wrong. I already said this 
				before in this thread, but again, only if one presumes a 
				universal ethic or principle acceptable to all (such does not 
				exist) -- only then, it would be useful to use the words "good" 
				or "bad", so I avoid it as I have found these merely statements 
				that affirm personal like or dislike, preference or aversion, 
				desire or fear, and the like. that for example is a way one 
				could approach ethics as a philosophical system. This is not 
				just another way of saying that good/right and bad/wrong exist, 
				but that I chose different words in order to avoid relative 
				confusion. Well, yes it is by all means necessary to use 
				different words, because good/bad and right/wrong depend on the 
				game -- they are culturally or religiously conditioned/determined 
				-- they are artificial results (the works of man) unless we 
				assume the imposition of a universal ethic or principle. 
				Actually I do believe that Reality has such universal principles, 
				but it can't be translated in terms of good and bad. Secondarily 
				not everyone is ready to intimately see and live in such a 
				Reality (yet) so such principles can not be universally accepted 
				and described as even being desirable by all let alone "good". 
				But even beyond desirable and undesirable, that is where the 
				Reality of "what-is-as-it-is" (swarupa) the Reality of I-AM is 
				found without being filtered by preference or preconception. 
				That is not a neutral existential reality, but rather a profound 
				non-dual transpersonal sacred communion with everything, 
				everywhere, and all the time. To talk "about it" (philosophize) 
				extracts us from it. At this stage of my experience this is the 
				culmination of yoga for me. Here one even goes beyond dislike/like 
				(aversion and attraction) -- all attachment is dissolved in the 
				living presence of the Great Integrity in which we are.
				
				Nothing is "wrong" or "bad" about the world as it is, it is only 
				people bitching and complaining or stating their preferences, 
				their needs, cravings, and sense of separation really. First 
				there was inseparable unity, but then came the rend, rift, 
				separation, estrangement, spiritual self alienation of ego. That 
				illusion/delusion has become institutionalized by a conspiracy 
				of men's forces aligned with the matrix of ignorance -- 
				programming. manipulating, and exploiting future generations of 
				man to provide for their neurotic security, comfort, and self 
				gratification. The Reality is that such alienated men will never 
				find fulfillment unless they re-enter the living community -- 
				the whole and find their place as one -- acknowledging their 
				place in the over all context of the inseparable 
				inter-connectedness of the web of life. The good news is that 
				this Reality is always accessible and by its originaless nature 
				inseparable, because the very fabric of the matrix is illusory 
				-- an artificial game . So Patanjali and Buddha give us 
				practices to transform illusion, ignorance, estrangement, and 
				suffering into realization. It is instructive that Patanjali not 
				once uses the words good or bad and his system of yama/niyama is 
				not at all meant to be a system of ethics or moral laws as so 
				defined in the Western context. The latter system of ethics is 
				simply another way of manipulating and intimidating people. The 
				Blight of Dogma, Ideology, Belief Systems, Radical 
				Fundamentalism, which are based on valid cognition but not on 
				non-dual insight. In a parallel way, if we look at any belief 
				system we see a structure or way of ordering the world. This 
				structure is always based on principles (conscious or not). 
				There is a cause and effect relationship formed in such "beliefs" 
				about reality. These structures or beliefs obey certain 
				inter-relationship rules. Many people have tried to map such out 
				in many systems. For example, Science of Mind, theology, 
				religion in general, cognitive science (or biology in general), 
				psychology, phenomenology (Hegel), philosophy in general, 
				physics, metaphysics, astrology, etc. These are all ways of 
				viewing or seeing which have their own laws or theories of 
				inter-relationships/connect-ability. Now when these "beliefs" 
				actually conform to the way it really is to a point synergistic 
				synergy is experienced -- wow it all becomes clear and things 
				work! Eureka! Here great inventions are discovered/expressed 
				rather than contrived. This is similar to how Einstein described 
				his own discovery. However all the above are recognized as 
				limited as they offer some doorways into discrete specificity 
				expressions of the whole, but still does it connect us with the 
				whole itself more completely? Not that there exists anything 
				"wrong" or "bad" about the specific expression, or that even one 
				must limit the whole by expressing it (which is not what I am 
				saying), but rather the natural uncontrived reality contains in 
				its completeness an inherent order that can not be contained by 
				man's intellect alone (as the intellect depends on words or 
				other symbols). It can not be contained within the brain or 
				nervous system, yet at the same time each and every cell can 
				resonate in harmony attuned with that all inclusive Infinite 
				Universal Integrity. That Reality is beyond belief. It has its 
				own innate order and laws which obviate the need for manmade 
				structure and artificial systems of thought -- which eliminates 
				neurotic need entirely. I think we agree on this.
				
				This unfabricated "REALITY" is the profound "as-it-is-as-it-is" 
				goal of yoga meditation, according to Patanjali. Patanjali does 
				not define meditation as any
				technique, any doing, any objective practice rather he defines 
				it as its absence. He defines the practices of mere techniques 
				as preparatory to meditation proper in order to help create the 
				stable stage of meditation where ordinary thought processes (the 
				monkey mind) ceases. So Patanjali's definition of meditation is 
				defined as the process of dropping all thought constructs, 
				objectifications, beliefs, as well as techniques unless we 
				define this cessation/dropping of techniques as a technique 
				itself. So then in the end this is the last technique to drop, 
				before samadhi self arises. (as David indicates as the true 
				nature of Mind or the Natural Mind itself (unconstructed from 
				the beginning). This type of meditation is experienced as an 
				emptying process of all these spinning mental processes (called 
				vrtti) which were produced and held together by the kleshas, 
				karma, vasana, and samskara. Then when this spinning is stilled, 
				the mind contents emptied, even beyond the most subtle objects 
				or processes of individual thoughts, then we are allowed to 
				merge in alignment/attunement to that which is profoundly and 
				innately present -- ineffable and unlimited. That is what he 
				calls nirvicara samadhi. In meditation we get glimpses of that. 
				When the mind starts to spin again and fill up, then we empty. 
				Then we taste nirvicara samadhi again. Eventually through 
				repeated practice, it becomes longer lasting and integrated 
				better. For some it becomes permanent samadhi (nirbija samadhi). 
				So in Patanjali's meditation practice (called dhyana) there is 
				no doingness or technique, rather the goal is the letting go of 
				doingness and technique itself -- emptiness, non-doingness, or 
				boundless big openness is experienced. Being open to THAT -- 
				that inseparable inter-connectedness that permeates all and 
				everything which we allow to pierce through our close minded 
				veil when concepts and beliefs are suspended in meditation. That 
				BIGGER order of things -- the Logos, Dharma, Inherent Natural 
				Mind -- call it what you will -- when we are so connected -- we 
				are filled and don't need the crutch of belief systems. 
				Meditation is a great practice, but the meditative experiences 
				are to be gradually integrated into daily life, just like the 
				lessons or experiences learned from asana, pranayama, 
				contemplation, visualization, chanting, art, music, etc. In fact 
				pramana is vrtti for many reasons. Through dualistic subject/object 
				duality in the process of perception of an object, the 
				apprehension process of the mind in which the sense data is 
				being placed (called pratyaya) and then processed is inherently 
				dualistic. It may have value outside (it is first . The 
				inference process itself which in inherently limited (being a 
				mere faint reflection of the Intelligent Source (Param purusha) 
				as well as dependence upon any external validating authority -- 
				all are inherently flawed.
				
				Man falls back to the beliefs and conceptual mental constructs 
				only when there is an absence of divine Grace or Divine order, 
				like why Adam and Eve had to cover themselves after being kicked 
				out of the God's Garden, albeit that is a story with parallel/multi-dimensional 
				meanings. So in saying that in my experience there does exists a 
				divine order, cosmic laws and principles, does not say that I 
				feel it is contrived by man, nor that man can fully comprehend 
				it in his conceptual mind or belief systems, but rather man can 
				only experience it fully when he opens to it fully without any 
				pre-conceptions and especially after dropping belief systems 
				which create abstraction/extraction from "IT". Here one simply 
				aligns with it, abides in harmony with it as an integral part of 
				it (to borrow a phrase from Erich as a wave on the ocean). If we 
				are really there (centered and aligned with it, then there is no 
				other need to fabricate, no fear, no desire, no anger, rather an 
				ecstatic love rules. So maybe we can distinguish between three 
				types of belief systems, only the last one being no belief 
				system at all. The first are the common types based on dualistic 
				experience and ordinary perception (pratyaksha), conceptual and 
				rational thought (anumana), and/or authoritative witnessing and 
				testimony (agama). This creates a top down neuro-physiological 
				conditioning imposed by the frontal cortex upon our 
				psycho-neurophysiology and hence limits our experiences 
				according to the limitations that belong to such beliefs. Belief 
				systems thus can be broken down into three broad categories.
				1. Ordinary dualistic experiences A) experiences that totally 
				dominated by the belief system so that new experiences and 
				information which does not conform to one's firmly held belief 
				system are discarded and or ignored -- they do not compute. This 
				is the common situation of arrogant, closed minded, bigoted, 
				prejudiced. dogmatic, stubborn, ideological, or fundamentalist 
				people. B) experiences are allowed to inform the belief system, 
				they are taken into consideration and are capable of expanding 
				one's vision of realty. But these are still limited, because the 
				nature of the experiences are based on mistake of dualism (separation 
				from all things) rather than one's intimate inter-connection. 
				Thus although the belief system and one's experiences is a two 
				way street, such still severely limits our "reality" and 
				experience. This is the experience of the true scientist, true 
				searcher, or beginner's mind of open-minded people.
				
				2. The second type of person uses their spiritual non-dual 
				experiences to inform their belief system. here the belief 
				system still kicks in, but it is both
				informed and allows for the non-dual and sacred more-so in 
				everyday life, switching back and forth to various degrees.
				3. The third type of person is informed directly through 
				sustained or continuous non-dual experience where there is no 
				need for belief systems because one is being directed and guided 
				by it constantly or to a great degree. Here there is basically 
				no difference between one's belief about the existence and 
				non-existence and existence and non-existence as it truly 
				is-as-it-is, because the ordinary belief processes have become 
				suspended and replaced by an integration of being (sat) and 
				consciousness (citta) . That merger brings as a result ecstatic 
				joy (ananda) brings which is yet another Mahavakya (Satchitananda).
				One could assert then that most of what is called pramana does 
				not differ from what Patanjali calls in the next sutra, false, 
				wrong, corrupted, perverse, or fragmented beliefs (viparyayo) 
				which are mistaken and confused, because any belief based on 
				dualistic cognitive functions are an error in judgment which 
				upholds ignorance -- the illusion of separateness and is hence 
				confused. Only in type two does the "theory" of what-is actually 
				start to conform with the "Reality" of it. Only in part two does 
				the imposition of self limiting theory start to loosen up and 
				allow for more authentic and sacred experiences. In the third 
				type then the conditioning/programming by our past dualistic 
				experiences cease as the unconditioned natural state of Mind 
				dawns. Here yoga practice and especially meditation is a 
				powerful deprogramming tool; then we rest in the natural mind (swarupa). 
				Yes, to experience number three it requires some trust or 
				courage, but not blind faith. Rather asking for guidance is 
				trusting in the sacred enough to seek it out in All Our 
				Relations settling for nothing less. If we can not find the 
				sacred, at least we are conscious of its absence, so that we are 
				able to continue the search/practice. Now if THAT relationship 
				is not functioning (is ignored), if it is not present, when we 
				can't find the great breath, or our practice (sadhana) isn't 
				working, only then, does one desire a need for belief systems 
				such as in #2 or #1 to compensate for that rend from 
				Reality-As-It-Is.
				See the essay "Yoga Sutras Made Accessible" for more on the 
				institutionalization of self gratuitous intellectual 
				provincialism, self indulgent, and stubborn fixed beliefs which 
				fixate traditional values and prejudice that have become 
				dominant within the established order and tradition of Indian 
				(status quo) academia. Such a rigid institutionalization of 
				"right" and "wrong" severely stifles creative thought, fending 
				off its detractors utilizing defensive/offensive modalities of 
				self denial which ultimately is spiritually corrupt. The only 
				"right knowledge" which is worth anything (according to 
				Patanjali) is not ordinary beliefs (based on observation (pratyaksha), 
				anumana (inference), and agama (authority), but rather direct 
				Gnosis/Jnana based on yogic experience, i.e., the type of right 
				knowledge i snot pramana but prajna, It is the result of 
				authentic yoga practice (sadhana) produced through direct 
				spiritual experience, where sattva and purusha are united -- 
				where the vrtti are eliminated. This "prajna (gnosis) is not be 
				confused with pramana. It has to be coincident with direct yogic 
				experience (not held together through agama, anumana, smrti, nor 
				pratyaksha). That knowledge (gnosis) that is gained through 
				authentic yoga is thus based on an experiential unity (samadhi), 
				not separateness -- it is not learned through simple 
				memorization, parroting, obedience, conformity, and jumping 
				through hoops; but rather it is the non-dualistic Gnosis (Jnanam) 
				of being inextricably united with the holographic Universal 
				Transpersonal Non-Dual All Pervading Infinite Self (no separate 
				self). This is what separates yoga from philosophy and religion. 
				It is thus authentic knowledge of the Heart of Hearts (Hridayam), 
				which is thus the authentic goal of yoga, and as such it is not 
				pramana. See for example Sutras I-47, 48, and 49. Some people 
				say that Patanjali contradicts himself here, after all he wrote 
				the "Yoga Sutras". Yes, he wrote them down, but not as a belief 
				system to follow. Rather he added this wisdom for a very 
				important reason; i.e., that it should not replace one's inner 
				way of knowing, but rather bring forth the inner wisdom/teacher, 
				so that one comes face to face with the eternal teacher -- 
				teacher of the most ancient teachers (isvara as purvesham). He 
				says that through yoga we develop direct experience leading to 
				samadhi, yoga being a tool, his book a guide book to the 
				intrinsic guide, an aide toward perfecting the inner realization 
				of the yogic process. Thus the Yoga Sutras are not meant to be 
				scripture nor an authoritative work from an outside authority, 
				but rather a lab book or user guide offered by one who has well 
				traveled the path of yoga before us, compassionately pointing 
				out some things to look for on one hand, and on the other hand, 
				the potential dead end roads. Instead of selling us the map, the 
				map is only temporarily borrowed, being meant to take us into 
				the territory of direct experience. It is that direct experience 
				of God, truth, or Reality (call her by any name you chose) that 
				is the goal of authentic yoga. As such this direct numinous 
				experience should be the goal of any spiritual discipline as 
				well as religion. Any manmade system that substitutes 
				compensatory or symbolic representation for this direct 
				experience is at best a distraction. The latter adds to man's 
				confusion and institutionalizes man's spiritual alienation.
				
				Worshipping Patanjali would also be an oxymoron, as that would 
				only reinforce the spiritual estrangement and alienation that 
				yoga intends to heal and put back together. The Yoga Sutras is 
				thus a tool to cut through belief systems, to cut through books, 
				words, religion, superstition, ritual, ceremony, past concepts, 
				and symbolic forms of worship to the real thing -- the universal 
				inner teacher/teachings which remove the veil of illusion. "The 
				head (sahasrara) is the ocean of delight, The seat of bliss, The 
				thousand-petalled lotus, The seat of liberation. Knowledge of 
				this is not found in books -- It is inherent in the brain! Books 
				are made up of parts But the knowledge that shines in the head 
				is One undivided whole. A book has many chapters, But this 
				knowledge has only one. Books are for those not established In 
				this knowledge. For the person with realization, Knowledge is 
				stable, eternal, and indivisible. A person is born with a brain 
				-- not a book! At the moment of death, there is no book. Only in 
				between do you take up a book. Swami Nityananda, translated by 
				M.U. Harengdi Similarly "When the heart is full, tongue is 
				silent; when the mind is still, intuition functions; when the 
				passions are quelled, devotion dawns; when the senses are 
				controlled, soul force is obtained; when the intellect is silent 
				God speaks; when the 'I' dies, 'He' shines as Radiant Reality" 
				Swami Sivananda Sutra 8 Viparyayo mithya-jnanam 
				a-tad-rupa-pratishtham False beliefs, wrong theories, or 
				corrupted cognition (viparyaya) are rooted (pratistham) in 
				corruptive and perverse process of cognition where the process 
				of establishing the cognition has been corrupted (mithya-jnanam) 
				where contexts become confused (a-tad-rupa-pratistham) -- where 
				one's very perceptual process is mistaken. Commentary: Here 
				false identifications and mistakes of perception as well as the 
				processes of inference are also faulty (one or both) lead to 
				misconceived perceptions creating wrong conclusions, theories, 
				and beliefs because they are based on a lack of perception (pratyaksha) 
				and/or an overall inaccurate context in which to ascribe true 
				meaning to it - such as the common fragmented and dualistic 
				context of seeing things in separate pieces. Here the modern 
				idiom, "garbage in, garbage out" bears a similar message. Many 
				examples abound. In a perceptual sense one's faulty vision is 
				blurred and sees an object faintly at twilight which looks like 
				a tiger to a mind already biased toward the klesha of fear. 
				Combined with one's faulty vision, one believes/concludes that a 
				tiger is there, but later one finds out it was only a large cat. 
				Is it the "mind's bias that has created the wrong conclusion or 
				the fault of the yes? We can call this an error of perception 
				due to lack of light, but really it is an error due to a 
				combination of events both mental and physical. In a simple 
				sense, one may hear a sound of an engine and conclude/believe 
				that it is a lion and run away. That is a result of a faulty "interpretation" 
				of the sound (a mistake in the computational function (anumana). 
				Both are viparyayo (false beliefs or wrong views). But on a 
				spiritual sense any conclusion or belief based on separation or 
				duality that one is separate from All Our Relations is ignorance 
				or based on a false belief. Even though in a physical sense a 
				belief appears to be confirmed through the ordinary channels of 
				pratyaksha, anumana, and agama unless it is informed by direct 
				spiritual insight it upholds the fragmented limited view, rather 
				than the view that includes the sacred whole. In other words we 
				have become conditioned to see "objects" as solid and the 
				physical only, but physicists and babies tell us that all things 
				are fluid, energetic, and inseparable.
				
				Like I might see a light in the sky distorted in the smog and 
				because I have astigmatism it may appear as something else. Can 
				the sense organs be fooled? Certainly. Viparyaya is not 
				dependent solely upon either faulty inference or faulty 
				perception, but either or both can be faulty. I can conclude it 
				is a flying saucer. Even others may verify that it is a UFO or 
				maybe not. Is my sense perception incorrect, my process of 
				inference, or my system of validation incorrect in making such a 
				conclusion? What if my parents and teachers (agama) taught me 
				that the world was flat. My limited sense perception (pratyaksha) 
				might seem to corroborate it, but then
				in the 15th century we learned that this was an illusion or 
				wrong knowledge even though it was based on sense perception, 
				inference, and agama. is that pramana or viparyaya or does it 
				matter? History is full of examples of established theories 
				being demolished by new correct theories established by new data 
				and confirmation. Rather it doesn't matter very much to 
				Patanjali if it is viparyaya (erroneous views or pramana (valid 
				cognition) they are both dualistic vrttis to dissolve. In one 
				sense only when we abide in the true Self as-it-is (swarupa) 
				will have have an undistorted view -- will vidya shine forth 
				destroying avidya. As long as we see things in the dualistic 
				context of I-it (as separate) instead of the non-dual 
				transpersonal world of All Our Relations then in a profound 
				sense, we suffer from errors of perception. Obviously many 
				people are afflicted with the vrtti of wrong and misleading "views" 
				either through a misapprehension of objects of the senses even 
				before the objects become processed (anumana), but also through 
				basic errors of the objects of the mind (where we place our 
				thoughts). Here this basic state of viparyayah can be called 
				simply confusion or delusion, but more specifically here 
				Patanjali is saying that confusion including false 
				identification (viparyayo) false knowledge (mithya-jnanam) which 
				is based upon (pratistham) a misapprehension of an object either 
				by the senses or the mind (a-tad-rupa). Here Patanjali is not 
				even referring to confusion caused by faulty inference or 
				reasoning abilities (anumana), nor even faulty methods of 
				validation (agama), but merely the confusion arising out of 
				perception (a-tad-rupa). Wrong views are similar to right views, 
				but they are based on an erroneous methodology. Why is the 
				methodology faulty, because it is based on a mistaken perception 
				in the first place (here faulty perception), let alone errors in 
				logic, misreadings, superimpositions of fragmented contexts, 
				incorrect application of context or standards -- or any 
				combination of these and more. The anumana and agama will fail, 
				because the pratyaksha (correct perception) is lacking, but even 
				if we were to assume "accurate perception", infallible logic is 
				actually as rare as infallible expert testimony or external 
				indicators. These erroneous assumptions thus color the citta and 
				obstruct the sadhana and thus also have to be given up. Here 
				viparyaya are often more easily given up, than pramana (so 
				called "right" views), because they are not widely backed up by 
				external authority (except in cases of mass insanity or 
				conventional held illusions/prejudice), logical proofs, or 
				ordinary objective methods of perception (such as found holding 
				together pramana). Here at least viparyayo caused by errors in 
				perception can be more easily pointed out, identified, and 
				recognized, thus capable of being eliminated more easily. They 
				are more easily given up, i.e., because they may have less 
				external reinforcements and support (pratistham) so that true 
				wisdom (prajna) can come forth more easily.
				
				This is made clear in Sutra 48-49: Rtambhara tatra prajna 
				shrutanumana-prajnabhyam anya-vishaya vishesharthatvat: "Then 
				Supreme Truth Bearing (rtam-bhara) Wisdom (prajna) self-arises, 
				dawns and prevails, which must be distinguished (anya) from the 
				mere knowledge (prajnabhyam) based on anumana (inference, 
				deduction, logic) and shruti (scriptures, belief, faith, 
				external or objective authoritative sources of knowledge) no 
				matter how "seemingly" authoritative, which is always less 
				reliable and more coarse than this very special insight (visaya) 
				of direct truth bearing wisdom (rtam-bhara), which is based on 
				inner direct spiritual experience and knowledge." On a daily 
				basis, there are many possible examples. We sit in dharana 
				staring at a candle. The eyes tell us that it turns into two 
				candles. We come out of concentration and shift our position 
				slightly and see that it is really one candle, but the eyes (instruments 
				of perception) had gotten tired and slightly crossed, so that 
				the object was misapprehended as two. A policeman goes into a 
				dark bar and sees what appears to be a gun handle in a man's 
				side pocket. This man sees the policeman and almost immediately 
				appears to grab for the gun. The policeman hurriedly grabs his 
				gun and fires it at the man. When the man is searched, it is 
				found at a closer look that he was grabbing for a metal flask of 
				liquor. We live in Chicago, Illinois. A loud noise rings out, 
				like a gunshot. Without thinking we duck for cover, but later 
				find out it is only an automobile backfiring. This is an example 
				of a conditioned viparyayo or a conditioned reflex without using 
				anumana or agama. We hear an airplane, but are reminded by its 
				noise an airplane crash that we witnessed 20 years ago while 
				serving in the military as a soldier. On an emotional level we 
				start to sweat and want to run for safety, but we are walking 
				down the street with other people, so we try to cope. This is an 
				example how two vrttis can work together; i.e., viparyayo and 
				smrti (memory) as a citta-vrtti. A person is brought up in a 
				cave where the source of light is a torch. Bigger torches bear 
				greater light. One concludes logically (with anumana) and this 
				is confirmed by the elders (agama), that light comes from a 
				torch. At an advanced age, the inhabitants of the cave finally 
				find an exit and see the stars, moon, and sun. They then believe 
				that the sky contains very large torches (in their sense they 
				are correct), but in reality something far deeper is occurring. 
				There is almost no end to the permutations of the vrtti. When 
				the vrtti are all given up in yoga, then we are able to see 
				clearly.
				
				Once we are shown our error (in viparyayah), we are usually much 
				more receptive and open minded toward exploring something new -- 
				letting go of the mistaken view or in this case exploring better 
				ways of knowing such as "inner" knowledge and direct experience. 
				However those who are "settled" in pramana (proven theories) 
				backed up by perception and inference) however, may more often 
				stubbornly cling onto their own self made limitations unless 
				"the view" dictates them to look within, give up the glue (observation, 
				inference, and validation) of the vrtti, and experience 
				"reality" for one self directly, without any such filters. This 
				is what Patanjali is saying in the rest of the Yoga Sutras, 
				i.e., self realization comes forth from within from direct 
				experience when the mental processes and external clinging are 
				completely remediated - their interfering waves (vrtti) are 
				annihilated (nirodha). This is why Patanjali includes pramana as 
				the first vrtti, as it is the most stubborn (more difficult to 
				let go of than viparyayo). Pramana is vrtti that most lends 
				itself to the kleshas of self delusion (avidya), attraction (raga), 
				pride (asmita), arrogance, false identification, hatred, envy, 
				fear, and the rest. Here we will include both objects of sense 
				perception as well as objects that the mind focuses upon in our 
				definition of Viparyayah, noting that the classic commentators 
				take the mind's wandering upon objects of thought as vikalpa (as 
				in the next vrtti). Sutra 9 Shabda-jnanaupati vastu-shunyo 
				vikalpah Knowledge and notions (jnana) dependent upon (anupati) 
				on language, words, or such symbols (shabda) often propel the 
				mind into machinations (vrtti) of imaginative daydreams and 
				fancies -- the contrived products of the conceptualization 
				process (vikalpa). They are empty (shunyo) of real meaning (vastu) 
				by themselves and thus are mere semantic fancy entirely 
				manufactured by the mental processes. Commentary: Vikalpa are 
				the artificially constructed preferential propensities based on 
				manmade words (which we will see are essentially empty) and thus 
				carry our attention away from realizing true intimate union 
				(yoga) unless they are surrendered in authentic meditation. 
				Vikalpas are mental constructs, ideations, and conceptionally 
				based thinking processes, and no matter how logical they may be, 
				they remain artificial. What is "bad", about artificial one may 
				ask? Patanjali does not say that it is "bad", only that it being 
				a vrtti, it will hold the yogi back from realizing the 
				underlying unconstructed and unconditioned truth which uncovers 
				the profound Reality of the Great Integrity -- of All Our 
				Relations.
				
				In general the ordinary minds get stuck in the severe limited 
				filter of conceptional realities (vikalpa) just as as they do in 
				other vrttis such as fixed beliefs (pramana) or erroneous 
				beliefs based on faulty logic, perception, or misreadings (viparyayo). 
				Vikalpa (misconception) differs from the confusion of Viparyayah 
				in such that it is dependent upon the more complex processes of 
				a series of words (shabda) which are placed in various sequences 
				and patterns that further fragment and corrupt the mind acting 
				as citta-vrtti. Here these patterning of words (shabda) form 
				conceptional processes accompanied by neuro-psycho-physiological 
				patterning that distract and bias the body/mind energetics when 
				mental objects are engaged, thus severe limitations/modifications 
				results (by what a meditator would call the monkey mind. The "normal" 
				discursive activity of the ordinary mind) occludes the pure mind 
				and stainless mind. This skewed assignment of meaning through 
				coloring/filtering the perceptional processes is another vrtti 
				which meditation practice destroys (in nirvikalpa samadhi). 
				Conceptualization imposes an insulated wall between the observer 
				and that which is observed and prevents direct Gnosis in samyama 
				or samadhi -- in direct knowing reality as-it-is; hence vikalpa 
				upholds/creates a modification (vrtti) of the citta. Words (shabda) 
				themselves are the basic coarse building blocks of vikalpa, 
				while all words, are mere symbolic representations, not the 
				actual reality. Thus they are devoid (sunya) of any true 
				substantiality (vastu). Meditation is designed to destroy 
				vikalpa by first recognizing the conceptualization and 
				fabrication habits of the conditioned mind. Vikalpa also thus 
				includes elements of daydreaming, fancy, speculation, and all 
				artificial induced thought constructs based upon conditioning 
				and words where there is an object, which because they serve as 
				substitutes for "reality" as-it-is. As such we call them also, 
				hallucinations. We participate in this farce by assigning words 
				to objects (objective reality) which appear useful in everyday 
				conventional reality to the extent that these objects do not 
				block out the overall vista (vision) causing avidya. Negative 
				conditioning based on chronic left brain over dominance 
				institutionalizes a chronic state of cognitive dissociation 
				where one's daily reality becomes habituated into a symbolic 
				representations (vikalpa) which bounds the ordinary man to his 
				self perpetuating neuroses. Here again we are reminded that the 
				map is not the territory.
				
				The ordinary person who has not cultivated self awareness,-- who 
				has not practiced meditation which provides access to the self 
				luminous wisdom of residing in the intrinsic gnosis of 
				things-as-they-are does not know yet how self limiting and 
				dysfunctional their ordinary mental thinking process has become. 
				When such starts to meditate, one sees things as they are, hears 
				what is heard, smells what is smelled, tastes what its tasted 
				and does not impose conditioned meanings upon experience. 
				Although this new awareness of the chattering monkey mind may be 
				alarming to the ego's delusion of "self" at first, it is 
				eventually seen as the liberation of grace once one realizes 
				that it has been pre-existing, but previously unnoticed. It is 
				through the sadhana of meditation that we start to observe that 
				our attention (what we call the ordinary mind) wanders from 
				object to object. What we call ordinary "thinking" about "something" 
				is thus also vikalpa. After a bit of self awareness and expanded 
				consciousness, we gradually begin to notice that the mind tends 
				to attach itself to objects as we ordinarily "think 'about' an 
				object".
				
				Ordinarily these objects of attention change from one object to 
				another driven by the winds of karma, vasana, and the kleshas. "This" 
				or "that" object is described (usually in words) and thus we 
				observe it as mind chatter (shabda). In meditation we do not "judge" 
				this wandering as "bad" nor do we try to suppress or control it, 
				but simply notice the monkey mind's propensities. We do not 
				repress nor react to it, thus we do not indulge it. We neither 
				ignore nor attempt to transcend it, thus we do not fuel our 
				aversion, fear, or preferential mind. By giving it no fuel 
				whatsoever, and we thus do not allow it to deplete our cit-prana 
				(attention and energy). Eventually it ceases to command our 
				attention at all and ceases by itself (as being self liberatory). 
				This happens through a joint effort of vairagya (non-attachment) 
				and abhyasa consistent practice). See sutra I.12 below. That is, 
				as we notice as the monkey mind wanders, we become aware of the 
				process of noticing, the presence of a more expansive underlying 
				awareness that is aware of the wandering attention of the small 
				mind, and which is aware of itself. Thus through repeated 
				practice (abhyasa) we stop getting caught in and carried away by 
				the vikalpa. In other words we observe that the mind is 
				wandering, but there is some larger "Mind" (citta) that is 
				watching the individual mind's machinations (manas). In 
				meditation we get to know and cultivate this more expansive and 
				all encompassing Mind which does not wander which is timeless, 
				universal, and eternal -- we discover its headwaters so to speak. 
				When this stage becomes stabilized or rather when we abide 
				within this awesome all encompassing stillness, then if the mind 
				starts to "think", roam, or chatter, we automatically, 
				spontaneously, and naturally notice this as it arises and even 
				before the first word in the process is uttered, it disappears 
				and is engulfed into this roaring silence until the wandering 
				ceases altogether (in nirvikalpa samadhi). Yet Patanjali tells 
				us that nirvikalpa is not the end, rather we have to go through 
				nirvicara samadhi and finally nirbija samadhi (see Sutras 
				I.47-51 below).
				
				After consistent practice (abhyasa), the yogi realizes that the 
				ordinary thinking of the monkey mind always depends upon an 
				object. Even when that object doesn't change, for example in 
				concentration (called dharana), there is still an object of 
				attention, a separation between the "I" and the "object". Later 
				on in the Yoga Sutras Patanjali suggests allied practices which 
				help to remove the restless characteristics of the individual 
				mind, how to still the thought process, eliminate the vrtti, and 
				empty the mind from what often appears as a cacophony of chatter. 
				But concentration on objects (dharana) no matter how "holy" 
				eventually needs to be let go of in authentic meditation (dhyana). 
				After practice we eventually come to see that obsessing/fixating 
				around any separate object of attention -- what we are thinking 
				about, is not only bondage, but an illusion, i.e., that it only 
				appears separate because we have defined it to be so in our 
				limited belief systems. In the "Reality" of All Our Relations, 
				this seemingly separate object that is grasping our attention) 
				or rather which our attention has temporarily become fixated 
				upon and/or is attracted toward) is empty (sunya), it does not 
				exist as a separate object of the mind (pratyaksha). Thus we 
				enter the more subtle formless realm void of coarse form -- void 
				of form and duality (nirguna) -- an ever present 
				undifferentiated and non-dual consciousness is embraced. We 
				increasingly become aware of this underlying sacred presence in 
				All Our Relations. Although Patanjali has only briefly touched 
				upon the conditioned tendency of the ordinary mind to grasp upon 
				objects (called pratyaksha), he elucidates this subtle process 
				on how to identify and remediate this and other similar 
				hindrances (all of which which become revealed during meditation) 
				in the rest of the Yoga Sutras. In fact when read correctly, one 
				understands that Patanjali's purpose is to explain the process 
				of success in Raj Yoga. The yogi does not have to understand any 
				of these terms in order to gain success in yoga. Sadhana such as 
				meditation alone is capable of bringing success, but it is 
				Patanjali's aim to aid us in this sadhana. Thus to sum up, 
				vikalpa can be said to be the "ordinary" mind's thinking process 
				which artificially isolates our attention from Reality as-it-is 
				in All Our Relations. Vikalpa as the normal state is thus often 
				symbolized as a daydream, a mirage, or hallucination, while 
				"reality as-it-is is revealed when we awake from the our dream. 
				Thus as a vrtti, vikalpa is distinguished from the true nature 
				of the Awakened Mind -- which is non-dual, universal, all 
				inclusive, and eternal. Thus vikalpa too must be eliminated (nirodha) 
				like all the other vrttis. When the distraction of vikalpa is 
				annulled/eliminated (nirodha), then thought constructs also 
				cease, then the mind rests in its own intrinsic self nature (swarupa). 
				Then the real nature of Mind thus can be directly realized. See 
				in also Sutra I.42. Sutra 10 Abhava-pratyaya-alambana vrttir 
				nidra The vrtti of drowsiness, stupor, torpor, inattentiveness, 
				and sleep (nidra) is experienced (pratyaya) when the supporting 
				base (alambana) of the content of the mind (pratyaya) is not 
				present (abhava) -- [the overall continuity or integrity in All 
				Our Relations of the intelligent principle of consciousness] is 
				occluded that links the contents of the mind in an overall 
				intelligent integrity (through bhava). 
				Commentary: Because of the word structure, this sutra is often 
				interpreted that Patanjali is only referring to the experience 
				of deep dreamless sleep. Certainly in deep dreamless sleep the 
				mind is empty and devoid of consciousness and conscious intent (bhava) 
				and the contents of thought (pratyaya) stops. Although a deep 
				rest may occur and any object that occludes or disturbs 
				consciousness (cit-vrtti) is eliminated, there none-the-less 
				exists a deep modification/occlusion (vrtti) of consciousness 
				because here consciousness is entirely blocked even in deep 
				dreamless sleep (sushupti).
				It is valuable here in order to clear up unfortunate common 
				traditional misconceptions to point out that the word, nidra, 
				refers to any state of sleep; while specifically, the word, 
				sushupti, is the Sanskrit word for deep dreamless sleep. Nidra, 
				as any aspect of sleep, is another particular vrtti that 
				occludes recognition of any object or non-object -- of any 
				individual consciousness itself also ceases. This is indeed a 
				severe cit-vrtti where consciousness appears to be entirely 
				absent in the individual. Here some temporary deep respite, 
				regeneration, and rest from the conceptional (monkey) mind can 
				occur, but actually without conscious integration what remains 
				is the possibility of a severe dissociation and blockage between 
				the source of consciousness and the individual's ordinary daily 
				consciousness. Consciousness and its modifications are often 
				broken down into fours states. The first is called jagrit which 
				is a severely modified, limited, identification -- what we call 
				ordinary daily dualistic waking consciousness which supports (alambana) 
				the illusion of incompleteness, the ignorance of separation, 
				desire, aversion, greed, and of lust may be very stressful and 
				greatly unselfconsciousness. Although we call it waking 
				consciousness, it is mostly ignorant and thus characterized as 
				as a dream, illusory, partially asleep, or unenlightened. Such 
				differs from dreaming only relatively to the degree of conscious, 
				intellectual control, individual will, and one's degree of 
				interaction with coarse sense objects. The second unawakened 
				state is what we call normal sleep with dreams (usually 
				occurring at night, napping, or day dreaming). 
				In Sanskrit it is called swapna. This state is where the deeper 
				unconscious forces dominates relatively more as compared to that 
				of jagrit (the above state where daytime worldly dualistic and 
				coarser sense object activities supported by the intellect and 
				will) conscious intent predominate. Both of these first two 
				states of partial sleep (jagrit and swapna) can be very restless 
				until they are integrated as one non-dual consciousness through 
				yoga. Dream yoga integrates these by at first realizing the 
				relative interactive nature between jagrit and swapna and then 
				seeing that unitive connection of actions and results within 
				both jagrit and swapna reflect an overall continuity (yoga) of 
				consciousness and karma revealing the innate timeless unformed 
				great universal unconditioned (turiya). Details of dream yoga 
				will only be roughly outlined here.
				
				The third state of ordinary limited states of mind called 
				sushupti, or deep dreamless state. Another common name for this 
				is swapna nidra, which simply means dreamless sleep. The 
				individual's mental processes (manas) are entirely at rest. That 
				fact alone is beneficial, because the monkey mind (such as 
				vikalpa) are absent. Here by the absence of the other vrttis, 
				mental objectifications, and false identifications one can 
				approach experiencing pure beingness to a great extent. Here 
				rest and regeneration can be achieved. The yoga scriptures (Shastas) 
				proclaim that deep dreamless sleep (sushupti) is very close to 
				samadhi, because the discursive mind is absent (indeed it is 
				nirvikalpa), but for samadhi to occur recognition or 
				consciousness must also be present -- for absolute pure 
				beingness to occur there must be mergence with absolute pure 
				consciousness (as we shall see later on in the Yoga Sutras. 
				However in deep dreamless sleep we are not conscious (abhava) of 
				anything. Here also there are no objects of the mind, so pramana 
				and Viparyayah is absent as well. Only in deep dreamless sleep, 
				is consciousness entirely absent and there is no linkage to the 
				other three states. Obviously any spiritual intent (bhava) is 
				also latent. Thus this state of deep dreamless sleep is very 
				restful and beneficial because the discursive monkey mind is no 
				longer chattering, but this is not the fulfillment of yoga 
				because it lacks consciousness, rather it is simply deep rest.
				
				So to avoid the common outsider's misinterpretation (which 
				includes many Buddhists as well) that samadhi or sunya is merely 
				a swoon, a self hypnotic state, or a self induced catatonia, 
				Patanjali makes it clear that yoga is definitely about 
				consciousness, not sleep, and hence nidra is classified as a 
				vrtti. This confusion is exacerbated by some classical 
				interpreters who equate sushupti with prajna (wisdom) or sunya (emptiness) 
				because their "reality" assumes a fundamental split (the 
				dualistic separation of Atman and Brahman). Rather yoga. prajna, 
				or true sunya is about waking up which Patanjali clarifies 
				unmistakably in Chapter 4. Yes, indeed if we include all three 
				sleep states of partial wakefulness (jagrat), partial sleep (swapna), 
				and deep dreamless sleep as having Turiya as its underlying (but 
				unrealized basis) then there is from the beginning no separation 
				(only consciousness has become isolated and discontinuous). 
				Indeed this is the goal of yoga -- to unite the illusory 
				fragmentation (vrtti) and split offs of consciousness and make 
				it complete, whole and continuous (yoga). Thus in yoga one does 
				not go off into a separate dualistic trance merging with the 
				absolute while ignoring manifest creation (the natural world of 
				evolution) but rather samadhi is an all encompassing 
				transconceptional non-dual experience. Similarly this example 
				should make it clear that nirvikalpa samadhi is not the goal of 
				yoga either. This is because in dreamless sleep there exists no 
				vikalpa, but yet there is still no samadhi (enlightenment). The 
				goal of yoga thus as being merely the nirvikalpa state has to 
				also be given up. Such a dualistic assumption is unfortunately a 
				very common error first promulgated by Vyasa and followed to 
				this day. Rather the authentic goal of yoga according to 
				Patanjali is not dreamless sleep (sushupti), but rather the 
				innate turiya state which Patanjali defines as nirbija samadhi 
				which can only be accomplished through the merger of pure 
				consciousness and pure existence where all suffering is 
				dissolved -- in Sat-Chit-Ananda.
				
				Waking up is also synonymous with samadhi. Thus as shown the 
				third stage of deep sleep; i.e., the deep dreamless sleep of 
				classical sushupti, is considered very close to samadhi as that 
				there exists no objects of thought that are grasped onto, no 
				restlessness of the mind, no attachment, no fear, no stress, no 
				aversion, no kleshas
				(except the samskara of ignorance), and no sense of separateness 
				except for one -- separateness from consciousness. Here all one 
				has to do is wake up! Wake up not into the dualistic world of 
				sense objects but into that non-dual transpersonal emptiness 
				which completes all time, everything, and everyone. Hence jagrit, 
				swapna, and sushupti all are linked by an element of sleep -- 
				even deep sleep would not be necessary for rest, respite, and 
				regeneration if jagrit and swapna were not by their nature 
				stressful and tiring. This waking up process heralds in turiya, 
				the fourth or "other" state beyond sleep. It is synonymous with 
				samadhi and encompasses and truly makes the previous three 
				states obsolete. Turiya is not limited by time nor place, nor 
				dimension. In turiya there is no separation, no stress, no 
				conflict, no degeneration, no corruption and hence no need for 
				regeneration or integration. Turiya is the trans-dimensional 
				aligned and integral state represented by the great living 
				yantra. Jagrit thus is the ordinary dualistic fragmented 
				consciousness governed by sense objects, intellect, and 
				individual intentions and kleshas. Although called conscious, 
				contains much subconscious forces. The second state of ordinary 
				dreaming sleep (swapna) is usually translated as subconscious, 
				but it has many semi-conscious elements and is influenced by our 
				daily life (jagrit). Study proves that the conscious and 
				semi-conscious states as defined in Western terms can not be 
				entirely separated. Likewise sushupti is specifically 
				differentiated as being "unconscious"; yet it too is influenced 
				by and influences both our daily life (jagrit) and dream states 
				(swapna). Given the above all three states of jagrit, swapna, 
				and sushupti can also be considered unawakened states (simply 
				variations of nidra). Here we can "see" deep dreamless sleep (sushupti) 
				as a relative calm in the overall hurricane of cit-vrtti (fluctuations 
				and disturbances of the ordinary mental patternings). Only in 
				turiya, which is the natural unconditioned state of freedom and 
				which is the same as nirvicara samadhi, do we truly wake up. 
				Likewise in yoga nidra (yogic sleep), consciousness and 
				continuity exists between the states of deep restfulness, 
				awareness of the surroundings, and dream like images that well 
				up from the unconscious and the collective unconscious. Yoga 
				nidra occurs in modified states of turiya and includes the 
				elements of what is called lucid dreaming.
				
				So we take the term, nidra, to pertain not only to deep 
				dreamless sleep, but rather elements of nidra operate in any 
				ordinary situation where the average man has their bhava 
				(spiritual focus) distracted, subdued, limited, and distorted. 
				In fact most of mankind are deep asleep to Self, thus yoga 
				becomes the process of awakening us to our true self (in swarupa) 
				-- to our higher creative potential -- awakening the kundalini, 
				latent Buddha nature, or innate potential Christ within, through 
				the elimination/cessation (nirodha) of the vrtti. Thus in the 
				integrity which is yoga, nidra can mean any awakened state 
				including drowsiness, dullness of mind, or in a gross form a 
				sluggish and stupor like ignorance. Bhava means spiritual intent, 
				mood, or focus -- the divine passion and presence that twinkles 
				in the eyes of a "turned-on" practitioner. Abhava then is the 
				opposite, where divine passion or sacred mood is absent. As one 
				progresses in yoga, the vrtti dissipate -- the citta is less 
				turbulent, the spiritual passion increasingly becomes focused, 
				and thus a greater inward clarity, calm, peace, and strength 
				abides. Here, nidra becomes less dominant, and indeed in many 
				realized souls ordinary sleep also ceases. In deep dreamless 
				sleep with consciousness, yogic sleep is possible (yoga nidra). 
				The sadhak (practitioner) increasingly becomes more awakened and 
				attuned to divine presence -- beyond even the most subtle 
				continuously without a break between night and day, but rather 
				the integrity of the night and day is affirmed. Divine bhava 
				awakens us to Self. This is called waking up from the sleep of 
				ignorance (avidya) or mukti. Abiding increasingly "HERE" in All 
				Our Relations -- devoid of inner psychic disturbances, tensions, 
				conflict, or stress one will need less sleep to regenerate -- 
				there is less to recover from. Another interpretation of sutra 
				10 is that the vrtti of nidra (sleep) is experienced (pratyaya) 
				when the individual mind is occupied by phantom-like objects 
				supported (alambana) by empty symbolic representations devoid of 
				real form (abhava). Another similar interpretation is that in 
				lack of spiritual presence and intent (bhava) creates the 
				conditions of nidra (sleep) where thought devoid of any coherent 
				context is generated. Simply this can describe the ordinary 
				unawakened mental processes (manas) of the common "normal" 
				modern man who is asleep to one's true nature -- to All Our 
				Relations. Since bhava means spiritual intent, mood, or focus -- 
				the divine passion and presence that twinkles in the eyes of a "turned-on" 
				practitioner, thus abhava is the opposite, i.e., absence of 
				sacred presence.Thus the vrtti of sleep (vrttr-nidra) is the 
				result (alambana) of absence of bhava (abhava-pratyaya). Compare 
				this with Sutra I.19, the practice of waking up in 
				transcognitive awareness (asamprajnata) by bhava-pratyayo (where 
				the spiritual mood is focused and present). Prayer by 
				Shankaracharya, Translation & Commentary by Vimala Thakar Pratah 
				smarami hridi samsphura ta twam Sthitau paramahansa gatim 
				turiyam Yat swapna jagara sushupta mavaiti nityam Tad brahma 
				nishkalamaham na cha bhuta sanghaha.
				
				"In the morning as I meet the dawn, I remember that my heart 
				contains the God, the Beloved, who has not yet been defined and 
				described. I remember that it is He who vibrates within my heart, 
				enables me to breathe, to talk, to listen, to move. When I am 
				thus aware, that it is He who lives and moves within me, then 
				the three phases of consciousness, jagrat, swapna, sushupti : 
				wakefulness, dreaming, and profound sleep, they are transcended 
				into turiya, the fourth dimension, which is behind the 
				wakefulness, the dream-consciousness, and the 
				sleep-consciousness. When I thus remember, that the underlying 
				current behind the wakefulness, the dream, and the 
				sleep-consciousness is He, who lives and moves within me, then 
				that awareness gives me sat chit sukham, the flavor of the truth, 
				the reality, and the bliss that is the nature, the basic primary 
				nature of life. Sat chit sukham. When I am always thus aware of 
				the real nature of life, then I arrive at paramahansagatim 
				turiyam. I arrive at a state of being that has been called by 
				the ancient wise Indians "Paramahansa", a swan that swims 
				through the waters of duality. That is how a sanyasi is called a 
				paramahansa, one who lives in the renunciation of that austere 
				awareness that it is not he who lives, as separate from the 
				universe, but that he is only an expression of the universal. 
				The state of paramahansa is the state where a person is aware 
				that he is not a conglomeration of sense organs and only the 
				five elements, but he is the nishkala Brahman, the supreme 
				Brahman, the divinity, who has taken the dense form of a mind 
				and a physical body." Sutra 11 Anubhuta-vishayasampramoshah 
				smrti The vrtti of smrti (memory) is the process where objects (vishaya) 
				of past experiences (anu-bhuta) still occupy (a-sampramoshah) 
				the present. This identification from the past obscures and 
				interferes with the mind-field creating disturbances (vrtti) of 
				the mind-field (citta). Commentary: Smrti includes all colorings 
				of past experiences, our past conditioning and programming, the 
				knee jerk reflexes from past traumas, acquired habits (vasana), 
				and the like. Normally we "think" that memory is "good" and 
				useful and in ordinary everyday experiences it can be as long as 
				it does not seriously distort the sacred profundity of the 
				eternal now -- of "Reality-As-It-Is" without the distorted 
				imposition of past impressions. However in the practice of 
				meditation, which is what raj yoga is all about, ordinary memory 
				is a vrtti which holds back, restrains, and obscures the pure 
				self effulgence of infinite consciousness. When we meditate, we 
				want to let go of such obstructions and habits of past 
				modalities of the thinking processes (vrtti). That is the 
				subject of the next sutra (Sutra 12).
				
				The ordinary problem is that the ordinary dualistically oriented 
				person carries this black cloud of past traumas, dramas, 
				memories, and past dualistic false identifications
				and fixations along with them wherever they go. Thus a new 
				experience may occur such as hearing a sound, seeing a color, 
				tasting, smelling, touching, sensing, but then that experience 
				then is patterned and re-ordered according to one's memory of 
				past experiences rather than allowing the experience to be 
				experienced fully as it is without prejudice. Past events, 
				traumas, samskaras, verbal, preverbal, post natal, prenatal, 
				peri-natal, karma, and their associations make up the past 
				imprints which fuel the myriad dramas and compulsive habits (vasanas) 
				that occupy our attention and thus occlude the mind-field (vrttis 
				created from smrti). Past experiences and habits condition and 
				often color the way we view "Self" in a biased, prejudicial, and 
				limiting way which obscures Universal Presence. It is worthwhile 
				to note that also on a physiological level, past memories are 
				stored not only in an energetic and psychic field (now 
				identified by modern neuro-physiological psychology) in which 
				they shape individual mental, emotional, and behavior processes, 
				but also they are stored as cellular memory, neuromuscular 
				armoring, and the neuro-endocrine system often far removed from 
				the central nervous system and brain. Body psychotherapy and 
				psycho-neuroimmunology recognizes such memory imprints and 
				attempts to both read and access them through trans-verbal 
				(right brain) methods such as through touch, tonality, gesture, 
				and movement. Later Patanjali will address how specific types of 
				actions produce certain effects such as psychic impressions (samskaras) 
				and afflictions (kleshas) that impinge upon and color the 
				present. Indeed yogic sadhana (practice) is designed to 
				subsequently remediate/integrate our past experiences so that 
				they no longer obscure profound presence in swarupa by creating 
				vrtti. Smrti is also the same word used for the vast body of 
				stories and dramas found in the indigenous ancient Puranic 
				literature -- the legacy of the past so to speak. When these 
				stories become wisdom stories clarifying the mind field rather 
				than dissuading consciousness away from the eternal present, 
				only then do they cease to be a distraction, diversion, or vrtti. 
				Ordinary dualistic memory processes are thus to be distinguished 
				from Divine (non-dual remembering. Mostly people simply memorize 
				the smrti, so that they act as surrogate/symbols for divine 
				rememberance but stop short of removing dualistic veils. In fact 
				they can reinforce the separateness (or duality) -- the rend 
				from our own divine spiritual nature. Likewise it is through 
				divine re-memberance (as non-dual as opposed to ordinary 
				dualistic memory processes) that remembrance of who we truly are 
				(swarupa) in the great integrity of All Our Relations 
				accompanies the cessation (nirodha) of the cit-vrtti.
				
				Past actions thus leave a karmic residue which can be said to 
				reside in a personal storehouse consciousness (called alaya 
				vijnana). These residues have an impact upon our present 
				relationship and consciousness until cleared. 
				When this is cleared then one no longer is victimized by the 
				karma of the past actions, but is free *mukti) or liberated. 
				Here the citta-vrtti cease for the individual. Collectively all 
				past actions of all beings are stored in a collective karmic 
				storehouse (the collective alaya vijnana). 
				When the collective storehouse consciousness (alaya vijnana) has 
				become remediated, then the present world of suffering ends -- 
				all beings are liberated and unconditionally happy. 
				 
				Here all the citta-vrtti cease. All past karma (actions) are 
				evidenced in the storehouse of our own or our collective 
				storehouse of consciousness. The realization of alaya vijnana 
				thus remediates the limitations, colorings, and patternings (vrtti) 
				of ordinary smrti upon the citta itself. Indeed it is through 
				yogic practices (sadhana) that we "see" that the common man who 
				is immersed in everyday dualistic fragmented consciousness is 
				most often living inside of an old drama/story, while yoga 
				brings us to greater awareness of our role and scripts freeing 
				us from its grasp, acknowledging sacred presence. Likewise smrti 
				(modifications of the thinking process due to the impositions of 
				past memories, past legacies, residues, impressions, experiences, 
				nostalgia, grief, trauma, etc) implies a limited, colored, 
				biased, or false identification and hence attachment to specific 
				objects or events that occurred in the past. As such, the vrtti 
				of smrti acts as the residual framework for bondage to klesha, 
				karma, vasana, and samskara. Those tendencies prevent us from 
				being present. Yoga is designed to break up old habits (vasana), 
				remove old samskaras (psychic imprints and trauma), remove 
				afflictive emotions (kleshas), and remediate old karmic patterns. 
				In memory we often call up past experiences to identify an 
				object or situation. This is not being in the present, but 
				rather coloring our present unique experience with the past. 
				Each moment "in reality" has the potential to contain all of 
				Reality (past and future) -- The present as it is -- not colored 
				by past habits is precious as well as timeless -- it is a self 
				luminous manifestation (sat) of pure consciousness (cit) which 
				rests in the feeling of ananda (ecstasy). Too often when we see, 
				smell, hear, taste, or feel an object, it is the memory which 
				ascribes meaning to "it" in a past context which discolors, 
				occludes, and modifies our experience. Through yoga we learn to 
				see things as they are in the magical and sacred moment of 
				eternity This timeless way of seeing is ultimately fulfilling, 
				but can not be rushed. It is not dependent upon our past 
				experience, yet through consistent yogic practice (abhyasa) it 
				can be realized.
				
				"When one has removed all trace of delusion together with the 
				habitual tendencies producing it, this is called ‗fruition‘ 
				Buddha nature. States of confusion do not belong to the essence 
				of mind. When they have been removed, clear light luminosity, 
				which is essential to mind, directly manifests. When this takes 
				place, fruition sugatagarbha is achieved. One has achieved the 
				enlightenment of the Buddhas. At the point when the Buddha 
				nature is obscured by the adventitious stains of delusion one 
				might think, 'If the basic nature of my own mind is obscured by 
				the incidental stains coming from my own delusion, how am I 
				supposed to know how to rectify the situation?' The point is, 
				such knowledge is accessible, because the Buddha nature contains 
				within it the seeds of knowledge (prajna) and compassion. 
				Because the seed of knowledge is naturally present, listening to, 
				reflecting over and meditating on the dharma is able to catalyse 
				a growth and development of this knowledge. This growth in 
				knowledge in turn corrects the deluded state." from "Beautiful 
				Song of Marpa the Translator" by Khenpo Tsultrim Gyamtso 
				Rinpoche & Zhyisil Chokyi Ghatsal Publications 2002. The 
				practice of yoga that Patanjali teaches brings out our natural 
				uncontrived state which is ever-present inherent and within, but 
				remains obscured through the wavelike operation of the kleshas 
				and vrtti. We will see in Sutra 12 how vairagya is the perfect 
				remediation for all the vrtti. See also Sutra 43. Sutra 12 
				Abhyasa-vairagyabhyam tan-nirodhah These vrttis (operations and 
				machinations of the mental processes) are dissolved, eradicated, 
				eliminated and cease (nirodha) by sustained and continuous 
				application in All Our Relations of the practice (abhyasa) of 
				vairagya (letting go, non-attachment, non-craving, non-grasping 
				and non-expectation). Commentary: Another similar translation 
				would be that the cessation/dissolution of the vrttis (machinations) 
				can be accomplished through engaging the process of consistent 
				integrated practice (abhyasa) without attachment to results (vairagya) 
				. Thirdly, the most common translation, has Patanjali saying in 
				effect that the cessation of the vrttis (nirodha) can be 
				obtained through two non-contradictory methods, i.e., of 
				non-attachment (vairagya) and also through consistent practice (abhyasa). 
				These different statements share a common direction and differ 
				only subtly, but not in intent (i.e., the cessation of the vrtti 
				occur through consistent applied yogic practice with vairagya (without 
				attachment to results) or perhaps the vrttis cease through 
				sustained application of releasing the tendencies toward mental 
				processes as a whole.
				
				Please note that abhyasa, consists of abhy (repeatedly and 
				intensely facing the goal) and asa (to sit or abide). Thus 
				abhyasa connotes intensely abiding in the practice. Vairagyam 
				being non-attachment to results, expectation, preference, or any 
				desire then connotes that abhyasa-vairagyabhyam are not two 
				separate practices to eliminate the vrtti, but are to be taken 
				both as one together as one practice, never separated. The 
				spirit of vairagya is to be accompany and applied in every yoga 
				practice. This is a most profound process oriented (versus goal 
				oriented) synthesis. As practitioners know from experience, it 
				is too easy to get goal oriented and lose the sense of sacred 
				presence. Too often a practitioner will become drawn into, 
				obsessed, and fixated/attached to the goal of the practice that 
				the result is not precluded such as in incessant striving. Here 
				is the yoga statement that success comes from both grace (isvara 
				pranidhana) and sadhana (practice). It is not an either/or 
				proposition (is it grace or sadhana). The two meet as one -- 
				divine will and individual will are married/synchronized here. 
				This is how nirodha (cessation) of the vrtti is established. Now 
				the ordinary man who has become addicted to cognitive processes 
				of objectification and who has lost their sense of subjective 
				experiential wholeness (beingness) may not be able to imagine 
				surrendering his mental operations/processes (vrtti) or having 
				them cease. Indeed in everyday life that discursive mind (often 
				labeled as the monkey mind) with its inertia of incessant mental 
				processing is usually chattering save for brief times of taking 
				pause, awe, grace, or serendipity. However in meditation the 
				monkey mind can calm down and cease as the mind lets go of its 
				grasping onto mental objects. This letting go process of 
				grasping onto mental objects as well as concepts in meditation 
				practice is vairagya. To sustain that in sitting meditation (dhyana) 
				is abhyasa. One continually applies abhyasa-vairagyabhyam 
				Applying abhyasa-vairagyabhyam continually, intensely, and 
				repeatedly creates much open space eventually leading to the 
				dissolution of the vrtti back to its source, allowing a mergence 
				into the of self effulgence luminous big space empty space -- 
				sunyata or the boundless mind to coalesce. This is where taking 
				a retreat, going to the mountain, roaming in the desert, vision 
				quest, meditation (dhyana), as conscious practices manifest. 
				Most modern people can‘t afford elaborate retreats but but 
				everyone can meditate (as a complete let go) for ½ hour or so a 
				day and practice other yoga techniques as well in this same 
				spirit. Then we can start trying to modify our life style (aparigraha) 
				so that abhyasa-vairagyabhyam allows for complete and continuous 
				illumination eventually ending in samadhi. The idea of the 
				co-existence of "non-attachment" (vairagya) in relation to 
				practice ("abhyasa") is understandingly difficult to the Western 
				novice, because too often non-attachment and consistent practice 
				may appear oppositional; i.e., the word, practice, too often 
				connotes willful effort, hard work, and control. However what 
				about a freely flowing enthusiastic type of practice which is 
				loving, passionate, playful, joyful, and not based on putting 
				one's nose to the grindstone? In other words a successful 
				practice does not have to be forced. fixated, driven, willful, 
				and neurotic.
				
				By abhyasa-vairagyabhyam, we understand that vairagya 
				(non-attachment to results) is the essential key practice (abhyasa) 
				in and by itself which can be applied consistently in All Our 
				Relations, then the contradiction between abhyasa and vairagya 
				ceases. Indeed we shall see how sustained intense practice (abhyasa) 
				applied without attachment to results (vairagyam) is a profound 
				principle when applied to All Our Relations is the key to yogic 
				union. Such activities expand (tan) the process of citta-vrtti 
				nirodha. The non-yogi may logically ask how then can a loving, 
				passionate, enthusiastic, and dedicated practice exist without 
				attachment. This is precisely where Patanjali is heading -- the 
				uninterrupted flow of Divine consciousness. It requires two 
				things for attachment to take place. In terms of yoga there 
				seems to exist the seeker or practitioner (sadhak) on one hand, 
				and there seems to exist the object or goal of yoga on the other, 
				but in the Integrity/Reality of All Our Relations there exists 
				no separation, rather in yoga the true self abides in swarupa 
				(in one's true form) which is not governed by the vrtti. This 
				profound theme is what Patanjali will be addressing throughout 
				the remaining of the Yoga Sutras. Here there exists a natural 
				propensity, love, dedication, devotion, and zeal without 
				attachment because it exists only in the sacred world of the 
				Natural Mind -- without expectation. There in Indigenous Time -- 
				in the Eternal Present, there is no goal orientation, no 
				separate object relationships, and no sense of alienation from 
				Self. Indeed the natural inspiration for practice is due to this 
				communion with this timeless Reality, while effective practice 
				moves us deeper. In other words sustained practice must be 
				framed within the non-dual context of the eternal here-now in 
				order for it to become effective/expedient (upaya). This eternal 
				now is where we are going in yoga, but at the same time it is 
				now and always has been from beginningless time. To mistakenly 
				think that it is somewhere else, is reinforcing an illusion. 
				Thus again we are encouraged to entertain instant presence in 
				All Our Relations. Starting here with Sutra I.12, Patanjali 
				enters into exposition of the specific remedial activities (sadhana) 
				of yoga which lead to samadhi and foremost of them is the very 
				causative application of tan-vairagya (extending the 
				non-grasping) - the process of letting go -- of non-attachment, 
				which facilitates the mind being present -- having arrived home. 
				If there exists one basic application in meditation which is 
				infallible, it is this -- Being present -- at one with Sacred 
				Presence.
				
				Here vairagya can be translated not only as non-attachment to 
				results and release, but perhaps more valuable as letting go of 
				all expectation (non-expectation) -- to expect the unexpected. 
				This is the necessary open minded attitude where functional 
				success in yoga is realized. The cessation (nirodha) of the 
				fluctuations, modifications, and distortions (vrtti) of the 
				citta (mind) are catalyzed through the practice of vairagya -- 
				the non-expectation of the beginner's mind. How else could rapid 
				dissolution of the vrtti occur? HERE in this context is where we 
				can achieve liberation. The practice itself (abhyasa) teaches us 
				vairagya (non-attachment as release). It teaches us that it is 
				futile to clutch, grasp, or hang on to the vrttis (although this 
				can be a life time lesson for many). The major vrtti are pramana 
				(politically correct and logical beliefs), viparyayah (erroneous 
				or false notions), and vikalpa (conceptional artificial thought 
				constructs in general) which glue together the largest false 
				identification/belief i.e., that of a separate self (ego). It is 
				this liberation from the limitations of ego delusion which must 
				be realized. It is done so through the consistent application of 
				the practice of vairagya in All Our Relations The practice 
				itself is an opportunity to let go of grasping and to get into 
				that beginners mind (expecting the unexpected). This kind of 
				non-willful practice itself thus facilitates the vairagyam. Such 
				is not performed by using the judgmental process (should I 
				practice or should I not practice), the intellect, or will (which 
				belong to avidya), but rather this kind of practice facilitates 
				vidya by itself. "Clear mind is like the full moon in the sky. 
				Sometimes clouds come and cover it, but the moon is always 
				behind them. Clouds go away, then the moon shines brightly. So 
				don't worry about clear mind: it is always there. When thinking 
				comes, behind it is clear mind. When thinking goes, there is 
				only clear mind. Thinking comes and goes, comes and goes, You 
				must not be attached to the coming or the going." —Zen Master 
				Seung Sahn The importance of vairagya as an integral part to all 
				yoga sadhana cannot be over emphasized. It along with isvara 
				pranidhana (surrender to our higher potential) occupy more space 
				in the yoga sutras than any other practices. Vairagya indeed 
				leas us to kaivalyam (absolute liberation). See III. 50 
				tad-vairagyad api dosa-bija-kshaye kaivalyam
				
				Summary of the above Sutras 1-12 so far.
				Patanjali first has stated the goal of yoga, the nature of the 
				modifications of consciousness to be eliminated (citta-vrtti 
				nirodha), then he described their oscillating operations. Sutras 
				4-11 thus name, describe, and categorize the causes of the 
				vrttis (disturbances, agitations, or fractuals of the mind field) 
				while sutras 12- 16 introduce the two proficient remedies that 
				dissolve, remove, and/or eliminate vrtti i.e., vairagya (the 
				continuous practice of letting go, non-attachment, or 
				non-expectation) and abhyasa (consistent or continuous yoga 
				practice). According to this pada, when vrtti is dissolved or 
				annihilated, yoga or union with infinite mind is realized which 
				is called samadhi. Sutras 4-11 have been given far too much 
				academic attention than they merit (mostly by scholars rather 
				than yogis). Those dependent upon mental constructs (vrtti) tend 
				to make this appear far more complex than it really is, because 
				they themselves are not able to step outside of thought 
				constructs i.e., they are unwilling to take Patanjali's remedy 
				which meditation affords. Here Patanjali is simply saying that 
				the vrttis can be classified into five categories. These five 
				categories of vrttis again can be analyzed whether or not they 
				are associated with kleshas (defilements) or not). Here 
				Patanjali addresses the disconnection i.e., what is not yoga-- 
				what obstructs our spiritual unification. Intellectual scrutiny 
				especially through reductionist means of inquiry will be found 
				to be counter-productive, rather it will be found later that 
				Patanjali prescribes trans-rational methods. To demystify verses 
				I. 5-11, Patanjali is addressing the vrttis and how to eliminate 
				them. He does not limit the vrttis to five, but simply says that 
				they can be so arranged or classified --placing them into five 
				possible categories. Most vrttis exist as a combination of two 
				or more of these basic categories. This is a cogent point, 
				because the vrttis (as conditioned thought patterns/machinations) 
				can take on myriad forms. We all know what a vrtti is (the 
				ordinary person experiences vrttis almost all the time except in 
				rare moments of clarity, vision, inspiration, beauty, satori, 
				revelation, meditation, or samadhi). The problem being is that 
				when cit-vrtti is dominant, we are not normally conscious of its 
				coloring effects; i.e., we are unable to step outside of it and 
				notice or be aware of its influence. Thus one who meditates 
				starts to notice the arising and falling of the vrttis. 
				Eventually through awareness they no longer are capable of 
				misleading us. Thus vrtti is not meant to be some abstract 
				intellectual, but any thought pattern that occupies or possesses 
				our mind field of attention -- any limiting modality of 
				patterning that colors, obscures, perverts, corrupts, limits, 
				restrains, or prejudices our experience of our inherent true 
				nature (swarupa), original mind or infinite mind.
				
				Likewise kleshas are also not to be viewed as some abstract or 
				esoteric mystical concept, but rather referring to everyday 
				ordinary experiences which unfortunately
				arise and surface at many times during the day or night (as well 
				as in meditation) - anytime our buttons are pushed, our chain is 
				yanked, fuses are blown, red flags are waved, -- when we feel 
				disconnected. desirous, or incomplete; when we "react", become 
				perturbed, uncomfortable, needy, compulsive, defensive, angry, 
				fearful, paranoid, grievous, anguished, jealous, hateful, 
				judgmental, disparaging, or are otherwise modify the basic 
				natural condition of Infinite Mind with the aberrations, 
				confusions, or disturbances associated with negative 
				conditioning, past programming, and habits -- when we act out of 
				ignorance, rather than wisdom. Thus simply stated, it is the 
				removal (nirodha) of these vrttis and kleshas which the process 
				of yoga facilitates as we move into greater clarity and self 
				empowerment -- into our true and authentic Self (swarupa). The 
				traditional intellectually bent commentaries often enter into 
				dense nitpicking and often obtuse philosophical detailing on the 
				specific mechanisms and dynamics of the vrttis (disturbances and 
				fractuals of the ordinary machinations of the dualistic mind), 
				but it is precisely this intellectual academic reductionist 
				circumlocution that Patanjali tells us can be circumvented in 
				yoga meditation. These are the pitfalls that must be dropped for 
				they will bear no lasting fruit. Sutras 5-11 are not important 
				sutras because they simply describe what yoga is not about; 
				however they have elsewhere been made so overly complicated and 
				obtuse through self indulgent over intellectualization on behalf 
				of scholars, intellectuals, and religionists (versus practicing 
				yogis) that many interested readers have been discouraged to 
				continue. Since I have already pointed out this tendency to 
				bastardize the sutras, from now on this translation will pay 
				less attention on what yoga is not, but rather attempt to spend 
				more time on what yoga is, namely samadhi or union, which is the 
				main focus undertaken in I. 17- 51. In this middle section of 
				Pada One (13-15) Patanjali discloses two key remediations that 
				lead to nirodha (vairagya and abhyasa). Patanjali is saying in 
				effect that the cessation of the vrttis (nirodha) can be 
				obtained through two non-contradictory methods, i.e., of 
				non-attachment (vairagya) and also through consistent practice (abhyasa). 
				We will actually see later that the entire remainder of the Yoga 
				Sutras deals with letting go (releasing) our attachment upon 
				objects (coarse or even the most subtle). This is achieved in 
				asana practice as well at the end of dharana where we surrender 
				the dualism of any object as well as the observer of 
				concentration into the objectless/goalless state beyond "even 
				the most subtle" where all separation melts down. HERE through 
				successful dhyana thought modifications (vrtti) no longer arise 
				-- there is no longer anything left to let go of. Sutra 13 Tatra 
				sthitau yatno'bhyasah There (tatra) through a consistent and 
				sustained dedication, devotion, zeal, or concentrated enthusiasm 
				(yatnah) in our practice (abhyasa), then a certain steady, still, 
				stable, and balanced (sthitau) self supporting state is achieved. 
				Commentary: This way we form the stable base to progress in yoga 
				practice. A sustaining, dedicated, devotional zeal, and/or 
				natural concentrated enthusiasm enters into our practice. It is 
				provides an increasingly accessible still, stable, and balanced 
				self supporting impetus in which to proceed. Thus, Patanjali 
				defines yoga practice (abhyasa) as that activity which leads us 
				toward, supports, and strengthens the presence of a sense of 
				balanced and steady stillness (sthiti) where the polar 
				turbulences or conflicts no longer tug nor nag the mind stream. 
				Here the word, sthitau, is translated as a passive firmness, 
				stillness, or a restful steadiness, something like what we can 
				experience in sama-sthiti or tadasana, rather than associate it 
				with the idea of, fixity, which conjures up a contracted and 
				active image of rigidity. Yogis do not pursue rigid minds and 
				bodies. One translation of sthitau is a coming into a stable 
				situation of rest, stillness, and quietude -- a steady abiding 
				at REST. Abhyasa should lead to a relaxed, stable, calmness, 
				steadiness, restful, and self supporting stillness and stability 
				of the mind-filed (sthiti). After it is firmly established it 
				self perpetuates its own power and intelligence. Swami Veda 
				Bharati interestingly translates Vyasa's commentary (bhashya) on 
				I.13 as: "Stillness or stability (sthiti) means the mind-field (citta) 
				flowing pacifically when it is without vrttis. The endeavor 
				tending towards this purpose is virility or exertion. Practice 
				is the observance of the means thereto, with the will to achieve 
				its fulfillment." Later SW. Veda Bharati comments on Vyasa's 
				commentary: "The endeavor is directed towards sthiti and is 
				explained by Vyasa by offering two synonyms: virya: virility, 
				vigour, strength, energy, potency, the qualities of a hero 
				utsaha: enthusiasm, perseverance, fortitude, firmness, exertion, 
				vigorous pursuit. Obviously an endeavour should be undertaken 
				with these heroic qualities turned inwards and their intense 
				concentration directed at the effort to bring the mind to 
				stillness."
				
				from the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali with the exposition of Vyasa, 
				Volume I, Pandit Usharbudh Arya (Swami Veda Bharati), Himalayan 
				Intl, Inst. 1988. Again the mutuality of abhyasa (as the 
				sustaining practice) and vairagyam (letting go) in I-13-16 is 
				very profound skillful balance taken together (upaya) because "ordinary" 
				mental processes which are operating under the dictation of 
				dualistic mentation (the normal situation of the ordinary 
				discursive mind) very often create a confusion between "practice" 
				on one hand, and " letting go" (vairagya) on the other. This 
				occurs because ordinarily we often confuse/associate practice 
				with individual willfulness. In yoga balance is key. For example 
				in India where there may be much abundance of indifference and 
				surrender then abhyasa is often emphasized as vairagya is taken 
				for granted. However in the West there is more fixation, goal 
				orientation, obsession, and attachment so vairagya has to be 
				emphasized in order to achieve synergistic balance. For the 
				hatha yogi, HA or pingala nadi represents abhyasa and THA or the 
				ida nadi represents vairagya. Their balance provokes a mutual 
				synchronization, synergy, and activation in the central channel 
				(sushumna nadi) where a stable self supporting (sthitau) 
				enthusiasm (yatnah) manifests. Those of us lost in duality 
				mistakenly think that practice on one hand and non-attachment to 
				results on the other, are conflicting, and thus a needless 
				tension is created. Really they are meant to work together as 
				will be illustrated in the following sutras. Consistent practice 
				eventually reveals what we are holding onto; i.e., what is 
				holding us back. Thus release (via vairagya) catalyzes our 
				liberation (mukti) from bondage. Similarly, just the intent of 
				taking up a practice is an affirmation of making a change in 
				one's life and that it concomitant with letting go of something. 
				Here effort and non-effort form the yang and yin -- the two 
				poles of the great process of yoga sadhana that Patanjali is 
				describing in Samadhi Pada. Just as profound is the question 
				whether it is through man's work or divine grace that ultimate 
				realization dawns. Is it earned or is it is bestowed? This is 
				easily answered that by vairagya one does not mean a passive 
				collapse or state of inertia because Patanjali calls it a 
				practice. It is a particularly advanced practice that lets go of 
				all attachments, even that of practice, thus creating space for 
				Grace -- for the higher transpersonal wisdom to dawn (as we will 
				see in Sutra 49 (Rtambhara prajna). One finds that in order to 
				even find our practice and to have the grace to "do" practice, 
				as well as to be successful in practice, such is due to to Grace 
				alone due in the end to Grace -- a higher and more profound 
				transpersonal wisdom and identification. But this does not mean 
				that abhyasa does not act as an invitation to Grace when 
				practiced wisely (upaya).
				
				Consistent practice over time by itself builds up its own 
				intelligent momentum and acts as the innate always accessible 
				transpersonal teacher, especially apparent when we are able to 
				give up expectation and preference (attachment to results) other 
				than to simply abide in the sacred space which is always 
				available and present within. This enables us to focus upon the 
				innate beauty and power of the practice as an ongoing self 
				revelatory process which provides access within to the timeless 
				attributeless eternal universal transpersonal source which 
				resides in all (isvara). HERE inspiration, zeal, dedication, 
				devotion, and natural enthusiasm (yatnah) work reciprocally so 
				that the practice becomes self perpetuating, self sustaining, 
				effortless, energizing, and self inspiring. All activity becomes 
				a moving meditation which reveals the ever present true Self and 
				thus the practice takes on a life by itself, becomes energized 
				and empowered, self actualizing, self empowering, self 
				liberating, fertilizing the pregnant fields (abhumih) which 
				gives forth beginningless birth, and which endows the fount of 
				inspiration (virya). Eventually this practice become continuous 
				(the esoteric meaning of the word, yoga, in All Our Relations! 
				Sutra 14 Sa tu dirgha-kala-nairantarya-satkarasevito 
				drdha-bhumih Then after a sustained period of time (dirgha kala), 
				with attentiveness (satkara), and consistent dedication (a-sevitah), 
				then the practice itself will become self perpetuating and inner 
				directed (nairantarya). Commentary:Practice will eventually 
				spontaneously manifest from the inside out as a natural result. 
				Practice becomes continuously inner directed (nairantarya), 
				gains its own integrity, maturity and basically becomes well 
				established through repeated prolonged or consistent application 
				(dirgha-kala) especially when combined with the concentrated 
				energetics of dedication, diligence, devotional attentiveness (satkara) 
				which are assiduously cultivated (asevito). Simultaneously as 
				our practice matures in stages, the quality of our enthusiasm, 
				dedication, devotion, and desire to practice synergistically 
				improves. In other words we find that functional practice leads 
				to even more enthusiasm to the fertile soil (abhumih) of an even 
				more functional (a-sevitah) practice i.e., it becomes natural, 
				flowing, and self perpetuating. In terms of 
				psycho-neuro-physiology a positive biofeedback loop is formed. 
				This is a natural continuation of Sutra 13. Although Patanjali 
				will offer many specific practices (sadhana) later, he expands 
				upon this theme that through a consistent and sustained 
				dedication, inspired enthusiasm, and devoted concentration (yatnah) 
				in our daily practice (abhyasa), then a certain steady and 
				balanced (sthitau) state is achieved which liberates the 
				naturally fertile and self perpetuating potential of the 
				practice over time. Here the practice itself becomes steady, 
				self established, self liberating, and inner directed (nairantarya) 
				having established a direct communion and intelligent energetic 
				dynamic of its own because the inner conduits (nadis) of the (cit-prana) 
				animated by cit-shakti has now become opened. A good practice 
				grows on us naturally and is naturally expansive, self 
				liberating, and self instructive.
				
				This practice creates a realignment and karmic shift paralleling 
				that of the intelligent energetic dynamic which the functional 
				practice itself creates over time. We can call this regaining 
				the natural intelligence of the body-mind or simply a 
				spiritually self empowered, practice which empowers our inner 
				wisdom while irrigating the evolutionary centers. To go deeper 
				in trying to express this profound mutuality of an empowered 
				practice most often becomes difficult to express in words. At 
				first (to those who have not yet experienced it), it may sound 
				like "mumbo jumbo", but advanced practitioners will take this 
				reading as a confirmation. This activated power of the practice 
				becomes a springboard itself -- its ability to become 
				spontaneously self instructing and self liberating has become 
				fertilized. This is what is meant by virya (as shakti pat) in 
				its more esoteric sense. Thus the true yogi goes to his/her 
				practice for instruction and guidance as it brings forth the 
				inner wisdom and inner teacher, while a religionist or 
				academician goes to ancient books or external authorities for 
				guidance.
				
				"The moon and sun unite within your body when the breath resides 
				in the meeting place of the two nadis ida and pingala. It is the 
				spring equinox when the breath is in the muladhara, and it is 
				the autumn equinox when the breath is in the head. And prana, 
				like the sun, travels through the signs of the zodiac; each time 
				you inhale, hold in your breath before expelling it. Lastly, an 
				eclipse of the moon occurs when the breath reaches the abode of 
				kundalini via the channel ida, and when it follows pingala in 
				order to reach kundalini, then there is an eclipse of the sun! 
				The Mount Meru is in the head and Kedara in your brow; between 
				your eyebrows, near your nose, know dear disciple, that Benares 
				stands; in your heart is the confluence of the Ganges and the 
				Yamuna; lastly, Kamalalaya is to be found in the muladhara.
				To prefer 'real' tirthas to those concealed in your body, is to 
				prefer common potsherds to diamonds laid in your hands. Your 
				sins will be washed away... if you carry out the pilgrimages 
				within your own body from one tirtha to the another! True yogis 
				who worship the atman within themselves have no need for water 
				tirthas or of gods of wood and clay. The tirthas of your body 
				infinitely surpass those of the world, and the 
				tirtha-of-the-soul is the greatest of them: the others are 
				nothing beside it. The mind when sullied, cannot be purified in 
				the tirthas where man bathes himself, ...Siva resides in your 
				body; you would be made to worship him in images of stone or 
				wood, with ceremonies, with devotions, with vows or pilgrimages. 
				The true yogi looks into himself, for he knows that images are 
				carved to help the ignorant come nearer to the great mystery." 
				Yoga Darshana Upanishad,4.40-58 trsl., J. Varenne, Yoga in the 
				Hindu Tradition, Univ. of Chicago Press, 1976. Then in I.15 (after 
				addressing abhyasa) Patanjali addresses the practice of vairagya 
				(what some may call the practice of non-practice). Sutra 15 
				Drsta-anusravika-visaya-vitrsnasya vasikara-samjna vairagyam 
				When the mental operations no longer is focused (drsta) upon 
				external teachings found in tradition (anusravika) nor any 
				externalized objects based within a relative conditional 
				framework (visaya), then a mastery (visikara) and freedom from 
				desire (vrtrsnasya) toward the external world of the sense 
				objects (visaya) is established. Then our practice comes 
				together and is touched by the intimate knowledge (samjna) 
				[which is gained through the activity of efficacious release 
				called non-willful doing (vairagyam)]. Commentary: HERE we are 
				moved by the non-dual wisdom which brings joy, being free from 
				the limitations of ordinary conceptually and extrinsic grasping 
				-- the outward spinning discursive thought patterns and 
				mind-sets which oscillate in the narrow corridors of the 
				conditioned (visaya) neurotic mind (citta-vrtti). The expedient 
				proficient activity which cultivates inner flow when outflowing 
				cit-prana is redirected inward (vasikara), is vairagya (release 
				of self efforting and attachment to results); which is 
				accomplished when the yogi is no longer possessed by nor 
				possesses neurotic cravings of external objects (visaya) of 
				fulfillment (vitrsnasya) in the dualistic mindset of a separate 
				"I" and "it"; thus the seer rests in undisturbed non-attachment 
				and release (vairagya). Thus desirelessness (vitrsnasya) is 
				achieved through perfection (vasikara) of vairagya which 
				coincides when one comes into an integrated inner understanding 
				(samjna) that the objects of senses (visaya) such as what we see 
				(drsta) and hear (anusravika) and all other such conditional 
				frameworks based on sense objects (visaya) will only distract 
				the mind and energy (cit-prana) further. When the cit-prana is 
				no longer drawn outward by apparently separate objects (seen, 
				heard, heard of, sensed, or imagined), then vairagya is 
				perfected. Thus the consistent practice (abhyasa) of vairagya 
				greatly aids us remain centered in our core (heart). It also 
				brings us into kaivalyam when we let go of the artificial 
				distinction between purusa and sattva (Sutra III.50) Perhaps a 
				simpler interpretation is that the word, samjna, merely means 
				equivalent, so that Patanjali is saying that the practice of 
				vairagya produces an accomplished state where a freedom from (vitrsnasya) 
				from limited relativistic and dualistic frameworks (visaya) is 
				achieved which were previous limited to things seen, heard, or 
				imagined in the past. Here one wakes up in true attentiveness, 
				no longer being distracted and dissipated into a disparate 
				dualistic world where the separateness of self (spiritual self 
				alienation) is validated. An esoteric interpretation is that 
				Patanjali is saying that through truly seeing (drsta) and 
				listening (anusravika) with the third eye (beyond the dualistic 
				method limited by the senses) then true understanding (samjna) 
				of the emptiness (sunya) of the sense objects will be realized, 
				thus leading to the natural mastery and freedom from desire (vitrsnasya), 
				therein vairagya becomes perfected in swarupa (abiding in our 
				natural true self). HERE in the profound non-dual transpersonal 
				sense there is no separate self and separate object of attention.
				Traditionalists, fundamentalists, and orthodox Hindus however 
				take anusravika in the Vedic sense of "listening to tradition, 
				authority, or the Vedas", but since Patanjali never mentions the 
				Vedas nor since he considers pramana to be a vrtti, this would 
				seem to be putting a Vedic spin on his rather plain and obvious 
				meaning regarding vairaga and abhyasa. Such adherents also of 
				course take vasikara as being forceful and willful control as 
				opposed to referring to the occurrence of a mastery which no 
				longer subject to the polar assaults of separate subject/object. 
				Traditionalists seem to read-in a lot of their own ideological 
				agenda in their interpretations. However if we take Patanjali 
				literally as meaning exactly what he says; i.e., as the 
				authority rather than his Vedic interpreters then the value of 
				the sutra takes on a profound Yogic message rather than a Vedic 
				message. If Patanjali meant something very different, then he 
				would have said it. When we look at the Yoga Sutras in that way 
				they make a lot of sense in regard to what our own practice 
				teaches, but when we take the institutionalized orthodox 
				interpretations, such makes little sense other than as an 
				intellectual exercise or philosophical discourse on the Vedas or 
				samkhya philosophy. In any case, in this sutra Patanjali states 
				that by releasing our hold on things that hold us back -- things 
				of the past as well as fixations (expectations) upon the future 
				and especially the way the mind grasps onto "objects" we can 
				achieve a thirstless/desireless state which in its positive side 
				provides fulfillment and completion. This desireless state (vitrsnasya) 
				awaits us in the non-dual present of All Our Relations. Along 
				the same lines it seems that the idea of subjugation, control, 
				nor even anything to do with the Vedas (as in the common 
				interpretation of may be reading in something that was not 
				intended (certainly it was not said by Patanjali). For example 
				vasikara/vashikara can be mastery or perfection, not necessarily 
				stemming from active methods of willful control or subjugation (especially 
				so when we are applying this to vairagya). If Patanjali meant 
				willful control, then we must ask "who" is it that gains that 
				mastery and over what? Control refers to struggle, but vairagya 
				refers to release. The inclusion of normal willfulness would 
				just be reinforcing the illusion of separateness, avidya, and 
				specifically the klesha of asmita? Patanjali however is far more 
				advanced than that, rather he specifically says that vairagyam 
				is accomplished when thirst/desire ceases (vitrsnasya). It's 
				simply over when we relinquish it. Similarly the word, samjna, 
				is here translated as "coming into understanding" or born of 
				self awareness . Samjna is composed of sam (together) and jna (to 
				know or understand), so that vairagya and vitrsnasya are being 
				equated.
				Again there is no intention of restraint or control (which is 
				unfortunately too often mistakenly attributed to vairagya), but 
				rather mastery or perfection (vitrsnasya) so that the outflowing 
				of the cit-prana ceases (in perfected vairagya). To a willful 
				and left brain dominant person mastery may conjure up force, 
				control, or restraint, but here it should be obvious that the 
				mastery is one of release, letting go, and surrender pertaining 
				to vairagya (non-attachment -- non-control). Vairagya is a let 
				go, a release,
				or simply non-attachment of any anticipation and hence anxiety 
				also departs. Here goal orientation is utterly defeated as well 
				as dependence upon conditioning (visaya). In this way 
				unconditional joy and well being is naturally affirmed and self 
				sustaining. It is not unusual that the traditionalists will 
				bring in the Vedic spin and issues of control in their 
				interpretations in 1.12-16, because Patanjali is speaking about 
				the exact opposite of control, tradition, and the past, i.e., 
				vairagyam. Vairagya as release becomes clear to advanced 
				meditators (those who practice over time). The ordinary mind 
				tends to wander toward objects of attention, yet applying 
				vairagya consistently (not through control, suppression, nor 
				restraint but simply by repeatedly releasing the the thoughts 
				and words of the monkey mind as they start) then the arising of 
				thoughts eventually becomes pacified and eventually cease for 
				longer and longer durations until this becomes recognized as our 
				Natural (unconditioned) Mind in swarupa. "If while speaking of 
				the samadhi of oneness, you fail to practice straightforward 
				mind, you will not be disciples of Buddha. Only practicing 
				straightforward mind, and in all things having no attachments 
				whatsoever, is called the samadhi of oneness. The deluded person 
				clings to the characteristics of things, adheres to the samadhi 
				of oneness, and thinks that straightforward mind is sitting 
				without moving and casting aside delusions without letting 
				things arise in the mind. This they consider to be the samadhi 
				of oneness. This kind of practice is the same as being 
				insentient like a rock and is the cause of obstruction to the 
				Tao. Tao must be something that circulates freely; why should we 
				impede it? If the mind does not abide in things, the Tao 
				circulates freely; if the mind abides in things, it becomes 
				entangled." from the "Platform Scripture", Hui-Neng Through 
				tasting the effects of vairagya in daily practice (on or off the 
				meditation cushion or practice mat) in All Our Relations as to 
				where our thoughts are wandering and letting them go (not 
				following them), then our attention is naturally brought back to 
				the core center in vasikara samjna vairagyam. We become aware of 
				the discursive (monkey) mind wandering and we bring it back 
				through pratyahara. Here vairagya is the remedy for all outward 
				cravings and anticipation -- specifically the remedy for the 
				kleshas of raga (attraction) and dvesa (repulsion). It is the 
				very reversing outward flow as in pratyahara away from outward 
				dissipation/distraction, then back into the center or sushumna 
				creating inward and upward flow in the core center (sushumna). 
				Through vairagyam and/or pratyhara we withdraw the clinging of 
				the mental energies toward duality (external objects either 
				mental or physical) and draw the energy back to the Source of 
				consciousness. Thus we prevent the cit-prana (consciousness and 
				vital energy) from dissipating and spinning outwards through 
				implementing and directing the inner gaze. This rekindles our 
				natural innate yearning and passion for Self -- it is at once 
				inspiring, strengthening, potenizing, and invigorating. When 
				this re-alignment is well established over time (through 
				authentic abhyasa and vairagyam), it establishes its own 
				energetic dynamic revealing the non-dual (inner/outer) teacher. 
				This creates a karmic shift paralleling that intelligent 
				energetic which the practice itself creates over time. We can 
				call this regaining the natural intelligence of the body or 
				simply a self empowered, practice which empowers our inner 
				wisdom. This way we re-educate our pre-existing errant mental. 
				emotional, physical, and energetic proclivities toward seeing 
				the Universal Self continually in All Our Relations. Thus we 
				conjoin the process of unifying with the intelligent Source of 
				cit-prana) more deeply communing with it here and now in sacred 
				presence. We both welcoming it while it simultaneously it 
				welcomes us in the Reality of the Great integrity of the 
				unconditional eternal (Infinite Mind). We gradually become more 
				at home residing in the Eternal HERE. Such reprogramming is the 
				result of functional and authentic yoga practice. This is done 
				by releasing old thought patterns which obsess upon the future 
				or the past, old karmic patterns, old mind sets, or any such 
				other goal oriented fixations, false identification, 
				neuropsychological dysfunctional patterns, goal dependent 
				orientations, or more simply put attachments, expectations, 
				prejudices, and anticipations dependent upon the past or future. 
				This release of anticipation spontaneously directs the vital 
				energy and attention inward to a centered and still place, and 
				thus one's proclivity and passion toward its benefits increases 
				automatically and naturally; i.e., a new positive biofeedback 
				loop or habit is formed, while the practice of "vasikara samjna 
				vairagyam" becomes the practice of no practice -- effortless, 
				invigorating, energizing, self inspiring. self liberating, and 
				free from "self"-will.
				
				On a simple level, vairagya is the acceptance of the present 
				without anticipation, apprehension, fear, desire, longing, 
				expectation, or even preference. Vairagya does not mean some 
				neutral passionless state of detachment, spaciness, indifference, 
				withdrawal, or abstraction; but rather as we will see in the 
				next sutra, vairagya can be equated with the divine passion for 
				ultimate union with param-purusa (reconnection/reunification 
				with universal spirit and consciousness) as our everyday 
				embodiment/manifestation --as our Reality in All Our Relations) 
				is maturing. In other words when we empty out the pot of dank 
				water, it can then be filled with fresh nectar. Thus this is a 
				simultaneous process of letting go of dysfunctional attractions 
				and anticipations (the kleshas of raga and dvesa) while at the 
				same time deepening our passion/communion in sacred presence. 
				Vairagya as such redirects the cit-prana from an outward, 
				dissipating externalized distraction, back into Source and back 
				into the body as an inner directed act that catalyzes divine 
				passion. As such on many parallel levels with such practices as 
				pratyhara, pranayama, aparigraha, santosha, tapas, isvara 
				pranidhana, bandhas, mudras, and others. When that sense of a 
				deep heart felt "connection" is strengthened through practice, 
				then in turn neurotic distractions spontaneously and naturally 
				lessen. That light of consciousness (citta) which was previously 
				obscured through the action of vrtti (the veil of ignorance) 
				starts to shine through more often, further reminding us to let 
				go of old corrupting and dysfunctional modalities of tension, 
				strife, and disintegration. As vasikara (mastery) becomes slowly 
				perfected (as no longer being subjugated to outward flows of 
				consciousness and prana), it is here also that the bandhas 
				become engaged spontaneously, the inner seeing becomes amplified, 
				our practices become extended to All Our Relations producing 
				virya (empowerment), and unconditional joy re-enters into daily 
				life more continuously. Sw. Venkatesananda's commentary on this 
				Sutra talking of samjna and vasikara says; "The attention that 
				was flowing outwards suddenly begins to flow toward yourself. 
				That is called vasikara which means that it comes under your 
				control. That is control of a very different kind. There is 
				neither expression nor suppression, but intense self-awareness. 
				When in the light of self-awareness the mental colouring is seen 
				and the object is then seen not to have that value, 
				simultaneously the craving disappears...That is not yoga because 
				you get so dreadfully committed to the vrtti called control. 
				Yoga has slipped through your fingers". This state of 
				thirstlessness leads us well into the key of understanding and 
				applying sutra 1.16 in the lofty terms of nonattachment to the 
				gunas (guna-vaitrsnyam) as param-purusa-khyater (the revelation 
				of param purusa). Sutra 16 Tat param purusa-khyater 
				guna-vaitrsnyam Through that [practice] where total non-fixation 
				and independence (vaitrsnyam) from the illusion of 
				differentiated physical objects (the gunas) occur then one 
				realizes (khyater) the param purusa (the Infinite Mind).
				
				Commentary: Progressively then as the strength of one's practice 
				increases, the vrttis also correspondingly subside, we 
				eventually wind up in stillness and clarity of the bigger 
				transpersonal non-dual and transconceptional Mind. Then the 
				individual mind has become transformed/enlarged resting/abiding 
				in its true nature (swarupa) as a realization (khyater) dawns of 
				param purusha (Infinite Mind, Supreme Self, or Absolute 
				Universal Transpersonal Consciousness). this awareness grows on 
				us through practice. It becomes increasingly present as sacred 
				divine presence. Thus through this dawning realization (khyater) 
				of param purusa one wins the freedom
				from any distractive desires (vaitrsnyam) for external objects 
				(the attractive outward spinning of the mind toward the gunas 
				are stilled) as we focus on the unitive Cause of relativistic 
				duality/differentiation (the gunas). This is the realization (khyter) 
				of param purusha (the transcendent All Encompassing Universal 
				Consciousness) [which is brought about through not being caught 
				up (vairagya) in the multitude differentiations of mundane 
				relativistic existence (gunas) as being separate individual/differentiated 
				forces (discrete). Simultaneously the yogi wins freedom (vaitrsnyam) 
				from the cause of bondage to differentiated objects which only 
				appear to be separate but in Reality are all united in the Whole. 
				By realizing the transpersonal non-dual whole (param purusa) -- 
				the Great Integrity, Big Self, or Boundless Mind, by the 
				cessation (nirodha) of habitual superficial dualistic mappings 
				of the mind (visaya) which occur through the distorted lens 
				where consciousness is abstracted into differentiated physical 
				objects of existence (gunas), then the dualistic colorings, 
				filters, veils, shrouds, enslavements, hindrances, and other 
				such limitations based on the delusion of separate object and a 
				separate perceiver (ego), which is called ignorance (avidya), 
				are loosened, eventually dissolve, and are utterly destroyed (nirodha) 
				Here the word, guna, simply refers to the differentiating 
				process of any or all physical phenomena i.e., the phenomenal 
				world consisting of separate things and qualities. At this stage 
				in our practice we realize that further extrinsic pursuits into 
				the myriad characteristic differentiations of material existence 
				as separate phenomena (as symbolized by the gunas) will not 
				bring forth true and lasting happiness. Rather Spirit/Source 
				lies in a different direction. When it is realized inside, it is 
				simultaneously realized in all things -- as omnipresent and 
				eternal. No separate thing (phenomena) can be such. That is, 
				reductionist and analytical thinking (although useful in 
				mathematics and technology) is not up to the spiritual task 
				which is yoga. It will not be adequate nor helpful toward 
				bringing forth integration -- the Integrity which is yoga. 
				Rather the practitioner is learning through the practice (abhyasa) 
				of vairagya that it is the process of knowing this very 
				instrument of seeing itself-- the inherent intelligence behind 
				the eye (the inner or third eye) which determines everything (whether 
				we see clearly and completely on one hand, or not clearly in the 
				confused and fragmented way called avidya or ignorance).
				
				It is valuable to point out that in yoga, the param purusa is 
				not itself a separate object like God, but it is a state of self 
				realization (khyater) -- it is an heightened way of observing/seeing. 
				It is not a separate witness consciousness although at first it 
				may appear to be separate from our inner intelligence. rather it 
				is the great flame which
				lights intellect and all intelligence (the intelligent principle 
				if you wish) but it is a principle not based upon any condition 
				or theory. This way the practitioner begins to pursue the 
				non-pursuable, expects the unexpected, begins to see beyond the 
				sense (the third eye is opened), and the yogi then becomes more 
				attuned to the underlying ever present eternal unifying 
				universal current of unbounded consciousness (param purusha) 
				which has always existed behind the scenes of what we have 
				previously labeled as gross temporal materiality. As we become 
				increasingly aware of this absolute, universal, and eternal 
				consciousness underlying the consciousness principle (param 
				purusha) and see through the clear glass of its Reality, we 
				abide effortlessly in our true nature (swarupa) thoroughly 
				devoid of desire (vaitrsnyam) . It is this lens which is no lens 
				at all, which is free of distortion and all aberration. Then the 
				agitating and disturbing patterns (vrtti) moving us away from 
				our core energy naturally subside and come to rest in a joyful 
				and timeless stillness (nirodha). It is valuable to point out 
				that vaitrsnyam refers to freedom from desire or distractions 
				and connotes the successful completion of vairagya 
				(non-attachment). It would be contradictory to the essential 
				purport of the word, vairagya, to misinterpret vaitrsnyam in 
				terms of any willful control (as traditionalist left brain 
				dominant academia assert) for certainly HERE there is no 
				ordinary effort, but rather natural transpersonal inspiration, 
				spiritually motivated zeal, enthusiasm, and divine passion reign. 
				Also it is perhaps salient to point out that vairagya and 
				vaitrsnyam as meaning freedom from distraction and dissipative 
				cravings, then it would connote (samjna) the accomplishment of 
				the opposite direction of distraction which would be 
				attentiveness and attention. Similarly the opposite direction of 
				vaitrsnyam would be continuous fulfillment or completeness such 
				as santosha, aparigraha, and kaivalyam (See the following padas 
				for more on these). Here the cit-prana is remediated inward 
				activating the previously dormant non-dual evolutionary energy 
				leading to Sat-Chit-Ananda. Guna is simply the word that denotes 
				a patterned philosophical system (the samkhya) that 
				characterizes, defines, and creates separation and 
				differentiation between the various aspects of what we normally 
				call the phenomenal or objective world. It is superimposed upon 
				the world of phenomena as an artificially imposed filter by the 
				samkhya philosophers to evaluate/quantitate the differentiations 
				of dualistic existence. Samkhya adherents will say that is the 
				way it really is. For them they believe it, but it is just their 
				preferred filter, coloring, or vrtti.
				
				For a philosopher, scientist, or other reductionist thinkers who 
				wish to catalogue phenomena one may become immersed in endlessly 
				elaborating upon the gunas in analytical and reductionist 
				thought, but it is not an effective methodology for a yoga 
				practitioner who is rather attempting to extract themselves from 
				the causal extraction process itself. Not that Patanjali is 
				saying that analytical techniques are not of use in "the world", 
				but rather in functional yoga practice, one eventually benefits 
				from a transcendental release or freedom from such reductionist 
				practices. The samkhya idea of the gunas is simply the unfolding 
				and differentiation of the physical world which can be discerned 
				or identified as form having discrete qualities Here in yoga 
				(versus samkhya) Patanjali says repeatedly in different ways 
				that no, they objects of form may appear isolated, fragmented, 
				and separate, but from the unitive non-dual and transpersonal 
				standpoint of param purusha or Infinite Mind, they are 
				inextricably woven together (yoga). The Buddhists call this 
				relative truth, the world of cause and effect where all things 
				are mutually interdependent within the whole (not separate). In 
				Sanskrit it is called pratityasamutpada. Here Patanjali is not 
				denying the richness of prakrti (as traditional interpreters 
				surmise), but au contraire, he is affirming that the 
				reductionist approach of separating creation into its parts, is 
				distracting and limit the magnificence of the non-dual unbounded 
				whole of All Our Relations as it truly is in swarupa. Thus one 
				needs not to know the intricacies of samkhya or Vedic 
				philosophical systems to understand the import of the Yoga 
				Sutras according to the teachings of Patanjali, because the 
				teachings of pure yoga is independent of such systems. One does 
				however need to understand well the value and efficacy of the 
				practice of release (vairagya) of grasping onto separate objects 
				of attention, onto external systems, upon objective fixations, 
				upon any "god" that is not omnipresent. This release is a 
				release of distractions and dissipations which keep us 
				imprisoned in duality -- a process of reclaiming the outward 
				spinning of the cit-prana's distraction which then provides the 
				energization necessary for evolutionary embodiment which in turn 
				frees the psycho-neurological circuits that have become 
				overloaded, bonded, blocked, fixated, distracted, externalized, 
				and dissipated in temporal outward flow through negative 
				conditioning, programming, habits, vasana, samskara, vrtti, 
				and/or karma. Hence Patanjali is slowly outlining the way toward 
				the empowerment of samadhi. Here some translators point out that 
				in the previous sutra (I.15) Patanjali introduces the basic 
				practice of vairagya (as freeing the mind from objects through 
				release), but here in I.16 Patanjali is describing a natural and 
				more mature (param) vairagya which happens after the yogi has 
				obtained a more complete glimpse, clearer insight and vision of 
				our innate integrity and identity as purusa. Indeed vairagya 
				leads the yogi into the highest insight and realization, and for 
				such it is a direct vehicle to ultimate attainment. Shankara 
				says in his commentary on this sutra, that for a yogi so 
				possessed (by the skill of the unpossessor) there is no need for 
				further practice of any other means for attaining kaivalyam (absolute 
				liberation) or "etasya hi nantariyakam kaivalyam", Sutra 16 then 
				is simply an extension of Sutra 15 where vaitrsnyam (16) is the 
				strengthened form of vitrsnasya (15). So some may call this the 
				highest (param) type of vairagyam where desireless is obtained. 
				I prefer to have this refer to the beginning of the dawning 
				realization of the highest self (param purusha) or the innate 
				buddha nature. To reiterate, vairagya is not just a neutral 
				dispassion, indifference, an escape, nor a catatonic withdrawal 
				from Reality, but rather the opposite; it is part of the process 
				where we withdraw from the illusion of fragmented existence and 
				then almost simultaneously commune more passionately with the 
				divine in All Our Relations. Thus proficient vairagya (release) 
				produces at first a realization (khyater) about how the basic 
				ways that we are ordinarily dissuaded from Infinite Mind (param 
				purusa). Through realization we learn how not to be so uprooted 
				from it. By light of consciousness we become aware that the mind 
				and energy (cit-prana) has wandered and become misappropriated 
				to an external object, so then we implement "letting go" by 
				releasing our own chains which is the same as embracing the 
				Param Purusa. This Reality becomes experiential -- we experience 
				it inside. On an energetic level, vairagya is the process of 
				turning our attention or consciousness away from external 
				distractions and shifted inward upon the Great Self (the Great 
				all inclusive Integrity of Infinite Mind -- param purusha) or 
				inner teacher which exists inside ALL things; and as such it is 
				closely allied with the practice of bandha on the physical level, 
				as well as the practice of pratyhara as being the bridge between 
				the energetic or pranic level and dharana (concentration). Such 
				yoga practices are designed to free the practitioner from being 
				preoccupied and fascinated by illusory dualistic existence and 
				its recurring cycles of physical and emotional craving, desire, 
				aversion, envy, greed, anticipation, anxiety, tension, 
				disappointment, grief, anger aversion, and suffering. As our 
				practice progresses over time, the joyous realization and 
				spontaneous celebration of "Self" as the imperishable Reality of 
				the truth of existence -- of "who we truly are" considerably 
				deepens. Here we are letting go of everything which fuels old 
				mind sets, compulsive and dysfunctional emotional patterns, old 
				mental activities (vrttis), old politically correct belief 
				systems (parama) which didn't fit, as well as old life styles 
				which were based on past ignorance. Vairagya as such is closely 
				associated with the spontaneous practices of saucha, santosha, 
				aparigraha, tapas, swadhyaya, isvara pranidhana, as well as 
				pratyhara, pranayama, dharana (samyama), the implementations of 
				the bandhas, and especially in the practice of dhyana (meditation). 
				"The Kensei comes to see that his light and the light of the 
				sages is essentially one and the same. The way of action 
				emerging from stillness is the non-action of the sages." from 
				the "Light of the Kensei" by G. BlueStone
				Also : "You have these obstacles only because you have not 
				realized the emptiness of the eons... If you were able to stop 
				the mentality in which every thought is running after something, 
				then you would be no different from a Zen master or a Buddha. Do 
				you want to know what a Zen master or a Buddha is? Simply that 
				which is immediately present, listening to the Teaching. It is 
				just because students do not trust completely that they seek 
				outwardly...If you want to be no different from a Zen master or 
				a Buddha, just do not seek outwardly. Do not allow any more 
				interruptions at any time, and everything you see is It.... 
				Don't stop with learning Zen or Tao on the surface as something 
				outside yourself...seeking 'buddahood', seeking 'mastery', 
				seeking 'teachers', considering them conceptually. Make no 
				mistake about it; turn your attention back on yourself and 
				observe." from "The Five Houses Of Zen", Lin-chi (9th century) 
				Translated by Thomas Clearly (1997) As an analogy, eventually we 
				are able to see the valley once we have climbed the mountain. 
				Here the true operation of the gunas (the dualistic conditioned 
				reality of cause and effect) become instantaneously revealed, 
				thus removing their power to obstruct, color, or limit 
				consciousness. This is facilitated through our acknowledgment 
				and embrace of param purusa (the non-dual transpersonal self). 
				This is achieved through releasing our tendencies to seek 
				answers within the sea of our pre-existing dualistic conditioned 
				confusion. No matter how familiar we are with our prisons, we 
				can never leave it, if we are not willing to surrender its 
				chains. We can not shoot a picture of the sun until we get out 
				of our shadow and hence Patanjali says in Sutra I.43 "Smrti-parishuddhau 
				svarupa-sunye va artha-matra-nirbhasa nir-vitarka" This is the 
				gradual direction which we are headed. The gradual realization 
				of vairagyam has to penetrate into our life styles and become 
				integrated in All Our Relations in order to remove/release 
				spiritual tension/resistance. When our cravings end, We arrive 
				In the present When we arrive home Here -- Abiding in the 
				Natural Mind In our natural Self.  Complete Fulfilled 
				Grateful All separations Cease
				All Cravings end What else is there to say? Purusa (introduced 
				first here in Sutra I.16) is a much misunderstood term because 
				the Vedic, samkhya, and academics tend to read-in their own 
				agenda into it. Patanjali is leading us in increasing intensity 
				toward isvara pranidhana the surrender omni-present purusa, 
				which is defined in 1.23-27. There is no coincidence that 
				vairagyam (as release) and purusa (as in isvara pranidhana) are 
				thus linked, because isvara pranidhana as will be elaborated 
				later is the surrender to our highest potential or Buddha 
				nature. Indeed vairagya and isvara pranidhana operate as two 
				sides of the same coin as we shall see through practice. 
				Vairagya and isvara pranidhana are not only practices, but also 
				profound teachings. Abhyasa as presented here is also both a 
				practice and a teaching in itself. This then leads us into the 
				discussion leading to the progressively deeper stages of samadhi 
				or infinite mind and how can this be realized. This is the theme 
				of the remaining verses (17-51) of chapter I and in particular 
				Sutras 17-45, which depends upon the acknowledgement of this 
				deeper transpersonal Self (param purusa) which we are told in 
				the next sutra is devoid of egotism (false identifications of a 
				separate self). See Sutra III.50 regarding the practice of 
				vairagya in relationship to purusa and sattva and how that leads 
				to absolute liberation (kaivalya). See also Pada IV. Sutras 
				32-34 along the same lines of the unification of purusa and 
				sattva. Here we have introduced the two major remedies and 
				teachings of yoga (vairagya as non-attachment and abhyasa as 
				consistent and regular practice). Thus following we 
				progressively exposed to the yogic ideal of a continuously and 
				permanently accessible samadhi (nirbija samadhi) -- an all 
				encompassing spiritual connection which includes both life and 
				death in All Our Relations -- a sacred presence within the 
				context of a Great Universal Integrity outlining the various 
				gradual processes and steps of temporary and partial 
				realizations, revelations, and satoris as minor temporary 
				samadhis (sabija samadhi) which forerun nirbija samadhi (samadhi 
				without seed). This is realized when one realizes the 
				fundamental unity of pure absolute consciousness and pure 
				absolute being -- where pure consciousness manifests in the 
				human form as pure awareness and receptivity -- as absolute 
				beingness. HERE in Sat-Chit-Ananda -- only in param purusa can 
				absolute and pure objectivity and absolute and pure subjectivity 
				be married. In the Great Integrity of universal Consciousness 
				and being siva/sakti, spirit/nature, and the mind/body become 
				completely non-dually integrated.
				
				Here the clear road to nirbija samadhi in Samadhi Pada continues 
				on its own accord through the self liberatory practices rooted 
				in vairagya (the process of non-expectation). Sutra 17 
				vitarka-vicara-ananda-asmita-rupanugamat samprajnatah [This 
				gradual process which is called the practice without attachment 
				to any results] is at first accompanied by the attainment of a 
				limited knowledge based on the cognitive processes (samprajnata), 
				which in turn is accompanied with (anugamat) various forms of 
				pleasure (ananda), due to coarse false identification/objectification 
				processes (vitarka), subtle identification/objectifications (vicara) 
				such as attachment to mental objects of form (rupa), giving 
				forth a limited sense of pleasurable gratification associated 
				with a definite feeling of "I-it" belongingness/gratification as 
				well as I-It separateness (asmita). Commentary: Here we must 
				start the journey from where we are at. We move from mental 
				attachment and identifications with the gross (vitarka) forms (rupa), 
				to the more subtle (vicara) forms, to the most subtle, to beyond 
				even the most subtle (sunya) as we will see toward the end of 
				this chapter, Samadhi pada). Thus samprajnata (ordinary 
				cognition processes that are fixated on form) is an incomplete 
				poorly integrated form of self identification or self absorption 
				(asmita), which is still polluted by gross and discursive 
				thought processes (vitarka) which have become distracted outward 
				toward physical objects. This abstraction process (samprajnata) 
				and false identification (asmita) includes as well mental 
				attachment to the more subtle mental objects (vicara); all of 
				which are still caught up with fragmented mentations of an 
				apparently separate objects as in the appearance of objective 
				form (rupa) and the confining sense of a separate self (asmita) 
				which reinforces the klesha (affliction) of separateness. that 
				is the nature of the world of form (coarse and subtle 
				objectification processes) accompanied (anugamat) by objects of 
				temporary self gratification (ananda). We will learn that 
				Patanjali later calls asmita (sense of ego or ownership) is one 
				of the five broad classifications of afflictions (kleshas) -- it 
				is due to ignorance (avidya), grasping, (raga), and dualistic 
				false identification. Hence it is clear that Patanjali is saying 
				that vairagya is designed to destroy asmita, which eventually 
				leads us into the broader and ultimate (param) identification or 
				integration with param purusa (IM). This is not complete (param) 
				until vitarka and vicara fixations which give rise to temporary 
				self gratification (ananda-asmita) cease (nirodha).
				Avidya is a confining space of nescience which calls out to be 
				released by the practice of vairagya. introducing the words, 
				vitarka and vicara here, thus show where Patanjali is going with 
				them and the entire idea of cognition; i.e., he is going from 
				the dualism of a separate seer and object that is seen (samprajnata) 
				toward a clarity of pure lucidity and grace -- the self 
				effulgent light of "vaisharadye'dhyatma-prasadah" mentioned in 
				sutra I.47. However in the mental state of restricted object 
				relations (called samprajnata) which is characterized by 
				vitarka-vicara-ananda-asmita-rupa-anugamat. the small self or 
				ego (asmita) still falsely identifies with the process of 
				attraction, attachment, and (be)longing (raga) for/to gross (vitarka) 
				or subtle (vicara) objects (of form or rupanugamat) which is 
				associated with the glue of temporary pleasure (ananda) when one 
				finally apprehends, comprehends, or grasps the object of craving. 
				The pleasure (ananda) attendant upon this temporary union (goal 
				gratification which is the result of craving after an object, 
				and then its possession) is both temporary and neurotic 
				providing a short release of tension, stress, or striving until 
				the next craving arises. This feeling which is normally ascribed 
				to as pleasure rather is due to the temporary extinction of the 
				craving, when the individual mind obtains its object. But since 
				grasping upon objects of self gratification (through asmita) 
				never bring lasting happiness, then this monkey mind which is 
				confusedly looking for completion, fulfillment, and lasting 
				happiness in dualistic objects, being lost in avidya, starts its 
				search into separate objects looking for happiness again (rupanugamat 
				samprajnatah) and then again experiencing temporary experiences 
				of ananda and then dukha -- then ananda and dukha, etc. The 
				temporary release of the craving through union with an object of 
				thought is called the pleasure of self gratification (ananda-asmita), 
				while its loss manifests in a suffering mistaken by the deluded 
				mind as the klesha called raga (desire or craving). This can be 
				likened to any fulfillment or possession of any object of desire 
				(gross of subtle). The desire for sexual union may be the most 
				obvious symbolic representation of being lost in the cycle of 
				craving, fulfillment, and separation. However all these 
				activities based on samprajnata (object relations), which here 
				we define as the process of dualistic objectification (the 
				separation of the seer from the seen) reinforces the illusory 
				separation from seeing eternal sacred presence in All Our 
				Relations. Such chronic dualistic objectification processes (samprajnata) 
				thus reinforces the spiritual split. These cycles exist within 
				avidya, ego delusion, or what is commonly called, samsara. 
				Writhing in the cycle of dukha (suffering) is thus the all too 
				common experience and it is mandated until the lesson is learned, 
				past karma annihilated, and samskaras extinguished, thus 
				allowing entry into transpersonal sacred space in All Our 
				Relations. Here the remedial practice is again vairagya -- 
				releasing the object from the mental apparatus.
				
				The normal person lost in avidya and in particular the klesha of 
				asmita confuses the craving with pleasure (ananda) because they 
				"expect" to achieve the goal. Thus
				tragically need, desire, and craving become held onto 
				insidiously. Patanjali is calling this ordinary way of "seeing", 
				samprajnata, where one falsely identifies with the process of 
				identification with the object which one perceives (one becomes 
				objectified). In other words, without vairagya, the monkey mind 
				tends to wander onto objects (physical or mental). This is the 
				nature of samprajnata. This craving toward "something" and its 
				gratification provides a certain amount of temporary self 
				gratification (ananda-asmita) and pleasure (ananda). Thus in the 
				beginning of practice, the yogi runs into samprajnata both 
				coarse (vitarka) and subtle (vicara). It actually is one's 
				common experience. But first we have to recognize it and go from 
				where we are at. Just this recognition of the suffering of 
				samprajnata is thus helpful to over come it. Next in I.18 
				through practice immersed in vairagya we see that eventually 
				this tendency is reduced (asamprajnata). Thus samprajnata goes 
				hand in hand with the nature of the kleshas and especially raga 
				(craving), while the successful application of vairagya 
				obviously brings forth its remediation. Vitarka can be defined 
				as absorption in a gross object while vicara is absorption in a 
				discursive thought process. Although vicara is subtle as 
				compared to vitarka, both are forms of limited absorption 
				because the i-it dualistic fixation is still present (there 
				exists an object separate from the perceiver which occupies and 
				limits the mental contents of the mind (cognition). In this 
				intermediary and fragmented state called by Patanjali 
				samprajnatah, there still exists goal orientation, conflict, 
				dissociation, disorganization, sequential fixations, and 
				discursive thought in meditation. A compensatory sense of joy (ananda) 
				which accompanies release and then fixation (the false self's 
				sense of loss and then possession/apprehension) wavers and is 
				transitory because as one releases one attachment another 
				eventually attracts our attention, but as soon as it is 
				apprehended another rises up again and again. Samprajnatah is a 
				temporary and unstable beginning part of meditation practice on 
				the path to samadhi accompanied with much mental agitation which 
				is mistaken for pleasure by the ego (asmita). Later Patanjali 
				will give many other practices to remediate samprajnata such as 
				isvara pranidhana, aparigraha, santosha, pratyhara, samyama, 
				tapas, brahmacharya, dhyana, etc.
				
				Unfortunately this sutra is generally misunderstood by an 
				intellectually based tradition which has become entrenched in 
				academia that attempts to classify numerous kinds of samadhis 
				(the word, samadhi, there in this tradition being defined in a 
				loose sense of any absorption) and thus samprajnata is 
				mistakenly categorized as a base samadhi by such interpreters. 
				They say that this is what Patanjali means, but the truth is 
				that Patanjali never called this, samadhi. If such an absurd 
				definition of samadhi were allowed, we would have football 
				samadhi, TV samadhi, and countless others. It is salient to note 
				that samprajnata as well as the term samapatti (attainments) are 
				not synonymous with samadhi as academic classifiers mistakenly 
				are wont. In other words some call savitarka (focusing on 
				physical objects) as a samadhi by itself, which opens the next 
				door to savichara samapatti (focusing on the more subtle mental 
				objects of of the mental concentration itself), which in turn 
				leads to a third samadhi which some call sa-ananda samadhi (joyful 
				samadhi). In truth there are a myriad types of minor absorptions 
				possible, but they are not samadhis as defined by Patanjali, 
				rather they are all disparate attachments and fixations of the 
				cit-prana that call for release (vairagya) through yogic 
				practice (abhyasa). Although certain mental states may occur in 
				gradations moving from the coarse (vitarka) to more subtle (vicara) 
				thus releasing the tension and suffering implicit in the past, 
				only the more inclusive and integrative non-dualistic, 
				trans-rational, and transpersonal samadhis are worth pursuing 
				such as nirvitarka (devoid of gross fixations), nirvicara (devoid 
				of subtle mental fixations), and nirbij (devoid of seed). 
				Patanjali clearly states that only nirbij (seedless) samadhi 
				brings about enduring liberation and that is the stated goal. 
				These other gradated absorptions that Patanjali herewith 
				addresses, although perhaps indicative of graduated stages of 
				freedom, are all to be released (in vairagya) -- they are not to 
				be held onto nor should one become engrossed nor self satisfied 
				with them. Regardless on what tack we take on the interpretation 
				of this sutra, the progressive stages of the expansion of 
				consciousness progresses from: Prenatal non-awareness or 
				consciousness of the world including any objects (the objective 
				world). Post natal subjective awareness of the world where one 
				identifies with the objects. Mature development of 
				differentiated consciousness (elementary discriminating 
				awareness) where one discriminates between the variety of 
				objects and learns to separate subjective feelings from external 
				events.
				The divine non-dual awareness where the world of seemingly 
				separate objects appears to be real, they are experienced as 
				inter-connected --All Our Relations - in the unitive wholistic 
				experience where one simultaneously perceives an object as an 
				effect of a cause and as a possible further cause in the chain 
				of karmic events while at the same time the Source awareness 
				that has no beginning or end persists -- beginningless time and 
				uncreated space abides as eternal profound and sacred presence. 
				This last stage is beyond any human words or power to objectify. 
				It can neither be grasped by the individual mind, but rather 
				exists within the innate unity where pure consciousness and pure 
				beingness reside -- in the non-dual holographic multidimensional 
				mesh of turiya -- in satchitananda or Natural Great and Perfect 
				Awareness As-It-Is
				undisturbed by manmade colorings (vrtti) and projections. HERE 
				the goal of yoga has become achieved where cit-vrtti has ceased 
				(nirodha). Here Patanjali is pointing us toward the goal (samadhi) 
				of yoga in stages. For a further elaboration on vitarka, 
				savitarka, nirvitarka, vicara, savicara, or nirvicara, see the 
				similar discussion in sutras I.42-44. In short one progresses 
				from the coarse to the most subtle. For a further discussion of 
				the kleshas of raga, dvesa, and asmita see Sutra II.6-8. Then 
				once prepared we enter beyond even the most subtle into the 
				formless, objectless, non-dual, non-separate, non-dual, and 
				timeless realization of All Our Relations when the ground has 
				become prepared -- when we are readied through authentic yogic 
				sadhana. Sutra 18 Virama-pratyayabhyasa-purvah samskara-seso'nyah 
				As yogic practice deepens (abhyasa), another (anya) deeper kind 
				of trans-objective absorption (not dependent upon 
				objectification) is practiced (virama-pratyaya-abhyasa). This is 
				not dependent upon support by the cognitive faculties and is not 
				dependent upon an object of thought nor objects of attention (pratyaya) 
				either coarse or subtle (nirvitarka or nirvicara). Here 
				objectification (samprajnata) which is based on apparent or 
				superficial causes dependent upon objects or form (pratyaya) 
				ceases (virama). Thus leaving only the residual (seso) imprints 
				(samskaras) of the past (purvah) to be cleared away. Commentary: 
				This describes the process of creating the requisite space 
				through vairagya for the dawning of the highest samadhi (nirbija 
				samadhi). Since this practice (virama-pratyaya-abhyasa) is 
				devoid of objectification or attachment to form it is often 
				labeled as asamprajnata (versus samprajnata of sutra 17). Here 
				Patanjali is saying every attachment is cleared away -- 
				consciousness no longer attached to any objects of form, but it 
				is only the residual imprints (samskaras) which now have to be 
				dissolved. This is why commentators say that Patanjali is 
				calling this asamprajnata samadhi (devoid of objects of form), 
				but in reality Patanjali never uses the word, samadhi here.
				The Sanskrit word, pratyaya, is often misunderstood. The term. 
				pratyaya, refers to ordinary dualistic perception where there 
				appears to pre-exist a separation between the viewer and the 
				object which is being viewed. In one sense this type of 
				cognition or recognition is a necessary element in ordinary 
				dualistic analytical or reductionist mentation where the mind 
				compares the differences between one physical "isolated" object 
				and another. However in a yogic sense, which is not dependent 
				upon such processes of dualistic objectification processes (pratyaya), 
				but rather yoga is based on the Reality of the unitive 
				realization of All Our Relations which is a higher 
				transcognitive realization, where we are capable of relating on 
				a more intimate transpersonal non-dual ongoing modality, then 
				pratyaya is seen as superficial and incomplete, and hence false 
				as its true nature remains obscured by being engrossed by the 
				denseness of the apparent separate object. In other words much 
				more can be included in our every day modality of consciousness, 
				but it is the dualistic rigidification of the mind-set 
				strengthened by pratyaya which must be dropped. Thus for this 
				higher process to be activated Virama-pratyayabhyasa-purvah is a 
				realization due to practice where any separate object of focus 
				by the mind is seen as a distraction, an obscuration, and 
				impediment and no longer heeded (in successful practice of 
				vairagya). Cognition as a processes is not entirely discarded, 
				but rather it is put on pause -- it no longer limits the scope 
				of the known, rather the Universal Mind is called into play. 
				Thus the direction where the ordinary mind is headed can be 
				redirected through virama-pratyaya; i.e., by resisting the 
				tendency to objectify, name, or identify with any independent 
				object as separate from the intrinsic unity of All Our 
				Relations. This dissociation ultimately leads to the 
				dissociation of a separate self (ego) but at the same time it 
				creates the requisite space to embrace the All and Everything. 
				For the common man (non-yogi) most ordinary thought processes 
				are limited, unfocused, unclear, and blurred, but yogis do not 
				take objective thought forms as being an ultimate beneficial 
				influence toward their spiritual goal of samadhi (non-dual union). 
				Rather the yogic direction is to go beyond ordinary mentation, 
				ordinary individual cognitive functions, and goal orientation 
				itself. Pratyaya is thus a necessary "element" in "ordinary" 
				cognition processes of objectification it is an essential 
				element in ordinary dualistic cognition itself, which Patanjali 
				called samprajnata in the previous sutra (17). But here since 
				virama means cessation, so this practice (abhyasa) is one where 
				intentional dualistic thought processes toward an object (pratyaya) 
				is terminated. Since pratyaya is necessary for samprajnata (objectification) 
				to occur, then this virama-pratyaya causes a transcognitive 
				state which many commentators call , asamprajnata (where 
				ordinary samprajnata is defeated). This practice is called 
				purvah (former or proceeding), which means that by constant 
				practice of eliminating the objectification motive force (virama-pratyaya-abhyasa-purvah) 
				then what remains to be accomplished (purvah) is only the past 
				imprints (samskara-seso'nyah) or samskaric residues to be 
				eliminated. We will see later that only in the very highest 
				samadhi (nirbija samadhi) in I.51 will these residues of 
				samskara be fully eliminated. Indeed removing the samskaras is 
				at the forefront of all yoga practices and much more is to be 
				said about them.
				
				A similar interpretation is that this sutra advocates a practice 
				(abhyasa) called virama pratyaya which eliminates ordinary 
				cognition (dependent upon superficial
				appearances and secondary causes (pratyaya), which in turn the 
				past residual imprints (purvah--samskara-shshos) are loosened. 
				This next type of absorption (which is not an objectification) 
				occurs in the beginning stagers of successful meditation. Vyasa, 
				the earliest commentator on the Yoga Sutras, interprets this to 
				be a "asamprajnata" or trans-cognitive samadhi (as compared to 
				samprajnata which is described in sutra I.17, because it is not 
				accompanied by i-it objectification (duality). Rather it is 
				devoid of both coarse objects (vitarka) as well as more subtle 
				discursive thought (vicara), form (rupa), and any sense of 
				separateness (asmita). Virama here also means cessation and 
				refers to the cessation of pratyaya (the objectification process 
				where objects are experienced as apparent mental contents/fixations 
				of the mind). The ordinary contents of the dualistic ordinary 
				mind who cognizes "reality" based on superficial appearances out 
				of context with the non-dual whole (pratyaya) then cease (virama). 
				What is left is a transcognitive consciousness. However the 
				residues of past psychic signatures, cellular memory, 
				psycho-neuro-physiological lesions, neuromuscular armoring, 
				energy cysts, and the like (called samskaras) are still not yet 
				completely destroyed. Only after the samskaras are destroyed, 
				then one conjoins nirbija samadhi as described in Sutras I. 
				50-54. In general this is an accurate overall statement of where 
				we are headed (to nirbija-samadhi) by eliminating all mental 
				fixations (asamprajnata) -- the world of object relations or all 
				limited self identifications (asmita) is ceases to imprison Self. 
				In the previous sutra we saw that samprajnata (cognitive) 
				absorption was difficult and unstable creating an rigidified 
				externalization, fixation, and over objectification, but after 
				consistent yogic practice (abhyasa) which attenuates, empties, 
				and eliminates the secondary causes of these fixations, they 
				become loosened especially in the practice of meditation where 
				vairagya can be most easily practiced. Then the transcognitive 
				and non-dual asamprajnata (objectless or acognitive) absorption 
				process which is starts to occur more regularly. This is an 
				objectless state, but still it is not completely wholly 
				conscious, rather it creates the space for more consciousness. 
				Most people are not used to not grasping onto an external object 
				nor are they used to not fixating the mind on a mental object, 
				so it takes some practice to allow this experience to occur and 
				have it grow on us. This asamprajnata realization is not a 
				situation where the mind wanders being being spaced out or 
				incapable of focusing, rather it is a result of a liberating, 
				transconceptional, and very centering experience. It is easily 
				achieved in meditation through consistent practice of vairagya. 
				It can also be reached through other yogic practices which will 
				be delineated in padas II and III.
				
				This graduation (into what is called asamprajnata) develops over 
				time from consistent regular practice (abhyasa) and vairagya (letting 
				go of the mind's tendency to fixate upon objects) where the 
				previously existing state of over objectification, self 
				extraction, and spiritual self alienation of externalization 
				cease (virama), but the
				samskaras (the residual imprints of past conditioning) which 
				still remain awaiting final exorcism. Indeed the Yoga Sutras are 
				full of describing this process in many different terms. 
				Especially se sutras III.2 and III.3 in a further discussion of 
				pratyaya and its dissolution (sunya) through meditation allowing 
				for the intrinsic clear light of lucidity to shine forth from 
				within (nirbhasam) in swarupa. Pratyaya being the relational and 
				comparative contents of the mind-field -- the view of the 
				ordinary dualistic mind in terms of external objects -- the "normal" 
				realm of I-it separation where it appears that objects (mental 
				or physical) are possessed by the mind. this is the realm of "normal" 
				perception which occurs in the corrupt state where separate 
				objects appear to be solid and real, while the observer appears 
				to live in a chronically estranged and disconnected world 
				detached from the apparent separate objects as a separate viewer 
				which defines the biased context of ignorance of the true nature 
				of mind -- Satchitananda. When however we practice 
				virama-pratyaya-abhyasa then asamprajnata (a non-dual or 
				transcendental way of seeing) dawns. Thus we emphasize that the 
				"objectlessness" state is not one of a space cadet, but au 
				contrae, the mind simply stops craving after external objects to 
				grasp. Being at peace, objects are no longer desired or a source 
				of self gratification or neurotic pleasure, thus allowing space 
				for greater natural expansive awareness and clarity to shine 
				forth. Even the more subtle waves of mental abstraction cease (nirvicara) 
				for awhile, and a sense of interconnectedness and wholeness is 
				experienced in a deep peaceful non-dual stillness, although 
				momentary and temporary. There exists no ulterior future goal, 
				goal orientation ceases, the sense of separateness and craving 
				is remediated. However this asamprajnata type of absorption is 
				intermediary as it does not destroy the samskaras. So these 
				respites from the dualistic mind are temporary, i.e., the old 
				patterns (vrtti) start up again after a short respite. Further 
				practice thus is still necessary in order to exorcise and 
				cathart the samskaras (past energetic signatures, the deepest 
				and most subtle biopsychic imprints and impressions, and 
				cellular memories). Asamprajnata thus is a short glimpse into or 
				taste of nirbij samadhi which is to come. "Think not thinking. 
				How do you think not thinking? Non thinking. That in itself is 
				the essential art of zazen." or "Sit stably in samadhi. Think of 
				not-thinking. How do you think of not-thinking? Beyond-thinking. 
				This is the way of doing zazen in accord with the dharma. Zazen 
				is not learning (step-by-step) meditation. Rather zazen itself 
				is the dharma-gate of great peace and joy (nirvana). It is 
				undefiled practice-enlightenment."
				from "The Way of Zazen" by Eihei Dogen Zenji.
				
				After giving up striving (virama) by practicing vairagya 
				(non-attachment) and abhyasa (as consistent application), then 
				further success in yoga is accomplished (here through 
				virama-pratyaya). Here during meditation even the idea of 
				practice itself can get in the way -- goalless, objectless, 
				formless the sky clears disclosing the brightest sun. The 
				meditator starts to become educated as to the true nature of 
				formless mind and gradually integrates this experience into his/her 
				life. In sutra I.50, Patanjali mentions the samskara that ends 
				all the others; i.e., that precious truth bearing wisdom which 
				is not derived from scripture (sruti), from inference (anumana), 
				nor objective knowledge of things or events. It is this sutra 
				where it is pointed out that yoga clears out the residual (seso) 
				imprints (samskara) of the past (purvah). It is thus through 
				abhyasa (consistent practice) and vairagya that this 
				transcognitive (asamprajnata) state is achieved, but then only 
				the samskaras remain as the sole impediment. Later Patanjali 
				will present how yoga practice clears out all samskaras (a major 
				benefit of effective yoga practice) in the summum bonum of yoga, 
				nirbija samadhi. Sutra 19 Bhava-pratyayo videha-prakrti-layanam 
				By melting into (layanam) the formless nature (videha) of nature 
				(prakrti) a special spiritual attitude or feeling awareness (bhava-pratyayo) 
				permeates the content of the mind. To put this in another way it 
				could also be said that through the practice of bhava-pratyayo a 
				non-cognitive (asamprajnata), formless absorption (layanam) into 
				the unconditioned state of nature as-it-is dawns. Commentary: 
				When one becomes absorbed (layanam) in the true nature of nature 
				(prakrti), a transcognitive state (asamprajnata) allowing one to 
				overcome the duality of ordinary pratyaya dawns. This is 
				catalyzed by the practice of bhava-pratyaya in which ordinary 
				dualistic processes of cognition is defeated. Here one generates 
				spiritual bhava and becomes absorbed in communion with formless 
				prakrti (creation). As such one reaches the creator (as creation 
				and creator can not be separated) in the Reality of All Our 
				Relations. Again pratyaya refers to the mind's habitual tendency 
				(vasana) to fragmentize the natural Mind.
				
				Bhava may be defined as the power of pure intention, but more so 
				spiritual motivation. In yoga, if intention is truly pure, it is 
				pure not only in the technical sense, but more so in the 
				spiritual sense. Thus it is clear that Patanjali, by utilizing 
				the word, bhava, here is addressing the great power of pure 
				non-dual spiritual intention/motivation which clears the mind 
				out of limited fixations. Here spirit shines through the yogi as 
				divine intention. Generating bhava, or the idea of divine union 
				is both on one hand a well known yogic technique to clear the 
				mind and set the mood, and on the other hand for the more 
				advanced practitioner it is a spontaneous and
				natural expression. Likewise spontaneous and natural self 
				realization is possible simply through spiritual reflection (bhava) 
				into our intrinsic "re-memberance" of our part in the 
				unconditioned formless aspect of nature. Are we apart from it or 
				a part of it? Does such bhava samadhi as divine rapture break up 
				the extrinsic tendency to over objectify and hence lead us into 
				an asamprajnata (transcognitive state)? We are able to envision 
				the mental tendencies in their "normal" formative processes 
				creating the content of our normal mindfields and occupying the 
				mind (pratyaya) within the greater identification of 
				bhava-pratyaya (spiritual vision) -- within the integrity of All 
				Our Relations then the awareness of how self imposed limiting 
				dualistic thought processes occur which chronically obfuscate 
				the normal dualistic mentations, then through that awareness, 
				such dualistic limitations can easily be let go (vairagya) and 
				cease (nirodha). What is left is the pure natural unconditioned 
				intelligence itself (videha-prakrti-layanam) as the intelligence 
				of siva/sakti. This is our natural and unconditioned state that 
				can be experienced beyond normal human cognition (in 
				asamprajnata) where ordinary cognition again is preempted by a 
				spiritual direction (bhava-pratyaya) where we are not fixated 
				upon any one limited object. In this case we become absorbed in 
				the nature of nature which some call the divine creatrix or 
				mother. As creation comes HERE through the creative act of 
				creation -- through the Divine formless beginningless spark of 
				the creator, then it is natural that prakrti provides the ground 
				that the true self is known. As we have seen ordinary dualistic 
				cognition is dependent upon pratyaya, which as we have seen 
				depends in turn upon a focused intent and direction on the part 
				of the ordinary mind toward an isolated object (physical and/or 
				mental -- coarse or subtle; i.e., a form is thus formulated). 
				Since bhava meaning the power of spiritual intent, motivation, 
				mood, spiritual focus, or loving feeling -- the divine passion 
				and presence that twinkles in the eyes of a "turned-on" and 
				accomplished yogi carries along with it its own intelligent 
				powerful force and direction. Then bhava-pratyaya is a focused 
				and reinforced spiritual intent and motive power based on the 
				communion/absorption (layanam) into the formless nature of 
				creation -- of sacred presence in All Our Relations.
				
				There exists much confusion about the word, bhava and hence the 
				intellectuals and traditionalist non-yogis severely 
				misunderstand this sutra. Technically bhava is used by 
				philosophers as the technical "intent" to be, or then the force 
				that brings things into existence (a "bad" thing for the 
				nature-phobic and other-worldly", but in authentic yoga where 
				the task is to embody spirit here and now, its meaning is 
				entirely spiritual as first put forward above. It means that our 
				spiritual intent that we generate as our spiritual mood is 
				equated with divine intent or pure love -- that what we hold in 
				our mind, directs the mind toward the desired goal (divine union). 
				In the pursuit of non-dual yoga the goal is sacred union and as 
				such bhava manifests as the backdrop -- setting the spiritual 
				mood and intent of our practice and keeping us on track. In a 
				Buddhist sense it can be equated to the generation of bodhimind 
				(bodhicitta) the powerful divine motivation or wish to gain 
				enlightenment in order to free all others from the suffering of 
				unenlightenment. Bhava, as in establishing our firm intent is a 
				very powerful organizing force in our practice, in meditation, 
				and in our everyday life. It focuses and strongly moves the 
				cit-prana. In similar bhakti yoga circles, bhava is the 
				trans-conditional intent equated with divine inspiration, 
				rapture, or the spiritual gaze. If our practice is devotional, 
				then the practice of bhava-pratyayo is even more relevant. In 
				India bhava samadhi (as spiritual rapture) is well known. It is 
				looked down upon as a trap by the intellectuals, philosophers, 
				and staid priests, but none-the-less practitioners claim that 
				such practice is transformative -- adherents claim that they 
				become moved by God and they experience stages of samadhi. As a 
				yogi, Patanjali was well aware of bhava, and is suggesting a 
				transcognitive (asamprajnata) practice that we can go (bhava-pratyayo) 
				which leads to this formless absorption in nature (videha-prakrti-layanam). 
				Thus bhava-samadhi can be an aid helping a practitioner to 
				experience transcognitive samadhi as long as they do not get 
				addicted to the rapture (spiritual rapture and divine attitude 
				being another common definition of bhava samadhi). As such 
				prabhava is the act of coming into swarupa --our true natural 
				self beyond the limited and false extrinsic identification 
				processes (pratyaya) related to ordinary cognition processes (samprajnata).Here 
				we affirm and generate the "good mind" and simultaneously 
				embrace the profound "right view" beyond judgment, methods of 
				inference, willfulness, philosophical ideas, conceptual artifice, 
				or perception. Thus this"right" view is the one beyond 
				conception and any artifice. It is established through direct 
				spiritual experience and is thus due to the dawning of the 
				intrinsic light in authentic darshan untouched by form, time, 
				and limitation. Thus in this way we practice the special 
				spiritual attitude (bhava) born of an absorption (layanam) on 
				the ongoing process of an unconditioned formless (videha) 
				natural mind as-it-is -- creation (prakrti) as manifested 
				through the intelligent evolutionary force disclosing the 
				creator/source in every atom. This is a special formless and 
				objectless spiritual intention called bhava-pratyayo, which is 
				not directed by individual cognition (asamprajnata), but rather 
				directed by transpersonal and non-dual absorption (as 
				asamprajnata type of knowing without an object). See the end of 
				Pada IV for more about this profound mergence.
				Especially when one identifies with the underlying formlessness 
				(videha) that is united and underlies (layam) all of nature (prakrti), 
				there exists kinship and a lack of separateness -- a formless (videha) 
				quality which pervades the entire universe (prakrti) is 
				acknowledged and recognized. This created and uncreated (shakti/shiva) 
				is available to those who have become reabsorbed (laya), 
				re-united, and have reclaimed the birthright of their formless 
				non-dual self nature in nature which is the unity of self in 
				nature and nature in transpersonal Self (prakrti layanam). This 
				transpersonal acknowledgement is not the result of ordinary 
				cognition (pratyaya), but rather is asamprajnata formed by 
				bhava-pratyaya. This taste of the universal intrinsic authentic 
				true self is the dawning of swarupa (the realization of our true 
				natural unconditioned self) where the matrix or veil of 
				superficial appearances (maya) is cleansed revealing the Reality 
				of Creator/Creation (Shiva/Shakti). It is not dependent upon 
				form; rather it is achieved through recognizing the underlying 
				authentic formless true nature of "Self" in All Our Relations. 
				Here shakti is the gateway to shiva, creation the gateway to the 
				creator, nature is the gateway to our true nature. In fact this 
				is a two way street. They define each other. We go to 
				undifferentiated Source from creation, but within the reality of 
				seemingly individuated creation, lies the dance of Self. 
				Embodiment is the spirit's container. The journey is neither 
				just to the up to Source, nor down to the earth, but rather it 
				pulsates between the two in a greater Divine Integrity. See 
				Sutra II 18: prakasa-kriya-sthiti-silam bhutendriyat-makam 
				bhogapavargartham drsyam When we perceive an object through the 
				dynamic activity of the inner light of consciousness -- from our 
				light and energy body (prakasa) -- we are able to see its 
				inherent light as well. From this unity consciousness gazing 
				upon what previously appeared as a fragmented material object (something 
				steady, solid, and stable (sthhiti-silam) being composed of the 
				apparent slow vibratory motion of the elements (bhutas), but by 
				acknowledging the splendor of this inner light (prakasa) then 
				know the senses (indriyat) to be a liberator and revealer (apavarga) 
				of the Great unity -- as all our experiences in everyday life 
				becomes our teacher, rather than as an avenue for dissipation, 
				duality, and fragmentation. Or similarly, the true non-dual 
				intelligent liberatory energetic nature of the unity of creator/creation 
				which is the essence of "things" seen or unseen, is illuminated 
				and disclosed by this deeper power of transcognition (in which 
				the seer, all which is seen, and the processes of seeing) are a 
				common reflection of an inherent all inclusive and all pervasive 
				luminous intrinsic power (prakasa) and common Source, which is 
				simultaneously experienced (bhoga) and thus this process of 
				identification with this self illuminating activity (prakasa-kriya) 
				becomes self liberating (apavarga) even in our daily experiences. 
				See also: IV Sutra 2 jati-antara-parinama prakrty-apurat. The 
				diverse embodiments (of spirit) are conveyed through the flux of 
				creative natural evolution. Spirit as such is intrinsic, part of 
				our essential nature although hidden by ignorance in the ―normal‖ 
				condition. And similarly Sutra IV.3 nimittam aprayojakam 
				prakrtinam varana-bhedas tu tatah ksetrikavat Through our daily 
				intercourse and experience with nature/creation the coverings (varana) 
				which are obstacles to the realization of the Great Integrity 
				and continuity of THAT manifestation are removed (bhedas) 
				naturally without necessitating force; but rather can occur 
				naturally like a cultivator with a green thumb who naturally 
				gravitates toward cultivating both the soil and the plants as 
				part of one‘s larger family or kin – as a partner or co-creator. 
				Also see Sutra I.33 for more on generating bhava to clarify the 
				mind (citta prasadanam). So how is bhava-pratyaya cultivated? 
				One can live in forest hermitages, huts, near the banks of holy 
				rivers, inside the caves of sacred mountains, or elsewhere in 
				the wilderness seeking the transpersonal inspirational blessings 
				that is inherent in natural creation which in turn reflects the 
				creator. Here communing with and worshipping the divine creatrix 
				in nature accelerates the practitioner swiftly into the non-dual 
				transpersonal Reality of All Our Relations. The ancient Rishis, 
				Munis, and yogis knew this and always sought out the wilderness 
				as a valued ally to their practice. In the modern urban age, it 
				is not always easy to find a quiet place in nature for spiritual 
				retreat and practice, but such influences are non-the-less very 
				powerful in creating asamprajnata. All aspirants are encouraged 
				to practice in this way in order to help activate the bhava of 
				the mother -- the Divine Creatrix. Bhava-pratyaya can also be 
				generated by divine re-memberance by remembering who we are in 
				All Our Relations, that separate forms are illusory, that we are 
				not separate from the trees, oceans, stars, deer, the formless 
				realms and each others. In this way we can invoke the presence 
				of the yogis of the three times (past, present, and future) to 
				help instruct and guide us.
				
				In a similar sense we can receive darshan and grace from 
				creator/creation -- shiva/shakti in All Our Relations at every 
				moment in all things everywhere. In this way we receive darshan 
				from nature as well as from inside the body as being an integral 
				part of nature (not apart from it). Thus antar darshan melds 
				with the darshan of the mother as hridayam darshan. This is the 
				culmination of bhava-pratyayo or non-dual spiritual intent where 
				our own intent melds with the intent of the universe and as such 
				a non-dual synergistic and synchronistic alignment comes into 
				being. The generation of divine intention/motivation or the "good 
				mind" (bhava-pratyaya) is a very powerful motive force linking 
				both practice and grace. Pure gratitude being perhaps the 
				deepest natural expression of divine grace. "thy will be done, 
				on earth as it is in heaven." also "suddha-sattva-visesatma 
				prema-suryamsu-samya-bhak rucibhis citta-masrnya- krd asau bhava 
				ucyate" Sri Caitanya Caritamrta Madhya-lila 23.5)
				Please note that Patanjali is indicating here a profound 
				practice which available to us through recognizing the formless 
				nature inside of all of nature; i.e., that purusa is shining out 
				at us from All Our Relations. It is obvious that Patanjali is 
				not addressing samkhya dualism here, but an integrative 
				relationship between prakrti and purusa; i.e., within THAT which 
				is contained in prakrti (nature) there is a formless presence (purusa) 
				which is the true nature of the Self (swarupa). Here the 
				profound mergence of sattva, purusa, prakrti, isvara, and 
				swarupa is being pointed out which is flatly stated in the last 
				Sutra of the last Pada the most lofty (Kaivalyam) Sutra IV.34. 
				Indeed purusa as isvara is known as self only through the agency 
				of prakrti, not as a separate Self. Sutra 20 
				Shradda-virya-smrti-samadhi-prajna-purvaka itaresham In the case 
				of others (itaresham), [if bhava-pratyaya or virama-pratyaya 
				have not been successful through consistent practice and 
				vairagya to loosen up duality, then as a recourse] others may 
				proceed (purvaka) through the self disciplines that cultivate 
				confidence and devotion to our practice (shradda); enthusiasm, 
				zeal, courage, and strength of practice (virya); reminding 
				oneself of the path, its purpose, and practice (smrti); and the 
				cultivation of gnosis, insight, and vigilant self awareness (prajna). 
				These practices will help augment the occurrence of asamprajnata 
				(transcognitive and non-dual) samadhi.
				
				Commentary: For those others (itaresham) when asamprajnata 
				through virama pratyaya or bhava-pratyaya is not sufficient to 
				move us forward -- where abhyasa and vairagya appear to need 
				some further assistance, then it is time to augment our practice 
				and ramp it up, so that transcognitive absorption can eventually 
				result (purvaka). Here purvaka, thus denotes that shradda, virya, 
				and smrti are preliminary practices which catalyze prajna and 
				samadhi. One can ramp up their practice and
				increase effort and energy (virya), engage upon practices which 
				increases confidence (shradda) in one's overall practice, 
				surround oneself with an environment that tends to remind us in 
				ways of sacred reverence (smrti) to cultivate that which 
				increases absorption (samadhi) in wisdom (prajna). Implementing 
				such remedies will positively affect our practice. Here also we 
				are reminded that the practice is intended to evoke the 
				intuition or innate wisdom and bring it forward into effecting 
				an even more efficacious practice.
				
				Swami Venkatesananda says, from "Enlightened Living" : "In the 
				case of others, when such spontaneous realization of the 
				unconditioned does not happen, such realization is preceded by 
				and proceeds from faith or one-pointed devotion, great energy 
				and use of willpower, constant remembrance of teachings and 
				one's own experience, the practice of samadhi (the state of 
				inner harmony), and a knowledge or discernment of such harmony - 
				all of which lead one gradually on to that state of yoga." In 
				other words an effective practice automatically creates its own 
				enthusiasm, strength, zeal, a greater degree of self confidence 
				and centered empowerment, sense of purpose, rememberance, 
				insight, inspiration, and feeling of being connected with All 
				Our Relations. A yogi/yogini who is to be successful really 
				needs great courage and strength, but sometimes our practice may 
				be lacking or unskillful. Then we might lose sight of our 
				spiritual focus. Then confidence (shradda), zeal, and direction 
				in our practice may be diminished, lost, or doubt may set in, 
				that may create a significant impediment toward practice and 
				thus our eventual realization. So confidence and enthusiasm for 
				the practice must be increased by remembering and being reminded 
				(smrti) of what we really are striving toward (nirbija samadhi). 
				Here these methods can become invoked as remedial safeguard (as 
				a practice to increase the practice), when our practice needs a 
				boost. As such shradda, virya, smrti, prajna, can help us to 
				become focused and engaged in our practice, but should only be 
				seen as a temporary adjunct toward reestablishing an effective 
				practice which provides its own natural inspiration, spiritual 
				passion, insight, enthusiasm, and encouragement. Here an 
				effective practice creates its own and increases prajna (insight) 
				virya (inspiration and courage), shradda (centeredness and self 
				confidence), and re-memberance of All Our Relations -- so that 
				our practice doesn't become mechanical or deadened.
				
				Various practical methods help in this regard such as studying 
				inspiring works, satsang, engaging upon a deeper connection with 
				spiritual friends and/or a spiritual community, living in an 
				inspiring spiritual environment, darshan (being in the presence 
				of enlightened beings human or otherwise), removing distractions 
				(aparigraha), tapas, isvara pranidhana (the practice of 
				listening for and surrendering to the eternal teacher/teachings 
				in All Our Relations, eating pure and sattvic food, assimilating 
				clean air and water (saucha), practicing the hatha yoga kriyas, 
				meditation, the practicing of the other yam/niyams such as found 
				in astanga yoga, the practice of layanam such as found in the 
				dharanas, etc. All these will act synergistically to empower 
				one's practice. See also Pada 2 for the practice of Tapas that 
				also kindles the spiritual flame when practice appears to sag. 
				Sutra 21 tivra-samveganam asannah Such practices will increase 
				the passion and strength of one's overall practice. Samadhi is 
				most close at hand and reachable (asannah) to those whose 
				passion (samveganam) for it is the most intense (tivra) for they 
				are less likely to be dissuaded from it). Those remain centered 
				in their core energy and claim their natural position in the 
				greater scheme of things. They find success, grace, and poise in 
				the greater integrity of All Our Relations which is always very 
				near. Sutra 22 Mrdu-madhyadhimatratvat tato'pi visesah Thus one 
				may further measure (visesah) one's momentum toward samadhi 
				dependent upon the strength of one's spiritual passion and focus 
				as to weak (mrdu), medium (madhya), or complete, ultimate, or 
				immeasurable (adhimatra). Commentary: Clearly Patanjali is 
				saying that if we are fickle in our passion for yoga, if we are 
				easily distracted or allured, unfocused and insincere in our 
				practice and intention, then our success in yoga will be delayed 
				or adversely affected. Conversely, if our practice and passion 
				for yoga is strong, enthusiastic, sincere, undivided, attentive, 
				and sublime, then success will be insured. Those who merely 
				dabble in yoga as a fad, fancy, or ego gratification will find 
				that they are wasting their time holding on to such an approach. 
				Through the aforesaid methods we eventually become naturally 
				ardent practitioners (samveganam) The nearer (asannah) we get to 
				realization, the closer aligned we are with our natural self, 
				the stronger (tivra) the intensity of natural inspiration, 
				enthusiasm, dedication, attentive devotion, and zealousness will 
				spontaneously manifest, so that self discipline becomes 
				completely transformed (adhimatra) where an effortless self 
				perpetuating divine passion manifests.
				
				So as we become more dedicated to our practice in I.21-22 we 
				also become dedicated to realizing our highest potential or 
				highest self (purusa). Next, it is fitting that Patanjali 
				dedicates Sutra 23-29 to the practice of Isvara Pranidhana to 
				indicate that success is not a matter of individual will power 
				or individual intention alone, but rather it involves an 
				transpersonal but intimate affirmation. Also see the discussion 
				in pada II on isvara pranidhana as a niyama practice) as well as 
				Pada III-1 (Kriya Yoga). As a path of surrender to the ultimate 
				intimate transpersonal, isvara pranidhana, is a "non-practice" 
				practice as it is non-willful -- as in "thy will be done on 
				earth as it is in heaven". As such a sincere and dedicated 
				practice becomes equated with an inspired and devotional 
				practice (abhyasa). Sutra 23 isvara-pranidhanad va Or (va) 
				further progress is realized through surrender, dedication, or 
				devotion (pranidhanat) to the great all inclusive Integrity - to 
				the body of Great Belonging - the final and complete integration 
				which is the untainted Self without skew or blemish and which 
				knows not the limits of separateness (isvara pranidhana) -- the 
				Great Integrity of All Our Relations Commentary: Simply put we 
				surrender here to our highest potential or highest self (isvara). 
				One could also translate isvara pranidhana as the surrender of 
				the limited dualistic illusion of separateness and delusionary 
				self identifications in favor of the identification with the 
				Supreme Integrity or Self (purusa). Isvara is that which is not 
				capable of being defined, but Patanjali will give some of 
				isvara's characteristics in the succeeding sutras. Isvara is the 
				name given to our higher Self, who we really are when all the 
				vrtti are dissolved. This is thus a dedication of our small 
				"self" of limited consciousness to realizing our true "Self", 
				our higher or buddha potential. Yogis often surrender to the 
				lord of Yoga, Siva, while Buddhists surrender to the innate 
				Buddha nature. As tantric yoga developed, Maheshvara became 
				identified with Siva. Followers of Christ affirm the Christ 
				within and embody that, while the advanced yogis who have 
				realized their true self nature (swarupa) have surrendered to 
				Self -- they have remembered who they really are as the 
				manifestation of Infinite Love. Tat Tvam Asi. Svara means 
				master, while the word, ishta, means, special, precious, or 
				intimate. Another breakdown says that Is means command and vara 
				means eminent or precious, but the secret meaning is that Isvara 
				means the innermost teacher. Who is isvara, we will see next. 
				For more on Isvara see commentaries in Sutra 24-27 above, Pada 
				II: sutras 1 and 45. Sutra 24 Klesha-karma-vipakasayair 
				apara-mrshta purusa-visesa isvarah Isvara is the purest (a-para-mrshta) 
				aspect (visesa) of pure undifferentiated universal consciousness 
				(purusa) which is untouched and unaffected by taint (klesha), 
				karma, and the seed germs (asayair) that result (vipaka) from 
				ordinary desire and propensities. Commentary: Isvara is the one 
				purusa untouched by klesha, karma, results, or dormant seeds. 
				Isvara is formless. How does one perceive or conceptualize the 
				formless? Obviously this is not possible. It is beyond 
				perception and conception, yet it is available through direct 
				experience. Isvara is always available through isvara pranidhana 
				(see Pada II. Sutra I and 45). Always available, that is, if we 
				look for that formless grace as All Our Relations -- if we ask 
				for eternal and sacred spiritual presence to guide us at each 
				moment. Again we are "re-minded" that isvara is the highest 
				purusa (pure being). Reminded of Sutra 16 where Patanjali first 
				talks about purusa, it is vairagya which leads to param purusa. 
				Thus surrender to isvara and vairagya are two sides of the same 
				coin; i.e., losing the small self (ego identifications) while 
				simultaneously embracing and being embraced by expansive 
				non-dual reality of siva/sakti. "The Purusha is Divine, formless, 
				existing inside and outside, unborn, free from Prana and mind, 
				pure, and greater than the great unmanifest. Purusha is one who 
				fills all space or who resides in the cavity of the heart. The 
				Purusha is immaterial, and therefore, divine in nature. For the 
				same reason it is inside and outside. It is unborn because it is 
				causeless. It does not undergo any process such as of life and 
				its experiences.
				The Universal Self knows without the ordinary Pramanas or proofs 
				of knowledge. Its knowledge does not consist in perception, 
				inference, verbal testimony or any kind of commonly known proof. 
				Worldly knowledge is relative and mediate. There is no necessity 
				for the cognitive or perceptive organs in the highest Self, 
				because in it knowledge consists in Self-realisation or 
				realisation of Itself. Even the distinction which is ordinarily 
				made between the sheaths of a person, cannot be made in the true 
				Self. Virat, Hiranyagarbha and Isvara are of the nature of Pure 
				Consciousness. The apparent distinction which is seen to exist 
				among these three aspects of the Divine Being, is more the 
				result of a convention or habit of the mind to find objectively 
				what it experiences in itself. Logically this distinction cannot 
				be proved, though it is simply believed in. Hence, the Upanishad 
				says that the Divine Being is without Prana or mind. The Pranas 
				and the mind are limiting factors, and therefore, they have no 
				basis in the unlimited Divine Being. The Mantras of the Vedas 
				and the declarations of the Upanishads which describe the Divine 
				Being as having heads, eyes, feet, etc., are only figurative, 
				meant to convey its universal nature. There is neither the 
				vibration of Iccha Sakti nor of Kriya Sakti in the Divine Being; 
				therefore, there are no sense-organs also. In short, there is 
				nothing in It which belongs to the special characteristic of the 
				individual."
				
				Swami Krishnananda, on the Mundaka Upanishad, The Divine Life 
				Society, Rishikesh. Sutra 25 Tatra-nir-atishayam sarvajna-bijam 
				There (tatra) [isvara] is the seed and origin (bija) of absolute 
				(nir-atishayam), unsurpassed, and complete omniscience (sarvajna). 
				Commentary: See also Pada II.1 and II.45. Isvara is the all 
				inclusive and unlimited identification containing all 
				differentiations and diversity and their seeds (bijam) within 
				its most wholesome and all inclusive great integrity within the 
				non-dual realization of All Our Relations, wherein all feelings 
				of loneliness and incompleteness are fulfilled. By remembering 
				to practice we affirm and generate the "good mind" and 
				simultaneously embrace the profound "right view" beyond judgment, 
				methods of inference, willfulness, philosophical ideas, 
				conceptual artifice, or perception. Thus this"right" view is the 
				one beyond conception and any artifice. It is established 
				through direct spiritual experience and is thus due to the 
				dawning of the intrinsic light in authentic darshan untouched by 
				form, time, and limitation, Although religionists attempt to 
				limit isvara with names and form, Patanjali clearly indicates 
				that such tendencies are an externalized corruption by assigning 
				the meaning to a symbolic representation, while extracting the 
				meaningful experience from intimate experience. Here the yoga of 
				isvara pranidhana is the alignment and integration of divine 
				will with individual will, spirit with nature, grandfather Sun 
				with grandmother moon, consciousness with beingness (satchitananda), 
				sahasrara (crown) and muladhara (earth), pingala (ha) and ida (tha), 
				or siva/shakti in the sushumna (central channel). Sutra 26 
				purvesham api guruhkalena anavacchedat Unlimited by time (kalena) 
				this great integrity (anavacchedat) is the primal (purvesham) 
				eternal teacher (guru) even (api) the teacher of the most 
				ancient teachers. Being all inclusive, unlimited, and eternal (kalena), 
				Isvara is found within the unobscured instantaneous eternal 
				moment -- here and now -- ever accessible to the true devotee.
				
				Commentary: Isvara pranidhana is a practice. HERE our every 
				intimate experience becomes our teacher when we ask for guidance 
				in the eternal moment by not identifying with false and limited 
				dualistic beliefs of separation (avidya), but rather when we see 
				eternal spirit as sacred presence in All Our Relations. This 
				Scared Presence is also called "being present". The teacher/teaching 
				is always HERE. The teacher/teaching is always HERE. The teacher/teaching 
				is always HERE.
				The most common definition for the word, guru, in yoga circles 
				is the remover of the darkness, and in a secondary way, the guru 
				is the one who brings forth light and grace. In one sense then 
				all of our experiences and relationships act as our teachers (in 
				the long run), but certainly most of us appear to suffer from 
				the "hard" lessons not quickly learned that has brought about 
				some temporary darkness, avidya, and pain (dukha). When we 
				reside in sacred presence, HERE, when our HeartMind is open, we 
				are all learning our lessons. Thus everyone everywhere and 
				everything in is in this greater perspective our gurus -- in the 
				integrity which is All Our Relations. The true teacher thus 
				directs us back to the true Self within. That true teacher 
				resides in the cave of the heart. That said, in the the 
				classical orthodox Hindu guru-shishya -- parampara diksha system 
				the guru once evaluated and accepted is to be obeyed 
				unquestioningly and in complete surrender seeing her or him as a 
				manifestation of the Sat Guru. This interpretation of guru is 
				not what Patanjali is referring to. Rather in the Yoga System as 
				put forth by Patanjali the situation is quite different than 
				orthodox Brahmanism, where the guru is not even mentioned except 
				in this very sutra alone. Rather Patanjali refers to devotion to 
				the PRACTICE as the practice, and here there is surrender only 
				to the highest formless "Self" (purusa) in isvara pranidhana (which 
				becomes a constant practice). Patanjali suggests surrendering 
				directly to isvara, as it is said that isvara is the teacher 
				(guru) of even (api) the teacher of the most ancient teachers -- 
				the darkness dispeller of the darkness dispellers. Isvara is the 
				innermost teacher and is always accessible inside. As such 
				isvara is our highest potential or said in another way, our 
				innate Buddha nature, or yet in other words, the eternal teacher 
				(Sat Guru) as the light removes the darkness. In yoga, the 
				practice (isvara pranidhana) is indeed the teaching, the 
				teaching is in the practice, and the teacher is in the teaching. 
				Every time we do the practice in an attentive way all of this 
				comes together (if we are lucky) in our own embodiment of it 
				(more or less). So practically Patanjali tells us that 
				worshipping idols, books, or external teachers is dissociative 
				and distracting unless they point us back to the eternal light 
				which resides within. We can thus look at each of our yoga 
				teachers as reflections of isvara or purusa (as their true 
				nature) and try to allow that light to brighten us up (Sri) as 
				much as the pre-existing darkness of our conditioned mind (in 
				its habitual mode of ignorance) can allow. This is darshan 
				acknowledging the inner light in All Our Relations. In a similar 
				way all our interactions with the trees, stars, moon, other 
				animals, star systems, and formless dimensions also are our 
				teachers reflecting the eternal light -- the darshan of all the 
				teachers and enlightened ones of all times. HERE we surrender at 
				all times to the ever present teacher. This is pure grace to 
				allow this to be continuous.
				
				Sutra 27 Tasya vachakah pranavah Isvara is expressed and 
				represented (vachakah) by the vibratory energy contained in the 
				pranava (the sacred syllable, om). Commentary: Isvara can not be 
				defined or limited because Isvara by definition is indefinable 
				infinite mind, however he can be symbolically represented by the 
				expression of pranava - by the vibratory essence that the sacred 
				sound, om, approximates. Thus isvara is often accessed through 
				the pranava which is om. Tasya means "it". Vacakah means "expression" 
				from the root vac to speak. Pranavah means "the sacred syllable 
				AUM" derived from "pra" (before) and nava (from the root, 
				sound). So the straight translation is simply, Its' (referring 
				to isvara as the teacher of all the teachers as discussed in the 
				previous three sutras) expression is the pranavah (the sacred 
				sound).Notice Patanjali himself never mentions AUM, but rather 
				pranava. It is also of interest that Patanjali does not say 
				"word", but rather pranava, sacred "sound". Who can really say 
				adequately in words, what is essentially ineffable, an all 
				encompassing supramundane transgalactic Reality which exists by 
				itself unable to be boxed in by human words, concepts, or 
				fabrication. IM by definition is infinite, it's boundaries can 
				not be defined or limited because it has none. Thus to try to 
				define it is both counterproductive and impossible (not that we 
				don't try sometimes :blush ) . So to define any word that 
				represents IM or God would depreciate it/demean it, and that is 
				why I believe that the name of God is sacred and unutterable. 
				Words are by definition symbolic representations for things -- 
				it is not the thing itself. Like looking at a map is not the 
				same thing as experiencing subjectively the here and now of the 
				territory (as in the well known adage the map is not the 
				territory), words likewise (although useful at times) can and do 
				tend to over objectify our situation, create separation, and 
				reinforce dualistic thinking (dualistic conceptualization is 
				impossible without words or symbolic logic). Simply put, words 
				and concepts may be useful for some tasks, but in meditation or 
				yoga they are counter-productive tending to hold up the 
				separation and duality.
				
				So the question then, is AUM an exception? As a sadhana (practice) 
				I agree with Patanjali, it can be effective, but like all 
				practices, I question whether it is the integrative experience 
				itself. The universe may indeed be pregnant with AUM -- 
				permeating all of space and emptiness -- or it may be deafening 
				silent -- or it may well be far beyond sound itself (some 
				animals do not have ears). So from my limited experience of 
				Infinite Mind (isvara), I think that the intoning of AUM is 
				still a
				conveyer, a pathway, a sadhana which leads us into the greater 
				vibration, pulsation, and inter-dimensional energetic hologram 
				which has no beginning or end -- where both sound and words have 
				little meaning. Some commentators who see God in all religions 
				try to show how they all point to the same living Spirit. So in 
				the West it is often attempted to take examples from from 
				Judeo-Christian texts as well "In the beginning there was the 
				word, and the Word was with God, and the word was God". Such has 
				been hacked over literally by thousands of scholars, but to this 
				commentator the relevance to this sutra means that there is a 
				creative and meaningful vibration of God/from God at the time of 
				creation (big bang) -- AT THAT MOMENT between non-creation and 
				creation, a meaning to life or "word" emerged -- a word thus was 
				spoken -- is BEING SPOKEN NOW as creation/evolution as the 
				creative evolutionary energy (shakti). But this is not an 
				ordinary word, as we may find in English, Hebrew, or even 
				Sanskrit as it was not pronounced by man in the beginning. I 
				believe is all we can do is hear THAT and maybe sing a long a 
				bit. Thus if I concentrate on the pranava, AUM, it is a powerful 
				sound capable of leading me into dhyana or samadhi. One can take 
				many directions from HERE but first I'd like to acknowledge that 
				in Sanskrit which is a highly developed phonetic language -- in 
				Sanskrit linguistic structure, the word, AUM, can be proved to 
				convey all the other sounds in the alphabet -- all possible 
				sounds that human's can make. As such (and Hindus take the 
				Sanskrit language and script as being sacred), AUM represents 
				more than the whole. One would have to study Sanskrit to go 
				further and such is beyond the scope of this translation.
				
				However Patanjali is going for a universal and eternal Truth in 
				isvara, beyond man's language and culture. To be fair the Jews 
				for example, believe the same thing about the Hebrew language 
				and their bible. There are huge volumes of books written trying 
				to figure out the right pronunciation of the word, for God, 
				(some call it Jehovah) as they also believe that it is sacred. 
				Other religions (including native American) believe that their 
				language is also sacred and that the word for the creator has 
				great transformative power as well. So in presenting yoga sutra 
				(I.27) to Westerners in terms that they may understand (Judeo-Christian) 
				may often miss what patanjali is really saying here. Patanjali 
				actually said that the pranava is the expression of isvara -- 
				the omniscient teacher of all the teachers. Practically speaking 
				however all vital and living religions agree, that is to focus 
				on the creator in creation. That is spiritual practice. So the 
				practical meaning would be the same i.e., practice intoning aum 
				and/or listening for aum as the self existing expression of 
				isvara (the divine purusha).
				
				Patanjali is thus offering this sutra as one practice that may 
				be effective in clearing out the vrttis and obscurations leading 
				us eventually to Infinite Mind. Sutra 28 taj-japas 
				tad-artha-bhavanam Through generating (bhavanam) constant 
				repetition (taj-japa) of the pranava (om) the meaning (artha) 
				behind the sound is realized and becomes manifest (bhavanam). 
				Commentary: The vibratory energy contained in the vibration of 
				the sound, Om (the pranava), connects with isvara. Japa means 
				the repetition of mantra, in this case the sound of OM. Thus 
				japa (mantra repetition of om) is given as a practice. Much is 
				available elsewhere on the significance of the vibratory nature 
				of OM and how to practice japa. One simple suggestion is to 
				allow the AUM to be expressed in three parts after inhaling deep 
				into the core, i.e., Ahhh rising up from the depths through the 
				abdomen and chest and back of throat OOO rising through the 
				throat to the top of the palate and on to the crown MMM 
				finishing the SHAPE of the sound labially -- all as a natural 
				energetic expression of isvara at the crown.
				
				Experiment with the various effects of the different rhythms, 
				durations, speeds, strengths, and locations of the breath and 
				sound energy. There exist many ways to practice japa, all 
				producing different effects. It is pointed out (contrary to 
				orthodox Vedism) that this is the only mantra that Patanjali 
				recommends in the entire Yoga Sutras. Sutra 29 tatah 
				pratyak-cetanadhigamo'py antarayabhavash ca Thence through the 
				practice of the pranava, aum, as a dedication toward realizing 
				isvara (through isvara pranidhana) consciousness (cetana) is 
				redirected inwards (pratyak) toward the realization (adhigamo) 
				of the intrinsic light of consciousness (pratyak-cetana-adhigamo) 
				and (ca) also (api) obstacles and hindrances (antarayah) are 
				thus removed (abhava).
				
				Commentary: By practicing surrender to our highest potential 
				Self, then obstacles, hindrances, blockages, psychic lesions, 
				and such are uncovered, dissolved, eradicated, or transformed 
				while the cit-prana is reunited and brought back from its 
				wandering distractions to Source -- to the infallible implicate 
				guide/teacher which awaits us all as an innate ever-present 
				effulgence. This practice is a two way street -- redirecting (pratyak) 
				light and consciousness (cetana) to Source -- Source shining 
				forth in our embodiment -- and embodiment to Source, which when 
				the pathway is cleared out, then the natural flow as natural 
				innate wisdom can be brought forth and manifest. This flow or 
				divine pulsation (spanda) is actually non-dual, neither 
				exclusively "from" Source (crown) to embodiment (muladhara), nor 
				exclusively from embodiment to eternal source, but rather 
				simultaneous Both/And. This is one way we "re-mind" the small 
				and limited mindset of the greater reality of the greater 
				holographic whole (Self) or purusa. This practice of redirecting 
				the consciousness to Source not only removes obstacles, but 
				allows the inner light to shines forth even more in All Our 
				Relations. The more the inner light illumines the path, the more 
				the obstacles fall away. At the end all is seen as Self in All 
				Our Relations. Now begins the practices which remove the 
				obstacles and distractions of the citta allowing entrance into 
				absorption into the deeper and more continuous experience of 
				samadhi (Sutras 30-51) Sutra I. 30 
				Vyadhi-styana-samsaya-pramadalasya-virati-bhranti-darsanalabdhabhumi-katvanavasthitatvani 
				citta-viksepas te'ntarayah The distractions of the mind field (citta-viksepas) 
				and obstacles (antarayah) to samadhi [which are removed by the 
				above practice] are: 1) disease (vyadhi) 2) doubt, uncertainty, 
				hesitation, inhibition, lack of self worth (samshaya) 3) 
				fixation, stagnation, rigidity, stubbornness, stupor, dullness, 
				inertia, and procrastination (styana) 4) carelessness or 
				negligence (pramada) 5) laziness and languor (alasya) 6) 
				frivolousness, dissipation of energy and consciousness into 
				meaningless sense indulgence or distractions, attraction to 
				external objects or the involvement in the dual world of I-it 
				illusion, externalized or materialistic consciousness (a-virati) 
				[the opposite of pratyhara] 7) false views, false beliefs, false 
				identifications, conclusions, adherence to blind and/or stubborn 
				beliefs, confusion, and delusion (bhranti-darshana)
				8) ungroundedness, poiselessness, fickleness, wandering, state 
				of being lost or in transition, not present, agitation, 
				constantly shifting positions, chronically clueless, spaced out 
				or bipolar, the inability to rest or return to in one's core 
				energy or poise (a-labdha-bhumikatva) 9) and instability, 
				imbalance, stage of oscillation, uncenteredness, in general not 
				being able to be still (an-avasthitatvani). Commentary: When the 
				cit-prana is distracted, distorted, and/or dissipated all sorts 
				of imbalances and difficulties arise. These are the hindrances 
				that are removed by the practice of isvara pranidhana and/or 
				through focused repetition of isvara's' sound, the pranava, 
				which brings us into isvara's realm. Sutra I. 31 
				Dukha-daurmanasyangamejayatva-svasa-prasvasa viksepa-sahabhuvah 
				The symptoms or manifestations of this distracted state (viksepa) 
				are concomitant to (saha-bhuvah) mental suffering (dukha); 
				psychic frustration, despair, and anguish (daurmansya); turmoil, 
				unsteadiness, and/or physical unstableness (angam-ejayatva); and 
				rough, uneven, and.or erratic breathing (svasa-prasvasa). 
				Commentary: When we get distracted from our true purpose, goal, 
				vital energetics, or alignment with Source, then we lose 
				alignment with Self and its restorative and regenerative powers 
				that establish well being and health. This state of distraction 
				is unfortunately the normal state of ordinary neurotic people (dukha), 
				being extracted into the external physical dualistic world 
				versus living in the innate synchronicity an alignment with a 
				living spirituality. The symptoms of general nervousness and 
				anxiety are the natural consequences (saha-bhuvah) of this 
				suffering (dukha) state which is caused by being caught up in 
				distractive activities (viksepa) in general. Please notice the 
				importance that Patanjali ascribes to distraction as effecting 
				an unsteady, uneven, or rough unbalanced breathing. As we refine 
				our awareness on the breath with practice we become more 
				conscious of when our breathing changes in relationship to or 
				emotions and state of mind. Here we will discover also that 
				making the breathing refined, even, steady and continuous, all 
				the distractions (viksepa) can be remediated.
				
				Especially in chapter two, Sadhana Pada, Patanjali gives 
				practices (sadhana) that reclaims our distracted energy and 
				consciousness (cit-prana) and returns it inside to kindle the 
				yogic process of self realization. All yoga practices are 
				designed to do so, but more specifically here in sutra 31, if 
				one feels distracted (viksepa) , one may recommend dharana (concentration 
				and visualization processes), pratyhara (bringing the cit-prana 
				inside thus preventing it from wandering, pranayama (extending 
				the essential evolutionary energy through conscious breath 
				work), asana, and meditation (dhyana). Such practices are a 
				combination of astanga yoga as outlined in Sadhana Pada, but 
				also many similar practices that produce similar results can be 
				found in the various samyama practices as outlined in chapter 3, 
				Vibhuti Pada. Sutra I. 32 Tat-pratishedhartham eka-tattvabhyasah 
				Therefore (tat) the remedy (pratishedha) [for these obstacles (viksepa)] 
				is ever increasing our practice (abhyasa) of one pointed 
				dedication and devotion to the truth (eka-tattvabhyasa) -- the 
				continued focused practice of rooting out those obstacles of 
				self delusion, and letting go of falsehood. Commentary: In this 
				sutra Patanjali describes the practice of eka-tattvabhyasah as 
				removing the obstacles (viksepa) by bringing together of one's 
				focus in a one pointed dedication to the eternal truth of the 
				Great Integrity -- the Reality of the All in the One and the One 
				in the All (eka-tattva) as the practice (abhyasa) of isvara 
				pranidhana (surrender and dedication to our highest potential as 
				That). See I.23-26, Pada II.2 and II.45. There is but one 
				underlying intent or purpose here; i.e., to allow for the 
				continuous flow of Divine Grace or Consciousness uninterruptedly. 
				This is realized in a a non-dual transpersonal and continuous 
				non-interrupted flow throughout all the koshas, chakras, nadis, 
				strota, marmas, and multi-dimensional fields of infinite 
				consciousness up into to Hiranyagarbha kosha, not as a separate 
				or personal realization. Otherwise it would not be the Great 
				Integrity/Yantra at all. Tat Tvam Asi -- All Our Relations. 
				Sutra I. 33 maitri-karuna-muditopeksanam 
				sukha-dukha-punyapunya-vishayanam bhavanatas citta-prasadanam By 
				generating and cultivating the intent and deep feelings (bhavanatas) 
				of friendliness and loving kindness (maitri), love and 
				compassion (karuna), happiness (mudita), equanimity (upeksanam) 
				and sympathetic joyfulness (sukha) in [all] conditions and 
				events (visayanam) whether it be potentially joyful (sukha) or 
				painful (dukha), auspicious (punya-apunya) or not, a sweet grace 
				arises that establishes a clarity of the heartmind (citta-prasadanam).
				
				Commentary: The cultivation (bhavanatas) of these sentiments of 
				friendliness and loving kindness (maitri), love (karuna), 
				sympathetic joy and desire for the happiness of others (mudita), 
				and equanimity (upeksanam) toward all beings and events 
				regardless if people are happy or suffering, the events 
				auspicious or inauspicious (punya-apunya) or whatever their 
				conditional circumstances (visayanam) may be, the underlying 
				serenity and clarity of the citta (citta-prasadanam) is always 
				cultivated and
				thus can manifest. This powerful practice or cultivation (bhavanatas) 
				as a attitudinal stance toward all beings and things in all 
				circumstances will help maintain serenity and keep us centered 
				in the heart (chitta-prasadanam). It will counteract polar 
				imbalances of pleasure (sukha) or pain (dukha) caused by 
				external events (visayanam), and prove to considerably enhance 
				the continuous experience of the Eternal Reality -- of All Our 
				Relations. This is a two way practice (citta-prasadanam) in that 
				we both cultivate it and it manifests through us. The embodiment 
				of maitri, mudita, karuna, and upeksanam reflects, reveals, and 
				discloses an underlying universal non-dual and transpersonal 
				consciousness reflecting Self in all and as all. When the "good 
				mind" or heart/mind has been sufficiently purified and clarified 
				by this practice, when we sufficiently see who we really are and 
				are able to somewhat better reside in our true nature. When one 
				has applied maitri, mudita, karuna, and upeksanam as skillful 
				means in All Our Relations, then from that clarified Heart-Core 
				Consciousness such emanates spontaneously and naturally as 
				divine expression. As such it is an effective remedy for 
				distractions of the mind (citta-viksepas). These practices 
				summed up correspond to the Buddhist Four Boundless Minds which 
				are compassion, loving kindness, equanimity, and sympathetic joy. 
				All these are designed as remedies (pratisedha) for our 
				fundamental distraction (viksepa) from our true nature (swarupa). 
				See also the commentary to Sutra I.19 (the practice of 
				bhava-pratyaya). To clarify this, upeksanam (equanimity) does 
				not mean a bland indifference or neutral withdrawal or attitude 
				toward people or the world. It does not just mean evenmindedness, 
				but rather it reflects one who has become stabilized around an 
				innate happiness (citta-prasadanam) where one is not bothered, 
				overly excited, troubled, pained (dukha), or unbalanced by 
				outside events or people, but remains unaffected by such 
				influences while being deeply rooted and centered in HeartMind 
				awareness. Here he can see all beings and things -- in All Our 
				Relations from this deeply centered place of Grace. Here it is 
				clear that Patanjali is suggesting that we do not condemn the 
				nonvirtuous (apunya), be dismayed by those causing suffering (dukha), 
				nor praise the virtuous (punya) or the those who create 
				happiness (sukha). It is more than enough to rest and abide in 
				citta-prasadanam where sweet grace flows forth without 
				obstruction. To that end friendliness, compassion, sympathetic 
				joy, and equanimity are never lost.
				
				Taken as a whole chitta-prasadanam is a profound practice in 
				itself. At the base level it can refer to a mind-field (citta) 
				which is innately wholesome and non-afflictive. Abiding in that, 
				then zero negative karma is generated. In fact citta-prasadanam 
				is the sum total result of maitri, karuna, mudita, and upeksanam. 
				As such it is available as a remedy for all afflictions (kleshas) 
				and negative propensities. On a practical level we can apply 
				this in all our relations (visayanam). Citta-prasadanam as a 
				practice removes all obstacles and interruptions of clarity. How 
				often have you seen yourself become angry, upset, irritated, 
				depressed, jealous, or other wise afflicted by the kleshas? For 
				most people these afflictions are deeply imbedded (in the 
				samskaras) and must be flushed out in order for liberation to 
				occur. As they are kleshic, they are also have karmic 
				consequences. Thus flushing them out purifies the negative karma 
				as well. Many suffer from these kleshas chronically (such as in 
				chronic depression, anger, irritation, etc). Hence Patanjali is 
				presenting us with a remedy that reminds us to practice 
				citta-prasadanam as a pleasant and positive non-afflictive 
				mindfield devoid of negativity whenever we recognize an 
				affliction. Thus the application of maitri (loving kindness and 
				friendliness), karuna (love and compassion), mudita (sympathetic 
				joy), and upeksanam (equanimity toward others and all events) 
				will be propitious in all our relations (visayam) so that 
				citta-prasadanam is effected (bhavanatas). On another more 
				profound level one could consider these activities to cause 
				citta-prasadanam as a wholistic manifestation of uninterrupted 
				flow from the param-purusha or Siva. Thus the sadhak places 
				one's mind-stream into direct connection with Divine 
				Auspiciousness (Maheshvara or Siva) and receives his sweet 
				blessing manifesting as a spontaneous outpouring, 
				citta-prasadanam, as sweet Divine Grace. Sutra I. 34 
				Pracchardana-vidharanabhyam va pranasya Or (va) through 
				controlling the expiration (pracchardana) and retention (vidharanabhyam) 
				of energy (pranasya) [the mind can be purified, clarified, and 
				stabilized while grace also is evinced -- citta-prasadanam is 
				brought forward]. Commentary: Or we can remediate (pratisedha) 
				the distraction and interruptions (viksepa) of the 
				citta-prasadanam (the graceful flow divine consciousness 
				stemming from the param-purusha or Maheshvara) directly through 
				working with the expiration and letting the interruption of the 
				flow of divine consciousness empty and die, thus getting down to 
				the underlying core energetics wherein the distractions of the 
				ordinary mind and emotions causally rides.
				
				Here we are not merely discussing the control of the outward 
				bound breath (pracchardana) alone, but more so the outward bound 
				energy, as the exhalation corresponds to outward flowing of 
				energy which in turn correlated directly to the dissipation and 
				distraction of prana and consciousness (cit-prana). Thus a key 
				practice in yoga is given by Patanjali here; i.e., the 
				remediation and regulation of suffering and distraction by 
				retaining the energy (prana) inside, rather than simply a 
				practice of controlling or holding the breath out (bahya 
				kumbhaka). Pracchardana also means to vomit out or to expire. 
				The word, prana, can be broken down to "pra", meaning to bring 
				forth; while "na" means vibration. Prana is the underlying 
				energy of all existence as well as consciousness. As such it is 
				the animating principle of Spirit as it manifests in the body. 
				We have mentioned previously and will mention it again that it 
				is a law of existence that where the mind's attention goes, so 
				does one's energy. Taken as a unit, this is called the cit-prana. 
				Here Patanjali is saying that by controlling the outflow of the 
				prana and regulating that, then the citta is stabilized, 
				clarified, and readied for samadhi. This works with the 
				underlying energy behind the negative thought patterns and 
				allows us to release them. Thus the outflow of the breath, being 
				associated with release, it is used to release the negative 
				energy, thoughts, and emotions which interrupt the Divine 
				mind-stream. Since breath is related to our basic energy, in 
				this light then, we can also understand how we can can regulate 
				the cit-prana and soothe and clarify the mind by bringing our 
				awareness back to the exhalation of the breath and the 
				regulation of the breath. This will bring freshness and 
				clarification to the mindstream. Thus as a practical method as 
				in meditation and in daily life, we can go back to the breath as 
				a gross way of redirecting our awareness from outward flows 
				toward sense objects (vishaya) or external events (visayanam) so 
				in turn preventing any interruption of the Divine mood or 
				chitta-prasadanam. Thus in meditation we release the negative 
				thought with the exhalation (pracchardana) and holding it 
				outside gently (vidharanabhyam). Thus Patanjali refers to the 
				emphasis on the exhalation to release negative thoughts or 
				attachment in general so it gently dissolves into a subtle 
				external release into emptiness. This is akin to the well known 
				Buddhist practice of Patanjali's day called anapana-sati which 
				observes the breath, except here in Sutra I.24 the expulsion 
				process is emphasized to effect release. In laya yoga, one can 
				add the visualization of blackish air to the exhalation and 
				whitish air to the inhalation, sounds and so forth, eventually 
				seeking through the breath heightened balance, equipoise, 
				equality, self supporting mutual steadiness, symmetry, 
				synchronicity, synergy, and continuity permeating body, breath, 
				energy, and mind with the greater mindfield. However this works 
				far better if we keep in mind that this is an indirect 
				substitute for the direct regulation of the primary cit-prana by 
				the param-purusa, Maheshvara as are all practices. In fact the 
				practices are necessary precisely because this divine breath has 
				become discontinuous.
				
				This is why success in pranayama (see Pada II: Sutras 49-53) is 
				entirely dependent upon first developing a direct experiential 
				sensitivity to and conscious relationship with the prana and its 
				source. After practice one realizes that the wavelike operations 
				of the mind (cit-vrtti) are dependent upon the operations of the 
				prana. the vibrations of the prana are available through the 
				vibrations in the air. By refining the air and prana -- by 
				making then increasingly subtle, eventually the mind opens up to 
				its vast potential. This requires a requisite amount of direct 
				experiential sensitivity -- of inner wisdom. As the mind empties, 
				as the breath empties, as the prana becomes less than subtle (empty), 
				as the mental objects dissolve, then samadhi dawns as we are 
				filled with Divine vibration (spanda). Further practice thus 
				focuses cultivating this samadhi to be continuous without 
				interruption. As an extension of this see the practices of 
				pranayama (energy extension) and pratyhara (balancing and 
				cultivating the awareness/attention and biopsychic energy and 
				moving such for inner transformation) in Pada II and the 
				practice of dharana in Pada III. Sutra I. 35 Vishayavati va 
				pravrttir utpanna manasah sthiti-nibandhani Concentrating the 
				individual mind (manas) on a specified object (vishayavati) 
				prevents (nibandhani) the birth (utpanna) of the further vrtti (pravrttir). 
				This gates (nibandhani) the wanderings of the ordinary mind and 
				thus steadies (sthiti) it by creating a continuity [which 
				removes the infirmities of mind]. Commentary: If the ordinary 
				dualistic mind (manas) wanders from one thought object to 
				another (vishayavati), one way to bind and redirect it and thus 
				gain steadiness of the mind, while preventing the wavering cycle 
				of attaching to an endless succession of further attachments, is 
				to focus the wandering mind from attachment to sense objects (vishayavati) 
				through techniques (usually through concentrating on one object 
				only). This tames the waves of the vrtti and causes a stability 
				(sthiti) of the ordinary mind (manas), thus allowing it a chance 
				to calm down and become clarified. Although here the vrtti are 
				not destroyed but simply pacified and reduced, there is still 
				attachment to an object present, never-the-less the mind has 
				been stilled quickly and easily through this simple 
				implementation. Thus manasah sthiti-nibandhani firmly 
				establishes the mind in a stable base made fit for meditation. 
				It is another practice in which one unites and focuses the 
				cit-prana in order to cultivate samadhi.
				Two parallel corresponding techniques in astanga yoga (expounded 
				in Pada II and Pada III) are pratyhara and dharana. Pratyahara 
				is bringing one's attention, energy, and awareness back inside 
				and up to one's internal energy self regulatory centers. Dharana 
				is concentration which is a preliminary to dhyana. In dharana 
				the sadhak (practitioner) first focuses the mind on external (coarse) 
				objects of the senses (vishaya) such as candles, flowers, 
				pictures, mantra (japa), mandalas, tip of the nose, etc. Later 
				one focuses on the more subtle and internal objects such as the 
				breath, the chakras, the energy bodies, yantras, internal and/or 
				psychic sounds, bandhas, mudras, etc. One is able to move from 
				the gross (vitarka) to the more subtle (vicara) and eventually 
				dissolve this inherently dualistic object orientation allowing 
				us to then enter into the transpersonal non-dual space where 
				meditation. From this stillness of mind the other techniques of 
				yoga can be applied to move one even closer to objectless and 
				formless samadhi eventually taking one step at a time. In our 
				path to samadhi, we can first steady the wandering mind (manas) 
				and our wandering internal energies by first limiting its 
				excursions, then through concentration (dharana) on chosen 
				objects that reflect the innate wisdom, then we gradually 
				removing all object relationships, attachments, limitations, and 
				impositions of duality as we go from the coarse and outer to the 
				subtle and inner and then beyond even the most subtle -- all 
				inclusive of both inner and outer -- the ultimate samadhi, 
				nirbij-samadhi. Sutra I. 36 visoka va jyotismati [Concentration] 
				through the cultivation of the inner light (jyotismati) of clear 
				lucidity that knows no sorrow (visoka) removes the infirmities 
				of the ordinary mind (manas). Commentary: Another simple method 
				of clarifying the restless mind is to "re-mind" oneself of the 
				innate light (prakasa) of clear lucidity within all things which 
				liberates afflictions and suffering. All this will help create 
				clarity, self confidence, remove obscurations and dross, and 
				thus prepare the mind for meditation and samadhi. Here awareness 
				is turned back into its Source. This magnifies the light 
				exponentially. This sutra is a clear reference to an innate 
				eternal unconditional joy and ultimate happiness that is not 
				dependent upon events and our reactions to them or judgment. 
				Make no mistake! Sutra I. 37 Vita-raga-visayam va cittam Also 
				from cultivation, association, and intercourse with and/or 
				reflection of (visayam) those dear friends of the path who have 
				achieved release (vita-raga). Those whose HeartMind's who have 
				achieved clear lucidity, mirror that back into our own lives -- 
				they act as clear channels and vehicles of its further 
				expression.
				Commentary: Especially in the beginning of our spiritual 
				practice when the pathways call to be opened up -- when the mind 
				still is heavily addicted and afflicted with kleshas and vrtti, 
				it is very helpful to not only to associate with spiritual 
				friends who are on the path who reflect, reinforce, and remind 
				us of light, love, clarity, and grace, but also to avoid people 
				and situations who being dominated by their own kleshas 
				(ignorance, fears, jealousies, hatred, anger, desire, greed, and 
				the like) might reinforce our negative tendencies and illusions. 
				Before each and every practice if not throughout the day, the 
				yogis of the three times who have passed through the veil -- the 
				beings of eternal light are available for help if we ask for it 
				and invite them in (invoke them). Sutra I. 38 
				Svapna-nidra-jnanalabanam va Or (va) cultivation of wisdom of 
				direct experience (jnana) is available while sleeping (nidra) 
				turning normal dreams (svapna) into lucid dreams (jananalabanam). 
				Commentary; Every night we sleep and dream. This is a wonderful 
				opportunity when the will, the intellect, and limited belief 
				systems rest and no longer dominate our experience. Normally 
				when this limitation disappears, our cognitive faculty is given 
				up as well so that the dreams are not integrated, but are 
				relegated to a subconscious level. But if we are able to relax 
				the the mind while remaining conscious, then this knowledge (janam-alabanam) 
				gleaned from the dream state augments our lucidity in daily 
				life. The lucidity that links both dream and ordinary 
				wakefulness is eventually disclosed as the clear light that 
				knows no sorrow. Sutra I. 39 Yathabhimata-dhyanad va Or (va) 
				from an agreeable, suitable, and customized meditation (dhyana) 
				as one is drawn to (abhimata), [all of these practices will 
				ripen the mind for samadhi]. Commentary: Va means or. thus this 
				sutra is the last of a list of practices that prepares the mind 
				(citta-vrtti) for samadhi. Yatha is simply an indicative meaning, 
				"as". Thus the key word is abhimata-dhyanad. Abhimata means 
				drawn to, desired, longed for, or wished for. Dhyana is most 
				often translated as meditation. By meditation Patanjali means 
				silent seated practice where the mind is extended (tanata) from 
				subject/object duality. See Yoga Sutra II.11 and III.2 for more 
				on dhyana. The literal translation is ―or from meditation as 
				longed for/drawn to‖ which indicates a natural type of 
				meditation or pure abiding.
				
				There are many types of meditation differing in specific 
				characteristics of preparation, beginning, duration, finishing, 
				etc. Here Patanjali is saying that one shoe does not fit all and 
				there is no exclusive supreme method, but one must explore and 
				choose the method of meditation which the HeartMind is attuned 
				to the most -- the one which brings forth clarity and peace and 
				leads toward samadhi. Why not utilize all these? One thus needs 
				to customize one's personal meditation practice to make it fit 
				into one's unique circumstances in order for it to serve your 
				highest potential. All the following sutras in Samadhi Pada 
				refer to realizing the supreme goal of yoga, nirbija samadhi, 
				through the process of meditation (dhyana). Make no mistake 
				about it! Sutra I. 40 Paramanu-parama-mahattvanto'sya vashikarah 
				The deepening and extension of this accomplishment (vashikarah) 
				[of meditation] will extend into and include the smallest (most 
				finite) atom (parama-anu) and also unto the whole of creation or 
				the greater whole (mahattva, antah, asya). Commentary: Through 
				the knowledge gained from meditation by knowing our own mind, 
				the practitioner gets to know the true nature of all finite (anu) 
				phenomenon from the most minute (anu) to the most large (mahattvanto) 
				extending into the very limits (antah) of existence (parama). 
				Here the instrument of seeing has been perfected to the point 
				that the lens no longer creates a distortion. Things then are 
				perceived as they are by a mind that has reached lucidity 
				through meditation, but at this stage the true nature of the 
				mind is still not known, just the nature of "things". When they 
				are known in the holographic sense -- in terms of the objectless, 
				formless (nirguna) non-dual siva/sakti wholeness, then a freedom 
				from their influence is established (vasikarah). Such extrinsic 
				situations can no longer negatively influence the mind and thus 
				nirbija samadhi will be near. All objects are held together by 
				energy fields. Even the physicists know that what we call the 
				physical or solid world is really all moving/fluid being 
				comprised of empty space, electrons, neutrons, protons, and such, 
				all configured in specific energy patterns forming the 
				characteristics of what we call elements, compounds, DNA, cells, 
				tissues, organs, glands, nerves, brains, animals, people, and 
				objects of perception -- all a product of millions of years of 
				co-evolution emanating from Source. All of creation is moving/dancing 
				and can only be fully related to as a whole -- in context of All 
				Our Relations. A problem of cognitive dissonance and 
				fractualization arises when the conditioned dualistic mind 
				artificially attempts to freeze this process through conditioned 
				thought patterns (vrtti), but through meditation this 
				fascination with the physical is abandoned and eventually 
				dislodged. We then become free from the illusion of materiality. 
				Solid matter as apparent physical "objects" then becomes only a 
				small minded and limited way of seeing things, identifying, 
				and/or relating.
				In meditation as the dualistic fixations with apparently 
				separate objects fade, they are gradually replaced by the the 
				universal vision which penetrates and unites the spaces between 
				the smallest atom and the wholeness of the entire created 
				universe all the way to Source. In short, through effective 
				meditation practices all dualistic fixations of objective 
				knowledge eventually become dislodged as clarified Heart 
				Consciousness as universal non-dual awareness arises. First 
				extrinsic or coarse perception is noticeably improved and one is 
				able to separate the actual event or situation from any 
				emotional/samskaric reaction to it. Later the samskaric seeds 
				themselves are removed through continued practice. This is 
				another reference to the liberating power of remembering or 
				affirming the Great Integrity in All Our Relations -- The 
				inherent implicate order of the All and Everything found in the 
				Great Integrity and that One that is contained in everything. 
				Such is the multidimensional non-dualistic holographic reference 
				field that is indigenous/inherent, natural/unconditioned, 
				unlimited/universal and not contrived or biased in anyway. That 
				is at the same time a sutric reference to the profound 
				experiential unity of the micro/macrocosm. Sutra I. 41 
				Ksina-vrtter abhijatasye va maner grahitr-grahana-grayeshu 
				tat-stha-tad-an janata samapattih When the vrtter (machinations, 
				iperations, agitations, spinnings, and coloring of the 
				mind-field) have become almost entirely stilled, dissolved, or 
				considerably subsided (kshina), then a stable and still (tat-stha) 
				alignment and synchronicity (samapattih) between the seer (grahitr), 
				the seen (grahyeshu), and the process of seeing (grahana) is 
				attainable (tat-stha). This is to say that the deep state of 
				integrity (tad-an janata samapattih) between the process of 
				cognition, that which is cognized and the cognizer is stabilized, 
				bridged, brought together, and harmonized (samapatti) so that 
				instead of operating as separate cognitive functions they evolve 
				into and activate what was a previously a dormant 
				trans-cognitive non-dual function, so that the the preexisting 
				individual colorings (tat-stha-tad-an janata) of the mind are 
				now transformed to reflect a greater light likened (iva) to a 
				nobly born transparent radiance (abhijatasye) of a crest jewel (manes).
				
				Commentary: Here the conditioned state of the vrttis have become 
				weakened and thus the illusory dualistic and fragmented splits 
				of a delusional separate or "small self" identification of the 
				"I - it" of the gross physical sense world falls away, 
				simultaneously as this samapatti (attainment) coalesces 
				cleansing the ordinary mind so that the pure citta as HeartMind 
				can flow through. Here the Clear Light of the Immanent Universal 
				Citta of the Great Integrity of All Our Relations shines through 
				a partially cleansed or translucent mind like the colorings of a 
				highly polished and reflective jewel (maneh). One no longer is 
				fixated upon the object and the seer, nor the object and the 
				seer, nor the process of seeing, because those limitations based 
				in duality have become liberated by a clarified and stabilized 
				Heart Consciousness, yet
				Universal Clear lIght has not yet fully dawned, because even 
				this attainment is seen as limited fixation which although 
				expansive must still be further purified. So when through 
				authentic yogic practice then, the negative influences of the 
				vrttis (spinning of the discolored/tainted consciousness) become 
				weakened, thus allowing the light of pure undistorted 
				consciousness (citta) to shine forth even more. Christopher 
				Chapple in his book; The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali", Sat Guru 
				Publ. Delhi, 1990 comments: "[The accomplished mind] of 
				diminished fluctuations, like a precious (or clear) jewel 
				assuming the color of any near object. has unity among grasper, 
				grasping, and grasped." See also Sutras II.20 and II.21 Sutra I. 
				42 Tatra shabdartha-jnana-vikalpaih sankirna sa-vitarka 
				samapattih This is because (tatra) when knowledge (jnana) of an 
				apparently separate object (artha) is produced through the 
				process of mixing together (sankirna) words or naming (shabda) 
				with processes of mere conceptualization and reasoning (vikalpaih), 
				then an unsteady and vacuous state of coarse over 
				objectification (savitarka samapatti) is produced [which 
				prevents/interferes with the establishment of total integration 
				in samadhi]. Commentary: Jnana-vikalpa is conceptionally based 
				knowledge is based on specific meanings derived from words (shabdartha). 
				It is a limited kind of knowledge which may have application in 
				certain technological applications, but is an impediment when 
				applied incessantly in yoga practice. Conceptualization, 
				imagination, and daydreaming (vikalpa) is defined by Patanjali 
				as vrttis. When fed with the fuel of words (shabda) they 
				reinforce vrttis even more (see I-6). These are the components 
				of vikalpa (conceptual constructs and the discursive ramblings 
				of the monkey mind) which as all of the sutras clearly indicate 
				must be remediated for the inner consciousness to shine forth.
				Ordinarily one becomes locked into habitual disconnection or 
				spiritual estrangement. It becomes habitual and the normal 
				individual mistakenly concludes that it is even necessary. This 
				is one belief based on false ideas and conceptual processes (vikalpa) 
				that must cease for spiritual progress to unfold. It produces 
				unsteadiness in regard to the deeper state of non-dual union/absorption 
				(in nirbija-samadhi) -- actually drawing us out from its 
				completion. In meditation we learn how to let go of the the 
				coarse oscillation (vitarka) toward various external separately 
				defined objects of attention uphold the duality (the duality of 
				the illusion of the separateness of an object, the observer of 
				the object, and the process of observing). This process occurs 
				in the mindstream of the novice meditator. Such coarseness (vitarka) 
				interferes with the most subtle and beyond even the most subtle 
				realms of consciousness which eventually must be pierced in 
				yoga. So here the meditator must become conscious of the 
				mistaken coarse fixations of the mental processes, how they 
				arise and cease one after another, and how to release the 
				process. This is done at first simply by noticing the process as 
				it arises. Later, one gains insight, through the practice itself 
				-- through awareness of the awareness. The prefix, sa, means "with" 
				or accompanied by. Vitarka means coarse or gross. So savitarka 
				means thought processes that are based on gross or physical 
				objectification -- physical objective or dualistic thoughts 
				based on events in the objective world. This will later be 
				differentiated from nir-vitarka (devoid of such an 
				externalization) and savicara (subtle thoughts based on internal 
				objects of thought itself). In other words the beginners energy 
				and attention gets drawn out and distracted into the objective 
				frameworks of the external world. We mistakenly think this 
				dualistic distraction is reality and so the individual's 
				conditioned mind has been trained to cling to it, but we can use 
				yogic practices to uncondition/remediate such distractions. We 
				start then with the gross/coarse or physical objects/objectification 
				processes (vitarka). Then we work toward the more subtle (vicara) 
				which are the awareness of the thought process itself as objects 
				of attention. That too must be seen as a distraction eventually. 
				When all coarse and subtle thought processes cease (nirvitarka 
				and nirvicara) then and only then, can the clear light of the 
				natural mind spontaneously arise. This statement is not a 
				statement of faith or belief, but comes from direct yogic 
				experience. is not Thus Patanjali is identifying an obstruction 
				to realizing non-dual samadhi that arises in meditation practice, 
				called vitarka. There our meditative absorption is distracted, 
				disturbed, unstable, and limited by coarse objectifications -- 
				fixations upon separate gross objects. This is because the 
				objects and words start to come up, the mind starts to name them, 
				objectify them as "this" is "that", differentiate and compare 
				the objects, evaluate, conceptualize, daydream, etc. One's 
				attention and energy is habitually distracted into such mind 
				patterns or vrtti, but the meditator is attempting to recognize 
				this distraction.
				
				Patanjali here is helping us to recognize that such coarse 
				distractions (savitarka) occur at first. That is normal. With 
				continued practice (abhyasa) they will cease. For us to 
				recognize this process is still an attainment (a samapatti) 
				because the non-meditator has no awareness of even this or even 
				the inner workings of his/her own mental processes. Thus 
				meditation practice is at first a retraining and reconditioning 
				process where one starts to wake up to our way of seeing and 
				being in the world -- how our innate knowledge or Gnosis (jnana) 
				becomes dissolute upon objects (artha-jnana) and we simply 
				become objectified, fixated, separate extracted, and estranged 
				-- that is where the union of yoga becomes corrupted. Knowledge 
				of the causes of distraction/disunion of course is not an end in 
				itself. Rather it simply allows us to drop our dissolute ways as 
				soon as we become aware of them. With continued practice in 
				meditation these savitarka (accompanied with coarse or gross) 
				thought tendencies of the dualistic mind are recognized as they 
				arise and thus the awareness itself no longer disappears with 
				the momentum of the distracted thought, but rather the energy of 
				that momentum is brought back to the source of the awareness -- 
				the cit-prana is no longer dissipated. Eventually the mind moves 
				from the coarse (vitarka) to the more subtle (vicara), to devoid 
				of even the most subtle objectification/separation. This then 
				eventually is a landmark step that leads to genuine samadhi 
				versus a limited state of union called samapatti. Thus in 
				meditation before a conceptualization is formed, before the mind 
				wanders in thought, before a sentence is formed, before a word 
				appears first, but as the process itself just begins arise, it 
				is recognized and released into the vast ocean pure awareness. 
				Beginning meditators learn to watch the words arise, become 
				aware of it arising, then no longer feed their arising. The 
				resultant stillness and silence becomes naturally and 
				increasingly more recognizable and constant. The words stop 
				arising by themselves as we become more aware of the subtle 
				energy behind their arising as we move more fully and naturally 
				toward that great stillness and vast open space of pure 
				awareness. Hence the ordinary dualistic mind stops revolving 
				(the citta-vrtti cease in nirodha). This occurs eventually 
				through practice. The the individual consciousness is merged 
				with the universal mind, the Universal Citta -- it rests in the 
				innate effulgence clear light stillness. Another definition of 
				vitarka is gross thoughts being accompanied by names of physical 
				objects, i.e., thus one can how our our absorption becomes 
				disturbed and noisy by such gross thought forms and as such as 
				the processes dominate they keep on arising/coming forth 
				producing an unsteady and wavering body/mind distraction. Thus 
				one may temporarily experience some connection with Self, but it 
				is fleeting, until one experiences nirvitarka (devoid of gross 
				objectification processes).
				Next Patanjali addresses nir-vitarka (meditation devoid of gross 
				thought processes but still containing subtle thought processes 
				(savicara). Vitarka is still a coarse stage in meditation 
				practice, then nirvitarka (devoid of coarse objectification), 
				while vicara is the next subtle stage, then nirvicara (devoid 
				even of the most subtle mind processes). Both engage dualistic 
				thought processes (objects of the mind) and are thus a temporary 
				stage of limited and transitional realization leading from the 
				coarse to more subtle, then beyond object/subject duality 
				entirely -- samadhi.
				
				"Just sit in the Reality of Life seeing hell and paradise, 
				misery and joy, life and death, all with the same eye. No matter 
				what the situation, we live the life of the Self. We must sit 
				immovably on that foundation. This is essential; this is what ―becoming 
				one with the universe‖ means. If we divide this universe into 
				two, striving to attain satori and to escape delusion, we are 
				not the whole universe. Happiness and unhappiness, satori and 
				delusion, life and death; see them with the same eye. In every 
				situation the Self lives the life of the Self -- such a self 
				must do itself by itself. This universal Life is the place to 
				which we return." Uchiyama Kosho Roshi Also see the commentary 
				in Sutra 9 on on vikalpa and sutra 17 on vitarka. Sutra I. 43 
				Smrti-parishuddhau svarupa-sunye va artha-matra-nirbhasa 
				nir-vitarka However when the mind stream which is normally 
				polluted and conditioned by past experiences (smrti) is 
				completely purified (pari-shuddham) from any taint of the mental 
				contents toward a coarse and limited objectivity (nirvitarka) 
				which is characterized by (iva) clarity [and the absence of (wandering) 
				vikalpa], then the innate natural effulgent light (nir-bhasa) of 
				inner realization without taint of the illusion of an 
				independent self (svarupa-sunya) shines forth. Commentary: 
				Another way of saying the same thing is that nirvitarka 
				samapatti is produced by virtue of pure rememberance of our 
				unobscured true nature (swarupa) not defined and limited in 
				terms of form, separate objects, words, or name (free of the 
				limitations of mere gross objectivism and cognitive faculties -- 
				free from the limitations of vitarka). Here the prefix, nir, 
				means without or devoid of. Thus the coarse wandering of the 
				mind is stilled in nirvitarka samadhi. How does this voiding 
				occur? Here we no longer assign words to the objects nor limit 
				them in any dualistic system nor process them through any 
				dualistic of object oriented relations method. This is easily 
				experienced in meditation but difficult to conceptualize because 
				we have moved beyond the limitations of individual cognitive or 
				conceptional functions. Here we must experience what is meant.
				Patanjali says it is through the application of swarupa-sunya 
				which purifies the relationship between separate subject and 
				object which allows space for the inner effulgence to be be 
				invoked (nirbhasa). Here the profound truth of the emptiness 
				(sunya) of separateness is simultaneously revealed and applied, 
				i.e., there is no separate reflection of "self", no stain, no 
				separate object, no dissuasion, etc. Through the emptiness of a 
				separate "i-ness", our inherent true nature (swarupa) magically 
				shines forth (bhasa) while meditating so that a state may be 
				created that may be called nirvitarka samadhi. I hesitate to 
				call this a samadhi in order to avoid confusion that this is an 
				end. Rather I prefer to call this plateau, a stage (necessary as 
				it is). Here the coarse fixations of the mind are eradicated, 
				but the yet the subtle (vicara) mental obscurations may still 
				remain. Here we are gradually learning to abide more frequently 
				in our true nature, yet nirvicara samadhi let alone nirbij 
				samadhi is still to be disclosed. Sutra I. 44 Etayaiva savicara 
				nirvicara ca suksma-visaya vyakhyata In a similar fashion, the 
				mental state which is accompanied by subtle thoughts (sa-vicara) 
				and the stage of realization devoid even of the most subtle 
				thought (nir-vicara) upon even the most pure domain (suksma-visaya) 
				is now differentiated (vyakhyata). Commentary: Where vitarka 
				describes the thought processes that become attached to gross 
				physical objects, the world of form (such as pictures, sounds, 
				lights, etc.), external events, or our experiences framed in an 
				objectified dualistic world, vicara is different as it connotes 
				the subtle or non-externalized objects of thought itself. Here 
				the thinking process is an object, the awareness process is an 
				object. The energy processes are objects of awareness. This is 
				akin to the yogic practice of antar dharana (focusing of the 
				inner and subtle processes) except that here, the savicara 
				processes are not consciously brought into being rather they are 
				on automatic. By becoming aware of these we can notice how they 
				arise and eliminate them (nirodha). So here Patanjali now 
				describes the thought processes that become attached to the more 
				subtle objects of thought and boundaries such as concepts, 
				conceptual frameworks, beliefs, ideas, the conceptional process 
				itself, cognitive function, etc. Not that he says that we should 
				focus on these, but rather that we should go beyond such 
				fixation by letting them go. Nirvicara is akin to the cessation 
				of even the arising of the first word in a thought process -- to 
				even the urge to think itself. This creates the stillness where 
				the energy is no longer distracted and dissipated into any 
				objectification process -- it is the stillness that invites the 
				innate light.
				
				An example: The mind is thinking to itself, "there is no mind, 
				there is no mind, Siva is All -- All is Siva". This is still 
				savicara samapatti, because there is still an object and 
				fixation and thus a limitation is produced by the thought 
				process. In order to enter into the more complete and wholesome 
				samadhi such thought processes (even the most subtle) still must 
				be purified so that one can know THAT which is greater than even 
				the most subtle -- greater than any or all the words -- THAT 
				which is simultaneously all Inclusive Universal Eternal and 
				Non-dual. Here Patanjali is simply delineating the graduated 
				stages of meditation from coarse fixations, to more subtle, to 
				the most subtle, and eventually free from any objective fixation 
				whatsoever -- Infinite Mind. These higher samapattis (nirvitarka 
				and nirvicara) are stages leading to samadhi (inseparable 
				spiritual identification in All Our Relations. Sutra I. 45 
				suksma-visayatvam ca alinga-paryavasanam As thought wanderings 
				become more rarified and subtle (suksma), the attachments to 
				objects (visayatvam) subsides and eventually ceases (paryavasanam) 
				in an undifferentiated and attributeless stage -- falling short 
				(parya-avasanam) as being possible to define, name, or quantify 
				(alinga). Commentary: As the mind ceases to wander on even the 
				subtlest object of thought, nirvicara samapatti is reached where 
				there exist no objects of thought -- a formless (nirguna) and 
				non-dual attributeless (alinga) place is entered upon which is 
				no place at all. Yet nirbija (seedless) samadhi is still not yet 
				realized. Only in the nirvicara phase (devoid of even the most 
				subtle objectification processes), then can one speak of truly 
				tasting samadhi albeit temporarily. As the subtle thoughts 
				become cleared away substantially, leading toward nirvicara 
				samadhi, only here experiencing the absence of even the most 
				subtle thought can one begin to speak of true samadhi. Alinga is 
				the most subtle objectification state, but it is not yet devoid 
				of subtlety -- of form. Rather the formless unconditioned nature 
				of nature beyond the boundaries of man's systems of 
				classification in nirvicara (absence of even any trace of subtle 
				object) goes beyond alinga, which remains undesignated, 
				attributeless, but not empty (sunya) of form. It is not calling 
				for a name or description so it is capable of whispering god's 
				name for those whose ears have become so attuned. This then 
				approximates emptiness (sunyam) which is described in 
				Patanjali's definition of Samadhi in Sutra III.3 as III. 3 Tad 
				evarthamatra-nirbhasam svarupa-sunyam iva samadhih Samadhi is 
				realized when the artificial separations between the object (arthamatra) 
				being meditated upon, the meditator, and the process of 
				meditation are voided (sunya) disappearing into its true state, 
				then the natural self existent effulgent source of the 
				luminosity (nirbhasam) of the object in its natural unbiased 
				place in all of existence as-it-is (swarupa) is known. In 
				samadhi all prejudice and limited consciousness not only are 
				illuminated but are also dissolved in the implicate self 
				effulgent light of ultimate truth which is our true nature (natural 
				precondition).
				Here where the vrtti have become considerably stilled and the 
				obstructions rarified so that glimpses of the eternal light of 
				the unobstructed natural unconditional mind which is our true 
				nature becomes more accessible and integrated. Please notice 
				that Patanjali has not yet called the nirvicara stage a samadhi. 
				Sutra I. 46 ta eva sa-bijah samadhih All these previous 
				attainments are at best temporary samadhis (mere glimpses having 
				with them the seeds for falling back). Commentary: These 
				samapattis (communions) still have a dualistic seed in them 
				unless it is nirvicara samadhi. But even in nirvicara samadhi 
				devoid of the even the most subtle cognitive state of taking any 
				limited form whatsoever, they are still characterized as samadhi 
				with seed (sa-bijah samadhi). Sa means with and bija means seed. 
				Savitarka extends up to even the most subtle objects of 
				cognition i.e., the modality of consciousness that still 
				ascribes to an "I-it", dualistic, or relative world consisting 
				of manmade (artificial and conditioned) cognitions, but not 
				including the direct interconnection, union, or fusion of siva/shakti 
				(purusha/prakriti). Nirvicara however is however direct 
				spiritual non-dual realization beyond any process of individual 
				ideation or cognition. All the previous attainments (samapattis) 
				before the nirvicara stage contain seeds because their vision is 
				still occluded and limited by the false identification of 
				separate objects. In such duality, universal Clear Heart 
				Consciousness is still not liberated. As long as one identifies 
				as a separate object with a separate object, one is still 
				afflicted in mundane fragmented relationships. When that 
				separateness is rarified through the realization and application 
				of sunya, then one has arrived -- abiding in union -- the 
				unitive stage of All Our Relations. In nirvicara the samadhi is 
				one of genuine insight, but is discontinuous and incomplete. The 
				sadhak continues to fall back at other times into the dualism of 
				savicara or savitarka. Even if all all false notions of 
				separation is relinquished, the union can still become rended 
				until the final samskara is lifted. Sutra I. 47 
				Nirvicara-vaisharadye'dhyatma-prasadah Upon reaching that 
				samadhi state of direct experience devoid even of the most 
				subtle thought processes or reflection on a separate object (nirvicara 
				samadhi arises); i.e., when the restlessness of the mind is 
				completely satisfied, quieted, and rested, and still -- when the 
				mental faculties are stilled entirely in the deep nourishing 
				peace and clarity of grace (prasadah), a very clear lucidity or 
				natural transparency (vaisharadya) is realized -- the authentic 
				spiritual light emanating from the Supreme Source dawns which is 
				none other than our authentic self (adhyatma).
				
				Commentary: In nirvicara samadhi, the reflection process has 
				become stilled and clarified as the peace of grace (prasadah) 
				giving birth to the transparency (vaisharadya) of the innate 
				light of the inner primal Source to shine forth on its own (without 
				obscuration). All conceptual processes (vikalpa) of course also 
				cease. Here what is often called nirvicara (free from even the 
				most subtle thought) samadhi is described, which is 
				pre-requisite to attaining the sacred grounds of nirbija (seedless 
				samadhi) in the sacred continuous transpersonal state of All Our 
				Relations. This corresponds with the last sutras in Pada 4 
				describing Kaivalyam (ultimate liberation). The Guhyasamaja 
				Tantra states: In terms of ultimate reality, meditate on the 
				things of the three worlds as insubstantial. The actual 
				meditation on insubstantiality is meditation having nothing on 
				which to meditate.Therefore meditation on substances and 
				non-substances is without an object. The Primary Tantra states: 
				The cultivation of single-pointed contemplation entails thinking 
				of nothing whatever. The Glorious Tantra of Royal Ambrosia 
				States: By meditating on the clear light, whose nature is empty,It 
				is not found, nor is it found by not meditating. Meditation 
				itself is conceptualization,and not meditating is also 
				conceptualization. Without having a speck of anything on which 
				to meditate, do not be distracted for an instant". from "Naked 
				Awareness: Practical Instructions on the Union of Mahamudra and 
				Dzogchen" by Karma Chagme, Snow Lion 2000 Sutra I. 48 Rtambhara 
				tatra prajna Then Supreme Truth Bearing (rtam-bhara) Inner 
				Wisdom (prajna) self-arises, dawns and prevails.
				Commentary: Here the inner truth, knowledge, or Gnosis (prajna) 
				which bears the truth within itself (rtambhara) shines forth on 
				its own unimpeded. This is a pivotal statement of the most 
				sublime goal of Yoga according to Patanjali. It should be noted 
				that Patanjali once again states that this wisdom is intrinsic 
				and innate, but was simply obscured. It is innate, unconditioned, 
				and natural, not needing cultivation or contrivation. Thus yoga 
				works on the pre-existing contrived and conditioned mental
				processes (the vrtti) and eliminates them (by eventually 
				eliminating all samskara) so that the practitioner abides in 
				their natural true Self (swarupa). Christopher Chapple and Yogi 
				Ananda in "The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali" (Sri Satguru 
				Publications, Delhi, 1990) translate this as: "This wisdom 
				sustains the movement of life. Ignorance is to fall from this [intrinsic] 
				order." To summarize, nirvicara samadhi leads toward nirbija 
				samadhi, but still is not capable by itself of destroying the 
				seeds which cause the falling out of this intimate unitive state 
				(samadhi) which is the realization/embodiment of our innate 
				wisdom potential (the inner Buddha, Christ, Sat Guru, or Brahman) 
				in the form of the jivamuktan. To remove this seed (caused by 
				past samskaras), Patanjali next addresses the removal of 
				samskaras. Sutra I. 49 Shrutanumana-prajnabhyam anya-vishaya 
				visesa-arthatvat This innate intuitive wisdom (prajnabhyam) must 
				be differentiated (anya) from the mere objective forms of 
				knowledge based on anumana (inference, deduction, logic) and 
				shruti (scriptures, belief, faith, external or objective 
				authoritative sources of knowledge) [no matter how "seemingly" 
				authoritative], which is always less reliable and more coarse 
				than this very special (visaya) [insight of direct truth bearing 
				wisdom (rtam-bhara), which is based on inner direct spiritual 
				experience and knowledge]. Commentary: This is because the 
				former knowledge is confined and limited to a particular object, 
				language, limited attitude, symbols, and such dualistic 
				perspectives, thus carrying the seed of a fractal taint, a 
				prejudiced and particular relative "point of view", i.e., it is 
				superficially based, externally imposed, alien, and artificial; 
				while that Truth of Universal Reality or Infinite Mind (available 
				only through rtam-bhara prajna) is inherent, self arising, 
				unconditioned, omnipresent, universal, and infinite. The 
				pre-existing state of chronic disconnection (which calls forth 
				yoga as the remedy) is dictated by an external and over 
				objectified knowledge where spiritual self alienation and 
				duality are fixated; while recognition of rtambhara is the 
				dawning of the intrinsic all encompassing universal inner wisdom. 
				The former is artificially and objectively derived and imposed, 
				while the latter is from our own subjective experience. There 
				can be no comparison. Here unification, integration, and yoga 
				reign. For one to successfully continue to bathe in nirbija (seedless) 
				samadhi, it is necessary to recognize the difference between 
				true inherent spontaneously self arising wisdom (rtambhara 
				prajna) on one hand, and shrutanumana-prajnabhyam on the other.
				Our experience must thus inform and instruct our world views and 
				belief; i.e., in order for our daily consciousness to not get in 
				the way and extract us from yoga, it
				must correspond to our experience. Liberation does not occur the 
				other way around; i.e., where ordinary people attempt to dictate 
				their experience according to the domination of specific belief 
				systems, bias, prejudice, thought patterns, samskaras, kleshas, 
				preconceptions, and karma all of which simply produce more 
				suffering (dukha). Thus being able to tune into the inherent 
				implicate inner wisdom and let it guide us stimulates a mutually 
				synergistic acceleration once this mechanism is recognized (inner 
				wisdom is brought forth and is increasingly respected, 
				acknowledged, and accessed) -- where the now educated and 
				vitalized mind in turn allows one hence greater breadth of 
				experience. Then greater breadth of experience then in turn 
				synergistically stimulates a broader consciousness and so on 
				like that until boundless universal Mind is disclosed. 
				Intelligently educated and informed awareness through experience 
				in turn allows an even more greater expansion of experience, 
				then further the education of the conscious mind even more is 
				achieved, and so forth, until eventually synergistic synchrony 
				coincides -- Yoga is accomplished -- All is Known and Self is 
				Experienced in Satchitananda. Sutra I. 50 Taj-jah samskaro'nya-samskara-pratibandhi 
				From the psychic signature (samskara) born from (taj-jah) [the 
				inner self realization of the Age-old Supreme Truth Bearing 
				Wisdom (rtam-bhara prajna)], all further samskaric seeds are 
				annulled (pratibandhi). Commentary: From the strong imprint that 
				issues forth from the dawning of the innate wisdom (rtambhara) 
				the arising of any further samskaras (past psychic imprints, 
				psychic signatures, programmed latent triggers, and the like 
				hidden in the cellular memory, neurology, energy body, and 
				etheric body due to past unresolved trauma, conflict, habit, 
				karma, or conditioning) are disengaged (pratibandhi), 
				annihilated, and cease to operate. Here then Rtambhara wells up 
				from within as a great wave upon the entire being creating a 
				deep shift to the core as the overriding imprint which 
				integrates/aligns us with Self.
				Self realization is a strong experience, not realized without 
				sustained practice (abhyasa) or by the complete surrender of 
				effort (vairagya). In turn it leaves a very deep and lasting 
				imprint. This imprint thus triggers our dna -- the innate wisdom 
				at a cellular self-organizing level, which in turn spontaneously 
				responds to every situation inside the non-dual holographic and 
				trans-dimensional context of All Our Relations. Some say that 
				this imprint is what the Sri Yantra represents. Others say that 
				it realized through the repetition of the pranava, etc. Yet 
				others say that nirvicara samadhi will in time set in motion, 
				the samskara necessary to return us to our original true self 
				nature (swarupa) in nirbij-samadhi.
				So here Sutra 50 says that continuous and permanent samadhi (nirbija 
				samadhi) occurs after all the samsaric samskaras (imprints due 
				to conditioning) are over ridden by our innate Buddha potential 
				-- intrinsic awareness which is always available but widely 
				ignored (because of avidya the main klesha). So according to 
				Patanjali yoga practice eliminates the veil of ignorance that 
				has occluded/obscured that pre-existing inherent love/wisdom 
				which has always existed from beginningless time. It's like a 
				treasure awaiting to be discovered. Yogis are thus like treasure 
				finders and maybe also if they are adept, able to point out to 
				others where their own inner treasures are buried. Also see III. 
				9-12 for a discussion on the three parinamas (nirodha parinama, 
				samadhi parinama, and ekgrata parinama) especially III. 11 for a 
				discussion of samadhi parinama. Sutra I. 51 Tasyapi nirodhe 
				sarva-nirodhan nir-bijah samadhih Upon the final dissolution, 
				cessation, and removal of all samskaras (past conditioned latent 
				imprints) thus Seedless Samadhi (Nirbija Samadhi) spontaneously 
				co-arises [from the beginningless pure sky. Commentary: When all 
				the samskaras (past imprints and trigger points that have run 
				the reactive programs in the past) have been purified and have 
				ceased (nirodha), there is no any wavering back into ignorance. 
				Here citta-vrtti nirodha is realized. "Nir" means devoid of; 
				while bija is "seed". Thus nirbija samadhi is translated as the 
				union or absorption without seed -- without being propelled back 
				into ignorance or duality. One may play at shifting scenes or 
				contexts, but one is free from the pulls of unconscious 
				impressions (samskaras) and hence Consciousness and Beingness 
				have merged as one without a second. Here the sadhak abides 
				joyfully because his samskaras have been washed clean, being 
				bathed and matured in and by the self luminous light inherent in 
				his/her own true natural abode (swarupa) which is of the same 
				taste inside or out in the non-dual reality of All Our 
				Relations. Here even nirodha ceases as one enters into the 
				non-dual abode of non-doing -- of absolute stillness and 
				openness where all latent seeds of past impressions have been 
				removed -- where all and everything reside as-it-is. This is not 
				the annihilation of consciousness (citta), but on the contrary, 
				the end of the vrtti, prejudice, bias, and spin of citta. HERE 
				is great abundance and fulfillment where santosha.and all the 
				yam/niyams are effected spontaneously and all at once.
				To Summarize the end of Pada I, the vrtti are thus eliminated (nirodha) 
				through first the integration or dawning of rtambhara which 
				produces a core impression which in
				turn remediates and ends all the other past triggers; i.e., that 
				precious innate truth bearing wisdom which is not derived from 
				scripture (sruti), from inference (anumana), nor from objective 
				knowledge of things or events. Rather it is aa deeper way of 
				knowing, where the inner Heart purifies and clarifies all. 
				Nirbija samadhi is the summum bonum of yoga because there is no 
				longer any falling back into the estrangement and disempowerment 
				of separateness (dualism). There is no place to go but HERE - 
				from whence we all originated. This is our natural uncontrived 
				state (swarupa) prior to avidya's conditioning, the disturbances 
				of the vrttis, and so forth. Although timeless it is expressed 
				in the Sacred Now. Nirbija samadhi is not discontinuous, 
				although the yogi may enter at will into many worlds, contexts, 
				and "situations", the overall context of Ultimate Integrity -- 
				of Eternal Spirit is always present -- as such sacred space is 
				continuously present. Thus wandering in the seas of karma, 
				samskaras, or avidya has ended for such a yogi, for such knows 
				only unending and beginningless bliss - for such All Our 
				Relations is the way it is.
				
                                        
				The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali -- Chapter Two -- Sadhana Pada (The 
				Chapter on Effective Practices)
				
				Synopsis: Sadhana means spiritual practice. Yoga sadhana is 
				something we "do" in order to move from a disconnected spiritual 
				state and connect more fully with spirit. Here we learn 
				experientially through practice, versus from following dictums, 
				memorizing politically correct beliefs, through proven theories, 
				inference, conceptionalization, or any of the other vrtti. 
				Practice, practice. practice, is the mantra here. Although 
				Patanjali gave many practices as remedies for spiritual 
				estrangement (pratishedha) in Pada I (such as vairagya, nirodha, 
				virama-pratyaya, isvara pranidhana, dhyana, eka-tattvabhyasa, 
				japa, shradda, virya, prajna, maitri, karuna, upeksanam, mudita, 
				bhava, and especially rtam prajna, the self arising truth 
				bearing seed which is the practice of no practice), rather it is 
				here in Pada II, that Patanjali focuses upon practices in a more 
				concrete way. Practice is a thus the way we learn in yoga which 
				is different from the methodology of philosophy, logic, religion, 
				or any "ism". Practice assumes a pre-existing disconnection (from 
				samadhi) and hence remedy (pratishedha). Pada I (Samadhi Pada) 
				outlined the framework of the disconnection or spiritual malaise, 
				so thus Pada II acts as a continuation of the outline sketched 
				in Pada I, where now Patanjali focuses upon the basic and 
				auxiliary practices as remedies. If our yoga practice keeps its 
				focus on spirit, then it is a practice of bringing more clarity, 
				heart consciousness, and love into our lives. As such it has its 
				own innate and profound momentum and enthusiasm and as such 
				authentic yoga sadhana has nothing to do with externally imposed 
				discipline, hard work, force, or an individual willfulness. It 
				is not willful in the ordinary sense because the authentic goal 
				of yoga is to align the individual will with the universal will, 
				thus it is a surrendering to an all encompassing intelligent 
				sacred dynamic. This is the kind of completion and santosha (sense 
				of fulfillment and peace) that authentic yoga includes even from 
				the very beginning -- from our entry into the process of yoga. 
				In the end -- when re-union is achieved in samadhi) we surrender 
				the practice, because there is no need for it. May your sadhana 
				be graced with love, peace, and wisdom. Sadhana Pada Patanjali 
				then progresses from the overall context of yoga delineated in 
				Pada I, to presenting the various techniques and practices of 
				yoga (sadhana), starting off with kriya (pre-requisite 
				purification) yoga activities (tapas, swadhyaya, and isvara 
				pranidhana). These three are often greatly misinterpreted by 
				intellectuals, academicians, and religionists who look at them 
				from the outside. We will point out the common mistakes of such 
				coarse misinterpretations. Then Patanjali discusses the causes 
				of suffering (being ignorance or avidya) in a clear cut way 
				discussing avidya in relation to the kleshas, vrttis, and karma 
				and then how to remedy them (through tapas, swadhyaya, isvara 
				pranidhana, dhyana, pratiprasava, vairagya, viveka, prajna, and 
				similar practices).
				Pada II ends with the introduction of ashtanga (eight-limbed) 
				yoga, discussing in detail the first five limbs (yama, niyama, 
				asana, pranayama, and pratyhara). Toward
				the end of Pada II in the discussion of ashtanga yoga, Patanjali 
				again brings up the valuable practices of swadhyaya (self study), 
				tapas (kindling divine passion through renouncing nonproductive 
				activity), and isvara pranidhana (surrender to the highest 
				formless Self), thus emphasizing their value when they are 
				functionally understood both as purification practices as well 
				as mutual synergists with the other limbs (of astanga). Thus 
				here in Pada II, Patanjali, briefly prepares us for the last 
				three and most subtle practices of ashtanga yoga found in the 
				beginning of Chapter III (Vibhuti Pada). These last three limbs 
				are generally considered the higher or more subtle inner 
				practices of astanga yoga being dharana (concentration 
				techniques), dhyana (meditation), and samadhi (integrative 
				absorption) to a gradual degree of increasing subtleness, until 
				the samadhi beyond all subtlety, where all seeds of falling back 
				out of union ceases in (nirbij samadhi). Pada II Sutra 1 
				Tapah-svadhyayesvara-pranidhanani kriya-yogah Tapas (spiritual 
				passion, energy, or heat generated through forgoing dissipative 
				activities), swadhyaya (self study), and isvara pranidhana (the 
				function of surrender to or the embrace of the all encompassing 
				comprehensive integrity which interconnects us all (who we 
				really are) are the three essential prerequisite (kriya) 
				activities that lead us to realizing the fruit of yoga. 
				Commentary: Another way of translating this is that a successful 
				yoga practice is based upon the activities (kriya) of increasing 
				spiritual passion/inspiration (or the spiritual engine), self 
				study (understanding self), and surrendering to that divine 
				intelligence which is at the universal center core/heart of *HEART* 
				[which is formless]. Technically yoga is the process, the verb 
				and activity, the interface tool/procedure, the intelligent 
				configuration of the technique that allows us to mesh in harmony 
				with the deepest currents of Reality (wherein the true self 
				nature or true identity can be realized in swarupa). In this 
				first sutra of pada two, Patanjali is telling us that to begin 
				yoga practice -- as its preliminaries (kriyas) so that it can be 
				eventually successful, these powerful practices are of immense 
				value leading to the deepening of the yogic process (connecting 
				eternal spirit in our daily life as Divine Presence). Indeed the 
				universalist definition of isvara pranidhana is just that, 
				surrendering to eternal spirit in everyday life -- at every 
				moment -- in All Our Relations. This is knowing the true Self as 
				it is (swadhyaya), and it is tapas which kindles the fire to 
				help us get HERE.
				We will run into these three practices (tapas, swadhyaya, and 
				isvara pranidhana) again many times in the Yoga Sutras (as they 
				also comprise the three of the five niyams of ashtanga yoga) and 
				we have already dealt with isvara pranidhana as the teacher of 
				all teachers (purvesham) in Pada I, Sutras 23-27. So why does 
				Patanjali put them here at the beginning of Sadhana Pada (the 
				Chapter of Practices) again? This is because they are the 
				foundation upon which successful sadhana is based. This 
				translation thus can read: Kriya yoga prepares the yogic 
				aspirant (sadhak) for success in all further sadhana, because 
				the necessary elements for success are the cultivation of 
				spiritual fire and passion (tapas), the desire to study and know 
				self, and the desire to know, embrace, and be guided by (isvara 
				pranidhana) the eternal divine -- teacher of all teachers (isvara). 
				Unfortunately, these three foundational practices are widely 
				misinterpreted as austerities (tapas), study of scripture (swadhyaya), 
				and surrender to God (isvara pranidhana) by those immersed in 
				dualism and religionism . Before going into a discussion on 
				these three preliminary practices which constitute kriya yoga, 
				and which may be applied both in daily life as well in other 
				sadhana, it's always wise to investigate how these practices are 
				applied in meditation (the main practice of raj yoga). So in one 
				sense we may view these three as activities that prepare us for 
				meditation. First one makes the effort to sit in meditation. 
				Withdrawing one's energy from ordinary temporal pursuits, one 
				redirects it internally to fire the meditation. This is the 
				application of tapas (spiritually redirecting one's energy from 
				the "normal" dualistic distractions of outer materialistic 
				objects of attraction and activities, back into our inner Source 
				core/center (on a physical and energetic level it is related to 
				the fifth limb of ashtanga yoga, pratyhara, and the hatha yoga 
				bandhas). As one sits in awareness, greater awareness of the 
				mental contents of the mind is revealed. how the mind works and 
				how it colors "reality" is revealed. The sadhak becomes aware of 
				the ordinary mind's karmic propensities, habits, psychic 
				signatures, and imprints, and eventually through consistent 
				application of the energy brought forth from tapas fueling 
				awareness its essential nature is revealed. One understands 
				oneself because one understands the mind. This is authentic 
				swadhyaya (self study). This self study is not the same as 
				analytical intellectualization, but rather we simply observe 
				that the ordinary mind wavers, fluctuates, and is unstable (cit-vrtti) 
				and acknowledge it. While observing the pauses between these 
				fluctuations (nirodha) space is created for the formless (isvara 
				as the eternal formless attributeless eternal teacher/teaching 
				then enters).
				Eventually one becomes aware of the objectless, timeless, 
				transpersonal ultimate -- that universal formless intelligence 
				which underlies the entire universe and embraces it as formless 
				Self -- that unites eternity with this very moment. That is 
				isvara pranidhana. It is coming HOME to what has always been 
				HERE and always will.
				Isvara is unreachable through the analytical process, but must 
				be experienced (usually through meditation or else through grace). 
				Applying these three procedures many times (as needed) even in 
				one meditation sitting can be productive in directing its 
				successful outcome. Thus the three kriyas (activities) of tapas 
				(which is often the renouncing of one activity to fire catalyze 
				all the other practices), self study (swadhyaya), and isvara 
				pranidhana can be applied as techniques as yoga sadhana in all 
				our relationships. The above example is applied to meditation 
				practice, because it is the main practice of Raj Yoga, the main 
				teaching of Patanjali; however all the limbs are meant to be 
				synergistic and hence kriya yoga forms a basis both of intent 
				and activity for the success in yoga in general, but only in the 
				non-dualist, non-exclusive, transpersonal, and universal sense. 
				For example the immense existence of widespread 
				mis-interpretation of these three activities, exist mainly 
				because they are interpreted through non-yogic eyes by those who 
				believe in dualism and separation. Such a dualist bias protects 
				the dualists and hence attempts to prevent the culmination of 
				authentic yoga. Indeed in "another" non-yogic system, these 
				terms mean different things, but here we will attempt to 
				translate these terms in the context of Yoga, specifically raj 
				yoga. Tapas: As we will see tapas means the generation of energy 
				and its direction in order that we have the requisite energy to 
				power our sadhana. Tapas is the spiritual fuel, fire, or [passion 
				for the divine which is associated strongly with the practice of 
				vairagya (non-attachment/non-grasping). In other words, we 
				create space, time and energy through the practice of vairagya 
				by emptying and eliminating the dissipating energies and 
				distractions of our attention (imprisonment with the I-It world 
				of duality) by allowing the spiritual energy and fire to become 
				kindled. This turns up the heat, builds up momentum, and 
				activates the spiritual circuitry -- our deeper spiritual 
				potential becomes activated. By emancipating our addiction to 
				external objects of gratification and dissolute habits, this 
				previously bound up energy is also liberated and made available. 
				Thus tapas is closely associated with the fifth limb of ashtanga 
				yoga, pratyhara and in the body with the hatha yoga bandhas.
				In this sense tapas has nothing to do with the negative or fear 
				based practices of self abnegation, self defacement, penance, 
				sacrifice (as is more commonly misinterpreted), self harm, self 
				punishment, or self mutilation. This unfortunate negative 
				association is the result of a confusion (avidya) due to the 
				kleshas of egotism (asmita), raga (attraction/attachment) and 
				dvesa (aversion/repulsion). It is absurd to hypothesize that 
				through repression or by hurting ourselves or denying ourselves 
				health or comfort, that spiritual progress will necessarilly 
				follow, yet this is a stubbornly held and not uncommon delusion. 
				Indeed much of what passes for tapas is really dvesa (aversion) 
				and self delusion (pride), albeit one is trying. But spiritual 
				progress is not so simpleminded as the mechanical action of 
				sacrificing one thing in exchange for another, for instance like 
				cutting off one's finger in barter for "spiritual" progress. 
				This absurdity is taken to extremes by some unfortunate souls 
				who believe that if cutting off one's finger is good then 
				cutting off two will certainly bring more benefit. Such futile 
				arguments can go ad absurdum into the more pain that one can 
				withstand the stronger they become spiritually. Unfortunately 
				such a confusion is not uncommon. Tapas as meant by Patanjali is 
				actually much more practical than turning away (as in disgust or 
				aversion (dvesa), but rather it is an affirmation. In one sense 
				it there exist two sides of tapas. One side is renouncing 
				activities which do not lead toward spiritual evolution, while 
				the other side is the firing up of that spiritual side, i.e., it 
				is the affirmation side of tapas. As such it is like recycling 
				or energy conservation. As such it is not simply a plain 
				renunciation, but rather an integral part of an affirmation, 
				acknowledgement of, and surrender to of the higher Self (isvara 
				pranidhana). The misconception surrounding tapas arose from the 
				quagmire of those who have become habituated to dualistic 
				thinking. They observed the yogis who were living simple lives 
				in bliss in the mountain caves or reclusive forests as those who 
				were denying themselves pleasure; rather than understanding that 
				what these observers deemed as pleasure was mere neurotic 
				sublimation, while their so called austere yogis were content 
				with a far more primal joy. In other words those who observed 
				such yogis mistook affirmation and fulfillment for negation and 
				sacrifice -- they assumed that the yogis had the same values and 
				desires that they themselves read into the picture. In other 
				words these interpreters who were attached to fancy food, 
				clothes, money, and worldly activities "interpreted" what they 
				saw within the mire of their own attachments and values, rather 
				than in understanding that these yogis had no need nor desire 
				for such attachments. Consequently, in the modern day, yogis 
				choosing a life of simplicity may be viewed as being self hating 
				or self abnegating, while in fact these yogis may be 
				experiencing and reflecting a deep and profound state of 
				wellness and spiritual fulfillment. A modern analogy might 
				expand on this further, such as rather than "viewing" the bliss 
				of a true yogi living without the need of TV, air conditioning, 
				fancy clothes, microwave ovens, rich pastries, automobiles, or 
				other such superfluous if not unhealthy attractions/addictions 
				as a sacrifice; we can rather more correctly view that within a 
				positive context of affirmation i.e., that the yogi has attained 
				something more primal, fulfilling, and satisfying and has no 
				ersatz external attachments or desires in these regards, rather 
				he/she is focused on attaining moksha (liberation). In other 
				words, these yogis may look like they are sacrificing something 
				if viewed from the eyes of a greedy, lustful, or fear based ego, 
				but from the yogi's point of view it is the ego bound individual 
				who has sacrificed the ALL, for something empty.
				Later on in this chapter, Patanjali describes the practice of 
				vairagya as well as ashtanga yoga (of which tapas, swadhyaya, 
				and isvara pranidhana are included as niyams) as techniques (sadhana) 
				in order to eliminate the kleshas. Authentic tapas is far more 
				straightforward than self sacrifice or self defacement i.e., 
				rather through authentic tapas we relieve ourselves of the 
				neurotic obsessions of ego gratification thus freeing ourselves 
				from needless stress and distraction. The processes of tapas, 
				swadhyaya, and isvara pranidhana are intertwined. For example we 
				first may make an affirmation become free of neurotic behavior 
				by knowing our "self" better -- study our "self" more, see how 
				and why it becomes imprisoned and caught up in suffering (dukha). 
				This is the momentum in alignment with swadhyaya (self study). 
				We might at the same time affirm our higher potential of spirit 
				side and wish to integrate eternal presence more into our life. 
				This is isvara pranidhana. Then, tapas naturally follows because 
				in the light of the former, we can analyze each action whether 
				or not it will lead toward more self understanding, liberation, 
				and spirit or not. In other words, will the habit of attachment, 
				neurotic greed, new clothes, entertainment, distraction, fancy 
				or rich foods lead toward the desired spiritual goal or not. If 
				not, then we decide not to do that anymore. That is authentic 
				tapas. It is not renunciation or repentance in the Western sense, 
				because it is an affirmation. It is not discipline, because we 
				are doing what we truly desire. Tapas in everyday practice can 
				first liberate us from the obvious addictions that are 
				possessing our vital energy and attention (cit-prana). They are 
				given up on the spiritual altar -- as an affirmation of the 
				Great Integrity. Then, more subtle hindrances are removed, and 
				as such tapas is also closely aligned with the yams of 
				aparigraha, asteya, and brahmacharya (See Sutra 37-39 below). 
				Sometimes tapas is translated as discipline, in the sense of 
				externally applied rules or duties such as found in 
				authoritarian systems or religions. Nor is tapas obeying moral 
				or legal precepts, but what distinguishes authentic yoga from 
				religion is that the yogi is self disciplined. The yogi's self 
				discipline is his/her daily sadhana (practice), which is applied 
				continuously (day and night) eventually as an affirmation and 
				love not as an aversion (dvesa). So tapas means much more than 
				discipline, rather it is a specific self-discipline that is 
				applied to boost and fuel our spiritual progress -- to realize 
				yoga in All Our Relations.
				Again tapas is to be applied not only in meditation, but 
				integrated into our simple every day relationships. Tapas is 
				simply letting go of attachment or self involvement in an 
				activity which is seen as neurotic, distracting, entertaining, 
				or diversionary such as neurotic entertainment, recreation, 
				consuming ersatz objects of gratification, or the engagement in 
				any action which is imbued with kleshas. In every day terms we 
				have many choices, so we can ask how does this activity or that 
				activity fit into my spiritual evolution. How does going to the 
				movies, going shopping, acquiring more things, going out to eat 
				and so forth compare with doing meditation, asana, pranayama, 
				karma yoga, or study tonight in regard to our spiritual progress 
				and happiness? Tapas is not simply renunciation for 
				renunciation's sake, nor will any success come from hatred, fear, 
				or an aversion (dvesa). Nor is it a simple minded remedy for 
				raga (attraction), nor should it be motivated by ego (asmita) or 
				pride; but rather tapas involves giving up afflictions (kleshas), 
				attachments, vasana, and old habits (any dualistic separate 
				identification) upon the altar of love -- in the context to free 
				up more energy for our spiritual activities --as a yoga kriya. 
				As such it is always an affirmation. On the other hand acting 
				from afflictions of attachment, aversion, ego, greed, jealousy, 
				ignorance, and the rest of the kleshas will dissipate/distract 
				the energy; so the yogi who achieves a certain amount of self 
				awareness through self study (swadhyaya) will make better use 
				out of their time and energy applying it to fire the kiln of 
				effective practice instead. This is how swadhyaya and tapas 
				interface on the mundane level to increase the spiritual 
				vibrations and sacred presence. Tapas is not simply renunciation, 
				but rather a recycling of the energy that could have been placed 
				into further distraction and dissipation -- placing that energy 
				into the service of further fueling one's spiritual evolution -- 
				tapas becomes the activity that freshens up and sparks a 
				practice that has become sluggish and dull. As such then it is 
				an affirmation of the higher Self. This is the action of 
				authentic tapas. Very simply by letting go of one's attachment 
				in such neurotic activities or propensities, then space and 
				energy is liberated and reclaimed that can now be directed 
				toward ultimate liberation.
				For example, mouna. or the practice of silence, is a traditional 
				way yogis build up "spiritual heat" to ward off spiritual stasis. 
				Simply by refraining from verbal chatter that energy (chatter 
				can be a severe drain on the throat chakra) is recycled as it 
				were for "other" activities. This is effective for those of us 
				who are subject to this kind of energy suck. Another common 
				physical practice of tapas is fasting, but again not to 
				reinforce the false identifications of pride, ego, or 
				willfulness (as in look how long I fasted), but rather for 
				spiritual energy -- living on the more subtle sources of prana 
				-- becoming more attuned to the Source of true Sustenance. Many 
				yogis say that the best and most effective tapas is entering 
				into silence of the mind, or meditation (dhyana). 
				
				Swadhyaya: Swadhyaya is most often mis-translated as scriptural 
				study, but that is more often the cause of false identification 
				than its remedy. Although scriptural study has become a 
				institutionalized philosophical tradition in India for thousands 
				of years, swadhyaya in the yogic sense means exactly as it says; 
				self study. Of course the religious and academic types will deny/ignore 
				this last statement, declaring that one can find oneself only in 
				books (scripture). Yogis meditating do not accept being defined 
				by authoritative books or external authorities; but rather they 
				are dedicated toward finding that Source intimately within as 
				the authentic living modality of true Gnosis. Patanjali meant 
				swadhyaya as just that i.e., studying the self at each moment. 
				As such it is an important technique in meditation practice (raj 
				yoga). In meditation activity however we do not want to analyze 
				the mind processes or self, nor "do" anything other than to 
				simply observe in awareness. In this sense meditation then could 
				be called the activity of no activity where the Self discloses 
				itself. Here swadhyaya in its highest form is pure awareness -- 
				where the small self disappears and the True Self is revealed. 
				That is where authentic swadhyaya can lead. Swadhyaya is 
				misinterpreted widely by scholars and religionists as "scriptural 
				study" or book study. Although studying "correct" philosophy and 
				practicing contemplation on mental and psychological phenomena (jnana 
				yoga) can provide some specific benefits of clarification or 
				inspiration for some students (but only when placed in the 
				context of the heart), such external study can be often very 
				misleading and disorientating (unless balanced with inner study), 
				as it merely leads toward the reinforcement of institutionalized 
				mass illusion and as such is not characterized as an authentic 
				yogic path. too often we find that those who study external 
				authoritative systems become obsequious, robotic, quarrelsome 
				with others sects, conformists, and jealous of others who do 
				follow the injunctions of the guru or scripture. Too often the 
				books substitute for the book of the Heart, but the map is not 
				the territory, nor will the symbols delineated by words, serve 
				well to replace our direct experience. Indeed we must learn from 
				our direct experience what is Self -- no one can be spared this 
				experience who wishes to know the authentic Self.
				
				Thus in a yogic sense swadhyaya means studying, observing, and 
				eventually knowing our true self nature, not through the 
				conceptual confines and objective externalized eyes of the 
				intellect, books, scripture, or authority, but rather through 
				Gnosis acquired through meditation -- from an authentic direct 
				transpersonal experience. This study or inquiry into Self is an 
				essential practice of the process of self realization via the 
				removal of delusion/illusion. It is a moment to moment 
				university culminating in Self Knowledge or inner realization. 
				See "Who am I" and "Self Enquiry" by Ramana Maharshi, "You Can 
				Be A Light Unto Yourself" from the Collected Works of J. 
				Krishnamurti, vol. 13, "Krishnamurti and the Direct Perception 
				of Truth", and similar.
				Isvara pranidhana: Isvara is often mistranslated with the 
				English term, "God", which in the Western sense of the term, is 
				almost the opposite of what is meant because isvara specifically 
				is not a theistic idea (as yoga is not theistic). In other words 
				the word isvara specifically refers to the formless and 
				deity-less aspect of Reality -- isvara specifically means the 
				formless and attributeless, hence "aspectless aspect" of the 
				divine and as such even to name it is a contradiction. Thus 
				Isvara pranidhana is to surrender to the great integrity of 
				formless infinity which is the eternal (beginning-less and never 
				ending) beginning-ness -- the all inclusive creator/creation -- 
				the Great Integrity while anything short of that is being short 
				changed. The word, isvara, thus expresses or symbolizes 
				completeness, the whole, or infinite mind and as such can not be 
				represented by symbols being the nothingness that includes 
				everything. It remains formless and undifferentiated in order to 
				not exclude even the minuteness differentiation of existence. 
				What does this mean then as a practice. It means that Divine 
				intelligence and Divine will is always available if we look for 
				it and we can always surrender to THAT. THAT larger momentum, 
				force, or grace (if you like) can and does lead us into the 
				Great Transpersonal Presence -- into the natural and true Self 
				that knows no bounds and as such isvara pranidhana is a daily 
				moment to moment practice. In meditation we allow THAT ineffable 
				immeasurable Light and Love to shine forth -- we create time and 
				space for this communion. Always we surrender to THAT which is 
				taintless and pure -- which has no definition -- exists but does 
				not exist -- that which is beyond all names; yet may be called 
				isvara only if we realize that it can not be contained by form. 
				If we do not devote our energy and attention to that which is 
				COMPLETE and WHOLE, how will we ever accomplish yoga? If we are 
				not focused in this direction, then we remain incomplete, 
				corrupted, fragmented, diverted, rended, neurotic, and 
				vulnerable to repeated fragmentation and separation in the 
				corrupted and confused mire of dualistic reality (samsara). 
				Isvara is always available. When we let go of our willful 
				practices -- when certain karma is extinguished -- then we make 
				room for Grace -- Guidance from the teacher of teachers, isvara 
				(see Pada 1.26).
				
				The confusion generated by what Patanjali meant by isvara 
				pranidhana, has been created because various religious and 
				analytical "schools" project their own "definitions" upon the 
				term, isvara. For example the pre-existing older samkhya school 
				of Patanjali's day, did not recognize any god at all. Then 
				samkhya itself changed. Later schools such as Vedanta attribute 
				an impersonal absolute (state devoid of any attributes) only to 
				nirvisesha (without attributes) nirguna (without qualities), and 
				nirakar (formless), which is distinguished from isvara. Some 
				bhakti yoga schools attribute isvara pranidhana to mean worship 
				or devotion while also one may interpret it to mean selfless 
				service (as is found in karma yoga). There are numerous other 
				interpretations displaying the specific bias of the schools 
				predilections or cosmology. Indeed in Hinduism alone there are 
				thousands of names for god, and ten times that number of books 
				which attempt at different definitions for each. The point that 
				concerns the yogi after liberation, is that the "name" doesn't 
				matter, i.e., that in order to rest in the universal ultimate 
				one must surrender all attachments to these separate forms, be 
				they religious or philosophical -- in Reality -- we are that -- 
				Tat Tvam Asi. That is assuming that we are sincerely on a 
				genuine spiritual search versus simply finding solace in ersatz 
				external systems. (See also Pada 1.23-27) Rather than harp any 
				further on this subject, we will assume that Patanjali meant the 
				practice in the context of a Raj Yoga enhancement. This practice 
				is not only a kriya (essential or prerequisite activity) for 
				spiritual transformation, but also a niyama and as such it is 
				perhaps more valuable to point out that isvara pranidhana is not 
				a practice that can be accomplished through the intellect, nor 
				is it difficult to access and practice like some scholars might 
				indicate. Rather it is a simple yet profound practice of 
				touching our highest potential which in the non-dual 
				transpersonal sense of yoga simultaneously co-exists both inside 
				and outside of our own being in the instantaneousness of the 
				sacred moment. "The importance that all these Indian metaphysics, 
				and even the ascetic technique and contemplative method that 
				constitute Yoga, accord to ―knowledge‖ is easily explained if we 
				take into consideration the causes of human suffering. The 
				wretchedness of human life is not owing to a divine punishment 
				or to an original sin, but to ignorance. Not any and every kind 
				of ignorance, but only ignorance of the true nature of Spirit, 
				the ignorance that makes us confuse Spirit with our psychomental 
				experience, that makes us attribute ―qualities‖ and predicates 
				to the eternal and autonomous principle that is Spirit -- in 
				short, a metaphysical ignorance. Hence it is natural that it 
				should be a metaphysical knowledge that supervenes to end this 
				ignorance. This metaphysical knowledge leads the disciple to the 
				threshold of illumination -- that is, to the true 'Self'. And it 
				is this knowledge of one‘s Self -- not in the profane sense of 
				the term, but in its ascetic and spiritual sense -- that is the 
				end pursued by the majority of Indian speculative systems, 
				though each of them indicates a different way of reaching it.
				For Samkhya and Yoga the problem is clearly defined. Since 
				suffering has its origin in ignorance of ―Spirit‖ -- that is, in 
				confusing ―Spirit‖ with psychomental states -- emancipation can 
				be obtained only if the confusion is abolished. The differences 
				between Samkhya and Yoga on this point are insignificant. Only 
				their methods differ: Samkhya seeks to obtain liberation solely 
				by gnosis, whereas for Yoga an ascesis and a technique of 
				meditation are indispensable. In both darshanas human suffering 
				is rooted in illusion, for man believes that his psychomental 
				life -- activity of the senses, feelings, thoughts, and volition 
				-- is identical with Spirit, with the Self. He thus confuses two 
				wholly autonomous and opposed realities, between which there is 
				no real connection but only an illusory relation, for 
				psychomental experience does not belong to Spirit, it belongs to 
				nature (prakriti); states of consciousness are the refined 
				products of the same substance that is at the base of the 
				physical world and the world of life. Between psychic states and 
				inanimate objects or living beings, there are only differences 
				of degree. But between psychic states and Spirit there is a 
				difference of an ontological order; they belong to two different 
				modes of being. ―Liberation‖ occurs when one has understood this 
				truth, and when the Spirit regains its original freedom. Thus, 
				according to Samkhya, he who would gain emancipation must begin 
				by thoroughly knowing the essence and the forms of nature (prakriti) 
				and the laws that govern its evolution. For its part, Yoga also 
				accepts this analysis of Substance, but finds value only in the 
				practice of contemplation, which is alone capable of revealing 
				the autonomy and omnipotence of Spirit experimentally." Mircea 
				Eliade, Immortality and Freedom Thus vairagya, tapas, swadhyaya, 
				and isvara pranidhana are the individual parts of an integrated 
				and potent process of spiritual transformation and liberation. 
				Success in yoga proceeds from here. Thus it is valuable not to 
				forget nor misinterpret these kriyas as they are very useful 
				when properly understood and applied. In this sense we let go of 
				ego involvement or attachment which is self enslaving, but not 
				in a rigid, static, or willful framework of self denial or 
				repression nor as a religious or moral duty, but as a passionate 
				and joyful release/relief -- as divine longing and intention -- 
				as Divine Love -- as a portal into THAT wholistic and joyful 
				interaction which provides us completion in the heart, true 
				happiness, and fulfillment. Thus we embrace and reside in our 
				core energy -- in the heart relinquishing our unhappiness. How 
				to stay thus centered is brought about through self observation 
				(how our energy shifts or our attention and consciousness 
				becomes obscured and modified by the vrttis. In this way self 
				study (swadhyaya), leads to self knowledge -- or knowledge of 
				the Self or Source. When we observe ourselves to be occupied 
				with activities that do not lead in this direction, we perform 
				tapas and this feeds the fire of our practice. When we feel lost 
				or corrupted, we search out the omnipresent sacred and all 
				intelligent presence in all and surrender to THAT. For more on 
				Isvara see Pada I: Sutra 23-27 and Pada II Sutra 45. Tapas, 
				swadhyaya, and isvara pranidhana all are mutually synergistic 
				i.e., the more we understand who we are, simplify our activities 
				and involvement, and dedicate our attention and energy toward 
				staying connected and in harmony with the Great Integrity, the 
				more natural, accelerated, and fulfilling our yoga practice 
				becomes. Kriya yoga as preliminary activity or preparatory 
				action clears a path, creates a pathway, and removes an 
				obstruction and as such means purification. In a similar way we 
				can use the word, prerequisite, for kriya. As such see 
				Patanjali's further elaboration of tapas, swadhyaya, and isvara 
				pranidhana as niyama (the branch of astanga yoga called 
				beneficial actions to undertake) starting at Pada II, sutra 
				43-46) following. II. 2. Samadhi-bhavanarthah 
				klesa-tanu-karanarthas ca [Tapas, swadhyaya, and isvara 
				pranidhana are practices] that brings forth (bhavanarthah) 
				samadhi (the synchronization of all the koshas, chakras, marmas 
				on all levels with the universal Self) by attenuating (tanu-karana) 
				the causation of the kleshas (actions that are motivated by 
				negative emotions negative emotions which bring about sorrow). 
				Kriya yoga thus thus eventually facilitates (bhavana) the 
				realization of samadhi. Commentary: The practice of kriya yoga 
				purifies the body/mind serving to reduce (tanu-karana) their 
				embedded afflictions, occlusions, obscurations, or taints (kleshas) 
				eventually allowing for natural flow to occur. As we cultivate (bhavana) 
				our practice, the purpose (artah) becomes refined, the 
				afflictions (kleshas) lessen (tanu), thus samadhi becomes more 
				accessible and continuous (bhavana). When the kleshas (as taints, 
				poisons, afflictions, and hindrances) are lessened then our 
				practice is less hindered and more successful. Kriya yoga 
				lessens these obstructions and hindrances so that our practice 
				blossoms. A wise practitioner who has found that his/her 
				practice has become stagnant, can go to tapas, swadhyaya, and 
				isvara pranidhana to remove the hindrance, blockages, and 
				obscurations by building up the spiritual fire (tapas), the 
				passion to know Self (swadhyaya), and the surrender to that 
				highest transpersonal wisdom that comes from divine and 
				infallible guidance (isvara pranidhana). So if our intent (artah) 
				is to cultivate samadhi (samadhi-bhavanarthah) we should learn 
				how to attenuate the kleshas in All Our Relations. See II.43-46 
				for more details about tapas, swadhyaya, and isvara pranidhana). 
				II -3. Avidyasmita-raga-dvesabhinivesah klesah The afflictions 
				that cause sorrow (kleshas) are all caused by avidya (ignorance) 
				of our true self nature. As a result of this ignorance which 
				veils the light of truth, ignorance and confusion further 
				manifests as asmita (the false identification of separateness, 
				aloneness, pridefulness, or egoism), raga (the illusion that 
				conjoining to, identifying with, or possessing separate I-It 
				objects will provide fulfillment i.e., attraction/attachment), 
				dvesa (repulsion, dislike, hatred, anger, and aversion), and the 
				fear of death (abhinivesah).
				Commentary: the kleshas are activities which lead to dukha (pain 
				or suffering). they are ordinarily classified by five general 
				categories of kleshas which functional and effective yoga 
				practice is designed to eliminate. Kleshas are emotional 
				afflictions, taints or poisons which if acted upon increase 
				suffering (dukha). Another way of saying this is that ignorance 
				(avidya) of our true self nature is the basic confusion or 
				erroneous mindset which separated us from embracing the flux of 
				the eternal now, wherein we habitually ignore the truth of our 
				essential true nature; i.e., swarupa.
				
				This ignorance creates a habitual and familiar milieu of 
				separation, a rend, split, trauma, and separation which is the 
				primal cause of all other obstructions which appear as the 
				myriad afflictive modalities which Patanjali calls kleshas. 
				Although there exist innumerable combinations of these kleshas, 
				their source is ignorance and here Patanjali breaks them down 
				into five toxic dynamics. The kleshas can be viewed as the 
				various frictions of separateness or ignorance (as compensatory 
				neurotic displacements) which causes the experiences of 
				discomfort, desire, craving, dissatisfaction, restlessness, 
				angst, and the myriad other negative afflictions (kleshas) of 
				spiritual self alienation which lead to pain and suffering. Of 
				these innumerable kleshas, Patanjali simply classifies them into 
				these general groups all emanating from this state of spiritual 
				alienation which is in reality, the absence of vision (avidya) 
				-- the process of ignoring the profound reality of who we really 
				are in wholeness and integrity -- in All Our Relations. Thus the 
				five broad categories of kleshas are avidya (ignorance or 
				confusion) which is the base of all the others, asmita (ego 
				delusion, the belief in the separate or small self, prideful 
				conceit, arrogance, denial, etc), raga (attraction, desire, 
				attachment, etc.), dvesa (repulsion, aversion, hatred, fear), 
				and, abhinivesah (the fear of death which negates the eternal 
				spiritual presence). It naturally follows that when we are 
				fragmented from our true love and vision, we would desire a 
				compensatory replacement. This is called raga or desire. Thus in 
				the yoga paradigm, desire goes away when we come back to the 
				True Self -- the All and Everything of the great Integrity. It 
				should be noted that fear in this context is really negative 
				desire; i.e., desiring something not to happen is fear. Fear is 
				also an aversion (dvesa) to something while raga is following 
				the attraction. Attraction and repulsion occur naturally, but 
				any activity or dominance of them become afflictions and cause 
				suffering. Repulsion or aversion is also manifested as hatred, 
				anger, disgust, and condemnation. Most people do not acknowledge 
				such in themselves due to their conceit and self deceit, but 
				they manifest in many ways in the ordinary man on a daily basis. 
				Also ignorance causes asmita (pride, ego delusion, conceit, and 
				belief in separateness). More will be said about this later, but 
				asmita again like the other kleshas is merely a compensatory 
				neurotic coping mechanism to replace the identification with the 
				true Self. 
				Note the Buddhists similarly trace the source of the kleshas to 
				clinging onto false views and ignorance and group them similarly 
				into aversion (anger, hatred, and fear), desire (raga), pride 
				(or arrogance and delusion), greed, and envy. One can see that 
				all the manifold varieties of kleshas such as jealousy, anger, 
				hatred, possessiveness, arrogance, condemnation, self 
				righteousness, aggressiveness, etc are simply permutations of 
				two or more of these basic kleshas -- all stemming from 
				ignorance.
				For example jealousy is based on a combination of desire (raga), 
				dvesa (aversion), and asmita (pride). Abhinivesah is often 
				translated as clinging onto physical existence, but I have 
				chosen to translate it in its negative as the fear of death. But 
				really it is the clinging onto a false sense of continuity or 
				security onto something which is ever changing. Abhinivesa is 
				really is rooted in the fear of change. In other words we do not 
				fear the discontinuity of eternal love or consciousness when we 
				reside in the firm experience of its continuity. It is only when 
				we are disconnected within the realm of false and confused 
				identifications, does the fear of discontinuity and death arise. 
				Both say the same thing. Abhinivesah is one of the greatest 
				sources of desire, fear, and separation and hence suffering (dukha). 
				It entirely goes away when we identify more continuously with 
				the eternal imperishable Self (that which never dies which is 
				always present.) in All Our Relations. Abhinivesah is one of the 
				most profoundly misunderstood kleshas, especially in this modern 
				materialistic age where consensus reality has sunk deeply into 
				the coarse, external, physical, materialistic, and temporal 
				"reality' at the detriment to the subtle, the inner, the 
				energetic, spiritual, and eternal. Indeed these two worlds are 
				not meant to be split into two, but our conditioning does this 
				all too successfully. Yoga on the other hand is designed to 
				embrace that re-connection i.e., of eternal spirit as divine 
				presence at each and every juncture of physical manifestation as 
				its basis. The young infant is born fresh from the eternal, 
				while the elderly prepares to re-enter the "reality" of eternal 
				flux, but for those who live it, they have never left it and it 
				never leaves. In dualistic religions, Spirit is said to exist in 
				the beginning and the end (alpha and omega), but precisely that 
				statement betrays abhinivesa, i.e., the clinging onto a life 
				bias. Rather, REALITY, as-it-is says that life and death both 
				belong to a greater wholistic continuum -- the beginningless 
				never-ending. In other words, in Reality there is an "I" which 
				is bornless and deathless that exists right HERE and now -- in 
				the Eternal Now -- the Continuity and Great Integrity which is 
				authentic yoga. If we were able to shed the conditioning that 
				frames "reality" as we know it, only in terms of temporal life, 
				but rather in terms of the eternal now -- the never ending 
				continuum, then our life would become far richer and productive. 
				It would be inter-dimensional and holographic. When we embrace 
				this great continuum -- when we lose our materialistic bias and 
				prejudice, then we also give up all fear of death -- fear itself 
				vanishes. HERE the Universal non-dual transpersonal 
				transpersonal Sacred Presence of All Our Relations -- as Reality 
				as-it-is -- becomes revealed. II. 4. Avidya ksetram uttaresam 
				prasupta-tanu-vicchina-udaranam
				
				All the psycho-emotive afflictions, hindrances, obstructions, 
				and impurities (kleshas) abide within (ksetram) avidya (the 
				process of ignoring or unawareness) and thus all the other (uttaresam) 
				kleshas are encompassed by avidya, be they attenuated or subtle 
				(tanu), active and dominant (udaranam), dormant (prasupta), or 
				temporally restrained (vicchinna). Avidya (lack of awareness of 
				what is-as-it-is) being the primary conditioned obscuration and 
				misapprehension of the self evident Eternal Now (the Great 
				Integrity) which is self existing in all things and at all times. 
				Commentary: Vidya means vision or to see. Avidya is the lack of 
				vision -- the obscuring sliver in our field of vision, the veil 
				that filters and distorts "reality" -- it is the blinder that 
				prevent us from seeing what is-as-it-is or Thusness. The problem 
				of stasis arises (or rather our vision becomes obscured) when we 
				become conditioned (habituated) to seeing the world, explaining 
				our existence, and identifying through this distorted lens, veil, 
				or sliver in our eye. When our familiarity and comfort with this 
				duality becomes confused with security and "reality", then we 
				are in trouble (dukha) because we start to demand, prefer, or 
				mistake our obscured and limited familiar "state of reality" in 
				favor of REALITY AS IT IS -- unobstructed clarity, true vision, 
				or the "real thing". Then consciousness becomes occluded and 
				patterned (chit-vrtti). Then past patterning (vrtti), 
				conditioning, and negative programming (karmic propensities) are 
				dominant. Authentic yoga practice is thus geared to both 
				attenuating kleshas which gives us breather space to work 
				eventually destroying them all. Avidya is the major klesha in 
				which all others (uttaresam) fall within its field (ksetram). 
				Thus the goal of yoga is reached through vidya (through the 
				removal of ignorance and the kleshas), which brings us back to 
				this natural unobscured visionary ability of All Our Relations. 
				Thus yoga practice concentrates on destroying ignorance because 
				avidya is the cause of all the afflictions and obstructions. Our 
				unlimited and ever present innate true self nature (swarupa) 
				awaits us always in the eternal now when all the spins, bias, 
				and vrttis cease -- when the illusory veil of false 
				identification and ignorance is lifted. this buddha potential, 
				our higher self, or the kundalini lies dormant in waiting while 
				we are lost in this dualistic veil of suffering (samsara), but 
				when we emerge even for an instant we then see that this very is 
				our true essential nature, and as such this gives us impetus to 
				become entirely free (in nirbij samadhi).
				
				Although there are almost an infinite amount of combinations of 
				kleshas,some of these combinations are: anger, hatred, jealousy, 
				pride, prejudice, bigotry, arrogance, contempt, disgust, 
				abhorrence, condemnation, bitterness, resentment, acrimony, 
				dismissiveness, haughtiness, self righteousness, fear, envy, 
				paranoia, confusion, insecurity, contentiousness, squabbling, 
				attachment, competitiveness, revenge, mania, habitual discomfort, 
				angst, anxiety, vengeance, and self centeredness.
				Some of these are often extended in behavior manifestations 
				which cause collective suffering and bad karma such as: 
				extensions of ego into group egos, religionism, chauvinism, 
				nationalism, crusades. jihads, wars, clanism, ethnocentrism, 
				bigotry, prejudice, tribalism, racism, sexism, regionalism, 
				languagism, kinsmanism, geocentricism, egocentrism, exploitive 
				propensities, theft, violence, group predation, scarcity 
				psychology, self adversity, xenophobia, etc. To a yogi being 
				free mukti (liberation) depends upon the elimination of the 
				kleshas. In turn the kleshas such as ignorance, hatred, fear, 
				ego false identification, religious, ethnic and nationalistic 
				pride; self righteousness, bigotry, and prejudice is the 
				manipulative fuel for militaristic/totalitarian and 
				authoritarian societies. II 5. Anityasuci-dukhanatmasu 
				nitya-suci-sukhatmakhyatir avidya Thus avidya (ignorance) is 
				that embedded, programmed, or conditioned state of sorrow (dukha) 
				where we habitually identify with and fixate upon as something 
				pleasurable (sukha), but which is transitory (anitya), impure (asuci), 
				and painful (dukha), confusing the true, real, eternal (nitya), 
				and pure (suci) Self (atman) of which brings true and lasting 
				happiness with that which brings more pain and suffering. 
				Commentary: Avidya (ignorance) is the cause of pain, suffering, 
				or craving (dukha). Ignorance as avidya confuses the non-self (anatama) 
				as the true self (atman) in false identification; the impure (asuci) 
				with the pure (suci); that which is ever changing (anitya) as 
				being static and eternal (nitya).This is dualism as ignorance as 
				well as false identification (asmita). Yoga makes the connection 
				between eternal spirit and nature in a sacred embodiment where 
				the eternal is continuously present (as divine presence) in the 
				sacred Now as it always has and will be. This is Reality, where 
				ignorance is illusory -- the fabrication of erroneous conceptual 
				processes. By the liberating light of vidya (vision), then 
				confusion, craving, and suffering (dukha) ceases. The 
				pre-existing common dichotomous and confused dualistic situation 
				which Patanjali comments upon is that the common man confuses 
				suffering as joyful. He confuses craving and desire with 
				pleasure having confused the anticipation of self gratification 
				with it's satiation. He has not woken up to how he creates his 
				own pain. It is likened to a man who eats slow acting poisons 
				during the day and enjoys it then only to suffer extreme pain at 
				night. The next day this same man eats and enjoys the poison 
				again, thinking how good it is, and then again at night he again 
				experiences pain, suffering, discomfort, craving, or a further 
				feeling of incompleteness (dukha).
				Another example is having an itch. The bigger the itch the 
				greater the ecstasy becomes when it is scratched and satiated. 
				But are we not better off without the itch itself? The common 
				man who has lost his way only knows the temporary pleasures that 
				occur from satisfying neurotic desires, confusing the presence 
				of desire with the process of pleasure and thus happiness. But 
				where is the lasting happiness that spiritual passion is 
				directed toward? There are many examples like this, but another 
				more esoteric example is the man who becomes addicted to 
				massage. He loves the massage so well and it is so pleasurable, 
				but that type of pleasure is conditional , resting upon the 
				pre-existing condition where he habitually creates tension and 
				pain in his body/mind acting unconsciously and ignorantly. the 
				pleasure that he is experiencing is really the result of his 
				ignorance i.e., previous actions based on ignorance. This type 
				of "pleasure" is thus contrived and dependent upon suffering and 
				can become addictive, while on the other hand yoga is designed 
				to eliminate the cause of suffering (avidya) and that is why it 
				is said that it brings True and Lasting Happiness. True and 
				lasting happiness is found through remediating all neurotic 
				ersatz attachment to duality. Coming back into wholeness -- into 
				Samadhi -- into the Eternal Now -- Sacred Presence and All Our 
				Relations, then there is nothing lacking -- nothing is ignored. 
				IV Sutra 28 hanam esham kleshavad uktam These samskaras create 
				kleshas and thus can be eradicated [by the previously mentioned 
				remediations of the kleshas, samskaras, vasanas, and avidya]. 
				Commentary: See Sutra 30-32 IV Sutra 29 prasankhyane 'py 
				akusidasya sarvatha viveka-khyater dharma-meghah samadhih Free 
				from selfish motivation while abiding steadily (sarvatha) in 
				self luminous discriminatory awareness (viveka-khyater) the 
				rain-cloud of natural law (dharma-megha) is absorbed (samadhih). 
				Commentary: Pure awareness or vigilance (in viveka) applied 
				steadily will create viveka-khyatir (luminous self revealing 
				discriminating lucidity), the remedial propensity where old 
				samskaras, old mind habits (vasanas), and vrtti become nipped in 
				the bud as soon as they arise. IV Sutra 30 tatah 
				klesha-karma-nivrittih In this way the waves of karma and klesha 
				are destroyed.
				
				IV Sutra 31 tada sarvavarana-malapetasya 
				jnanasyanantyaj-jneyam-alpam Then all veils (sarvavarana) and 
				impurities (mala) are removed (apetasya) so that the knowledge 
				of infinite mind (jnanasyanantyaj-jneyam) is revealed which 
				leaves little more (alpam) to be disclosed. Similarly in a 
				Buddhist perspective kleshas are caused by ignorance. Acting on 
				the kleshas cause bad karma. "The six poisons are: hatred, or 
				anger, which creates the experience of the hell realm; greed, or 
				miserliness, which creates the hungry ghost realm; ignorance of 
				how to act virtuously is the cause of rebirth in the animal 
				realm; attachment (virtuous action performed with attachment to 
				the meritorious results) is the cause of human rebirth; jealousy 
				(virtuous action sullied by jealousy) causes rebirth in the 
				demigod realm; and pride, or egotism (virtuous action performed 
				with pride) causes a godly rebirth. The defilements lead to 
				unskillful actions, which generate karma, the infallible 
				operation of cause and effect in the mental continuum of each 
				individual. The negative karma caused by the defilements is the 
				origin of the sufferings of the six realms. The only way to 
				eliminate suffering is to practice the path, method or remedy 
				that will remove the defilements and the negative karma that 
				they produce. By developing loving-kindness and compassion it is 
				possible to diminish the defilements, but in order to uproot 
				them completely, it is necessary also to develop the 
				discriminating awareness (Skt. prajna; Tib. she-rab) that arises 
				from the wisdom of emptiness. The development of loving-kindness 
				together with wisdom is the result of following the path of 
				Dharma, otherwise known as the five paths: path of accumulation, 
				path of unification, path of seeing, path of meditation, and 
				path of no learning.
				The first, the path of accumulation, has three subdivisions. The 
				first stage consists of taking the first step in the right 
				direction, that is, taking refuge and practicing tranquility 
				meditation (Skt. shamatha, Tib. shinay). The aspect of wisdom 
				that is involved is that of listening to teachings (called the 
				wisdom of hearing), and of reflecting on them with the 
				analytical mind (called the wisdom of contemplation). The 
				contemplation appropriate to this stage is known as the four 
				applications of mindfulness, which is an examination of the true 
				nature of (1) the body, (2) the feelings, (3) the mind, and (4) 
				all phenomena. By logical analysis it is possible to come to the 
				intellectual understanding that all of these are merely names 
				for interdependent occurrences that lack any true self-existence, 
				this prepares the way for an acceptance of the idea of emptiness 
				(Skt. sunyata; Tib. tong-pa-nyi). The second stage of the path 
				of accumulation involves the abandonment of negative actions and 
				the cultivation of virtuous actions, by which merit is 
				accumulated. The third stage consists of the development of four 
				qualities, without which further progress on the path will not 
				be possible: (1) aspiration (strong determination to practice 
				Dharma), (2) diligence (enthusiastic effort), (3) recollection (not 
				forgetting the practice), and (4) meditative concentration (one-pointedness 
				of mind without distractions). What was developed on the first 
				path becomes stronger on the second, the path of unification, 
				which is a linking of the ordinary level to the exalted. On this 
				path the practitioner experiences greater tranquility, more joy 
				in virtuous action and fewer negative thoughts; confidence, 
				energy, reflection, concentration, and wisdom increase, and 
				tolerance of obstacles is developed. Finally the highest 
				possible mundane realization is reached, a momentary experience 
				that occurs during meditation, in which the nature of emptiness 
				is perceived directly. After having this perception, the 
				practitioner is called a noble or exalted one (Skt. arya; Tib. 
				pag-pa), one who has immediate insight into the four noble 
				truths. This experience is like that of blind person whose 
				blindness is cured and who sees colors for the first time; 
				therefore, it is called the path of seeing. " Based on a seminar 
				given by Khenpo Karthar Rinpoche II 6. Drg-darsana-saktyor 
				ekatmatevasmita The particular aspect of ignorance called asmita 
				(ego delusion) is the result of the more specific process of 
				confusing the inherently transpersonal and eternal powers and 
				processes of consciousness with that of individual 
				intellectualization or cognition which then results in false or 
				faulty identification with fragmented existence -- a sense of a 
				separate "I" or ego.
				Commentary: Another way of saying this is that asmita (ego 
				delusion) occurs when we falsely identify the Infinite power of 
				consciousness (cit-sakti) which emanates simultaneously both 
				from within ourselves and within all things-- which is a 
				reflection (darsana) of eternal and infinite omnipresent spirit 
				-- as that of a separate intellectual power of a self separate 
				self standing as an alone seer (drg). In the "ordinary" state of 
				dualistic consciousness as separate self (asmita) the seer is 
				not aware that one's vision is being severely limited by this 
				false identification or bias. When we view an object of 
				cognition in that framework of duality where there is a separate 
				self viewing a separate "self" (as object) but we are not aware 
				of this duality but rather falsely understand it to be one 
				process (eka), then we suffer from the particular manifestation 
				of avidya called asmita (or ego sense), rather than as being a 
				participant and reflection of the universal transpersonal 
				Undifferentiated Eternal Source which permeates and animates the 
				entire universe. Asmita is the klesha of the delusion that 
				identifies oneself falsely as a separate entity (self), ego, in 
				short an ego delusion, pride, self deceit, arrogance, desire for 
				recognition, status seeking, power mongering, and related 
				permutations. In the modern age arrogance and pride are knee 
				jerk afflictive emotions where the victim attempts to defend and 
				build up their ego insecurity by reinforcing their delusion 
				through methods of self aggrandizement, justification, arrogance, 
				denial of any wrong doing, avoidance of seeing past faults, 
				demonization or condemnation of others, self righteousness, 
				inflated sense of superiority -- in short through the many self 
				deluding reactive methods of arrogance and denial. Asmita is one 
				of the most difficult kleshas to remedy, because the ego 
				misidentifies with itself and thus falsely misinterprets signals 
				that do not support its delusional assumptions as threats to 
				"ego self", thus either defending "ego selfhood" and/or 
				attacking the purveyors of the signals (truth bearers and truth 
				bearing seeds). Arrogance, hubris, overbearing pride, conceit, 
				smugness, narcissism, dismissiveness, presumption, cavalierism, 
				condescension, pretension, prejudice, pompousness, disdain, 
				imperiousness, haughtiness, braggadocio, smugness, cockiness, 
				over confidence, snobbery, patronage, affectiveness, vanity, 
				mockery, causticness, flashiness, prestigiousness, snootiness, 
				boorishness, foppishness, ostentation, self centeredness, self 
				cherishing, self involvement, egocentricity, ego mania, close 
				mindedness, narrow mindedness, jealousy, competitiveness, 
				sibling rivalry, desire for fame, prestige, or status, etc., 
				primarily are variants of and/or an admixture of asmita with 
				raga, dvesa, abhinivesa, and/or the other vagaries of avidya.
				Self absorbed or egocentric individuals tend toward delusions of 
				pride and tend to join groups which reinforce their delusion and 
				conceit such as organizations that reinforce group pride, racial, 
				national, religious, or similar supremist organizations. Much of 
				what is called radical fundamentalism and all other chauvinistic 
				tendencies stem from this need to reinforce one's already 
				diminished feelings of self worth and false identification. Such 
				chauvinistic groups thus feed one's need for delusion and self 
				deceit. Such people seek out like-minded support groups and 
				teachings/teachers and ideologies which tell them how great and 
				superior they are as compared to other groups which differ from 
				them, thus encouraging provincial close mindedness, while 
				avoiding, disparaging and/ or demonizing the harbingers of 
				different minded groups or messengers that contradict their 
				predilections and narrow mindedness. The powerful remedies for 
				asmita klesha are the cultivation of humbleness, isvara 
				pranidhana, citta-prasadanam (I.33), the implementation of true 
				equanimity, compassion, and loving kindness. When we approach 
				the truth of our real situation, then the identification with 
				the transpersonal, eternal, and universal non-dual vision has 
				taken root and the organism has attuned itself to the Greater 
				Self Integrity which is eternal, universal, imperishable and 
				self effulgent. THAT of course is the ultimate remedy to keep in 
				mind. Swami Venkatesananda translates II. 6 as: The particular 
				aspect of ignorance called asmita (ego delusion) is the result 
				of the more specific process of confusing the inherently 
				transpersonal and eternal powers and processes of consciousness 
				with that of individual intellectualization or cognition which 
				then results in false or faulty identification with fragmented 
				existence -- a sense of a separate "I" or ego. See the last 
				sutra of the yoga sutras (Pada IV Sutra 34) for a further 
				elaboration of asmita. Following. Patanjali describes the last 
				three kleshas of raga (attraction), dvesa (repulsion), and 
				abhinivesah (fear of death) as all emanating from a primary 
				ignorance. What is this that we are ignoring -- Reality as-it-is 
				- our true self nature. II 7 Sukhanusayi ragah Part and parcel 
				with this ego state of separation caused by ignorance (asmita 
				and avidya) is the anticipated pleasure (sukha) of attaining the 
				object of attraction (raga). The anticipation of pleasure in 
				union creates desire and craving.
				
				Commentary: Raga (attraction or attachment to the appearances of 
				objects) is the specific false identification or rather 
				confusion that misinforms us that objects of attraction will 
				bring about cessation of our cravings or rather create happiness. 
				Raga is a compensatory displacement of our more primary desire 
				for union (yoga) with the true imperishable Self misdirected to 
				a temporal replacement which is secondary, neurotic, and 
				compensatory. Thus a a habit, fixation, and vicious circle is 
				created which causes attachment, compulsion, and bondage. This 
				is the statement of the first Noble truth in Buddhism; that the 
				ego's tendency to grasp onto objects which are impermanent or 
				temporal constitutes the major cause of suffering. The fixation 
				upon an ego, a physical body, or that which is always changing 
				is just another grasping onto a limited way of being. Life is so 
				much richer when we let go of such fixations.
				Ordinary pleasure is often experienced as the satisfaction of a 
				desire and thus tension or stress is resolved. One rests in the 
				present rather than being goal oriented (toward an object). Also 
				the release or removal of fear, a threat, or pain (physical or 
				mental) is also associated with pleasure. This type of self 
				gratification although part and parcel of raga (desire or 
				attachment) is confused with an anticipation of pleasure (its 
				gratification), rather than as a struggle or suffering state (dukha). 
				Here in confusion (avidya) the process of goal orientation is 
				confused with obtaining its object (they are blurred together as 
				one) and hence the average person perpetuates their own 
				confusion of pain with pleasure. One easily can be conditioned 
				and fall victim in associating the attraction/repulsion as an 
				anticipation of pleasure/pain. Too often while suffering from 
				neurotic ego afflictions man puts in front of him neurotic 
				objects of desire to be grasped or obtained by the ego, such as 
				in goal oriented pursuits of fame, objects of self worth, 
				amassing of wealth, symbols of success, authority, privilege, 
				power, status, commodity consumption (consumerism), etc. The 
				pain of not obtaining these objects is obvious in raga 
				(attachment) but the pain associated in craving them in the 
				first place is less obvious, never-the-less it exists and can be 
				discerned by the discerning. In yoga the apparent separation 
				between the seer and seen -- the object of gratification to be 
				possessed is seen as being based on a false assumption -- the 
				assumption of duality, ignorance, avidya, and ego (asmita). In 
				authentic yoga one perceives these false assignations to be 
				distractive and neurotic -- being both contrived and 
				compensatory for a greater longing for union due to a more 
				primary and spiritual dissociation/separation which when 
				reunified and completed (as authentic yoga) brings santosha (true 
				contentment) and bliss (ananda) versus ordinary pleasure. Thus 
				the completion of ordinary desire by obtaining the object of the 
				desire can at best bring about temporary pleasure, but 
				eventually more craving is sure to arise until the primary and 
				non-neurotic passion is completed. A vicious cycle is often 
				formed where the craving itself is confused with the expectation 
				of its consummation so that there becomes a perverse association 
				of pleasure with the process of craving/desire itself. The 
				greater the anticipation or expectation (raga) the greater the 
				resultant suffering, yet at the point of obtaining the object 
				there is a temporary sense of gratification (which is really a 
				release of tension or strife in getting "there").
				
				The pursuit of security when one is afraid of losing something 
				because they feel insecure, can be said to be a desire/craving 
				as well as an aversion, just as the feeling of temporary well 
				being can over come one after they have escaped from robbers or 
				murderers. Pleasure is the reward and pain is the payment [for 
				ordinary neurotic craving]. Ordinary pleasure and pain are two 
				sides of one coin. Some one carves something and then is 
				rewarded by its union. That is part of the cycle of samsara. 
				More craving (pain), then the more pleasure that is sought. 
				Removing the kleshas (emotional afflictions) springing from 
				ignorance, then spiritual suffering is eliminated.
				Then is lasting happiness possible outside the cycle of craving, 
				desire, fear, aversion, ego (asmita), pride, greed, jealousy, 
				and death). All the kleshas when understood come from the same 
				dualistic source, the estrangement/fragmentation from Self. 
				Similarly, pleasure can also be accomplished through aversion/repulsion 
				(dvesa) just like raga, not only in the process of assuaging or 
				removing fears, but in exacting revenge in gaining "satisfaction", 
				ego gratification, a compensatory sense of self worth and 
				victory or justice by exacting punishment to one's enemies or to 
				those who have inflicted pain upon oneself. Regardless, it is 
				futile to find lasting happiness in neurotically chasing these 
				phantoms caused by raga (attraction) or dvesa (hatred or fear). 
				Raga and sukha have a strong mental component that reinforces 
				the false identification of ego and pride (asmita) by addicting 
				the mind to stories, messages, dramas, people and and world 
				views that tells the story that is pleasurable, gratifying, and 
				praising to ego pride (asmita) -- that strokes the limited ego 
				fixation telling it that it is good and worthy. Likewise this 
				desire for stroking the ego shows up in our preferences, 
				prejudice, and predilections which anticipate the future and as 
				such severely limit it and/or create disappointment. The 
				affliction (klesha) of mental preference occurs when the deluded 
				ego sees what it desires to see, what is most pleasing to the 
				ego and supports it, rather than to see what-is as truth. In 
				other words the spiritual seeker seeks the truth, rather than to 
				serve its vanity, mechanisms of self gratification, self 
				justification, and pleasure (of which the latter serves asmita, 
				pride, delusion, and self deceit). In everyday life because of 
				our grasping and attachment man becomes subject to manipulation, 
				corruption, graft, avarice, greed, covetousness, acquisitiveness, 
				paranoia, rapaciousness, infatuation, possessiveness, addictive 
				behavior, lust, malfeasance, perversion, prostitution, neuroses, 
				selfishness, and so forth because the desire for the object 
				supercedes other priorities such as spiritual values or 
				conscience. Remember Sutra 17 
				vitarka-vicara-ananda-asmita-rupanugamat samprajnatah [This 
				gradual process which is practice without attachment to results] 
				is at first accompanied by the attainment of a limited knowledge 
				based on the cognizing mindset (samprajnata), which in turn is 
				accompanied with (anugamat) various forms of pleasure (ananda), 
				coarse objectification processes (vitarka), subtle 
				objectifications (vicara) such as attachment to mental objects 
				of form (rupa), but such experiences are still associated with a 
				definite feeling of "I-it" separateness and false identification 
				(asmita) and thus also has the potential that serves to 
				reinforce it.
				
				Again fear is simply a negative desire ; i.e., the desire for 
				something not to happen.Thus any predilection or preference for 
				something to happen or not to happen
				will bring with it some tension and affliction unless we remain 
				unattached. The larger the attachment, the greater the dukha (pain). 
				As we shall see raga (attraction) and dvesa (repulsion) are 
				simply two sides of one coin being the main motor power of 
				normal neurotic living. The obvious immediate yoga remedy of the 
				kleshas of raga, dvesa, and asmita is vairagya (non-attachment) 
				and as a practical application aparigraha. In ashtanga yoga the 
				practice of the bandhas, tapas and pratyhara serve the same end. 
				In everyday life generating compassion and engaging in 
				generosity and selfless service as well as the practice of 
				chitta-prasadanam (remembering the divine) is remedial to raga. 
				See I. II 8. dukhanasayi dvesah The anticipated pain or 
				suffering (dukha) or aversion or repulsion (dvesa) of hatred and 
				fear of losing an object, and the fear of death that accompanies 
				those who have not integrated their life with Eternal Source in 
				the Eternal Now. Commentary: Just as in the previous sutra the 
				anticipation of suffering or pain (dukha) creates aversion (hatred, 
				disgust, fear, anger and the like). Dvesa (repulsion, aversion, 
				hatred, or fear) is based on the confusion that possession of or 
				identification with other objects, or the fear of losing objects, 
				or the change of states from one false identification (seemingly 
				secure) to another will bring about pain or sorrow. Mental 
				aversion is very often a supporting cause of ignorance where 
				one's compensatory mechanism of pride is averse to hearing the 
				truth about its delusion or where one's fixated identification 
				with the framework of one's existing dualistic world view (avidya) 
				appears "threatened" by the truth -- where the ego views new 
				information as a threat to the old identification/fixation of 
				self (anataman). The mental affliction of fear occurs when we 
				are confronted by a message that we associate with pain or past 
				trauma or which is painful to our ego's identification, which 
				contradicts our sense of security or world view, or else wise 
				appears as a threat to our identification with the small "self". 
				In order to avoid that pain (of ego) in aversion, we armour 
				around it or else protect ourselves from it through mechanisms 
				of aversion/repulsion and thus maintain our affliction (klesha) 
				while at the same time reinforcing avidya.
				Likewise when we dislike something, that is when we do not 
				desire it to happen or occur, we say we hate or despise it. It 
				is a way of disagreeing with "reality' and registering our 
				dislike which is the other side of raga (desire) which would 
				consider something desirable, Condemnation, disapproval, blame, 
				censure, denunciation, blameworthy criticism, abhorrence, 
				disgust, disdain, and the similar are all statements of extreme 
				displeasure and horridness -- a decision that a desired result 
				has not been achieved and more so the undesired result has 
				occurred. Such is merely an evaluation of the intellect and 
				belief system based on good and bad (ethics and esthetics) and 
				is thus both a vrtti and a klesha. Thus all the kleshas are 
				creations of the dualistic mind and are illusory. Once they are 
				seen for what they are, they then disappear. hatred is an 
				aggressive compensatory adaptive way of coping with our pain, 
				sorrow, and grief. As such it leads us even further astray 
				feeding the illusion that we are not in reality in pain or in a 
				grievous situation. Just like raga, aversion can manifest in 
				many ways in daily life as it is the result of grasping also. 
				More specifically, aversion and/or its combination mixed with 
				the other kleshas manifest as hatred, contempt, extreme dislike, 
				anger, abhorrence, disgust, distaste, rancor, derision, mockery, 
				hostility, resentment, irritation, disapproval, condemnation, 
				demonization, antipathy, repugnance, revulsion, haughtiness, 
				disdain, overbearance, pomposity, scorn, arrogance, and the like. 
				The ordinary man though, lost in samsara as he is, clings on to 
				his hatreds, loathing, predilections, bias, hatreds, blame, 
				disapproval, condemnation of others, desires, pride and 
				arrogance -- in short his many combinations of afflictive 
				emotions and obstructions (kleshas) thus not only blocking out 
				his true nature but most often creating more fuel to feed more 
				bad karma. This is why the Buddha said that dualistic "life is 
				hard when we are attached to our ignorance, but very sweet (when 
				sorrow ends) -- when we have realized the fruit of the path of 
				our latent innate wisdom (buddha nature or Christ potential). II 
				9. svarasa-vahi viduso pi tatha rudho bhinivesah The fear of 
				death (abhinivesa) arises (rudah) from the desire for continuity 
				in this life. It is perpetuated (vahi) even in the wise (viduso) 
				through inclination (svarasa).
				
				Commentary: Abhinivesa can more literally be interpreted a "desire 
				for continuity" and predictability, while svarasa literally 
				means own (sva) taste (rasa). The ego tends to want to 
				perpetuate and defend itself. Because it is lost in ignorance, 
				confusion, and delusion and hence separated from direct contact 
				with the innate order and meaning of the true Self, it tends to 
				grasp onto "things" as it is has been known; i.e., the ego tries 
				to perpetuate itself in terms of the past. Ordinary non-seekers 
				fear change, defend their egos and views, and habitually define 
				themselves within a rigid and tight framework of reference which 
				they cling to. Such a stubborn klesha tends to obscure our 
				larger transpersonal non-dual identity with All our Relations -- 
				the larger Self. As such it obscures vidya (clarity). That is 
				the literal translation of this sutra. That creates a rut; the 
				prison of seeking out predictability in the old order a d thus 
				one resists change and spiritual growth being locked into a self 
				perpetuating prison of "the already known". Thus this sutra is 
				most often interpreted as a statement of some type of fear of 
				physical death, but in reality Patanjali is addressing ego death. 
				Since the physical body is the most common and most coarse false 
				identification of the ego, most interpreters thus take this 
				sutra only in its most dense and coarse sense (of fearing 
				physical death). So over time, svarasa has become "interpreted" 
				as meaning physiological inclination; while abhinivesa has been 
				"interpreted" as desire for physical existence or even clinging 
				to life), but readers should know that such an interpretation is 
				common, but not based on the Sanskrit meaning. Rather if we take 
				the larger view, then any clinging onto physicality devoid of 
				energetic or spiritual integration will cause suffering (dukha). 
				In other words how can we fear the discontinuity of eternal love 
				or consciousness when we are firmly centered in the experience 
				of its continuity? It is only when we feel separated and 
				disconnected from that eternal flow, does the fear of 
				discontinuity and death arise.That is, clinging onto the 
				physical body is only one example of abhinivesa. Even if we do 
				take this fifth klesha, abhinivesah, as the clinging onto 
				physical existence (or to say it another way the fear of a 
				physical end) regardless this too is the result of the 
				insecurity due to not fully accepting life as temporal -- the 
				true nature of nature which is fire. That is a false 
				identification or error of mentation. Ii is an error in judgment 
				that concludes that the earth and the body are discontinuous 
				with the universe and its origin (shakti/shiva)-- that the 
				continuity of eternal spirit -- of Sacred Presence - is not 
				present. It is the fear of the unknown and death -- of 
				discontinuity itself (the perpetuation of the self or familiar 
				ordered structure which underlies that specific fear. It is of 
				course due to ignorance of the innate order -- of knowing the 
				self within. Thus abhinivesa is based on the illusion of death 
				or rather the materialistic over emphasis that is most often 
				placed upon an exclusive physical existence which is not 
				harmonized with a living creation story -- with a living and 
				present all inclusive omnipresent god. Physical death is feared 
				by those who have not integrated (joined) the eternal with the 
				living -- spirit and nature (or purusha with prakriti) in the 
				eternal now (while living). This union accomplishes kaivalya, 
				absolute and unconditional liberation.
				
				Physical death is the big unknown only if one has not 
				investigated where the body and the universe has originated (shakti 
				or prakriti) -- where one has not integrated the "timeless 
				uncreated eternal") Shiva or Purusa) as a living continuity in 
				their daily life. For these people suffering from the ignorance 
				(avidya) of false and limited identifications of ego (asmita) 
				death is frightening. The fear of death represents the end of 
				everything they possess or are holding onto including their 
				identification of "self" as the assumption of an ego who is 
				surrounded by a bag of bones and temporal objects (possessions 
				or "other' people). In that limited way, then physical death 
				becomes equated with the great fear of losing "everything"-- 
				total annihilation. But such fear is based on a limited (ignorant) 
				dualistic assumption of separateness with a
				living creation/creator (Shiva/Shakti) in the first place. So 
				what needs to die in "reality" is only the delusion (ego) of 
				separateness. With that the fear dies as well. Although, 
				abhinivesa is more commonly translated as attachment to the 
				physical body and its physiological function (and hence the fear 
				of its cessation), when we become attached to that imperishable 
				great integrity, which encompasses our many rounds of births 
				from beginningless time, in All Our Relations, then even though 
				these physiological functions are to be honored and respected, 
				they will not dominate our emotions, create fear or false 
				grasping, nor pain (dukha). It's temporal nature will thus be 
				acknowledged and respected, at the simultaneously as we 
				acknowledge the imperishable -- as we integrate self within Self 
				-- crown with root -- spirit and nature, Shiva/shakti. It is a 
				profound truism that until the fear of physical death is 
				overcome, the fear of life will always be present. We must 
				acknowledge, respect, and cherish the human form for what it is, 
				temporary , subject to disease, old age, and death. Then we do 
				not become complacent (like the devas) and do not waste our time 
				here. With this wise perspective we can maximize our opportunity 
				for spiritual practice (sadhana). The certainty of physical 
				death actually helps us to embrace the larger Self that connects 
				us with all of life, all of creation, as well as uncreated 
				Source which is unending/timeless and eternally present. 
				Physiological death is always part of an ongoing process of 
				continual transformation on the physical plane (shakti) and thus 
				Siva is the traditional governing deity of the end of 
				manifestation as transformation/death. This sutra assumes that 
				inherent to the body, there exists a self sustaining life 
				preserving intelligence -- the innate life supporting energy (prana) 
				intelligence that is part of prana-shakti which animates the 
				entire universe. When the yogi's body/mind has become purified, 
				refined, and tempered through authentic yogic sadhana then one's 
				consciousness merges with shakti (nature's creative force) -- 
				one's prana shakti merges with cit-shakti, kundalini shakti, and 
				para-shakti. Then the continuity of eternal consciousness 
				(Shiva/shakti) is harmonized in the body just as siva/shakti as 
				represented in prana/shakti are harmonized in the gross physical 
				body -- spirit and nature -- the body and the mind -- heaven and 
				earth work in harmony, love, and synchronicity in All Our 
				Relations. This is where we go for true nurturance and support - 
				to the love that never dies. Here there is no fear of death nor 
				attachment to physical objects, rather only ETERNAL LOVE and 
				life.
				There is only one instance where one is still in avidya and also 
				does not fear death, which occurs by those who are severely 
				afflicted with dvesa (aversion) so that their pain and suffering 
				in life are so great, that they crave the end of their physical 
				existence. here the pain of continuing to live is greater than 
				the pain of annihilation
				(suicide). Such have an opportunity to attain realization at 
				this time, by letting go of all attachments and embracing the 
				eternal, but unfortunately more often this opportunity for vidya 
				is over-powered by dvesa and ignorance (avidya). the dying 
				process has thus been part of spiritual traditions and practices 
				for waking up. The dying process being an integral part of the 
				living process, thus fully coming to terms with death, allows us 
				to also fully come to terms with life without fear. What is all 
				too common is that the fear of death will be so strong so that 
				it inhibits/restricts the full embrace of living -- people 
				contract from experience and duck life. In fact since physical 
				birth is the cause of physical death (everybody dies), many 
				people unconsciously run away from life in the mistaken hope 
				that they will escape death (by not fully accepting their 
				birth). For these people life is judged as full of grief and (dukha), 
				as scary -- full of aversion, fear, hatred, sin, and evil, 
				because they so much fear dying, misidentifying ego loss and 
				physical death nihilistically as a personal annihilation. 
				Another factor here to consciously harmonize is to respect the 
				body's natural intelligence and instinct to stay alive and to 
				maintain life (resist disease and death). As above, aversion to 
				life will not save us, and as such attachment to it only creates 
				aversion to death. The basic idea of holding onto our grief and 
				pain is fundamentally flawed. "Who" does that morbid attachment 
				serve other than the pain body (the egoic dependent self) to 
				inflict more pain and grief in our lives? Is pain good? Is grief 
				good? Is death bad? These are judgments that are made by the 
				conceptual dualistic mind. this error of the mind assumes 
				falsely that if physical death were "bad", than birth was also 
				bad, because physical birth is the cause of physical death. Now 
				if we were able to accept the temporal nature of the body and 
				CELEBRATE it as an expression of infinite love, then ―who‖ is it 
				that dies and who/what continues to live? Yes universal 
				transpersonal non-dual and definitely transconceptual Universal 
				Soul (Brahman) lives HERE ETERNALLY. That is who we really are, 
				if we dare to embrace it or accept its possibility. Love never 
				dies!
				
				On the other hand we have this cult of fear and pain going on 
				that is crying to be defeated. It says that life is scary, it is 
				painful, ―bad‖ things are happening, ―life‖ is bad because ―death 
				is bad‖. That is what the ego fixation surrounded by the "haunting" 
				bag of bones when one identifies as a separate body from the 
				life force, creation, nature, and shiva/shakti. That separation 
				created by the fragmented mind establishes a false 
				identification and dualistic mindset fraught with fear and doom 
				for one who has bought into this false assumption. Of course in 
				Reality there exists a vast non-dual beginningless Reality that 
				will never die. That is why Patanjali specifically mentions 
				abhinivesa as one of the chief kleshas built upon ignorance (avidya), 
				asmita (ego), raga (attachment), and dvesa (aversion). This cult 
				of fear and doom is opposed to the above mentioned belief that 
				Unending Intelligent Loving Source presence is always present -- 
				is All There Is in Everything all the time. This last experience 
				and resultant realization is what wholistic non-dual yoga is all 
				about. Here the human body is put in harmony with infinite 
				Source acting as a spontaneous and wise integrator -- a 
				co-evolutionary instrument in creation for universal creator. 
				Here body, nature, and beginningless Source are all aligned and 
				a profound synchronicity occurs. Here divine will and individual 
				will are synchronized; earth and heaven; muladhara/sahasrara 
				chakras joined through the sushumna; conflict, stress, and 
				duality are destroyed. Here the profound teachings of the three 
				bodies ((physical, energy/astral, and spirit bodies). the five 
				koshas, the bindu, winds, and channels are all integrated as 
				divine seva -- love in action (perfect karma and bhakti yoga). 
				So here abhinivesa is remediated as a profound teaching, that 
				when learned puts one's neurophysiology and biopsychic 
				instrument in total harmony with the unconditioned life force -- 
				spiritual non-dual universal and eternal love and healing! Once 
				one experiences and realizes the continuity (yoga) that always 
				exists here and now -- the "always-is" beginningless "never-ending" 
				sacred presence of All Our Relations, then the fear of the 
				discontinuity of temporal existence will also disappear. The 
				physical bodies may come and go -- come and go -- but eternal 
				spirit -- ineffable LOVE is all-ways HERE. Divine love is wisdom. 
				It conquers fear, aversion, carnal/neurotic/compensatory lust, 
				attachment, small minded self centeredness, dualistic thinking, 
				and ignorance -- in short all the kleshas. For each klesha (poison) 
				yoga offers a profound remediation teaching (pratiprasava)_-- an 
				antidote. II 10. te pratiprasava-heyah suksmah Even the most 
				subtle (suksmah) of these five afflictions (kleshas) can be 
				eliminated (heya) by tracing and redirecting (pratiprasava) them 
				back into their most subtle origin. Commentary: Here Patanjali 
				presents the remedy of pratiprasava (redirection of the 
				manifestation backwards toward the Source) for the elimination 
				of the above five major kleshas of avidya (ignorance), asmita 
				(ego), aversion/repulsion (dvesa), raga (attraction or desire), 
				and abhinivesah (fear of death) while the next sutra discloses 
				the remedy of meditation.
				
				Pratiprasava (redirecting a phenomena back into its cause) is a 
				very valuable technique to refine. It is essential to success in 
				meditation. See the last sutra in the last chapter (Pada IV.34)
				II 11. dhyana-heyas tad-vrttayah Meditation (dhyana) is the 
				efficacious practice that annihilates (heyas) these fractures, 
				limitations, hindrances, agitations, and turmoil's of 
				consciousness (cit-vrtti). Commentary: Meditation (dhyana) also 
				remediates the effects of the kleshas which in turn uphold the 
				vrtti (agitations and thought patternings that obscure the citta 
				or consciousness). Similarly, the mental patternings that are 
				caused by the domination of the kleshas are eliminated through 
				meditation (dhyana). When the vrtti are eliminated, then chitta 
				shines forth unimpeded and yoga is accomplished (in samadhi). 
				See Sutra III.2 for more about dhyana (meditation) which leads 
				to samadhi. II 12. klesa-mulah karmasyao 
				drstadrsta-janma-vedaniyah The root (mula) of the kleshas is 
				rooted in past actions (karma) through the laws of cause and 
				effect be they realized and active in the present (drsrta) or 
				imprinted upon the subconscious being latent to be realized in 
				the future (adrsta). This explains what is experienced (vedaniyah) 
				in life (janma) and how kleshas arise. Commentary: In this way 
				the accumulation of negative karma which resides in the 
				subconscious, cellular memory, neurology, and energy body are 
				both produced and supported by the kleshas, but further actions 
				based on the kleshas in turn create the birth of future karma. 
				The ordinary person is imprisoned by this vicious cycle, while 
				the sadhak (spiritual aspirant) has taken up functional practice 
				(sadhana) as its remediation. Another way to translate this is 
				that the kleshas are a root cause for the continuation of 
				negative karma. negative karma causes further kleshas, and the 
				kleshas cause further negative karma. Such forms the basis of 
				the suffering inherent in this cyclic existence (samsara). thus 
				authentic yoga teachings attenuates the kleshas and eliminates 
				our imprisonment to karma. Through good karma (variously called 
				merit, skilful means, wise and compassionate activities, the 
				karmic cycles of past programs come to an end. Necessarily here 
				the kleshas end as well because there is no cause for them to 
				arise. What arises is thus a pure natural expression of 
				universal love.
				
				So when we are meditating for example when a klesha first comes 
				up we can notice it (viveka) such as; "Oh anger, or jealousy, or 
				desire for a soda pop, oh lust, oh envy, oh mental discomfort. 
				or .…" But we don‘t have to act nor react to the klesha. What‘s 
				next we can ask ―show it to me‖ without fear or expectation. 
				Guess what, they go away then. That is how the monkey mind plays 
				hide and go seek. Not acting on the kleshas, the karmic 
				propensities are de-energized and then we rest deeper and more 
				energized in a peaceful and clear state. Then off the meditation 
				mat we are more clear minded and peaceful and more quickly 
				recognize if/when a klesha is arising and just let it go -- 
				noticing it and letting it pass without reacting. When the karma 
				is eliminated then there arises the unconditioned (natural) 
				state or unconditional liberation and happiness (not dependent 
				upon causes. Here we should not confuse physical pain or normal 
				pleasure (as the reward for desire or rather its satisfaction. 
				Patanjali is addressing spiritual suffering not neurotic craving. 
				As Yogeshwar Muni says: Pleasure is the reward and pain is the 
				payment [for ordinary neurotic craving]. ordinary pleasure and 
				pain are two sides of one coin. Some one carves something and 
				then is rewarded by its union. That is part of the cycle of 
				samsara. More craving (pain), then the more pleasure that is 
				sought. Removing the kleshas (emotional afflictions) springing 
				from ignorance, then spiritual suffering is eliminated. Then is 
				lasting happiness possible outside the cycle of craving, desire, 
				fear, aversion, ego (asmita), pride, greed, jealousy, and death). 
				All the kleshas when understood come from the same dualistic 
				source, the estrangement/fragmentation from Self. We saw in Pada 
				I how vrtti is associated with klesha and how additional klesha 
				comes from vrtti. Now Patanjali is telling us about the 
				relationship between karma and klesha -- how vrtti will no 
				longer continue to affect, pre-dominate, pre-determine, 
				re-afflict, obstruct, and cause further negative effects which 
				limit and condition our experience in the present and future (which 
				are operational even now) until we remediate the basis (mula) of 
				klesa and karma. This is accomplished through meditation. In 
				other words, vrtti (fluctuations of citta) will continue to 
				manifest in meditation until they are annihilated through 
				uprooting the causes of the kleshas. Thus in meditation we 
				become more aware, identify, and re-cognize (viveka) the kleshas 
				as they arise, and then have the opportunity to let them go 
				cultivating in turn the natural unconditioned state. This is how 
				they are remediated (pratiprasava). See II.10 and IV.34) II 13. 
				sati mule tad-vipako jaty-ayur-bhogah, As long as this basis 
				(mule) of karma and klesha i.e., ignorance and self grasping, is 
				not remediated, its undesirable results (vipakah) will occur 
				(sati) giving birth (vipakah) to a variety of experiences 
				appearing as they pleasurable (bhoga) or not throughout life 
				starting at birth (jati) and affecting one's vitality and health.
				
				Without eliminating the basic causes for the appearance of karma 
				and kleshas then further undesirable results will continue to 
				appear to arise (vipakah) influencing characteristics from birth 
				(jati), our vital life force and health (ayur), and experiences 
				so that we continue to chase pleasures (bhoga) and/or avoid what 
				is not not pleasurable. Moms and dads start programming children 
				from the very start. The children are terribly vulnerable at 
				that stage. Depending on the parents own unconsciousness the 
				ignorance and neuroses is absorbed directly (via right brain 
				receptive mechanisms) for "survival purposes. This early 
				conditioning is very strong, albeit mostly unconscious and forms 
				the single most hard shell to crack by psychologists as there is 
				often BIG trauma associated with these early life traumas. Most 
				definitely positive or negative identifications and preferences 
				(associations with pleasure and the avoidance of non-pleasurable 
				experiences) are formed in early life which often effect and 
				haunt the person throughout the rest of their life.
				Children are very sensitive, intelligent, and receptive; albeit 
				not sophisticated. They get programmed in the womb and in early 
				infancy. They also come in with past karma (good or bad). Most 
				moms and dads recognize that to some extent. Psychotherapists 
				now are recognizing both prenatal and peri-natal traumas. Here 
				is a link to the Assn. for Pre- and Peri-natal Psychology and 
				Health is housed. Also the Santa Barbara Graduate Institute 
				teaches similar prenatal and peri-natal trauma remediation work. 
				Stan Grof of who developed Holotropic Breathwork also focuses on 
				that reconnecting process as well. It‘s fascinating but new in 
				the West, but still big in the East. Yoga of course recognizes 
				that both siddhas and/or samskaras from past births can and do 
				have an influence. Yoga is designed to recognize these programs, 
				samskaras, vasanas, and resultant kleshas (state of ignorance) 
				and clear them out -- be liberated from them should one desire, 
				but such requires dedication. These old habits based on 
				obtaining pleasure and avoiding pain form habitual prisons that 
				are difficult to break, but our liberation depends on their 
				remediation. This is well recognized by yogis and psychologists 
				(although most psychologists will not recognize past life 
				samskaras and karmic influences). So what my teachers taught me 
				and what I teach, is to get rid of all the karma and all the 
				afflictions so that one resides in the natural unconditioned 
				state (swarupa) regardless where the false identifications and 
				limited mindsets are coming from. "Where", "why", and "how" 
				depend on the engagement of the analytical discursive mind. Just 
				watch it in pure awareness and that clear Light luminosity will 
				destroy the vrtti.
				
				Kids learn how to play roles and even conform to those roles (identities) 
				that are expected of them, which they are rewarded to play, are 
				encouraged, where their sense of existence and security are 
				acknowledged, or their sense of insecurity is diminished. . They 
				learn (are conditioned) to chose various roles to play out of 
				fear and need -- out of ignorance of who they truly are. The 
				tragedy is of course that is who they learn to be – what they 
				believe is their ―reality‖ and within that contrived ―reality‖ 
				the reality of who they think they are as they define ―self‖ in 
				terms of ―other‖ is taken into adult life governing their 
				destiny and coloring/covering the expression of their creative 
				evolutionary potential. That is not the aim of authentic yoga of 
				course. Such fixations and habits have to be surrendered in 
				authentic yogic practices such as dhyana or authentic hatha 
				yoga. I can‘t imagine sitting in meditation with all that 
				garbage going through my mindstream or surrendering deep into an 
				open posture. The more common problem is that most people forgot 
				in the first place that they are even playing an acquired role 
				or that they have fallen inside of some one else‘s 
				transgenerational dream or trap II 14. te hlada-paritapa-phalah 
				punyapunya-hetutvat In this way (through the result of avidya 
				and the resultant kleshas) we become victims upon the winds of 
				karma which condition the degree, type, and length of the 
				recurring vrttis which in turn further potentiate undesirable 
				karma. These karmic winds may produce as fruits (phalah) 
				temporary pleasure (hlada) or pain (paritapa) depending upon 
				their causative factors (hetutvat) due to meritorious or 
				favorable karma (punya) or negative karma (apunya) which result 
				in joy or sorrow respectively. Thus one becomes locked up, bound, 
				and enslaved to cyclic existence and dysfunctional thought 
				patterns. II 15. parinama-tapa-samskara-dukhair 
				guna-vrtti-virodha ca dukham eva sarvam vivekinah The wise 
				through discriminating awareness (viveka) witness these 
				seemingly endless transformations (parinama) and changes from 
				one mental stage to another (vrtti) as the past habits and 
				imprints (samskaras) and false identifications with fragmented 
				reality (dukhair guna-vrtti-virodha) as being needlessly 
				stressful and painful. To them this wheel of change (parinamas) 
				[fueled by past karma] is abandoned as suffering (dukha). The 
				transforming fires (parinama-tapa) of old samskaras are now 
				redirected towards THAT which knows no suffering.
				
				Commentary: Through abiding in pure awareness without judgment (viveka), 
				we longer falsely identify with duality, mistaking the temporary 
				and changing nature of "external objects" as being permanent, 
				separate, or substantial, thereby avoiding (false identification) 
				while uprooting samskaras (old psychic imprints and energy 
				signatures imbedded in the cellular memory and neurophysiology. 
				so that the actual patterns of suffering (dukha) implicit in 
				perceiving the world in terms of its apparent disparate 
				fragments (guna-vrtti) are themselves discerned (viveka). Here 
				the conflicting and confusing world sparked by the manifold 
				permutations (parinama) of samskaras and karma are identified 
				and abandoned. All that which exists in the world of form (as 
				the gunas) is on fire. For a tantric it is experienced as being 
				a celebrating fire and oblation -- ever changing and impermanent 
				-- an offering of self to Self -- as the Divine Spark of Love 
				being the immutable underlying Source and our true essence (swarupa). 
				This way one avoids conflict and confusion in true discernment. 
				Here we train the mind to abide simultaneously in the ineffable, 
				changeless, core/heart (hridayam) center which knows no bounds, 
				no end and no beginning. Here viveka is mentioned for the first 
				time in Pada II. Although most often misunderstood as 
				discriminating awareness or the discernment process that uses 
				comparison or reductionist methods, viveka is not to be confused 
				with merely an intellectual, analytical, reductionist, or 
				comparative activity of the intellect. Rather viveka is that 
				application of pure awareness that notices, watches, and 
				observes what is happening without imposing any further 
				philosophical frameworks, reference points, words, values, 
				comparative analysis, conceptual frameworks, or judgment. As 
				such in raj yoga (the Yoga of Patanjali) the word, viveka, 
				differs from the usage found in the philosophical and 
				metaphysical approaches found in the more popular schools of 
				vedanta and samkhya philosophy which characterize what is often 
				called jnana yoga. However in the case raj yoga, viveka is not 
				intellectual inquiry or vikalpa, but rather it is cultivated and 
				applied in practice (sadhana) of which meditation is the main 
				focus. Thus in the yoga context, viveka is developed to a sharp 
				point through abhyasa (consistent or repeated practice over time) 
				so that the mental processes (cit-prana) does not become 
				distracted, stray, fixated, or dissipated upon objects of 
				thought. In meditation practice the ordinary mind often wanders 
				at first (because of vasana, vrtti, karma, samskara, klesha, etc). 
				This wandering is noticed and cut short by the sharpness of 
				viveka and through the application of vairagya (non-attachment). 
				Through yogic viveka one rests the mind in pure and effortless 
				awareness -- awareness of awareness -- and as such the innate 
				Intelligent Source of awareness is eventually disclosed (through 
				patient practice).
				In classical meditation practice there exist three classic ways 
				to deal with the wandering (monkey) mind after wandering has 
				been noticed in viveka. One school recommends reigning it back 
				in to the present -- to sitting meditation, the breath, 
				concentration or meditation. A second school recommends simply 
				letting go of the discursive monkey mind thoughts once one 
				realizes (through viveka) that the mind contents (pratyaksha) 
				have wandered, thus coming back to the meditation. These two are 
				similar but in the former there is more of an effort or force 
				and thus the possibility of inhibition, repression, and even 
				hypervigilence. In the second school there it is more of a 
				letting go (vairagya) and thus effort is not applied except in 
				noticing -- in applying viveka as pure awareness. However in 
				this second application vairagya alone can create stupor, 
				dullness, sleepiness, or spaciness in extreme. So what is needed 
				is balance or sattva. Here viveka and vairagya act as a team. 
				Here we are training the mind through meditation to eliminate 
				the vrtti and kleshas through viveka and vairagya. A third 
				classic way to deal with the wandering of the monkey mind is 
				through active visualization practice, specific dharanas, and 
				similar practices such as found in laya, hatha, kundalini, and 
				tantra yoga thus riding the dragons to heaven. This third way is 
				only faintly alluded to in Patanjali's Yoga Sutras (mainly in 
				pada three under the many samyama practices), but is prevalent 
				in later day hatha, kundalini, laya, and tantra yoga. By no 
				longer dissipating one's energy (cit-prana) in the dissipating 
				distractions of the monkey mind caused by past samskaras, karma, 
				and avidya, then tapas (psychic heat) is generated and harnessed 
				which feeds the dynamo for further spiritual growth. Here 
				skillful meditation serves as the gateway for knowing "Self".
				
				For more on viveka see also sutra 26, 28 here in Sadhana Pada 
				and in Pada IV: Kaivalyam Sutras 8, 15, 21, 26, 27, 29 II 16. 
				Heyam dukham anagatam Thus the misery (dukham) which is not yet 
				come, can and is to be, avoided. Commentary: Cyclic existence is 
				destroyed whence karma, kleshas, and vrtti are annihilated 
				through an effective meditation practice. II 17. drastr-drsyayoh 
				samyogo heya-hetuh This confusion of suffering is caused (hetuh) 
				by our false identification, fixation, and fascination (samyogah) 
				with the objects of perceptions (objectification), the 
				objectification of a separate "self' being the greatest 
				confusion (delusion) is to be avoided (heya).
				Commentary: See also the commentary in II. 6. The seer (drastir) 
				identifies (samyogah) itself as an object in comparison with 
				another sense object (drsyayoh). This limited fixation (samyogah) 
				is man's conditioned (karmic) folly -- a love affair with 
				suffering which is to be avoided. The ordinary mind is in 
				constant seduction and fascination. It is habitually brought out 
				(externalized and objectified) into the external material world 
				of the sense objects which it identifies as such. That "appears" 
				to be real and we identify and define our "self" in relationship 
				to that. That is the world of an independent seer and the object 
				that is seen. As a unit, this is a severe limitation, 
				preoccupation and a fascination that must be broken asunder (via 
				viveka). Patanjali says that this ego fixation is a basic 
				confusion that creates suffering. It consists of not being aware 
				(ignorance) of the artificiality of the difference our mind 
				creates between the perceiver, that which is being perceived, 
				and how the process of perception can color our view. Here 
				Patanjali is not just pointing out that there is a difference 
				between the seer and the object that is being viewed (which is 
				still an edited externalization and abstraction -- a severe 
				limitation where we ascribe meaning to self and the universe 
				from dualistic and fragmented means. Here Patanjali is 
				addressing the profound importance of attitude, stance, and view; 
				i.e., whether it is fixated, frozen, corrupted, and dead or is 
				it Universal and alive. When it is frozen we are incomplete, we 
				start to crave, suffer, and neurotic. When we live in the Heart, 
				we are completed, artificial fixations are dropped. The latter 
				is yoga, the former samyoga. In Pada Three we learn the advanced 
				practice of samyama which connects the objective focus of 
				concentration with the process of consciousness itself, but here 
				Patanjali simply is reminding us that in meditation we should 
				avoid the pitfall of getting sucked into the objectification 
				process as well as the fascination process as they are two sides 
				of the same coin, i.e., ignorance or duality. Later on in 
				Sadhana Pada as part of the eightfold practice (ashtanga) we 
				will learn how pratyhara is a related effective practice that 
				redirects our cit-prana from external fixations -- from getting 
				caught up in dualistic sense experiences, and hence preventing 
				us from becoming distracted from or forgetful of our true nature 
				of Self (swarupa). So in the beginning of practice (sadhana) it 
				is helpful to discern fixations of false identification by 
				utilizing viveka, withdraw our attention (cit-prana) away from 
				these false identifications and distractions and then eventually 
				(in advanced practice) connect as the integration which affirms, 
				combines, and embraces the same wholistic and energetic 
				intelligent process of universal consciousness which lies 
				underneath at the root of the process of seeing, all and 
				everything that is seen, and the one who sees as the Unborn 
				spark of infinite love -- . as the purusha. In ordinary 
				consciousness however, we either blur the process, are not aware 
				of the differences and functions of the process, or artificially 
				create distortions and false boundaries which are clung to. In 
				short we have become conditioned to duality and thus have become 
				externally fixated. For example, an event may occur. the 
				observer may react with passion if a samskara is triggered, in 
				turn activating a vasana or klesha. We may confuse the external 
				event, object, or phenomena with our feelings (reaction) while 
				it is really the mind in conspiracy with the samskara which has 
				created the reaction. Thus a prude may label a sexually 
				attractive woman as being evil because her presence has 
				stimulated a samskara where "evil" thoughts or feelings are 
				triggered. Thus a cause has been confused with an effect. There 
				exist numerous daily illusions based on such ignorance of our 
				mental processes and deeply buried samskara (both of which need 
				to be rooted out in order for self realization to occur).
				
				The resolution to this conflict is simple; i.e., we disrupt the 
				karmic patterns, reprogram it, burn it up, and free oneself from 
				avidya through swadhyaya, tapas, isvara pranidhana (kriya yoga), 
				pratiprasava, and meditation (dhyana) where one changes from the 
				relational dualistic fixation that defines a separate seer and a 
				separate object --where the conditioned consciousness is 
				occupied by these two apparently separate elements into viewing 
				from the Center -- from the perspective of Universal Heart 
				Consciousness --when we learn to abide in the Heart of Hearts 
				through functional sadhana and view All Our Relations from this 
				vantage point. Jnaneshwar says in the "Jnaneswari" (6-40); "Oh 
				Infinite One in your Universal form is there anything in which 
				you do not abide? Is there any spot in which you do not dwell… I 
				realize now that you are not different from this universe, but 
				rather that you ARE all this universe". here samyoga is 
				transformed into authentic yoga as spiritual union. The divine 
				non-dual awareness where the world of seemingly separate objects 
				appears to be real, they are experienced as inter-connected -- 
				All Our Relations -- in the unitive wholistic experience where 
				one simultaneously perceives an object as an effect of a cause 
				and as a possible further cause in the chain of karmic events 
				while at the same time the Source awareness that has no 
				beginning or end -- beginningless time and uncreated space 
				abides as eternal presence persists. This last stage is beyond 
				any human words or power to objectify. It can neither be grasped 
				by the individual mind, but rather exists within the innate 
				unity where pure consciousness and pure beingness reside -- in 
				satchitananda. II 18. prakasa-kriya-sthiti-silam 
				bhutendriyat-makam bhogapavargartham drsyam When we perceive an 
				object through the dynamic activity of the inner light of 
				consciousness -- from our light and energy body (prakasa) -- we 
				are able to see its inherent light as well. From this unity 
				consciousness gazing upon what previously appeared as a 
				fragmented material object (something steady, solid, and stable 
				(sthhiti-silam) being composed of the apparent slow vibratory 
				motion of the elements (bhutas), but by acknowledging the 
				splendor of this inner light (prakasa) then know the senses (indriyat) 
				to be a liberator and revealer (apavarga) of the Great unity -- 
				as all our experiences in everyday life becomes our teacher, 
				rather than as an avenue for dissipation, duality, and 
				fragmentation.
				
				Or similarly, the true non-dual intelligent liberatory energetic 
				nature of the unity of creator/creation which is the essence of 
				"things" seen or unseen, is illuminated and disclosed by this 
				deeper power of transcognition (in which the seer, all which is 
				seen, and the processes of seeing) are a common reflection of an 
				inherent all
				inclusive and all pervasive luminous intrinsic power (prakasa) 
				and common Source, which is simultaneously experienced (bhoga) 
				and thus this process of identification with this self 
				illuminating activity (prakasa-kriya) becomes self liberating (apavarga) 
				even in our daily experiences. Commentary: The "normal" 
				dualistic perception and apprehensions of a separate seer 
				experiencing an apparent separate object that is seen, is not 
				instructive, but rather dysfunctional and extractive in that it 
				tends toward further fragmentation, dissipation, and corruption. 
				However when the meditator rests in the sattvic equipoise, there 
				the fascination with the gunas (saguna) ceases, while the 
				nirguna nature of eternal spirit shines forth as the inherent 
				spark of universal consciousness that pervades the entire 
				universe (praksa sa) acting as the universal university. The 
				yogi is not fascinated nor possessed with the gunas, but rather 
				as we have learned in chapter one, yoga moves our awareness from 
				the gross (vitarka, to the more subtle (vicara), to beyond even 
				the most subtle (nirvicara), to nirguna (devoid of the gunas), 
				and eventually nirbija samadhi (the goal of yoga). HERE the 
				universal eternal imperishable light which is the beginningless 
				sourceless source of Mind is everywhere present. Our experience 
				becomes our teacher within the common trans-personal 
				non-dualistic union. It is HERE that we have the opportunity to 
				see behind appearances to the causal. Through functional 
				authentic yoga practice we eventually see that all is Brahman -- 
				that we are kin to all of creation within the non-dual context 
				of All Our Relations. In the non-dual and tantric sense then all 
				our experiences is a vehicle for our liberation (bhoga-apavarga) 
				-- they are in one sense self liberatory. II 19. 
				visesavisesa-lingamatralingani guna-parvani Relative and 
				transitory phenomenon (gunas) can be further broken down, 
				classified, distinguished, differentiated, or compared (parvani) 
				as being discrete, concrete, separate, and diverse (visesa) or 
				on the other hand as being undiverse, indistinct, or 
				undifferentiated (avisesa), as well as being given symbolic 
				attributes associated with a substantial form (lingamatra), or 
				very subtle and without being assigned attributes (alinga) or 
				qualitative aspects.
				
				Commentary: There is no limit in the way the mind can classify 
				nature's endless diversity (saguna), but the yogi is not 
				interested in that kind of external classification system which 
				is more properly the venue of the physical sciences, engineering, 
				or academia. All these are ultimately indefinable (alinga) and 
				empty by themselves. Here the yogi affirms the reality of the 
				great integrity -- of All Our Relations. There exist myriad ways 
				men constantly classify, differentiate, categorize, and ascribe 
				meaning to manifest temporal reality (the gunas), but such is 
				always biased and colored by the viewpoint (time and place) of 
				the viewer unless one all from the perspective the
				eternal universal principle. The yogi is not interested in mere 
				symbolic representations and apparitions. The yogi realizes the 
				vacuousness of such attempts, and thus is not satisfied nor 
				caught up or distracted in the gunas (manifestations) as being 
				separate characteristics, but he/she penetrates beyond even the 
				most subtle to the connection of eternal spirit in the eternal 
				now. The yogi has become initiated to the eternal consciousness 
				principle of the attributeless "Self" (purusa as isvara) which 
				resides in all. See also commentary to Sutra I.19, I.26, and 
				I.45. II 20. drasta drsimatrah suddho 'pi pratyaya-nupasyah The 
				cognizer (the one who sees -- drasta) is empowered by a more 
				pure fundamental underlying power of seeing (drsi) that is 
				capable of seeing the process of cognition itself once this 
				process is recognized and turned back into itself 
				pratyaya-anupasyah). Thus the eyes of the seer is purified (suddho). 
				Commentary: So what is it that you see when you look out from 
				your eyes? What happens to you when you sit in meditation? Who 
				is it who is seeing? In what direction does the cit-prana move 
				and how can you shift it so that sattva is realized? In yoga we 
				are looking to go beyond coarseness (nirvitarka), all form, all 
				characteristics (nirguna) beyond even the most subtle (nirvicara) 
				-- to the profound what-is. This is a direct perception that is 
				not dependent upon the five senses. One could say that we now 
				perceive from the sixth sense -- a way of knowing (gnosis) that 
				is not limited by time and space. Others say that this is 
				realized when the kundalini (evolutionary creative energy) has 
				become activated in the sushumna and has reached the hridaya 
				(the herat of hearts). From that core center our view is clear 
				-- splendorous and majestic -- expanded ad infinitum in all 
				directions and dimensions -- transcendent of linear space and 
				time -- it is devoid of qualification (nirguna). When who we 
				really are starts to become disclosed in authentic yoga practice, 
				we see that what we previously thought of as being the 
				individual mind, is merely a dim reflection of that great all 
				encompassing universal mind which encompasses all things. In 
				fact nothing exists separate from THAT. The intelligent light of 
				consciousness shines through the eyes of the beholder, but how 
				many can turn back to see this light of consciousness. Those who 
				have done so have used conscious awareness to reveal its Source 
				and then when they see "the so called world" they see all as the 
				light of God everywhere as All Our Relations. For such the doors 
				of perception have become cleansed and transformed.
				Jnanadeva in the "Jnaneswari" (6-38) speaking of the Supreme 
				Self says: "You are the source of both prakriti and purusha and 
				also beyond both. You are the eternal Spirit and there is no one 
				prior to you. You are the very spring and support of life and in 
				you alone are contained the eternal knowledge of the three times 
				and manifest in unlimited form." Here Jnaneshwar reveals what 
				Patanjali will reveal later that Purusa and Prakrti are in 
				Reality, One. See III.35, III. 49 and Pada 4 for much more on 
				this profound unity, granting this is a tantric interpretation. 
				See also Sutra I.41 II 21. tad-artha eva drsyaya-atma But in 
				Reality the "apparent" separate existence of subject and object 
				is merely the result of the observer's false identification with 
				fragmentary existence. In "Reality" the true purpose (artha) of 
				that which is seen (drsyaya) exists for the revelation of "Self" 
				-- self realization (drsyaya-atma). Commentary: Albert Einstein 
				said: "A human being is part of the whole called by us 'Universe', 
				a part limited in time and space. We experience ourselves, our 
				thoughts and feelings as something separate from the rest... 
				This delusion is a kind of prison for us, restricting us to our 
				personal desires and to affection for a few persons nearest to 
				us. Our task must be to free ourselves from the prison by 
				widening our circle of compassion to embrace all living 
				creatures and the whole of nature in its beauty. We shall 
				require a substantially new manner of thinking if mankind is to 
				survive." So what is it that we see when you look out from the 
				Heart -- centered in our core energy in sacred indigenous space? 
				Is it All Our Relations? Also see Sutra I.41 II 22. krtartham 
				prati nastam apy anastam tad-anya-sadharanatvat This fragmentary 
				state although completely destroyed (nasta) as such by the seer 
				who has realized integration or yoga, will none the less appear 
				as "real" (anastam) to others whose consciousness is obstructed 
				from Unity consciousness because its constituent parts are 
				common to both views.
				
				Commentary: The same objects exist as-they-are or appear not to 
				exist in both views (whether in samadhi or ordinary fragmented 
				existence blinded in avidya), however they are known differently. 
				In the latter state the objects are perceived as separate, but 
				in the integrated state these are not perceived as separate 
				objects, but are known in a deep and penetrating universal way. 
				In one sense the material (relative world) does not change 
				according to how we perceive it, rather it remains the same 
				independent of our view, except that our consciousness (way of 
				seeing is altered). Thus the only thing that changes is the 
				vantage point of the viewer and in that sense then only, does 
				the entire world change (as the viewer is part of the whole). In 
				a similar but different thread of thought when we change our 
				thoughts a wave is generated in all of humanity just as we are a 
				wave in that great ocean of humanity, all of humanity changes 
				also. In meditation we may experience this unity consciousness 
				whose eternal source is unchanging, but in the disparity of 
				ordinary everyday experiences this non-dual "reality" may not be 
				reinforced, but rather the mass consciousness and energy of 
				consensus "reality" within a society often will amplify their 
				own mass prejudices, bias, provincialism, vanity, nationalism, 
				and sorrow and tend to draw in those with a weak mind or 
				intention. The wise will not be drawn in, being able to wed 
				oneself firmly to the heart while recognizing all the forces 
				that are involved in the moment, being able to wisely utilize 
				one's past experiences to one's own spiritual advantage, i.e., 
				to empower clarity, self realization, liberation, and love. This 
				is a gradual process of waking up -- of harmonizing, alignment, 
				balance, and union. The wise balances the cit-prana in All Our 
				Relations so that All Our Relations bring us more deeply into 
				love. II 23. sva-svami-saktyoh svarupa-upalabdhi-hetuh samyogah 
				The ordinary false fixation (samyoga) between the component 
				parts of an owner who apprehends the object and the object 
				itself is based on the false assumption/context of dualistic 
				thinking. This non-distinction is called samyoga, but when one 
				recognizes (upalabdhi) within the transpersonal non-dual 
				operations (saktyoh) the unitive cause (hetu) behind what was 
				thought to be two apparently separate (seer, the seen, and the 
				true nature of self as swarupa) underlying powers (saktyoh) at 
				work, then"who" perceives"what" becomes clarified in the 
				clarification of the seeing process itself. The distinction of 
				the true owner (sva-svami) as comprehender and our true self 
				nature (svarupa-upalabdhi) as the object apprehended become 
				viewed as the sacred non-dual activity of the union of shakti 
				and siva -- of prakrti and purusa -- which by itself bestows the 
				power of self mastery (sva-svami-saktyoh).
				
				Commentary: Ordinary life is governed by the severe limitations 
				imposed by dualistic thought through past conditioning. We 
				mistakenly become fixated upon an external or internal object of 
				perception and define ourself as the separate object that is 
				perceiving that object. Thus we become locked into a limited, 
				frozen, dualistic, and materialistic world of the senses through 
				false identification (sam yoga based on duality). This fixation 
				(samyoga) is part and parcel of the false identification of 
				asmita. Thus a valid yoga practice is to consistently disengage 
				and interrupt that limited fixation process belonging to avidya 
				(ignorance and the small self or asmita) and to find the 
				universal spirit as our true natural Self (swarupa) at all times 
				-- in All Our Relations. This is reality is the unity of Purusa 
				and Prakrti. As we let go of our false fixations (samyoga) as 
				they come up, then viveka, vairagya, isvara pranidhana, tapas, 
				swadhyaya, all occur simultaneously as one practice --as grace. 
				Vision (vidya) then becomes more constant while avidya is 
				attenuated in that special place when the seer is able to know 
				the cause (hetu) of seeing (swami) while one sees the object of 
				seeing (sva) as the union (samyoga) of Self (purusa) and Prakrti 
				as our true self nature (swarupa). When we view the world from 
				the Heart (Hridayam), then all is Grace -- no words will suffice. 
				True yogic power or self empowerment results by the mastery (swami) 
				of resolving the apparent polarities and dualities of everyday 
				life as-it-is (swa) into its causal (hetu) true self nature (swarupa) 
				by recognizing the Eternal Cause, Source, and Origin of All 
				Intelligence including the intelligent power (saktyoh) behind 
				cognition in all our everyday relationships and experiences -- 
				in All Our Relations. Just as the spark resides in the raging 
				fire, it is often obliterated by the superficiality in 
				specificity or isolation of the appearance of the fire. But if 
				we see the fire as it is, then such superficial specifics vanish. 
				Resting in THAT unity consciousness which is devoid of the 
				illusion of the dualistic and contrived separation of the seer, 
				the seen, and the cause of the process of seeing is brought 
				about by synchronization with our true core essential nature 
				recognizing that the one who comprehends and the object that is 
				apprehended belong to the Universal university where Self is 
				beholding and revealing Self simultaneously. This non-dual world 
				is where the lila of siva/shakti plays. HERE our experience and 
				our perception of our experience become synchronized, empowered, 
				and enlivened -- HERE there is no longer friction between 
				experiential or subject "reality' and the way the mind 
				interprets events rather both are united in the unitive state of 
				authentic yoga. This is both uplifting and empowering. It is a 
				truism that when we reside inside our core/heart energy the "vicissitudes 
				of life" do not bother us, but when we are "out of synch" then 
				even a seemingly small trifle may cause upset, pain, and anxiety. 
				Although many people have experienced this, few know how to 
				reliably get back into synch -- into the flow. Fewer still are 
				those who can continuously reside in the deepest courses of 
				creative flow -- in nirbija samadhi empowered by the perfect 
				eternal embrace of siva/shakti. 
				
				See also Sutra I.41 II 24 tasya hetur avidya  II 25 
				tad-abhavat samyoga abhavo hanam tad drseh kaivalyam Ignorance 
				Avidya) of this (tasya) process is the cause (hetu) of avidya. 
				Likewise ignorance (avidya) of our true nature is the cause (hetur) 
				of our fixations and false identification with separate objects 
				(experience of separation, duality, or polarization of an 
				perceived object and the one that acts as the perceiver). In 
				that way we continue to fracture and corrupt our experiences, 
				making it disjointed and neurotic (until our grasping unto it is 
				relinquished). Thus avidya is the first cause of all the kleshas 
				and when it's burdensome veil is lifted the truth discloses that 
				the nature of liberation is not isolation, separation, 
				independence, and fragmentation, but rather unimpaired direct 
				communion, inter-connection, and union through which an 
				authentic authentic yoga practice evokes, until ultimate samadhi 
				(freedom from separation and obstruction which is kaivalyam) is 
				realized. Here we identify only with pure universal 
				consciousness (purusha) as-it-is in its true nature (swarupa), 
				dissolving (hana) all prejudice, taint, and limited dualistic 
				views (drseh). Commentary: To sum up, the ordinary man is bound 
				by ignorance (avidya) which reinforces separation; i.e., asmita. 
				false identification, and the rest of the kleshas. From the 
				ignorance which is duality then false identifications become the 
				norm, and we do not realize whence our consciousness has become 
				fixated, possessed, fascinated, possessed, obsessed, extracted 
				to, distracted, objectified, and imprisoned to. Various 
				practices such as viveka, vairagya, and meditation (dhyana) then 
				lend themselves (tad-abhavat) to enabling us to extract and 
				liberate ourselves from these apparent attachments and 
				diversions to appearances which are seen (drseh). Thus 
				abandonment (hanah) of limited false identifications and 
				fixations (samyogah) occur more naturally. Then ignorance is 
				destroyed (abhavat), thus unconditional liberation (kaivalyam) 
				from that which is seen (drseh) eventually occurs naturally. 
				What follows from this natural liberation (kaivalyam) is the 
				natural abandonment of ignorance, fixations, and dualistic false 
				identification ceases.
				
				Through the realization of nirbija samadhi (ultimate union and 
				integration) comes kaivalya, absolute liberation. Kaivalyam is 
				not a freedom from "any thing" but rather freedom from 
				separation itself; i.e., All Our Relations. HERE there are no 
				limitations because one is merged with boundless Self in the 
				Heart of Hearts. HERE the veil of ignorance (avidya) has been 
				lifted and the vrtti have become annihilated revealing the 
				natural self abiding self" (swarupa) -- the goal of yoga. 
				Without the removal (hanam) of ignorance (avidya) the false 
				dualistic identifications and fixations (samyogah) could not be 
				removed, and hence the highest synchronization of authentic yoga 
				could not exist (abhavat). All false and limited identifications 
				and ignorance are removed in kaivalyam. See Kaivalyam Pada 
				especially Sutra 34 for more.
				II 26. viveka-khyatir aviplava hanopayah The skillful means (upaya) 
				that removes (hano) ignorance, fixation, and false 
				identification is the continuous, uninterrupted, constant, and 
				unbroken (aviplava) application of pure discriminatory awareness 
				(viveka-khyatir) -- being able to discern or notice in pure 
				awareness (viveka-khyatir) when duality or vrtti arises -- thus 
				affording ourselves the opportunity to apply the skillful 
				remediation process (upaya) of moving the vrtti back into the 
				stillness from which it came. Commentary: An unwavering self 
				revealing luminosity of discriminatory awareness (viveka-khyatir) 
				is the skillful means (upayah) which nullifies or removes (hana) 
				ignorance (avidya). Yet another way of saying this is that 
				effective meditation is achieved when ignorance is reduced or 
				removed through the skillful, continuous, and automatic 
				application of viveka-khyatir. In viveka-khyatir we notice, 
				observe, and become aware of the arising of the fixation/false 
				identification with its resultant veiling of consciousness, and 
				we then are able to remove or nullify it (hanopayah). Then we 
				let go of that fixation (vairagya) easing ourselves into the 
				more expansive consciousness that knows no bounds -- Eternal 
				Presence. In fact such fixations lose their hold entirely and 
				will not even arise when viveka-khyatir becomes constant and 
				unbroken (aviplava) through skillful means (upaya). First we 
				learn how to do this is in meditation practice (dhyana), but 
				then we can more easily apply this wisdom to everyday life in 
				All Our Relations. Viveka is a key process in our meditation. We 
				apply awareness to our process of awareness itself so that when 
				the mind apprehends or becomes fixated upon an apparently 
				separate object, we are aware that the contents of the mind has 
				become occupied. Through viveka we are able to disengage this 
				form of possession (vairagya) and return awareness back (pratyhara) 
				into its source (citta) which has no bounds.
				
				Again viveka is not to be confused with the intellectual or 
				analytical processes of samkhya or vedanta, but rather applied 
				in meditation practice (raj yoga) one becomes aware when the 
				mind has wandered over time more easily and with less effort (through 
				a more consistent constant application and familiarity with the 
				process of self awareness). Thus one knows where the mind is (viveka) 
				and wandering and fluctuations of the mental processes 
				eventually ceases. Here Patanjali uses the word, khyater, (clarity 
				of illuminating wisdom) along with the word, viveka, indicating 
				that this is not just the application of discriminatory wisdom 
				alone, but a particular way of seeing through viveka-khyatir has 
				been gleaned through practice. Viveka-khyatir, as the pure 
				awareness of pure awareness -- as the clear lucidity that 
				discloses grows inside as an opening to the intelligent 
				Universal Source of Consciousness itself (ascribed to purusha in 
				samkhya philosophy) -- it is the citta shining through more 
				brightly -- the True Self our own true self nature which abides 
				within. So let us be clear that although we can ascribe names to 
				this illuminating wisdom (viveka khyatir), the light of that 
				light (the param pursuha) is the illuminating source which is 
				shining through and to which the yoga is meant to reconnect us 
				with as an unbroken continuity. It is because we are have become 
				fragmented from that continuity or Great Integrity, that we need 
				to practice yoga in the first place.
				
				See commentary on viveka in Sutra II.15 above, Sutra II. 28 
				below, and in Pada Four: Kaivalyam, Sutras IV. 8, 15, 21, 26, 
				27, 29. Although Patanjali's advice is to be taken at first 
				within the context for the practice of meditation, we can apply 
				it (viveka-khyatir aviplava hanopayah) in All Our Relations as 
				it leads to All Our Relations II 27. tasya saptadha 
				pranta-bhumih prajna Thus wisdom (prajna) is applied throughout 
				(pranta) [to integrate and intensify this continuity of 
				consciousness] by discerning seven (sapta) discrete phases (bhumih) 
				in our yoga practice [leading to samadhi as the eighth]. 
				Commentary: Viveka-khyatir produces a luminous clarity or wisdom 
				(prajna) in seven stages (bhumis) which has always been 
				accessible being timeless and beginningless (pranta). The 
				development of this self luminous wisdom is self revealing to 
				those who have sought spiritual discernment. It can be broken 
				down into seven stages. As wisdom dawns, so does ignorance fall 
				away. As ignorance falls away, wisdom dawns. Through practice we 
				see that wisdom supports more wisdom -- that elements of all the 
				limbs are found in each other, i.e., that they all reflect the 
				overall tree of yoga and are mutually synergistic. We will find 
				that each stage is mutually synergistic, each able to mutually 
				access, support, and amplify each other, while always keeping in 
				mind that they in reality form an interactive dynamic whole 
				being capable of both accessing the evolutionary Source of 
				Consciousness and Beingness as well as being its natural 
				expression. The seven connecting stages can be viewed in many 
				ways. One way is to discern the connections between:
				1. yam and niyam
				2. niyam and asana
				3. asana and pranayama
				4. pranayama and pratyhara
				5. pratyhara and dharana
				6. dharana and dhyana
				7. dhyana and samadhi
				Patanjali has just finished his discussion of avidya (ignorance) 
				with its concomitant kleshas, karma, and false identifications 
				Although kriya yoga, pratiprasava, dhyana, and viveka-khyatir 
				were mentioned as remediations, now we begin the discussion of 
				the major sadhana of ashtanga (eight limb) yoga, which can be 
				said to have seven stages or rather phases between the eight 
				limbs. Others say that the reference to the seven phases is a 
				mystical reference to correspond to the development of the seven 
				chakras. Vyasa and his school break this down into graduations, 
				each one removing another layer of ignorance, while disclosing 
				an underlying expansive view (vidya) ending in absolute 
				liberation or kaivalyam (see pada 4). II 28. 
				yoga-anga-anusthanad asuddhi-ksye jnana-diptir a viveka-khyateh 
				Through the practice (anusthana) of the following (eight) limbs 
				(angam) of yoga the obstructions and impurities (asuddhi) which 
				occlude the vision of truth are destroyed (ksaye) which in turn 
				allows the inherent self existent effulgent awareness (viveka-khyatir) 
				to shine forth (jnanadipti) revealing the intrinsic all 
				inclusive profound unity (the Great Integrity) more profound and 
				greater than the depths of the processes that ordinary 
				discernment can penetrate. Commentary: It is not strange that 
				after applying viveka (discernment) to the monkey mind, the 
				habit of following the monkey mind in all its wayward 
				discursions and dissipations becomes broken up. One learns to 
				abide in the light of pure awareness. A balance between vairagya 
				and viveka is attained and eventually new more sattvic patterns 
				are energized giving rise to a greater all inclusive and 
				intrinsic awareness which existed underneath the winds and 
				agitations of "normal" coarse discursive mentations of vrtti, 
				but was occluded by it. Through the following of eight limbed (ashtanga) 
				practice we start knowing more directly about "Self" and the 
				process of consciousness itself -- such a practice in itself is 
				self disclosing. In yoga, thus the fruit is known experientially, 
				i.e., the practice itself produces the experience which is the 
				fruit rather than in some other systems the approach is rather 
				through gathering external knowledge "about' the experience, but 
				the experience itself most often remains elusive and enigmatic. 
				Here through yogic practice the impurities that occlude the 
				vision of truth are destroyed allowing the immanent and 
				intrinsic self effulgent awareness to shine forth from within. 
				We become brighter as the world becomes luminous/illumined.
				
				See Sutras II. 15 and II.26 for more on viveka.
				II 29. 
				yama-niyama-asana-pranayama-pratyhara-dharana-dhyana-samadhayo'stav-angani 
				The eight limbs (asta angani) of yoga (which are yama, niyama, 
				asana, pranayama, pratyhara, dharana, dhyana, and samadhi) work 
				as mutual synergists together in order to create a beneficial 
				momentous whole. II 30. 
				Ahimsa-satya-asteya-brahmacarya-aparigraha yamah Certain 
				activities hinder our progress in yoga. If they are wisely given 
				up while their opposite qualities are nourished (yama), then our 
				progress will flow more smoothly and quickly. These yamas are 
				ahimsa (non-violence, i.e. the removal of violence from our own 
				life as well as others (taken in the non-dual sense, in which 
				the two are really one), satya (truthfulness being the removal 
				of the veils of deceit and falsehood from our lives including 
				that of self deceit), asteya (honesty, non-stealing, 
				non-exploitation of others, and integrity in All Our Relations), 
				brahmacharya (continuity, centeredness, wedded-ness, or one 
				pointedness to the all inclusive weave of "Source" -- harmony 
				and union in true Integrity while not allowing oneself to be 
				distracted from the spiritual goal), and aparigraha (non-possessiveness, 
				non-greed, non-envy, non-attachment, letting go, non-false 
				identification penetrating throughout the mind in meditation as 
				well as in all our relationships as the simplification of our 
				life so that we are better able to focus on the spiritual goal 
				latent in every moment). "Yamas and niyamas all have their root 
				in ahimsa (not harming living beings); their aim is to perfect 
				this love that we ought to have for all creatures..." From the "Yogasutra-bhashya" 
				2.30, by Vyasa, the oldest commentary on Patanjali's Yoga Sutras, 
				trsl. by J. Varenne, "Yoga in the Hindu Tradition", Univ. of 
				Chicago Press, 1976 Since everybody on the planet has caused 
				some harm to other animal forms or plants, the spiritual truth 
				that ahimsa points to is simply to more deeply commune and 
				inter-connect with the practices of non-violence, not harming 
				others or self, and actually removing harm to others (healing) 
				and self especially in the transpersonal sense where "the other" 
				and the self are one in our daily actions so that balance and 
				continuity in our authentic yoga practice is accelerated and 
				realized. Thus bringing ahimsa into our lives is a healing 
				action for "Self" as others, bringing less harm and abuse into 
				our own lives, while promoting healing and well beingness.
				
				Yama is commonly mis-translated as being similar to external 
				Western moral dictums, proscriptions, codes, standards, and laws, 
				such as if you break such written or externalized rules, one 
				then becomes punished. But there is not any thread of similarity 
				to what Patanjali means by the word, yama. No where does 
				Patanjali hint upon Divine retribution, vengeance, or punishment. 
				Rather yam/niyam are the first two limbs of ashtanga yoga and as 
				such are practices that lead to samadhi. As such they are 
				offered up as guidelines or suggestions in a "take it or leave 
				it" attitude where one may practice any of the limbs be they 
				yama, niyama, asana, or pranayama, or ahimsa, or dharana, or any 
				other sadhana. Patanjali is stating clearly that all of the 
				limbs taken together for the mutually synergistic practice of 
				ashtanga yoga which is designed to lead one to samadhi. 
				Patanjali had already stated in Pada One that yoga eventually 
				leads to the activation of the inner seed bearing wisdom (rtambhara), 
				and is not even close to a process of placating an externalized 
				God or authoritative system nor conforming to external dictums. 
				The main difference between Western moral systems on one hand 
				and yama/niyama on the other hand is that for the average 
				Westerner, God wrote a list (external book) of commandments, 
				which if not followed lead to sin; while the yogis comprised a 
				list of practices which if practiced in a coordinated manner 
				lead synergistically to the ability to see and read the inner 
				law which ultimately leads to liberation. Thus the road to 
				salvation for the yogi is not found in some old external books 
				or words, it is not found in obeying rules per se, nor is it 
				found in conformity and obsequiousness at all; but rather yam/niyam 
				are indicators of that state of Divine union. They are only 
				tools (as opposed to absolute imperatives) which develop 
				increased sensitivity, awareness, inner wisdom, and which 
				activates one's inherent creative power. The laws of the 
				universe can only be distantly approximated by written words let 
				alone rules, as such they are not the logos itself. just as 
				there is a huge difference between a map and the territory. The 
				laws of the universe can not be written down in words, but 
				rather they must be realized in our intimate participation. then 
				as that Divine union (yoga) is integrated they are then 
				naturally realized and manifested in our daily life -- within 
				our very heart as our Heart identity -- in All Our Relations. It 
				is rather a serious distraction to follow anything external to 
				one's true Self or heart. Belief in external rules or ideologies 
				are what the vrtti of pramana are composed of and as such they 
				lead toward kleshas, not the least are aversion, pride, and 
				prejudice. They are an obstruction put between us and the 
				divine. That curtain must also be melted and annihilated.
				Thus from a yogic perspective, yam/niyam are not ends or goals 
				in themselves, nor are they rules nor proscriptions in the 
				Western sense, but merely remedial processes designed to help 
				move us into realization of the inner eternal law (Sanatana 
				Dharma) of the Heart -- the authentic goal of yoga. The 
				following yam/niyam are discussed in greater length elsewhere, 
				but briefly a few points may serve clarity. Yam and niyam work 
				synergistically. As indicators of the Divine union of the 
				aligned primordial man (called Adam Kadmon in the Kaballa) or 
				Jivamuktan, they all are pointers pointing to the same "reality" 
				-- they are corollaries to the same grand underlying Great 
				Integrity of All Our Relations which are revealed through 
				effective yogic practice. As a two way street they become 
				naturally expressed as the result of tasting or abiding within 
				non-dual unity consciousness, and similarly when they are 
				practiced with purity they also lead us to that realization. As 
				such they can act as guides. They are practiced with body, 
				speech, and more importantly with mind and intention, and they 
				contain both gross and subtle levels -- both inner (antar) and 
				outer practices. They are powerful in identifying and 
				remediating wayward tendencies and activities of the body, 
				speech, and thought. For example using this scheme, Brahmacharya 
				practiced in thought, regardless of the external activity, is 
				far more powerful and beneficial than gross Brahmacharya 
				practiced physically, but without Brahmacharya of mind. This way 
				they are not restraints in the ordinary sense of the word, 
				because there becomes no "bad" tendency to restrain. This is not 
				to say that it is beneficial to act upon random compulsions, the 
				afflictions of the mind (kleshas), out of bad habits or 
				tendencies (samskaras and vasana), neurotic tendencies, lust, 
				greed, selfishness, ignorance, aversion, and the like; but 
				rather it is far better to remediate the Heart/Mind of these 
				wayward tendencies for example through realizing the fruit which 
				underlies the synergistic application and practice of all the 
				limbs of yoga. If we consider the word, yama, it can be defined 
				as the end, as yama is the god of death. From the Yoga Sutras we 
				learn that the death of one is actually an affirmation and birth 
				of another. Although uncommon, one may break down the word, yama, 
				in an unconventional way; ya meaning that which moves, while ma 
				represents the mother principle -- nature's/creation's nurturing 
				principle. Thus in this analysis yama means to bring forth and 
				nurture into fruition by moving with the nurturing principle. 
				Naturally when one activity ends, then there is energy freed to 
				go into another direction. Death in one sense is an illusion, 
				while really things morph and change; i.e., there is rebirth and 
				constant change. Only if "things" could be frozen in time, would 
				"death" exist, but we learn that time as well as death then, is 
				an illusion.
				
				Thus in this way (like all the other limbs) yama does not have 
				to be seen as a negative, a restraint, or even a willful 
				practice; but rather as a natural surrender, as LOVE shining 
				forth -- thus as a positive affirmation. In this sense then 
				ahimsa does not mean to restrain violence, but rather to remove 
				violence and suffering as well as it's
				remnants (such as samskaras). As such it is a healing 
				affirmation that not only removes suffering but brings forth 
				happiness. Ahimsa brings forth healing, kindness, gentleness, 
				and love not only into our own lives and that of "others" but 
				into/from the profound realization of our True Self -- of the 
				unconditional happiness that comes from the realization of the 
				unconditional/natural truth. So only in the larger sense the 
				yams are more than a counteractant to an opposite tendency, but 
				rather they herald in and affirm the underlying unity of All Our 
				Relations. Satya thus does not mean to restrain deceit as much 
				as to bring forth Truth; i.e., to remove falsehood, confusion, 
				illusion, delusion, and ignorance. It is not so concerned with "telling 
				the truth" externally as much as it is in its inner (antar) 
				esoteric meaning of removing the ingrained samskaras which 
				support self deceit and conceit. Thus satya when practiced with 
				the body, speech, and mind in All Our Relations becomes a 
				profound transformational practice. Brahmacharya is to reveal, 
				acknowledge, and act in accordance with the eternal inner 
				eternal teacher in All Our Relations. In All Our Relations we 
				are wedded to Brahma and Brahma in All Our Relations. 
				Brahmacharya is practiced thus not as a restraint of the body, 
				but within the integration of the body, speech, and mind as an 
				affirmation of a way of life. Asteya and aparigraha are not only 
				to eliminate exploitation, contradiction, deceit, self 
				dishonesty, greed, attachment, and selfishness, but to act to 
				promote integrity, honesty, generosity, trust, abundance, 
				fulfillment, and gratefulness, contentment, and clarity in All 
				Our Relations -- body, speech, and especially with an integrated 
				HeartMind. II 31. Jati-desa-kala-samaya-anavacchinnah 
				sarva-bhauma maha-vratam Applying these yams to all situations 
				by the practitioner, at all times, without limitations or 
				exceptions will turn the tide effecting closure of and sealing 
				off the great gate of death and dissolution, thus moving us into 
				greater synchronization with the transconceptional and natural 
				laws of universe as it is (Sanatana Dharma).
				Commentary: The yams have the power to close the gate of 
				suffering and rebirth -- they have the power to end woe of 
				cyclic existence. Here the outgoing gate of distraction and 
				dissipation is closed -- the wheel of cyclic existence (samsara) 
				which causes suffering (which is the realm of the god, yama,) is 
				reversed. This closely corresponds to the hatha yoga bandha 
				activities which are applied to specific gates affecting the 
				granthis (psychic knots) corresponding to the various lokas 
				(spiritual realms). See Sutras 33-34 below.
				
				In the essence of the yams, the essence of all the other yoga 
				practices can be found. Their essence can be applied in all 
				other yoga practices as well. Their meaning is revealed in all 
				authentic spiritual practices. They are multi-layered having 
				inner and outer, subtle and coarse, mental and physical meanings 
				and connotations which are revealed through practice (versus 
				analytical reasoning, speculation, rationalizing, or discursive 
				thought). Their essence is universal and inter-dimensional (sarvabhauma) 
				and includes no limitations (annavacchinnah) of time (kala), 
				place (desa), or level (jati), rather it integrates us in every 
				dimension of being (samaya). Taking up such a powerful all 
				inclusive practice in All Our Relations completes the great 
				circle and makes us whole -- it celebrates the Great Binding 
				Together (maha-vratam). Maha-vratam also refers that the 
				practice of the yams eliminate the outflows and distractions of 
				the cit-prana -- from distraction and nescience to integrity and 
				vidya. Maha-vratam seals the gate of creating more bad karma (acting 
				on nescience). Thus maha-vratam also refers to our awakening to 
				the deathless universal consciousness which is eternally 
				omni-present. Thus the yams seal as well the outward leading 
				gates of death and rebirth into states of ignorance. As stated 
				above, when we seal an energy leak in one direction, when we are 
				freed from the knee jerk activity of neurotic dualistic behavior, 
				then there is energy freed to go into another direction. Death 
				only exists as an illusion -- in terms of fragmentation, while 
				in the larger scope of REALITY, things morph and change; i.e., 
				there is rebirth and constant change. Since it is an illusion to 
				think that things by themselves can be frozen in space and time, 
				then "death" as a thing also is non-existent. Again time as well 
				as death then, is an illusion, caused by the rigid tendency of 
				objectivity to artificially freeze and lock the frames of life 
				as if life was like a movie screen where the projector became 
				frozen. Yams and niyams are practices which are based on Divine 
				indicators of samadhi -- of the perfect yogic alignment. Thus 
				they help wash the bloodied hands of the bad blood and karma 
				already spilled and that which would be spilled and wasted in 
				the future. Thus yam/niyam not only seal the gate of distracted 
				and dissipated consciousness and energy (chit-prana), but move 
				also activate the innate light of the inner wisdom activating 
				our dormant evolutionary potential, the kundalini -- they help 
				us see the universal Love in All Our Relations. If we are not in 
				that situation of ecstatic spirited love, then we can be certain 
				that a vrtti or a klesha is operational blocking or distorting 
				our innate clear vision.
				
				Here the yam/niyams point to the one non-dual truth of All Our 
				Relations where there is no separate self, no separate object, 
				no ego delusion (asmita), no ignorance, rather just Eternal Self 
				reincarnating/manifesting in infinite forms. Practicing the yams 
				puts an end to the downward spiral of pain filled (dukha) cyclic 
				existence (samsara), coarseness, ignorance, violence, etc. In 
				our translation we use the word, sanatana dharma, literally as 
				the eternal law, "Reality" as-it-is without artificial 
				contrivation or relative bias contaminated by dualistic subject/object 
				limitations -- not as a statement of any one religion, doctrine, 
				ideology, philosophy, or moral system. II 32. 
				sauca-samtosa-tapah-svadhyaya-isvara-pranidhanani niyamah Niyama 
				consist of saucha (purity), santosha (contentment and 
				peacefulness), tapas (spiritual passion and fire), swadhyaya 
				(self study and mastery), and isvara pranidhana (surrender to 
				the Universal Great Integrity of Being). Commentary: Thus the 
				yams are not merely restraints or counteractants, but rather 
				actions that bring forth. They have a strong remedial effect. 
				For example truth counteracts deceit, asteya remediates thievery, 
				etc., but the niyams reflect even more the causal value, 
				underlying principles, and fruition of the yams. "Ni" (as in 
				niyam), means that which is inherent or underneath. As such the 
				niyams clarify, complement, and expand upon the yams. The 
				niyamas thus are even more proactive actions (versus 
				counteractive actions such as in the yams) that Patanjali 
				encourages us to engender and to undertake in order to 
				accelerate one's success in yoga. Again yam and niyam are both 
				two way streets. For example, ahimsa and satya promote saucha 
				and swadhyaya, asteya and aparigraha lead to santosha and tapas, 
				brahmacharya leads to isvara pranidhana, while the reverse is 
				also true; i.e., that the practice of the niyamas leads to the 
				realization of the yams. II 33. vitarka-badhane 
				pratipaksa-bhavanam Qualities born from the coarseness and low 
				vibratory qualities of fragmented existence (vitarka) become 
				remediated (pratipaksa) through the application and cultivation 
				(bhavanam) [of these yam/niyams]. Commentary: Thus when 
				consciousness is agitated, unwholesome, discontinuous, and 
				corrupted by the coarseness produced by the ordinary discursive 
				cognitive faculties of fragmented materialistic thought patterns 
				(vitarka), it can be remediated and balanced (pratipaksa) by 
				questioning the basis of all dearly held beliefs and attachments 
				by entertaining the possibility of their opposite meanings (pratipaksa-bhavanam). 
				Here again the yams/niyams point to the nirvicara (beyond even 
				the most subtle mental contamination produced by the confusion 
				of a separate subject/object relationship) Great Integrity of 
				the sacred place of All Our Relations. Here the yams/niyams all 
				point to the non-dual transpersonal Great Binding (Maha-vratam) 
				or Unity which underlies Yoga.
				
				II 34. vitarka himsadayah krta-karita-anumodita 
				lobha-krodha-moha-purvaka mrdu-madhya-adhimatra 
				dukha-ajnana-ananta-phala iti pratipaksa-bhavanam [The 
				functional practice of the yam/niyams] act as remedial 
				application (pratipaksa bhavanam) which balances the forces of 
				corruptive influences of violence (himsadayah), lobha (greed), 
				krodha (anger), and moha (delusion) no matter if they are 
				present subtly or coarsely having the latent potential that 
				leads us into future suffering (dukha) and ignorance (ajnana). 
				All these existing negative feedback loops can be effectively 
				balanced out and nullified (pratpaksa-bhavanam) [by the 
				application of yam/niyam]. Commentary: Actions of body, speech, 
				or mind based on coarse thoughts which in turn are based on 
				separateness (vitarka) result in himsha (violence, greed (lobha), 
				krodha (anger), and moha (delusion) lead to suffering (dukha). 
				They come from pain and ignorance and lead to even more pain and 
				ignorance unless they are remediated by the wise (through the 
				balancing out these negative states through the application of 
				yam/niyam). Coarse breath, speech, physical actions, breath, and 
				mental thoughts are all related. Acting upon them only brings 
				more suffering and ignorance. All the yoga practices help us 
				move from vitarka to nirvitarka and from vicara to nirvicara 
				until our vibrations and awareness are raised and we are moved 
				only by love. We will see how all the yam/niyam are all 
				inter-related with each other, how they all are mutual 
				synergists top the other limbs, how they may be applied, and how 
				they complete the great circle with the Heart of yoga residing 
				in the middle of middles -- in the Great Heart Center -- the 
				Hridayam. The yam/niyams reflect this Great non-dual Truth and 
				also bring us closer to it through aligning with these in daily 
				practice -- in deeds, in words, and in thought. Paramahansa 
				Yogananda's commentary to the Bhagavad Gita , (SRF, Los Angles, 
				1999 ) says in chapter VI. 37-38s: "Arjuna said: (37) O Krishna! 
				What happens to a person unsuccessful in yoga -- one who has 
				devotedly tried to meditate, but has been unable to control 
				himself because his mind kept running away during yoga practice?
				
				(38) Doesn't the yogi perish like a sundered cloud if he finds 
				not the way to Brahman (Spirit) -- being thus unsheltered in Him 
				and steeped in delusion, sidetracked from both paths (the one of 
				God-union and the one of right activities)?
				(39) Please remove forever my doubts, O Krishna! for none save 
				Thee may banish my uncertainties The devotee who performs 
				meritorious actions develops divine memory and good karma that 
				propel him to seek liberation in this life or the beyond. The 
				memory of the divine bliss of yoga practice lies lodged in his 
				subconscious mind. If he is not able to find full liberation in 
				one life, in his next incarnation the hidden memory of his past 
				experiences of yoga sprouts forth in spiritual inclinations." 
				Now Patanjali describes the five yams in detail in sutras 35-39 
				II 35. ahimsa-pratisthayam tat-samnidhau vaira-tyagah Thus by 
				establishing a firm alignment and stance with ahimsa (non-violence), 
				then harm, hostility, hatred, contentiousness, conflict, and 
				disease in our life is reduced and removed. Future seeds of 
				ahimsa are planted. Commentary: Ahimsa is considered the primary 
				yama in which all the others can be derived. There are countless 
				ways to derive this connection. One way is that by removing harm, 
				violence, pain, and suffering to "self" we commune more deeply 
				with that which heals -- the healing force. To cultivate ahimsa 
				in relation to others we see that this brings more ahimsa energy 
				into our own very life. After a while we become aware that in 
				order to bring ahimsa into our lives more, it has to be 
				unconditional, i.e., it becomes a wholehearted, unfettered, 
				automatic, and spontaneous transpersonal affirmation as we 
				become more certain of what we want and who we truly are. 
				Through the practice of ahimsa -- through our direct experience 
				of it, we increasingly start to see the underlying transpersonal 
				nature of ahimsa and where it is coming from -- its healing 
				Integral Source. When we merge with that innate Great Integrity, 
				then the healing spontaneously abides and manifests from the 
				inside out in All Our Relations.
				
				Physically we refrain from hurting others physically as well as 
				animals, plants, and the entire Gaia-sphere. We refrain from 
				hurting the environment which is habitat to self and others. We 
				refrain from harming the future habitat as well and that of our 
				grandchildren's children. Every action thus considers and 
				consults both those yet born up until at least the Seventh 
				Generation as well as the elders who have come before us and 
				have lit the way. Our political, social, ecological, and 
				consumer actions also reflect this ahimsa attitude if we have 
				integrity (as such these are not simply rules that we parrot, 
				but a way of living spirit. For example where does ahimsa fit in 
				regarding our use of food grown with pesticides, our consumption 
				of electricity from nuclear power plants, our consumption of 
				non-biodegradable products, etc. harm our ecology, others, our 
				future ecology, and /or ourselves or conversely can we help 
				create a less
				harmful world, less war, less violence, more peace, more 
				abundance, and more happiness? It is more powerful to know that 
				just attempting to eliminate himsa physically although helpful 
				is not causal. What all encompassing non-dual "Reality" does 
				ahimsa in its transpersonal sense reflect? Refraining from 
				harming others in speech is also valuable, so we refrain in 
				belittling and condemning others -- refrain from gossip and 
				innuendo, refrain from using words as weapons -- to hurt, punish, 
				exploit, condemn, or manipulate others. But it is in the ahimsa 
				of the HeartMind that ahimsa works its most causal magic. Here 
				we no longer hate others, harbor anger nor ill will toward 
				others, no longer desire to punish nor condemn others, no longer 
				disparage or judge others, no longer harbor envy nor competition, 
				pride nor one-up-man ship. When ahimsa of the HeartMind is 
				realized, saucha and santosha are also realized -- suffering, 
				samskara. karma, and its tendencies have become completely 
				remediated, The power of ahimsa in thought and attitude toward 
				All Our Relations is one of the most powerful of all healers. 
				Just to think of any one as being ill, limited, or incomplete 
				does the dormant universal soul potential within them an 
				injustice. So it is wise and less harmful to see the buddha 
				nature potential in all beings and address one's correspondence 
				by affirming THAT truth in All Our Relations. This connects 
				ahimsa with satya in satyagraha (see the discussion under satya). 
				So we go beyond simple ahimsa by no longer creating more harm or 
				suffering through body, speech, or mind, but actually take the 
				next natural step, i.e., of removing harm and suffering (and its 
				seeds) by healing, both self and others, and in the 
				transpersonal sense "others as Self". We see that the Source of 
				ahimsa is unrequited Love and we eventually become convinced to 
				wholeheartedly embrace THAT Source fully in All Our Relations.
				
				Ahimsa is thus not a passive withdrawal, but rather it can be an 
				active engagement in protecting against harm and preventing it. 
				It can also be ferocious. Just like a mother bear who licks her 
				cubs wounds, feeds them, teaches, and protects them. If they 
				become threatened, the mother out of love protects them even if 
				it means fighting off a predator ferociously. Likewise, when we 
				act skillfully and proactively out of love and wisdom to protect 
				and engender life, to remove harm and/or to prevent it, that 
				also is ahimsa. Ahimsa together with satya, form the basis of 
				the satyagraha movement where truth leads to the balm of justice 
				alleviating much suffering. Falsehood (asatya) as well as 
				exploitive institutions on the other hand leads to thievery, 
				expropriation, alienation, ignorance, abuse, and harm (himsa). 
				The satyagrahi must always provide a face-saving "way out" for 
				an opponent if one is to champion truth. Here ahimsa combines 
				with satya where the goal is to discover a wider vista of truth 
				and justice, not to achieve victory over an opponent.
				
				Himsa (violence) is not just getting hit in the head physically 
				and personally, but it is also violence for the mother to 
				witness her children starve to death, to go hungry and be 
				malnourished, to become ill, to be cold, to be exploited, and to 
				die due to manmade conditions, artificial scarcity, economic 
				policies, war, boycotts, competition, and so forth. To be 
				certain it is violence that occurs to people who get sick from 
				pesticide spraying, from impure foods, from dangerous drugs, 
				from unnecessary and dangerous medical procedures, from 
				unhealthy working conditions, from over work, by ultraviolet 
				radiation caused by ozone degradation, by impure air or water, 
				and so forth. To be free from this kind of harm one has to 
				discern the truth and consequences of one's actions while 
				ceasing to contribute to these secondary causes of harm. The 
				consequences of harmful actions do not always show up in one 
				generation. One must thus ask, what is the result of one's 
				actions upon future generations, the children of our children's, 
				up until at least the seventh generation as well as to All Our 
				Relations. II 36. satya-pratisthayam kriya-phalasrayatvam 
				Likewise by establishing a firm footing upon truthfulness and 
				non-deceit (satya), then obscurations, falsehood, self deceit, 
				and illusions are lifted and removed and we become more firmly 
				allied with truth and the self disclosing forces of revelation 
				that lift the veil of ignorance that causes repeated suffering 
				and abuse. Commentary: Cultivating satya has many levels of 
				body, mind, and speech as well. Here we not only want to speak 
				the truth, but also attend satsang where the truth is eternally 
				being spoken (in the true sanatana dharma) all the time. Our 
				malaise is caused by our bondage (even grasping) onto ignorance, 
				confusion, and delusion -- onto skew and bias. Truth destroys 
				this falsehood and reveals Reality as-it-is. Here boundless 
				awareness opens up. When so afflicted in avidya (ignorance) we 
				benefit from association with fellow truth seekers (sangha) who 
				help to reveal and magnify the truth. We benefit from living our 
				truth and being authentic with others INCREASINGLY as a practice 
				in All Our Relations. Satya destroys self deceit, ego delusion, 
				and the masks of false identification (asmita and avidya). Sat 
				implies openness, honesty, and fairness, as well as truth.
				
				Satya thus is not applied only to telling the truth to others, 
				and not only in telling the truth to ourselves, but rather as an 
				affirmation of truth, openness, and clarity -- as the embrace of 
				the dynamic of clarity and pure awareness. Thus through satya we 
				abandon our alliance with falsity, deceit, self deceit, and 
				illusion altogether. We also embrace expressing our truth in All 
				Our Relations by not going along with other people's delusions, 
				self deceit, prejudice, bias, confusion, and false beliefs. In 
				this way even silence in the face of lies may perpetuate falsity, 
				where speaking one's truth may stop others from being duped, 
				misled, demeaned, cheated, exploited, or abused. Thus there is a 
				close affinity here with asteya as well as ahimsa.
				
				The ability to see the truth (satya) in all things will destroy 
				avidya (ignorance) -- it will destroy all our connections with 
				false identifications, illusions, delusions, self deceit, and 
				ego delusion which our consciousness has become imprisoned, but 
				on the larger level our expression of satya allows All Our 
				Relations to come through us naturally -- as our true Self. Thus 
				as an internal practice satya is part and parcel of the process 
				where the Grand Integrity of the profound Reality becomes 
				revealed (falsehood is destroyed by truth -- ignorance is 
				removed through reality). Realizing the truth of this Integrity 
				is the essence of the practice of satya. Daily materialistic 
				life as found in the West often denies the true natural Self and 
				Reality as-it-is, but the practice of satya reaffirms it in the 
				ground of Sat -- true beingness. Thus the practice of satya can 
				be very deep in integrating the unitive state of Satchitananda 
				which is our true nature. Satya is practiced with the whole 
				being -- body, speech, and mind so here in the broader non-dual 
				sense satya practiced inwardly is expressed outwardly (the 
				duality of inner and outer become integrated in the non-dual 
				realization of the satya of satya -- the truth of truth. We 
				commune with SAT which destroys mara, maya, ajnana, and avidya. 
				Similarly the communion with Sat is most pleasing to the lord of 
				yogis, Siva, who brings an end to all falsehood and attachments 
				by bringing forth pure stainless consciousness. Durga Ma is that 
				greatest of all warriors who slays falsehood with truth, so that 
				no darkness can withstand her light. Sat is that sacred and very 
				basic ground of subjective beingness where we experience Reality 
				as-it-is in Sacred presence. When that that experience of Sat is 
				merged with unalloyed Consciousness (Citta), then the unity of 
				SatChitAnanda -- Pure Unalloyed Existence and Pure Absolute 
				Consciousness are merged as Pure Bliss (Ananda). When satya is 
				one pointed and unwavering liberation is very close at hand. 
				Satya in action is to bring about the truth, not only by 
				opposing falsehood, lies, deceit, dumbing down others, and 
				propaganda, but more so to tell one's truth, be the embodiment 
				of who you are, to let your heart shine forth. Satyagraha thus 
				effectively applied expresses itself so as to stop the circle of 
				deceit, by breaking the silence Socially and politically satya 
				is the fore-runner of satyagraha -- living and moving from our 
				center of truth in All Our Relations "With satya combined with 
				ahimsa , you can bring the world to your feet. Satyagraha in its 
				essence is nothing but the introduction of truth and gentleness 
				in the political, i.e., the national life.
				Satyagraha is utter self-effacement, greatest humiliation, 
				greatest patience and brightest faith. It is its own reward.
				
				Satyagraha is a relentless search for truth and a determination 
				to reach truth. It is a force that works silently and apparently 
				slowly. In reality, there is no force in the world that is so 
				direct or so swift in working. Satyagraha literally means 
				insistence on truth. This insistence arms the votary with 
				matchless power. This power or force is connoted by the word 
				satyagraha . Satyagraha , to be genuine, may be offered against 
				parents, against one's wife or one's children, against rulers, 
				against fellow-citizens, even against the whole world. Such a 
				universal force necessarily makes no distinction between kinsmen 
				and strangers, young and old, man and woman, friend and foe. The 
				force to be so applied can never be physical. There is in it no 
				room for violence. The only force of universal application can, 
				therefore, be that of ahimsa or love. In other words, it is 
				soul-force." (From a letter, 25.1.1920) Mahatma Gandhi II 37. 
				asteya-pratisthayam sarva-ratnopasthanam Having firmly communed 
				and practiced integrity, non-exploitation of others, and honesty 
				(asteya), then one no longer becomes easily distracted, 
				dissuaded, or corrupted from one's core energy (yoga) which is 
				seen as far more a precious possession than mere material gems 
				or ornaments. Hence evenness and balance establishes itself 
				where before there existed agitations and disruption. Having 
				learned to cultivate this place of abundance and well being 
				inside oneself, one feels no need to exploit situations. 
				manipulate others, to steal, hoard, be envious, or 
				misappropriate and is thus content (santosha) to leave things as 
				they are in one sense and in another transpersonal non-dual 
				proactive sense to establish abundance, to serve the Self, to 
				eliminate exploitation. abuse, and greed as a natural 
				consequence of the more advanced proactive sense. Commentary: 
				Like the other yams, asteya is a two way street. Contemplating 
				asteya and implementing it establishes harmony and leads us 
				toward greater integration into Unity consciousness; while 
				similarly the more we are spiritually connected, the more asteya 
				is a natural expression of Infinite Love.
				
				Steya means to steal, expropriation, or thievery, thus asteya is 
				most often translated as honesty and non-stealing, and hence the 
				easy connection with aparigraha (which includes non-covetousness 
				as well as non-possessiveness), satya (truthfulness), and ahimsa 
				(non-violence), but if we look deeper asteya is where we do not 
				need to take anything in the first place (aparigraha). So asteya 
				is in one sense creating abundance through generosity. Asteya 
				thus is the realization and expression of abundance, 
				fulfillment, and santosha, where there is no need to take from 
				others, possess objects, or exploit "others" in the first place, 
				rather . Also inclusive under the practice of asteya, one would 
				have to include the elimination of cheating, exploitation, 
				manipulation, heavy handedness, fraud, or victimization of the "other" 
				to one's comparative advantage. Any type of expropriation such 
				as fraud, cheating another, lying, misleading, or even demeaning 
				another sentient being is not only asatya, but is asteya because 
				it serves to demean and steal away the richness of life. Thus 
				the act of expropriating self or others from their indigenous 
				spiritual connection in the eternal now is asteya. That is when 
				by any activity of body, speech, or mind where we further create 
				this spiritual alienation/expropriation, rend, separation, or 
				fragmentation it acts to reinforce and rigidify a spiritual and 
				psychic ripoff (asteya). On the other hand when we are "connected', 
				in union, residing in natural abundance, ahimsa, satya, 
				aparigraha, santosha, and the like we naturally act by 
				reflecting and transmitting asteya in All Our Relations. Asteya 
				goes far deeper than a gross material sense, when we ask 
				ourselves what theft is on a spiritual, emotional, and 
				psychological sense. Many people feel cheated, ripped off, 
				abused, and exploited and guess right most people are. Any 
				ignorance is a limitation and hence a sense of incompleteness 
				sets. In order to compensate for this incompleteness man through 
				his ignorance (avidya) often delves deeper into the kleshas 
				seeking compensatory neurotic substitutes in increased cravings 
				(raga), security (dvesa), anger, jealousy, greed, status (asmita), 
				and the other myriad kleshas built around that basic split/rend 
				from the natural unconditioned harmony and unity of body and 
				mind, Nature and Spirit, Shakti/Shiva - from embodiment (Sat) 
				and Source (Chit), from root and crown -- from Natural 
				Unconditioned Universal Mind. In one sense man is always 
				expropriating more from mother nature than he gives back, such 
				as from natural resources say from trees, the earth, the air, 
				water ... from All Our Relations because of the frozen mind-set 
				of his conditioned ignorance. In the sacred sense all is 
				borrowed, but ignorant and aloof man acts apart as an arrogant "owner". 
				That attitude of asmita thus is remediated by asteya, just as 
				asteya disappears when we realize who we truly are (in swarupa).
				
				The average modern man is too often caught up in competition in 
				the dualistic and paranoid framework of coarse materialistic 
				life neurotically grabbing onto ersatz external objects of 
				gratification or consuming "things" with the hope of an ultimate 
				satisfaction or completion, well being, or sense of meaning and 
				self worth. Especially in the modern milieu the afflictions (kleshas) 
				of attraction, jealousy, hatred, greed, lust, hoarding, 
				possessiveness, consumerism, acquisitiveness, lying, 
				misrepresentation, exploitation, and ignorance can be very 
				strong because in such a corrupt/perverse society it is a symbol 
				of success. All such manifestations of steya manifests out of 
				scarcity consciousness and fear -- the ego; where asteya is 
				based on a natural transpersonal love -- All Our Relations -- 
				which has become habitually abandoned and blocked. Creating 
				abundance, satisfaction, happiness, and providing for others is 
				a powerful antidote. It will also keep us on track with Self. 
				Practicing asteya as honesty and integrity in body, speech, and 
				mind will help counteract any such tendencies. It will 
				eventually reveal the Great Integrity -- the state where we see 
				the beauty and meaning of the Integrity in all life -- in All 
				Our Relations. Asteya as an external practice is not only being 
				honest to others, but not exploiting them, not cheating them, 
				not competing with them, not taking from others, but rather as 
				always giving -- as attempting to restore their connection with 
				eternal love and peace. 
				For this to have a greater positive effect in our yogic practice, 
				asteya must be extended not only to people but to all beings and 
				things - to All Our Relations. It is not necessary that one 
				extends "things", objects, or even temporal comfort as much as 
				that the spiritual bhava is reinforced generating passionately 
				the attitude and intention of desiring to provide for the 
				other's wants and suffering -- for other's happiness. This 
				activity of asteya can be an approximation, an alignment with, 
				the presentation and revelation of the path to lasting happiness 
				and love- where satya, saucha, ahimsa, aparigraha, isvara 
				pranidhana, tapas, and especially santosha all meet and are 
				revealed. Asteya is accomplished when the thievery of fragmented 
				existence, the corrupting forces of separation, the ego, of self 
				deceit, conceit, ignorance, cunning, and trickery have ceased. 
				Asteya has an inner aspect where we are honest with oneself, we 
				honor the integrity of our inherent intelligence, rooting out 
				the very tendency towards self dishonesty and self adversity. It 
				is the insidious habituated alliance with self deception, 
				conceit, self deceit, arrogance, and delusion (called ego) which 
				must be defeated which is revealed in meditation in order to win 
				mukti (liberation). HERE we do not cheat others of the Reality 
				of the Heart, nor do we cheat ourselves of being HERE ALL WAYS. 
				Abiding in the Heart everything shines forth generously as 
				precious jewels (sarva-ratna-upasthanam). Steya thus on a mental 
				level represents our fragmented state of spiritual self 
				alienation -- the primal split off/rip off from non-dual Self -- 
				while it is the spiritual hero/heroine as sadhak who 
				reestablishes the lost spiritual integrity, fullness. and 
				wholesomeness -- who reestablishes connection/union in yoga.
				
				Steya thus is also a type of dishonesty (asatya) and a 
				corruption (versus honesty and integrity) is actually the 
				opposite of satya (communion with truth). With satya we reveal 
				the truth and do not kowtow to falsehood, therefore we do not 
				augment self deceit, dishonesty, nor even other people's 
				illusions/delusion. In asteya we do neither create more scarcity 
				and fear, but rather we remind people of Shakti's abundance and 
				love. This way we do not spirit nor demean life. As such in this 
				way we contribute to stealing away from others the unbounded 
				limitless richness of Reality as-it-is. Steya is very closely 
				related to the kleshas, while the wise practice of asteya 
				greatly attenuates their hold. On a social level we cheat "others" 
				and cheapen life by not honoring and acknowledging Spirit and 
				Nature in All Our Relations. Thus as demean creation/creator we 
				demean ourselves -- we steal from others and future generations. 
				Like ahimsa we can evaluate the implications of our social 
				actions, political actions, ecological actions, and consumer 
				actions as how they may affect others, our habitat, and that of 
				future generations. In other words how we commune with abundance 
				and happiness in All Our Relations, without taking, 
				expropriating, exploiting, or destroying, will directly impact 
				upon our progress in realizing our true self nature. Vice versa, 
				when we have realized the authentic unlimited Self, then our 
				actions will spontaneously manifest and appropriate asteya -- we 
				will manifest the cessation of corruption, dishonesty, 
				exploitation, and expropriation. Contemplating asteya in all our 
				relationships can help many to remediate the energy dissipation 
				from their yoga practice. For example how much do we take under 
				consideration actions which may deprive others in a spiritual 
				sense of a feeling of well beingness? How often do we take into 
				consideration our actions as it may steal from future 
				generations, from future eco-systems, rivers, and habitat? Are 
				we habitually allowing ourselves to abandon our Heart and Core 
				Center in our daily actions, and is such activity wise or 
				helpful? On an even deeper level of beingness whose gate we will 
				all pass on our way to All Our Relations we realize that the 
				entire physical world has been given to us by Ma as Yama. 
				Everything we "think" that we have or own has been loaned to us, 
				has come from an expropriation, from some where else (from 
				creation). Only from the Great Non-Dual Self which embraces All 
				Our Relations does "All" belong to "us" as "we" to It. Only 
				within that context are we free in ultimate and eternal love, 
				abundance, happiness contentment, and trust. Further, asteya 
				comes into play in meditation where the wandering mind 
				expropriates our attention. It is the thief in the night which 
				sucks out our attention and energy. Thus asteya is also similar 
				to the practice of pratyhara where we draw back our energy and 
				awareness to the Hearth of Spirit within -- where our inner 
				spiritual wasteland and desolation becomes regenerated and 
				inspired. II 38. brahmacarya-pratishayam virya-labah Having 
				firmly established the continuity with one's core energy, not 
				being able to dissuade nor corrupt one's attention or desire to 
				that which is empty and devoid of value (brahmacarya-pratishayam), 
				one's vigor and strength is stabilized (virya-labah). Commentary: 
				Brahmacarya is best translated as integrity. It is action, 
				thought, and speech based on that basic incorruptible Great 
				Integrative state of All Our Relations where we act from the 
				Heart of Hearts (hridayam). This is perhaps one of the most 
				widely mistranslated paragraphs of the yoga sutras by life 
				negative, body negative, and "other" worldly academic and 
				religious traditions and institutions. The word's structure and 
				purport has no direct correlation with sexuality, i.e., it can 
				not be translated as sexual abstinence or the refraining from 
				sexual misconduct which is its most common "mis-translation". 
				Rather this anti-sexual connotation is the legacy of the 
				institutionalization of a life negative, nature negative, and 
				body negative so called "authoritative" tradition. Indeed 
				integrity goes far beyond any gross conception of sexual 
				continence, restraint, or repression. The word, brahmacharya, 
				can be derived from the two words Brahma and acharya or charya 
				(take your pick). Now Brahma is God as the creator or progenitor 
				aspect while acharya is teacher, while charya means "to be 
				wedded to" or "moving with". Thus one could say brahmacharya 
				means being wedded to Brahma or Beginningless Source (as Brahma). 
				Similarly one can say that brahmacharya is moving in harmony or 
				attunement with the power of creation and procreation. Thus one 
				person could say that it means "to remain connected to Source" 
				or to remain continuous and integral with it, hence the 
				connotation of continence as continuous flow, may be implied as 
				in being always married to Brahman (Self) without distraction. 
				In that marriage no distractions or corruptions can occur since 
				by definition one is describing this integrity. How could any 
				desire, greed, hatred, anger, jealousy, abuse, or harm occur in 
				authentic Brahmacharya? Impossible, but the "ignorant reality" (called 
				avidya) the normal man's non-integrative and corrupt dualistic 
				state still does not see nor honor this natural integrity, thus 
				his view requires adjustment or remediation through authentic 
				yogic practice. Such a practice is brahmacarya which may be 
				translated here as dancing (moving) with god.
				
				Similarly if one continuously looks toward Brahm as the teacher 
				in All Our Relations; i.e., one is continuously focused on 
				Brahma. Brahm's teachings are always available in this state of 
				mind. Indeed both definitions can be easily integrated as the 
				focusing of the mind, the energy, the body, and breath upon the 
				Creative Source of Life -- Creator/Creation. In this sense 
				Brahmacharya is continence, but not in the sense of sexual, 
				urinary, fecal, or other such very limited ideas of retention 
				and control over the bodily functions, but rather continence in 
				the more subtle sense -- a continence of the more causal energy 
				and mental bodies of the sukshma sharira belonging to the 
				pranamaya, manomaya, and vijnanamaya koshas. This type of 
				communion that is called brahmacharya is far deeper than the 
				dualistic limitations of faith, loyalty, devotion, or belief, 
				but rather address the direct experience and practice of merging 
				as one into the creative life stream -- to honor THAT as one's 
				everpresent teacher. This occurs naturally when the practice of 
				yoga becomes continuous in All Our Relations, but for most of us 
				who have only too briefly tasted that unity consciousness, then 
				such is a practice to seek out, to explore, and embrace. So in 
				this practice of Brahmacharya one must honor and entertain the 
				potential possibility that the generative and intelligent 
				creative/procreative transgenerational force is present here in 
				our very life today, as a teacher. Then we can find the door to 
				Brahma is opened. Finding Brahma we can more easily find Brahman 
				(the true non-dual and complete imperishable Self manifesting as 
				Brahma/Vishnu/Siva). Acharya, as the teacher that we are seeking 
				out and learning from -- focusing on the eternal teacher all the 
				time and in All Our Relations then leads us to the true, 
				universal, all inclusive, and authentic Self. Brahman reveals 
				herself to her devotees -- true seekers. All we have to do is to 
				look for her. seek her, and be at one with her in all our 
				activities -- as All Our Relations. When we reside here, there 
				is self empowerment -- the cit-prana is not drained outward, but 
				rather it is directed toward inward flow activating the 
				evolutionary/creative and procreative forces and thus virya (strength 
				and self empowerment) builds. The accomplishment of the 
				energetic matrix of authentic brahmacharya then naturally 
				manifests in activities that are integrated with Brahman, but 
				the normal man lacks vision (is lost in avidya), so the natural 
				and spontaneous expression of brahmacharya is lacking. As in 
				reverse engineering brahmacharya can be effectively cultivated 
				once we understand its basic purpose and dynamics. The point is 
				that eating, walking, drinking, evacuating, talking, social 
				intercourse, sexual union and other such activities all can be 
				accomplished in continuity with authentic brahmacharya, all of 
				which can involve a spiritual intent and attitude (sankalpa 
				shakti) more than the elimination or repression of specific 
				natural bodily functions. In authentic yoga one does not use 
				force, violence, or repressive means to guide one's activities, 
				but rather wisdom and love. However if these same activities are 
				approached through dualistic ignorance (avidya), desire (raga), 
				aversion (dvesa), and the other kleshas then our spiritual power 
				and strength will become dissipated. According to this sutra 
				authentic brahmacharya generates virya (increases spiritual 
				vigor).
				
				Another way of saying this is that acharya is the teacher, which 
				we continuously can "learn to learn" from at each sacred moment, 
				always staying open, never turning away from the everpresent and 
				self existing omnipresent teacher within. This is sometimes 
				called asking for guidance. As such brahmacarya very closely 
				aligns and adjuncts with the practice of isvara pranidhana. Thus 
				in reality anyway one looks at it, Brahmacharya is the 
				affirmation of the sacredness of life -- Sacred Presence -- 
				Eternally HERE and Now. "Those who follow the path of service, 
				who have completely purified themselves and conquered their 
				senses and self-will, see the Self in all creatures and are 
				untouched by any action they perform. Those who know this truth, 
				whose consciousness is unified, think always, 'I am not the 
				doer.' While seeing or hearing, touching or smelling, eating, 
				moving about, or sleeping; breathing or speaking, letting go or 
				holding o, even opening or closing the eyes, they understand 
				that these are only the movements of the senses among sense 
				objects. Those who surrender to Brahman all selfish attachments 
				are like the leaf of a lotus floating clean and dry on water. 
				Sin cannot touch them. Renouncing their selfish attachments, 
				those who follow the path of service, work with body. senses, 
				and mind for the sake of self-purification. Those who 
				consciousness is unified, abandon all attachment to the results 
				of action and attain supreme peace. But those whose desires are 
				fragmented, who are selfishly attached to the results of their 
				work, are bound in everything they do. Those who renounce 
				attachment in all their deeds live content in the 'city of nine 
				gates", the body, as its master. They are not driven to act, nor 
				do they involve others in action" Bhagavad Gita, 5. 7-16, trsl. 
				by Eknath Easwaran, Tomales, CA 1985. In this way we can see 
				that this yama of brahmacharya practice is the counterpart of 
				the niyama of isvara pranidhana, the surrender to the Self -- to 
				our highest divinity -- to the Great Binding or Integrity. It is 
				also closely aligned with tapas. pratyhara, bandha, and 
				swadhyaya practices (see commentary to sutra 1).
				
				Thus it seems that the practice of Brahmacharya in this sense is 
				to remain wedded to Brahma in integrity in All Our Relations and 
				activities, while at the same time increasing our innate power, 
				spiritual vigor, courage, and strength which has become 
				heretofore repressed/supressed.Here I must reject the 
				chauvinistic claim that virya refers to some male endocrine 
				substance which women do not possess. We also wish to be 
				absolutely clear that it is a mistake to take the word, virya, 
				as used in Ayurveda as a male endocrine substance. Rather 
				Patanjali means here by virya as spiritual strength, empowerment, 
				and spiritual zeal. This is made clear in Sutra I.20 "Shradda-virya-smrti-samadhi-prajna-purvaka 
				itaresham". Swami Veda Bharati in his comprehensive book on the 
				Yoga Sutras discusses this above subject by analyzing what Vyasa 
				said about virya. "We have not translated virya to mean a male 
				hormonal fluid, nor brahma-charya to be the preservation there 
				of.... virya which represents in the common mind only a certain 
				male fluid, the preservation of which is thought to be 
				continence or brahma-charya. If that were the meaning of the 
				word, how would we explain the brahma-charya, of ancient 
				brahma-vadinis, the lady sages and teachers? What do they 
				preserve? Does any lexicon show virya to mean a female fluid 
				also? That is not the case. On the other hand if virya is male 
				property, how do we explain the use of the word virya vali (fem. 
				endowed with virya) and such other express ions. A synonym of 
				virya, the word, retas, is also used in the context of female 
				personages. 'All the three daughters of Mena and Himalya were 
				endowed with the ascetic bodies, possessing the powers of yoga; 
				the divine ladies with great and high auspicious characteristics, 
				all gifted with a stable youthfulness. All of them were teachers 
				of Brahman: all urdhva-retas, they whose virya flows upwards.' 
				Vayu Purana III.72. 14-15 If the words, virya and retas mean 
				seminal fluid, how would the term urdva-retas apply to female 
				ascetics as above? Obviously the words, have a wider meaning." 
				From "the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali, Volume Two, by Swami Veda 
				Bharati, Motilal Benarsidass, Delhi , 2001. Earlier Swami Veda 
				Bharati comments on what Patanjali means by virya in sutra I.13: 
				"Stillness or stability (sthiti) means the mind-field (citta) 
				flowing pacifically when it is without vrttis. The endeavor 
				tending towards this purpose is virility or exertion. Practice 
				is the observance of the means thereto, with the will to achieve 
				its fulfillment... The endeavor is directed towards sthiti [a 
				balanced stillness] and is explained by Vyasa by offering two 
				synonyms: virya: virility, vigour, strength, energy, potency, 
				the qualities of a hero utsaha: enthusiasm, perseverance, 
				fortitude, firmness, exertion, vigorous pursuit. Obviously an 
				endeavour should be undertaken with these heroic qualities 
				turned inwards and their intense concentration directed at the 
				effort to bring the mind to stillness." from the Yoga Sutras of 
				Patanjali with the exposition of Vyasa, Volume I, Pandit 
				Usharbudh Arya (Swami Veda Bharati), Himalayan Intl., Honesdale, 
				PA, 1988. Here Swami Veda Bharati takes virya as having an 
				unexcelled capacity (samarthya-vishesha or nir-atishaya 
				samarthya which can be approximately compared with shakti's pure 
				potentiality. In a tantric sense, urdhva-retas (upward flow of 
				the sexual energy) is always associated with the activation of 
				kundalini shakti (when the ordinary dualistic pranic flows have 
				become extraordinarily harmonized and trans-substantialized). In 
				this sense the proto-tantric elements in the Yoga Sutras can be 
				made clear. Buddhists use virya as a paramita (perfection) 
				leading to wisdom, often specifically meaning "right effort", 
				vigor and strength as applied to sadhana, in the same way as 
				Patanjali does elsewhere in the Yoga Sutras (again see Sutra 
				1.20). In such practices there is no limited sexual meaning to 
				virya paramita as it is meant to be practiced by both females as 
				well as males, which again points away from a mere gross sexual 
				or physiological bias. I think it is also valuable to look into 
				the historical context of Patanjali's time in order to obtain a 
				meaningful interpretation in such terms, since the popularity of 
				Buddhism and its similarity to yoga in that era and clime is 
				well established. In other words, the ingrown academic 
				institutionalized interpretation of brahmacarya meaning sexual 
				restraint is both limited and coarse displaying an anti-female, 
				anti nature, and anti-sexual bias. Authentic brahmacarya goes 
				far beyond this coarse and limited view, which the student of 
				yoga is encouraged to explore.
				
				Going further even the idea of being devoted to Brahma would 
				introduce a dualistic corruption or separation from Brahman -- 
				the Large Self. Here we are taking another step from Brahma as 
				creator/progenitor to Brahman which is not entirely equivalent, 
				but the bridge is easily made after we realize that Brahman is 
				the Universal Self. This "reminding" of our true self -- of our 
				unitive state of wholeness -- both to "remind" others as well as 
				our selves constitutes the practice of Brahmacarya. Reminding 
				each other (as well as our own small self) of the fullness and 
				divine riches of Universal Eternal Self, then not only is the 
				practice of Brahmacarya, but also completes santosha, asteya, 
				satya, ahimsa, isvara pranidhana, swadhyaya, tapas, and 
				aparigraha because we no longer continue to cheat,
				demean, or obfuscate other people's true identity; we no longer 
				through our own actions obstruct the reality of others's 
				completion by validating nor reinforcing the falsity, the 
				suffering, and other countless distractions/dissipations of 
				avidya (ignorance). Thus our own communion is made more 
				continuous, while simultaneously residues of old negative karma, 
				vasana, and samskaras are more quickly and thoroughly remediated. 
				This is the true meaning of Brahmacarya, but to practice it in 
				the world, we must realize it inside as well. Both practicing it 
				as integrity in the world as well as in our minds and hearts, 
				its benefits will become empowered and fructified and eventually 
				become spontaneous and natural. In this way, one may simply 
				practice brahmacarya by evaluating all one's activities in this 
				light, that is , while asking does this or that action which I 
				am contemplating or engaged upon draw me out of my marriage with 
				the eternal teacher/teachings -- my core feeling of integrity 
				and wholeness, or on the other hand, does "this" or "that" 
				activity draw me closer to that deep full intimate heart felt 
				relationship with Brahman? Then the authentic practitioner 
				evaluates how one may increase that marriage with Brahma more 
				continuously in All Our Relations. Those activities which 
				increase this sacred relationship, while simultaneously 
				providing an increased sense of self empowerment, spiritual 
				strength, vigor, and courage (virya) is indeed authentic 
				Brahmacarya. What are some examples? The common answers is to 
				make one's daily physical and psychic environment more in 
				harmony with Brahma. For example can we eliminate those things 
				in our lives that do not honor creation and creativity and at 
				the same time renew our alignment with the creator, creation, 
				birth, generation, the forces of renewal and regeneration. 
				Perhaps it is as easy as changing our mindsets toward mother 
				nature and how we deal with her. Is it an abusive dysfunctional 
				relationship or do we honor the creative force on the earth? How 
				do we respect and honor other life forms, animals, trees, plants, 
				as well as our own body? Do we see that they are all the result 
				of the same creative spark? Would bringing nature home "inside" 
				help more? Would honoring wilderness serve as an adjunctive aide? 
				Perhaps surrounding ourselves with other people who honor the 
				creative impulse (the qualities of Brahma) and serve to empower 
				our spiritual strength and inspire us on the path would also 
				help. There is much to do to remind ourselves as we are 
				reminding others of that great Integrity which the yam of 
				brahmacarya reflects.
				
				Now how did this plain and profound sutra become so distorted by 
				the status quo orthodoxy? This corruption of what Patanjali said, 
				was done by those who had a negative body image, a negative 
				embodiment image, negative nature image, negative female, earth 
				negative, life negative, and consequently sex negative dualistic 
				bias, prejudice, and fear. They did not trust nature nor the 
				body because they were dualistic in mind. They were dualistic in 
				mind because they had not integrated Sat with Chit (nature with 
				spirit or being with consciousness, or shakti/siva), but rather 
				feared it choosing alienation from the generative force (Brahma). 
				Thus a polarization of mind from body became institutionalized 
				and they built upon this institution over millenniums 
				rigidifying their beliefs into a self serving tradition (although 
				in fact it only served their pride, aversion, and ignorance). 
				Specifically with the Yoga Sutras, the source of the 
				misinterpretation stems from the first well known and "authoritative" 
				commentator on the who "interpreted" Brahmacharya to mean sexual 
				continence and that "interpretation" stuck within the confines 
				of the institutionalized authoritative status quo anti-nature 
				academic tradition which attempted to co-opt/expropriate the 
				Yoga Sutras. Again we point out that Patanjali did not use the 
				word sex or continence in this sutra at all, but it is only 
				through the nature phobic "interpretation", that the word, 
				brahmacarya, has become not only synonymous with abstaining from 
				sex, but also as renouncing the world in these overly 
				objectified and heavily abstracted circles. In these perverted 
				realms, duality is reinforced by artificially placing "reality" 
				and sacredness "other" than on this planet and within this very 
				body. It is indeed the denial of Brahma as creator not only of 
				the body, the earth, and the universe, but also the denial and 
				demeaning of our own co-creative pro-creative function in nature 
				(as if procreation was something not spiritual). Rather 
				spiritual empowerment (virya), spiritual strength, vigor, 
				endurance, and enthusiasm comes from the embrace of Brahma in 
				this very body, not through aversion (dvesa) of the body and 
				nature. What brahmacarya should be associated with is the 
				affirmative practice of conscious engagement with Brahman in 
				daily life and finding spiritual vigor in such. In short the 
				institutionalized "authoritative" interpretation of most of the 
				yams and niyams in general have been corrupted by an anti-life 
				and nature negative prejudice -- the original words have been 
				perverted and corrupted to mean the opposite in many cases, 
				i.e., being wedded and in harmony with the creative/generative 
				force (Brahma), honoring it in everyday life, reflecting your 
				relationship with the great progenitor/creator, Brahma, and so 
				acting in harmony, spontaneity, and vitally (versus mechanically, 
				conceptually, or in contradiction). In a similar sense this yama, 
				brahmacharya, is the everyday practice of being focused on 
				Brahma and the cit-prana (where Brahma is the source of prana), 
				remaining centered to one's core of goodness not allowing 
				oneself to become upset, distracted, dissuaded, or caught up in 
				citta vrtti (neurotic activities).
				
				This is not to say that the confusion that is presented to our 
				unprepared youth as manifested in sexual lust and propensities 
				in not problematical, but rather simply ignoring it or 
				forbidding it in most cases simply creates more tension and 
				armoring around it, often to a pathological point. Indeed much 
				compulsive violent and harmful
				speech that derides, curses, and condemns others is often due to 
				one's defensive armoring, tension, fear, and conflict around 
				sexual fears that have become repressed, denied, buried, and 
				ignored. Because the generative urge in many youth is more 
				powerful than that to eat, to drink, to sleep, and in some in 
				par to that even to breathing, thus one may be forced to extend 
				this basic idea of Brahmacharya (in the opposite direction of 
				traditional repressive institutionalized authority) into a 
				tantric/agamic interpretation which this sutra hints at because 
				of discovering and more deeply communing with the Source of our 
				potency and strength (virya-labah) through the bodily 
				pro-creative/generative pathway. Indeed brahmacharya so applied 
				on a physical level is a great aid in overcoming avidya as it 
				directly impacts upon our neurology, generative life impulse, 
				attachments, dissuasions, programmed prejudice, abhinivesa (fear 
				of death), fear and dissolution in general. Here instead of 
				impregnating our youth with fear, armoring, and tension around 
				sexual function, the tantric approach is keep the energy flowing 
				in the water chakra (swadhistana) not by discharging it nor 
				stopping it, but rather by binding/interconnecting it to the 
				other chakras through pranayama, pratyhara, and samyama. As a 
				gate, bandhas, fill in the leaking holes where cit-prana can 
				dissipate. such energy then is redirected to empower the 
				evolutionary circuits (kundalini). Brahmacarya thus teaches 
				balance and harmony in all our relationships entreating us to 
				find the virya (strength and courage) in such. Being wedded and 
				intimately united to Brahma as the force of renewal, generation, 
				creative force, and regeneration is a healing grace and 
				integrity combined. This is a blessing indeed and when it 
				manifests in All Our Relations it is a blessing passed on. Such 
				practice will be in consonance both with the maha-vratam and 
				nirvitarka goals of the yam/niyam as put forth by the sage 
				Patanjali which affirms our inseparableness --our integrity and 
				continence in all of eternity. Detailed hatha yoga, tantric, 
				kundalini, or laya yoga approaches to this activity, although 
				perhaps somewhat problematic in many anti-nature monastic 
				settings, can be found in other literature as well as in Pada 
				III. The main point is to seek out Brahma in All Our Relations 
				in body, speech and mind and then act in accordance/continuity/integrity.
				
				In the non-dual tantric sense, sexual activity is a potent 
				practice where both partners can increase their communion with 
				Brahma, by transmuting the potential of being carried away and 
				distracted by the physical pleasure of transpersonal experience, 
				but rather approaching this as an opportunity to integrate 
				physical passion and divine passion into a spiritual and divine 
				partnership, where physical, energetic, emotional, cognitive, 
				and spiritual union of the individual becomes an act of 
				renouncing short term sexual pleasure as discharge, but rather 
				as the generation of ojas and virya as tapas -- charging the 
				flow through the nadis rather than the armoring. blockage, or 
				constriction around them for mutual liberation and spiritual 
				evolution -- as an act of devotion or surrender (isvara 
				pranidhana), as worship, where the fire (tapas) is fed by the 
				inner ghee (neuro-physiological liquor) on the altar of Brahma. 
				This of course is not the institutionalized orthodox view on 
				brahmacharya, but it is put forth sincerely as a modern non-dual 
				tantric interpretation in light of the fact that Brahma is the 
				Hindu idea that most closely resembles the force of creation and 
				generation (and hence the pro-creative and generative powers are 
				also associated) -- the grammatical roots of this word (and my 
				own yoga practice) convince me that a deeper honoring of the 
				creative, vibrant, and vital living force that underlies all of 
				creation -- sacred and profound is being called forth to be 
				considered and heard. Indeed, genuine tantra practiced not as a 
				temporary sensual pleasure or release of dammed up energy, but 
				as an activity that does not distract, dissuade, nor dissipates 
				one's consciousness, vital energies, or fluids, but rather feeds 
				the eternal omnipresent flame -- as an entering into the 
				non-dual transpersonal integration, which is our true nature, 
				removing obstacles, generating spiritual passion and vigor, as a 
				simultaneous act of tapas, aparigraha, isvara pranidhana, and 
				brahmacharya appears to be more in harmony with the rest of 
				Patanjali's Yoga Sutras than the institutionalized anti-sexual 
				interpretation In this sutra, Patanjali says that by effective 
				practice of brahmacharya increased spiritual momentum, energy, 
				empowerment, strength and courage is encouraged/generated (virya). 
				Thus one could read that sexual activity like any other activity 
				without practicing brahmacharya while so engaged could thus be 
				dissipating and weakening. According to tantra then the 
				remediation of lust and distracting influences through the 
				conscious application of Brahmacarya on a physical or energetic 
				level is applied. Then to some extent Brahmacarya can be linked 
				to the energetics of the hatha yoga practice of vajroli mudra (especially 
				to its inner (internal correspondence) application where there 
				is natural upward flow (urdvaretas) which is activated by the 
				compounding of blood and hormonal juices (ojas) with cit-prana. 
				urdvaretas can be achieved through practice or naturally and 
				spontaneously through grace by one who is spiritually ripe. "The 
				process of offering is Brahman; that which is offered is Brahman. 
				Brahman offers the sacrifice in the fire of Brahman. Brahman is 
				attained by those who see Brahman in every action" Bhagavad 
				Gita, 4.24, trsl. by Eknath Easwaran, Tomales, CA 1985.
				
				Brahmacharya thus is catalyzed by tapas and implied in isvara 
				pranidhana, swadhyaya, asteya, santosha, ahimsa, satya, saucha, 
				and aparigraha. By a similar extension it implies equanimity, 
				karuna, compassion, ahimsa, satya, saucha (as purity of the 
				heart), and jivamukti. All the yam/niyam form a great circle (maha-vratam) 
				and
				refine our cit-prana from gross to subtle engendering (nirvitarka). 
				So authentic brahmacharya practiced not only in bodily actions 
				and speech, but more causally in the HeartMind where we are 
				always focused on Brahma and Brahman. "To contemplate on God in 
				this world is the highest Sadhana, and this automatically 
				implies love towards all beings. You cannot see God in all and 
				yet not love all people. These are contraries. You see God in 
				all and love all equally. It is implied, and you need not 
				mention it separately, and this also implies service to all. To 
				recognize one's own self in others and to work for the 
				fulfillment of this in life is a part of our sadhana. Love all, 
				serve all, because God is in all." Swami Krishnananda Swami 
				Venkatesananda says of Brahmacharya: "Brahmacharya literally 
				means when the whole inner consciousness flows constantly toward 
				truth, towards what is, towards God, Brahman. That is difficult! 
				And so some holy ones restricted the meaning. They asked; 'What 
				is it that distracts a person's attention most?' The opposite 
				sex [polarity]. so they interpreted brahmacharya to mean 
				continence, chastity. This is no doubt one of the constituents 
				of brahmacharya, but brahmacharya means much more than that. 
				Brahmacharya is also part of the search for truth. It means that 
				the mind is always moving in the infinite (Brahman), towards the 
				infinite, constantly looking for Brahman. That itself again is 
				meditation. When the question, 'what is truth, what is this?' is 
				burning in one's heart, it is then that both truthfulness and 
				brahmacharya are possible. It is said that the yogi who is 
				devoted to truth becomes completely silent; every time he wants 
				to say something, there is the thought, 'How do I know this is 
				true?' This happens also with brahmacharya in the sense of 
				chastity. When your mind, heart, and whole being are constantly 
				absorbed in this search for truth, towards enlightenment, then 
				craving does not arise and continence happens [spontaneously]. 
				On the other hand, suppressing all these emotions is dangerous, 
				because it is violence, it is untruth, and there is no 
				brahmacharya there." "The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali with 
				Commentary by Swami Venkatesananda" pp 198 -199, The Divine Life 
				Society, U.P., India , 1998
				
				In the modern world alienation, fragmentation, disparity, and 
				corruption has become normal. Because most people with the 
				widespread dichotomy of false identification (falsely 
				identifying with the dualistic mind, as a separate ego, or body 
				this "apparent" dichotomy as an institutionalized estrangement 
				from non-dual Self has become epidemic. Of course the physical 
				body dies, but this body is the result of billions of years of 
				intelligent evolution from beginningless Source -- which brings 
				in the subject of the Long Body or Brahman. It is precisely this 
				short sighted false identification (avidya) with a temporal and 
				limited "self" which attaches with it so much affliction and 
				pain (dukha). This small self can not be sustained and will most 
				definitely perish, but yoga tells us that this small self is 
				also a result of a limited mindset -- it is illusory. Who is "i" 
				in yoga such as what is disclosed in the authentic practices of 
				yoga such as in vairagya, dhyana, tapas, swadhyaya, isvara 
				pranidhana, ahimsa, or other such practices which reveals as 
				understanding who/where/what we are "in the greater yogic 
				context"? We cannot know who we are unless we know where we came 
				from also (Brahma). Without that practice and realization of 
				Brahmacharya we have a limited or distorted idea of "self" (being 
				lost in avidya). All "things" are on fire, they change, die, and 
				come into being, but in yoga we learn that we are not just this 
				physical body. That is, no ego, no body, no "thing" lives in a 
				vacuum or exists as separate; rather it is the result of limited 
				thinking to presuppose such a duality. When we open through yoga 
				to connect up with who we really are (and this usually takes 
				years of deconditioning) we start to see who/what we really are 
				in the context of transpersonal and non-dual consciousness and 
				beingness --as Satchitananda. Here the crown (sahasrara) and the 
				earth (muladhara) -- sprit and nature -- are both activated 
				simultaneously and the sacred temple is restored. This comes not 
				as a result of theory or philosophy, but as a result of genuine 
				yoga practice. This is why Patanjali emphasizes that authentic 
				practice remediates old energy patterns, tendencies, karma, 
				klesha, and samskara. One of the kleshas is the false self 
				identification with fragmentation, the ego, and pride (asmita) 
				while Brahmacharya is one such practice out of hundreds designed 
				to loosen that fixation while placing us in that greater 
				Implicate Integrity. The body, the trees, ocean, animals, Mother 
				earth, stars, Creation, -- All Our Relations- all came from 
				Beginningless Source, and that Source is thus contained in us -- 
				we reflect it and at the same time we are its expression. The 
				separation was a result of an illusory state of mind. Since this 
				"we" or "i" does not exist outside of the whole in Reality -- "we" 
				all together becomes a tangible and deeply felt experience 
				eventually. As we increasingly surrender/offer up the veiled 
				cocoon of ignorance upon the altar of our practice, the more is 
				revealed of this transpersonal eternal beginningless Source in/as 
				All Our Relations. Our practice approximates it, attunes with it 
				aligns with it, or at other times we rest in deep gratitude and 
				santosha -- at one with Brahm.
				
				Not that Brahm can be defined, but as a practice we can take 
				frequent pauses each and every day from neurotic habits, daily 
				agendas, and schedules and then invite THAT sacred presence 
				"in", not just for guidance or expression, but as an intimate 
				embrace like a long lost friend. The more rich and full this 
				expression becomes -- the more creatively empowered this 
				expression becomes -- the happier and more fulfilled we become 
				-- the more enter into the True Self. TAT TVAM ASI II 39. 
				aparigraha-sthairye janma-kathamta-sambodhah By establishing a 
				firm practice (sthairye) of simplifying our life through 
				eliminating our attachments to frivolous and distracting 
				non-essential desires and by no longer grasping at personal 
				possessions nor appropriating, consuming, or hoarding objects 
				out of neurotic false identifications (greedily hoarding because 
				of feelings of an inner emptiness or lack), nor to covet and be 
				attached to that which is transitory and ever changing, and 
				seeing greener fields always on yonder horizons (aparigraha), 
				then our ability to see into our past neurotic patterns is 
				disclosed (janma-kathamta sambodhah). This knowledge (kathamta 
				sambodhah) of the driving winds of transformation and change as 
				it has manifest in the past (janma), serves to replenish our 
				innate power to support us in eliminating further bondage and 
				suffering that is inherent in craving, fear, and clinging to the 
				future which has yet to come. Thus true integrity is achieved 
				and past karmic proclivities are burned up when through 
				authentic aparigraha we merge into greater ecstatic contentment 
				in the Eternal Now. Commentary: Aparigraha means non-greed, 
				non-covetousness, non-possessiveness, non-excess, and literally, 
				"not grasping -- not clinging ". Sthairye means to be firm, 
				steadfast, still and easeful (in the practice of aparigraha). 
				One reading thus is when we become firm, still, and unmovable in 
				not needing, when that state is easy and still, then the how (kathamta) 
				of our past existence -- how we got HERE (janma) is awakened (sambodhah). 
				HERE we remain centered in the eternal present. HERE our life 
				comes together through aparigraha and we are able to become 
				reborn free from the winds of past karma, and it is HERE (in 
				turiya) that all dimensions come together and become whole.
				
				Another similar reading is that when our past (janma) is 
				revealed through kathamta sambodhah, then a strong natural ease 
				of non-craving and release (aparigraha) is naturally expressed 
				in our future activities. HERE we approach All Our Relations 
				without grasping or attachment to results. We will discuss these 
				ideas later, but first it may be valuable to see how aparigraha 
				operates in daily life. Generally it is the antidote for greed, 
				possessiveness, excess. clutter, excess, desire/fear, imbalance, 
				or attachment in general. The most apparent instances of 
				parigraha (grasping, clinging, or clutching) can be normally 
				remediated by cultivating abundance, generosity, gratefulness, 
				santosha, vairagya (non-attachment), and the like. How can 
				anything be possessed without first artificially establishing a 
				false identification with separation, alienation, and 
				fragmentation -- identifying with the ego (asmita) in the first 
				place? "Who" is it that grasps? After all it is our spiritual 
				self alienation (estrangement/rend from Self) which has caused 
				the circumstances for craving and desire in the first place. The 
				false identification of "thinking" that own a body also doesn't 
				help (called parigraha of possessing the body). The physical 
				body being temporary, this ignorance of who and what incarnates 
				is thus part and parcel of the process where 
				janma-kathamta-sambodhah creates aparigraha-sthairye. Knowing 
				who we truly are as the imperishable Self certainly would help, 
				but that is putting the cart before the horse. Aparigraha is 
				thus is a practice that is helpful for spiritual evolution. 
				Aparigraha thus as a practice in daily life can create more time 
				and energy for sadhana -- supporting our spiritual progress as 
				we clear out or propensities toward neurotic desires and 
				attachments. On a more subtle/mental level as thoughts of greed, 
				consumerism, and possessiveness come up we can let them go more 
				often realizing that they will not lead to any lasting happiness. 
				Thus the sadhu or monk owns nothing and is possessed by nothing, 
				and thus does not fear being ripped off, assaulted, or defensive. 
				He/she does not obsess or identify with such objects, but his/her 
				mind is free. For such a one, this aids the liberation process 
				helping one to free the mind of false identifications and 
				attachment. In a similar sense aparigraha means simplifying our 
				life style. That frees up our attention, energy, and time. The 
				average neurotic consumes external objects as a substitute for 
				an inner emptiness -- a lack of meaningful and fulfilling life. 
				We should all know that ersatz compensatory consumerism will not 
				provide lasting happiness or santosha. The more unhappy we are, 
				the more we crave. The more unhappy and the more we crave the 
				more we are vulnerable to advertisers to consume something that 
				will make us happy or satisfied. But wisdom gleaned from 
				practice discloses that no lasting happiness (santosha) will be 
				found through consuming compensatory vanity items that we do not 
				need.
				What makes far more sense in order to eventually become free 
				from the dysfunctional cycle of craving, consummation/gratification, 
				temporary pleasure, more craving, more consumerism, and more 
				temporary pleasure and so forth. In that cycle the consumer 
				confuses desire and craving on one hand with the anticipation of 
				its consummation/gratification (pleasure), hence big eyes, big 
				desire, viagra, and greed becomes mistakenly equated with a 
				happy life. But in reality it is a vicious circle of craving and 
				greed which winds up in personal exhaustion (which is associated 
				with satiation), but which brings no lasting happiness or 
				meaningful fulfillment. Consumerism taken as a goal in itself 
				imprisons our life and clogs the spiritual arteries. Since what 
				we consume is part of a living system of which have its own laws 
				of sustainability, unbridled wild consumerism eventually becomes 
				unsustainable in itself. To contribute to the demise of natural 
				systems or to create scarcity for others is an act of himsa and 
				thus one becomes a participant in the generation of negative 
				karma. Without practicing aparigraha one not only risks himsa 
				and sacrifices santosha, but also asteya is compromised because 
				unbridled consumerism is a form of stealing from others as well 
				as future generations. The practice of aparigraha has numerous 
				positive benefits that clears up our karma (by anma-kathamta 
				sambodhah), and frees our energy and time. It is often observed 
				that the more one owns the more one worries about maintaining 
				and keeping their possessions. In that way they are possessed or 
				owned by the very objects that they "think" they own. This kind 
				of parigraha occupies and obfuscates the mind and hence 
				reinforces the false sense of separate "self" (ego) or delusion 
				(avidya). So the practice of aparigraha not only clarifies the 
				mind, but also there is a mind aspect or more subtle mental/psychic 
				practice of aparigraha when we mean to free the mind itself from 
				its graspings, false associations, attachment, and similar 
				wandering unto objects of thought. Thus in meditation there 
				exists a more subtle practice of aparigraha which is more 
				precisely vairagya.
				
				For most people the rend of dualistic separation has become 
				rigidified through trauma, samskara, vasana, rigidified limited 
				beliefs, mental/emotional fixations, distorted attitudes, 
				stubborn mind sets, behavior which affect our life style, 
				vindictiveness, as well as psycho-neuromuscular and 
				physiological components, then aparigraha becomes a powerful 
				practice which remediates the above tensions. One may not 
				immediately see how powerful aparigraha is as a practice. In the 
				above situations a sense of personal loss of something or 
				someone occurs in one's thought process. This sense of loss 
				stems from a previous sense of attachment or grasping onto the 
				person or thing that no longer is present. This sense of loss 
				stemming from false identification, attachment, and grasping (parigraha) 
				can cause all sorts of further afflictions and negative karma if 
				not seen for what it is in truth and dropped (released). For 
				example grief over a past event of perceived loss can be 
				remediated through aparigraha. Often, revenge is due to 
				parigraha. One seeks to "get even" for an apparent loss, a 
				previous perceived injustice, a ripoff, a cheat, or even a lack 
				of self esteem and self worth. Revenge is energy and thought 
				that has been misdirected seeking discharge in folly, 
				dissipation, afflictive emotions, and bad karma. Awareness of 
				the emotional vulnerability of one's situation of false 
				identification would often be sufficient to entertain the 
				possibility of aparigraha, which in turn affirms the larger 
				sense of Self (Brahman). In the same way many other kleshas can 
				be cleared in this way when given the chance, with a far more 
				spiritually empowering outcome. In other words aparigraha, like 
				the other yam/niyam, acts as a two way street. We can simplify 
				our life, let go of frivolous possessions, reduce our greed, 
				become more generous, give up stubbornly held beliefs, change 
				our clinging to familiar mindsets, etc., on one hand in order to 
				make progress toward samadhi. On the other hand the graspings 
				onto the very concepts that reinforce scarcity, need, neuroses, 
				and separation are weakened through authentic sadhana. Then HERE 
				aparigraha eventually becomes naturally expressed -- manifesting 
				spontaneously and naturally. Once some insight is gained (through 
				swadhyaya, sadhana, janma-kathamta-sambodhah, etc), then one no 
				longer is subject to suffer from the apparition that possessing 
				any temporal object will produce lasting happiness, because we 
				have realized that happiness is a state of mind. The illusion 
				that is produced by the erroneous judgment that an object is "good", 
				desirable, or even is capable of being possessed is absent. Once 
				we have realized that it is a distorted mindset which has 
				generated the need and unhappiness (as well as the decision to 
				be unhappy) in the first place, then we able to understand the 
				spiritual malaise in which parigraha incarnates in the first 
				place. Then from HERE aparigraha occurs naturally and 
				spontaneously. On a gross physical level people too often pursue 
				more than they need, obsess unceasingly after compensatory 
				objects of attraction, and are never happy or content, because 
				of this false identification which reinforces an inner spiritual 
				lack -- the absence the sacred. Thus this is a result of a 
				contrived, conditioned, and artificial process of spiritual 
				alienation, but not the experience of our true nature or natural 
				Self. Most fear and physical illness including obesity is due to 
				parigraha. The freedom from this physical addiction is 
				essentially spiritual. Suffering from the affliction that says 
				that even more sublimation (which is a compensation for a 
				spiritual alienation) is better is a vicious cycle; i.e., one 
				new car is not enough so get two new cars; four new shoes are 
				not enough so we get five new shoes; yet lasting happiness never 
				comes this way because it is always neurotically driven. Such 
				objects are only symbols but not the real thing which we desire 
				and thus ordinary people live in in an apparitional shadow world 
				driven by their own inner demons.
				
				Authentic aparigraha comes about naturally through self 
				realization (kathamta-sambodhah)-- realizing the innate 
				happiness and abundance in All Our Relations -- through a deep 
				transpersonal and timeless gratefulness that unconditional (non-dependent) 
				happiness naturally provides. So to begin with simple activities 
				that are helpful toward realizing this end may include 
				simplifying one's life, changing life styles, identifying and 
				discarding the superfluous and burdensome, removing clutter,
				giving away things that are not necessary, not refraining from 
				obsessing about theft nor loss, living a more naked and open 
				life, meditating on physical death, the transitory nature of all 
				things, the nature of unconditional happiness, and the like. 
				Fear lies at the root of greed and covetousness, so it is 
				cultivating love, happiness, contentment, generosity, and 
				gratefulness which is useful. "When the inner light of 
				intelligence illumines the state of mind that has firmly 
				rejected greed and there is contentment with what life brings 
				unsolicited, there arises knowledge of the mysteries of life and 
				its why and how." Sw. Venkatesananda, "The Yoga Sutras of 
				Patanjali" On a mental level, one can be obsessed by spiritual 
				materialism in constant pursuit of superficial artifacts or 
				symbols of spiritual attainment such as malas, asanas, teachers, 
				robes, statutes, mantras, incense, texts, teachings, etc. This 
				too is a disease that is best surrendered at the foot of All Our 
				Relations. Thus removing the physical attachments the mind gets 
				clear. As the mind gets clear, it becomes that the true source 
				of happiness and liberation comes from an open unattached mind, 
				not from grasping onto (or being grasped by material objects. 
				When the mind is clear, then a sense of fulfillment and peace (santosha) 
				naturally arises. What if all was perfect right now? 
				Contemplation on the nature of the pre-existing Great Completion 
				and Perfection of Eternal Presence in All Our Relations offers a 
				most potent remedy. On the more subtle, mental, and energetic 
				levels, aparigraha is the non-grasping unto thought objects 
				which occur in meditation (or out of meditation for the 
				jivamuktan). Here the dualistic limitations of pratyaksha are 
				remediated. One no longer separates out limited self 
				identifications (neither of separate "selves" or own "self", but 
				rather the rich and deep innate continuity (which is yoga) shows 
				forth in each "apparent" object holographically, cutting through 
				superficial appearances and displaying its non-substantial 
				nature in and by itself while at the same time revealing the 
				innate presence and great Integrity of All Our Relations. Thus 
				aparigraha comes naturally to those who have realized the truth 
				of their own natural existence (swarupa) devoid of superficial 
				appearance, artifact, conceptual construct, symbolic 
				representation, and free from other kleshas or vrttis -- beyond 
				even the most subtle taint of a separate dualistic object. Here 
				one is complete in the unlimited fullness of Reality and needs 
				nothing else.
				
				Aparigraha like the other yam/niyam, also has an esoteric aspect. 
				It also works in two directions. One way is that when a certain 
				amount of the veil of illusion (avidya) has been lifted, we are 
				then able to see (vidya) the past karmic propensities, vasana, 
				samskaric triggers, neurotic patterns, and related compulsive 
				mechanisms of cravings, graspings, attachment, and fear that we 
				have been previously unconsciously obsessed with for years. One 
				day we wake up and an old habit is suddenly "seen" which gives 
				us the opportunity to no longer feed it. Or maybe we realize 
				that an old vasana (habitual mechanism or knee jerk reactive 
				circuit) is gone and as a result we feel liberated, relieved, 
				and grateful. Certainly new energy becomes available because an 
				old dysfunctional compulsive circuit is no longer draining us. 
				That way we cease "chasing our tails" in one way or another 
				through direct insight (wisdom). We thus understand the tragic 
				bondage of our past and in such cases the past becomes seen as a 
				series of incarnations leading up to the present experience. 
				many years but didn't "see" it until that moment. Then when I 
				saw it, I was able to let it go (gratefully). Whew! This is not 
				very different from when someone points out in asana practice 
				that we my be habitually and unconsciously "holding/clutching" 
				at the jaw, gut, shoulders, etc., Then through such discernment, 
				we can start unwinding and letting go. Aparigraha , vairagya, 
				and isvara pranidhana are thus closely related. Then new 
				evolutionary energy comes into the previously dormant circuitry. 
				This is the birth of a new incarnation -- a new "self" becomes 
				energized and embodied. Maybe this is not exactly aparigraha (as 
				it is usually applied to daily life situations in regards to 
				letting go of mental/emotional fixations, beliefs, attitudes, 
				rigid and limited mind sets, and behavior which affect our life 
				style), but certainly there exists a is a 
				psycho-neuro-physiological component of aparigraha which affects 
				us even at the cellular and energy body level. After seeing 
				these old patterns, vasanas, and samskaras that we have been 
				grasping/clutching at during this life drop away a sense of 
				spaciousness and openness arises. Then through the power and 
				freedom which consciousness provides, then thought patterns that 
				previously tended to attach to objects or the I-it world of ego 
				are able to be released in the body, the mind, in our behavior 
				-- in All Our Relations. Old programming is dislodged and a 
				sacred space for authentic movement is affirmed. Then one may be 
				able to see further into their past lives (past the false gross 
				material identifications of separateness) perceiving that such 
				were merely new incarnations of the same lesson -- the same 
				karmic lesson launched in ignorance having formed a mental/psychic 
				energetic pattern which had not previously been resolved, but 
				having now completed its journey in the culmination of 
				integrated consciousness and realization. So just as insight 
				facilitates the natural expression of aparigraha, likewise, from 
				the other end, looking at the possibility of implementing 
				aparigraha in everyday life and then applying it, will provide 
				synergistic progress in establishing the eventual of realization 
				of nirbija samadhi.
				
				The practice of aparigraha as non-grasping, non-greed, and 
				non-attachment is not just an attitude, but can be practiced as 
				an intent as well as an expression. It has
				ramifications on all walks of life. If one plane is rigidified, 
				then tension in the other planes will ensue. For example, some 
				people understand aparigraha on an intellectual level, but they 
				have yet to get rid of bad habits or fears on the physical level 
				such as simplification of one's lifestyle on the gross material 
				plane. Whenever there is tension in our lives, it is wise to 
				look toward aparigraha for a remedy. We often surround ourselves 
				with the objects of predictability often concretizing our own 
				rigidified limited prisons (mental, physical, and spiritual). 
				This of course is self limiting but without insight such 
				activities are the norm. As an antidote embracing life style 
				changes that move us in the opposite direction (from the 
				illusion of safety in predictability) are often very synergistic 
				toward remediating rigidity and tension and bringing in new 
				vigor, energy, and creative change. A new world and a new life (incarnation) 
				can be given birth to. As such it is a form of aparigraha (non-hoarding) 
				and non-grasping. If we never take a chance, never risk anything, 
				then we can get stuck, and stagnant, and become really unhappy. 
				then we can blame the unhappiness on "things", i.e., " we don't 
				have this or we don't that, or, if only we had this or that, etc" 
				If we look around many people are unfortunately so driven. This 
				makes them worried, rigid, security oriented, fearful, and 
				dysfunctionally even more greedy and grasping onto more symbols 
				of success, status, privilege, money, appearances, and further 
				neurotic false identification. Is that life or death? Having 
				become spiritually self alienated, we get hung up thinking that 
				we need certain things in life, but these "things" (which are 
				really compensations for being with it in the now) most often 
				act as anchors or chains, weighing us down, preventing us from 
				drifting with the tides of our intuition, and inner guidance.Such 
				activities rooted in parigraha make things worse -- they create 
				more suffering. These life situations that we become involved in 
				(and that aparigraha can free us from) create big-time tension, 
				stress, depression, anxiety, etc. When we can let go of some of 
				this stuff, like freeing a calendar up, or saying no to certain 
				obligations so we have more time for ourselves, shifts happen. 
				We can then more clearly see the space in front of us, for we 
				have looked at our past incarnations and have found it stifling. 
				To bring success, aparigraha must be approached fearlessly in 
				All Our Relations. Thus the practices and realization of 
				santosha, tapas, isvara pranidhana, brahmacharya, etc., are very 
				closely aligned with the realization and practice of aparigraha. 
				Aparigraha finishes Patanjali's discourse on the practice of the 
				five yams, which are all mutually synergistic, being rooted in 
				ahimsa and the clear realization in which the establishment of 
				vairagya is founded.
				Now Patanjali describes the five niyams in detail in sutras 
				40-45 II 40. saucha svanga-jugupsa parair asamsargah II 41. 
				sattvasuddhi-saumanasyaikagryendriya-jayatma-darsana-yogyatvani 
				ca Through the practice of physical purity, attachments to 
				toxins and corruptive forces disappear naturally. Also through 
				internal and external purity (saucha) both of the body, psychic 
				environment, and of removing the occlusions of consciousness, 
				there is achieved balance, cheerfulness, one- pointedness, 
				harmony of the senses, and yogic vision. HERE one is no longer 
				attracted by corruptive influences because one has established 
				(and is happily rooted within) a intelligent self empowering and 
				self regulating innate energetic freedom. Commentary: Purity (saucha) 
				is one of the niyams. It can be interpreted many ways. Some 
				yogis take it to mean keeping the inside of the body clean (annamaya 
				kosha) and healthy, the nadis open (pranamaya kosha) and energy 
				unobstructed, while the body is affected by being less burdened, 
				open, and light. Another inner application of saucha is keeping 
				the mental thoughts (manamaya kosha) free from kleshas, 
				samskaras, and vrttis. Yet another application of saucha may be 
				applied to our belief systems whether or not they may be tainted, 
				and thus be a source of taint, impurity, and affliction to our 
				consciousness (until purified). In this sense transformation and 
				rebirth is an action of purification. Yet another manifestation 
				of saucha is in our motivations and actions. But since actions 
				follow thought and consciousness (or lack thereof) it seems that 
				the purification of consciousness is more causal to this process.
				
				So on a physical level, not poisoning the body or burdening it 
				with afflictions that it can not digest, assimilate, or 
				eliminate easily will unburden not only the digestive system, 
				but the elimination and immune systems thus creating more 
				available energy for the process of evolutionary circuitry and 
				higher consciousness to unfold. In one sense poor food habits 
				(and inability to digest, assimilate, and eliminate food) is an 
				energy drain and sedation of the kundalini, taking energy away 
				from the "other" super-psychic activities or spiritual projects 
				unless we were already very open in this direction and were not 
				negatively affected by dietary choices. The key however is the 
				development of our innate wisdom, instinct, or intuition to know 
				which of the food options are best for our own unique 
				constellation of body/mind at the moment achieving synergistic 
				balance, well being, and synchronicity. This is where the rest 
				of the yoga practice acts synergistically with diet -- and in 
				turn, diet with the overall integrity which is the yogic process. 
				Here also is where the hatha yoga kriyas or sat karmas (external 
				cleansing activities) can also help as well as reduce irritation, 
				thus creating more peacefulness (santosha) and being adjunctive 
				to the allied processes of aparigraha, tapas, pranayama, 
				pratyhara. concentration, meditation, and isvara pranidhana. On 
				an energy level we are purifying the energy body -- free some 
				psychic signatures due to past samskaras and karma. On a mental 
				level, meditation is the best practice of saucha i.e., 
				purification of the mind and the removal of the obscurations of 
				consciousness. As we study the yam/niyams we will see the 
				mutually synergistic inter-relationships between ahimsa, satya, 
				asteya, brahmacharya, aparigraha, saucha, santosha, tapas, 
				swadhyaya, and isvara pranidhana disclosing the underlying all 
				inclusive integrative wholistic principle. II 42. santosad 
				anuttamah sukha-labhah By establishing a connection with the 
				energetics of fulfillment while being at peace with one self in 
				the present moment (santosha), then communion with a boundless 
				joy (sukha) manifests and deepens. Commentary: Santosha simply 
				means contentment and abiding in great peace. It is a natural 
				expression of the deepest samadhi (a profound state of 
				integration and completeness). This completeness and great 
				satisfaction is unconditional (not depending upon a separate 
				object of gratification or attainment. It is beyond the 
				disturbances of raga (attraction) and dvesa (repulsion) and thus 
				it transcends craving (dukha). As a practice it points to this 
				samadhi. Santosha becomes a new non-conflicting and stress free 
				way of wellness and thriving which becomes natural, When it is 
				disrupted, absent, or made discontinuous, we become aware of it, 
				and then we naturally apply the balancing and centering remedy 
				of santosha. We cultivate the completeness in All Our Relations. 
				Santosha is contentment, fulfillment, completion, and peace. As 
				such denotes abundance (not scarcity), happiness (not discontent), 
				and in a deeper sense especially deep gratitude, for if we are 
				deeply grateful how can we be can be unfulfilled? By gratitude, 
				one does not need to be grateful to anyone person or event, but 
				rather it is the deep heart felt sense of unconditional 
				gratitude in All Our Relations which when catalyzed, heals.
				
				There is so much to be grateful to if we truly "re-member" -- 
				the Great Binding (maha-vratam) -- the Great Integrity and 
				Completion -- the Great Natural Perfection -- that direct 
				connection with all mothers and fathers, the earth, stars and 
				sun -- the rain and winds, the trees and birds, the DNA and the 
				eternal Source -- all our elders and All Our Relations. As such 
				gratitude is a bridge from separation to Integration -- to All 
				Our Relations. It is the completion of ahimsa, aparigraha and 
				asteya. It is the end to disconsolateness. If dukha (which is 
				incompleteness or suffering) is really a state of craving or 
				unsatisfactoriness, then santosha would appear to be the natural 
				result or symptom of having removed the suffering of the kleshas 
				whose root is ignorance (avidya). Hence santosha becomes 
				spontaneous and natural when we feel deeply connected with our 
				natural uncontrived true and unconditioned beginningless true 
				nature. Likewise, by practicing santosha we are affirming and 
				moving toward that profound and sacred direction. Santosha is 
				practiced as peace and happiness -- as love. We commune with 
				peace and abundance and give it forth -- manifest it. When greed, 
				lust, conflict, war, trickery, competition, himsa (violence), 
				pain, thievery, deceit, corruption, falsity, and ignorance are 
				defeated -- when invincible Durga is victorious - then Santosha 
				reigns supreme! In the meanwhile we must attempt to assess our 
				allegiance with grief, war, conflict, anger, hatred, jealousy, 
				hurt, and fear -- be willing to surrender them unto the altar of 
				peace and lasting happiness. The Great Perfection awaits us. In 
				objectless meditation free from subject/object duality the 
				restlessness of the mind, the mental agitations, internal 
				conflicts, desires, aversion, contempt, defensiveness (in short 
				the kleshic propensities) eventually are stilled (nirodha) 
				bringing about the great open space and peaceful freedom of the 
				boundless and complete universal mind whose full nature emanates 
				peace. Great peace of mind, effects peace in All Our Relations. 
				II 43. kayendriya-siddhir asuddhi-ksayat tapasah Through the 
				purifying burning fire of tapas all the sense organs of the body 
				are perfected (kayendriya-siddhir) by the destruction (ksayat) 
				of all impurities (asuddhi). Commentary: The functioning of the 
				sense organs, the bodily functions, as well as the evolutionary 
				circuitries (sixth sense) are perefcted by repeated applications 
				of tapas (the generation of spiritual fire or passion) which 
				will also burn up and destroy all residue impurities creating a 
				radiant light body. Tapas is thus the heat that purifies and 
				fires the vehicle coarse vehicle of the body and refines it, so 
				that it is capable of being a loving/living evolutionary 
				container, manifestation, temple, and emanation for pure Spirit 
				and consciousness.
				
				Now the question might arise, what is this tapas and how is it 
				applied? Where Brahmacharya is the most widely mistranslated 
				yama, tapas is the most widely mistranslated niyama -- 
				mistranslated habitually by the same alineanted, academic, 
				authoritarian, anti-nature, and anti-body (read alien) 
				institutionalized traditionalists and control freaks, and for 
				the same reasons; i.e., they fear the natural and spontaneous). 
				Although the roots of the Sanskrit word, tapas, has nothing to 
				do with austerity, self abnegation, penance, or sacrifice, that 
				mistranslation has stuck because of this institutionalized bias 
				cast in precedence has become dominant in the vast morass of 
				unthinking parroting that one finds rampant in traditional 
				translations. As an unfortunate result there exists some cults 
				who pride themselves on how much harm they can inflict upon the 
				body, how much pain they can withstand, how much suffering they 
				can endure mistakenly hoping to "overcome" samsara this way -- 
				mistaking this to be control over maya and freedom from 
				suffering which will lead them to samadhi. But simply inflicting 
				wounds upon the body, does not win wisdom, liberation, nor the 
				fruits of yoga. Authentic spiritual realization can not shine 
				through being lost in dvesa (aversion). Indeed there exists an 
				element of renunciation in the activity of tapas, but it is not 
				simply a renunciation as an goal in itself, but rather as an 
				acknowledgement, recognition, and affirmation of our spiritual 
				evolutionary process -- an effort to turn up the heat in a 
				stagnant practice -- engaging more deeply into the sacred dance 
				and prayer. The Sanskrit word, tapas (whose root maens heat, 
				connotes fire, passion, zeal, or fiery enthusiasm). Tapas is 
				both the result of abhyasa, sadhana or vairagya (applying yogic 
				practices such as pratyhara, pranayama, asana, dharana, and so 
				forth applied in a consistent manner (abhyasa) without 
				attachment (vairagya) and its motive causal flame at once. I say 
				this because tapas is eminently practical. It's both effective 
				expereintially and makes sense logically. In the practice of 
				tapas, one is not engaging in dissipating activities that suck 
				one's energy, but rather the energy is conserved (a 
				revolutionary concept in a gas guzzling society). If we have no 
				left over energy, then we can not direct it very well of course. 
				So tapas is more concerned in what we do not do, e.g., not 
				wasting our attention (cit) and energy (prana)l i.e., the 
				cit-prana, than in what we do (like in positive sadhana or 
				abhyasa).
				
				Tapas is the specific practice which simply illumines the fact 
				that when we stop engaging in neurotic activities, then one will 
				have more energy left over to engage in spiritual practice (sadhana). 
				It makes perfect sense if you contemplate that, although 
				ordinary materialistic people's minds and energy as well as 
				bodily actions wander quite a lot being nabitually fixated on 
				external form (duality). That is why Shankaracharya said that 
				even beyond fasting or silence (mouna), the highest tapas is 
				meditation (dhyana) -- the stilling of the mind.
				Patanjali very clearly said earlier in Pada II.2 above that 
				tapas attenuates the kleshas and provides the fuel for samadhi 
				ny making the vehicle (the temple of embodiment) light and 
				radiant -- free from dross. Without a working conscious 
				knowledge of such mechanism, success in yoga (samadhi) is not 
				possible. The trick of course is know how to ramp up the heat/fire 
				in one's practice. Eventually one finds oneself seated in a 
				circle of a billion fires (infinite source). This leads back to 
				the original yogic quest. i.e., finding what works for the 
				individual sadhak. If we follow the prana (shakti), thus 
				avoiding the tendency for the logical mind to delimit the 
				possibilities. That is why yoga practice is so valuable. The 
				point that this is supposed to change and evolve as we evolve 
				alongside in partnerships with the evolutionary energy as 
				teacher. Other wise we do not learn any lessons. Freeing our 
				mind-body-energy systems from dissipating distractions leading 
				toward fragmentation and dissolution, thus reclaiming and 
				reorganizing them through pranayama, pratyhara, dharana, and 
				dhyana practices is the correct application of tapas. The 
				authentic practice of tapas is generated by ceasing any activity 
				that is neurotic, habitual, material, ingrained, superficial, or 
				ties up our energy, freeing up that previously committed energy 
				that is normally committed/bound to a previously specific 
				endeavor, habit, or energy pattern. That particular energy that 
				is thus liberated can then be recycled and applied into 
				evolutionary activity (feeding the fires of divine passion and 
				providing tremendous strength). Thus tapas has two parts, only 
				the first part contains the energy of renunciation (giving up a 
				distraction, old habit, neurotic tendency, or corruptive 
				activity) while the second part is an affirmation which fires 
				up, speeds up, and accelerates the integrative spiritual 
				function. At first this previously trapped energy when first 
				liberated may just "sit there" and we can just be and breathe 
				with it, then as it builds up, it can be directed and used as 
				fuel on the sacred fire (and is thus associated with agni or the 
				fire ceremony). As such, the kundalini yogis say that tapas 
				feeds lady kundalini. Like the other yam/niyams they can be of 
				the body, speech, and mind -- coarse and refined (subtle) -- 
				outer and inner (antar). The physical practice of tapas is often 
				associated with fasting from neurotic eating or fasting from 
				superfluous talk (mouna) as both activities can consume an 
				unnecessary and wasteful amount of time and energy as well as 
				contain many habitual patterns and propensities (Samskaras and 
				vasanas). However it is meditation that is considered to be the 
				highest form of tapas. Tapas is also strongly associated with 
				the other limbs, especially pratyhara. Tapas can also be 
				associated with various tantric practices as well as approaches 
				to life in everyday life -- in All Our Relations.
				
				On a physical level (annamaya kosha), tapas is associated with 
				the hatha yoga bandhas. On an energetic level (pranamaya kosha) 
				tapas is associated with pratyhara, and on the mental levels (manamaya 
				kosha) it is associated with meditation. For more on tapas see 
				the discussion above in Pada II - Sutra I and in "Tapas as a 
				Spiritual Practice". Notice that tapas, swadhyaya (the next 
				niyam), and isvara pranidhana (the second following niyam) were 
				discussed in the beginning of Sadhana Pada as the three 
				synergistic activities that constitute Kriya Yoga. II 44. 
				swadhyaya ista-devata-samprayogah Through self study (swadhyaya) 
				knowledge of our true self is disclosed completing the yoga that 
				reveals our true sacred nature (innate divinity or ishta devata 
				which resides inside all beings). Commentary: Here all 
				activities have the potential of connecting us up with Source, 
				such as our asana practice as well as daily life experiences if 
				we learn how to observe ourselves in witness consciousness. 
				Swadhyaya can be a profound yogic process carried out all the 
				time. It too has an inner aspect such as the realization of the 
				purity and unity of "self'" in meditation (undifferentiated 
				aspect of consciousness) as well as the co-evolutionary aspect 
				of all created objects (the divine creatix or differentiated 
				aspect of beingness) which is completed in functional meditation 
				practice. Swadhyaya means self study. In the larger sense it 
				means study of the Self or Brahman. As such it is wedded to 
				brahmacharya, just as brahmacharya is wedded to aparigraha, 
				tapas, and ahimsa. Swadhyaya does not mean the study of books, 
				scriptures, or holy texts, although that has become the most 
				common interpretation. Although external books and teachers may 
				be of some value, this value exists only to the extent that one 
				finds the indwelling spirit -- revealing one's own true nature 
				within. If these external teachings/teachers lead to an inner 
				alignment with the collective universal core/heart -- the 
				hridayam -- resonating simultaneously in our hearts, only then 
				can the external teaching be considered non-dual, 
				non-distracting, and not corruptive. In modern ashrams daily 
				time is set aside to the study of inspired or revealed teachings 
				-- discourses of sages and realized yogis. Because in these 
				modern times, where the average student has already suffered 
				from over objectification it is valuable to keep all such 
				practices in synergistic balance.
				The common man is not interested in how his mind works, how it 
				colors his life, who he is, and how to seek the truth. Rather 
				the common man doesn't know who he is and doesn't care. He seeks 
				out compensatory self gratification and meaning in externals -- 
				in objects which he attempts to possess and identify with on one 
				hand, or escape, avoid, and flee from on the other. The inner 
				world of the mind and body is often left as an unsolved riddle. 
				Some men become interested in the hands and feet in order to 
				work better -- to obtain these objects. Some people become 
				interested in their genitals so as to feel more pleasure. Such 
				are approaches to the body/mind in order to touch the external 
				world. better. Care of the eyes, ears, and health in general is 
				thus relegated to such external functionality, but knowledge of 
				Self rarely becomes the issue outside of this superficial 
				extrinsic fascination (as a neurotic compensation for spiritual 
				self alienation) with the objective world. Thus the ordinary 
				man's interest in the inner workings of the instrument of 
				perception, cognition, consciousness and self rarely goes deeper. 
				In yoga for example taking up asana practice is seen as the 
				first step in getting in touch with the vital life force (prana) 
				and the subtle inner body/mind mechanisms which are more causal 
				toward affecting stress or wellness, tension or release, disease 
				or health., etc. Going deeper the mind/body relationship is 
				uncovered, the nature of the life energy is revealed, the 
				meaning and true nature of the mind, creation, and existence is 
				disclosed. This all requires attention, direction, concentration 
				of effort, dedication, devotion -- in short the self discipline 
				called swadhyaya. This will allow divine intention (bhava) and 
				grace to actualize. This is what authentic yoga is about -- how 
				to ramp the practice up so that these deeper relationship with 
				All Our Relations is revealed and as such the neurotic self 
				gratifications, over indulgences, consumerism, and symbolic 
				fascinations of man cease. Here meditation becomes the daily 
				opportunity for man to look inside and to see how his mind works, 
				rather than to chronically and neurotically avoid, escape, and 
				run away from it in his many masks of arrogance, aloofness, 
				delusions, lies, and other insecurities and false self limiting 
				identifications which is summed up by the word, ego.
				
				The fear of looking inside to see how we work and who we truly 
				are is created by the denial of the ego -- the desire of the ego 
				to maintain its own delusion and rule -- its own life so to 
				speak. After one has become conditioned and accustomed to the 
				many masks of the ego, the ego reasoning goes if the ego dies, 
				then "I" die. Thus any truth that discloses this delusion (which 
				lies at the heart of neuroses) is seen as a threat to ego 
				identification and dominance -- as a threat to "self". This 
				threat is usually perceived unconsciously and dealt with by the 
				ego mechanisms of pride, arrogance, aloofness, hatred, scorn, 
				condemnation of the messenger, demonization, marginalization, 
				and even violence desiring the destruction of the threat. It 
				doesn't take a genius to see the socioeconomic and other 
				behavior consequences once man gets in touch with who they are 
				-- reestablishes a healthy relationship with All Our Relations. 
				Here truth (satya) is the threat to falsehood and delusion (avidya), 
				so the solution is easy -- man must wake up to his true 
				authentic self (swarupa). This is done through swadhyaya of 
				which meditation is the best purveyor. One essential step is to 
				throw away the mask. But the catch is that man must first has to 
				establish some meaningful security with true self -- with All 
				Our Relations in order to make this leap. This is what yoga 
				practice can provide when presented in this light. So functional 
				yoga practice in this regard gets man to trust the innate 
				intelligence inside -- in his body and as a an intimate part of 
				the earth, the universe and creation. One here relearns to trust 
				their instinct and intuition -- the inner wisdom and innate 
				teacher starts to shine forth eventually revealing itself in All 
				Our Relations. Meditation lets one step into the workings of 
				one's own mind and then eventually to set ourselves free from 
				ego's neurotic mechanisms of externalization and false 
				identification. Thus meditation reverses the extrinsic spin 
				toward self gratification in extrinsic things and objects. One 
				eventually sees that as an escape -- a neurotic substitute for 
				being presence with sacred presence -- for being HERE. In this 
				increasing clarity of mind and lucidity the meditator eventually 
				learns to trust his own ability to know by himself without 
				external authorities or validation. This attunement with 
				creation/creator creates great self confidence and sparks the 
				creative impulse. Only here can true freedom (kaivalya) be 
				spoken about. The inner, more causal and refined meaning of 
				swadhyaya is realized through meditation where the true nature 
				of the universal timeless Self is realized -- it not being found 
				in any book, words, concepts, belief, nor human language. See 
				commentary for tapas in Pada II. Sutra I. II 45. samadhi-siddhir 
				isvara-pranidhanat Samadhi is perfected (siddhir) through 
				letting go the limited matrix of a separate self while 
				surrendering to isvara (the all inclusive aspectless and 
				unconditioned great universal integrity or the underlying motive 
				power behind the principle of Infinite Mind).
				
				Commentary: This is an affirmation that we must let go of the 
				limited matrixes of prejudice, preconceived, predilections, and 
				attachments to present beliefs in order to move into the 
				fertile/organic territory of Reality (which knows no such 
				artificial bounds or impositions). Here we surrender to the 
				highest self which is found as our highest innate potential -- 
				Buddha nature. Isvara pranidhana means the surrender to the 
				highest Self - our highest potential which simultaneously exists 
				in the inherent unity of the three worlds (beginningless source, 
				never ending future, and the eternal present). In pada I we see 
				that Patanjali identifies Purusa, Isvara, and swarupa. As a 
				practice isvara pranidhana is closely related to Brahmacharya (see 
				above), but specifically invokes the energy of self surrender to 
				Self (purusa). In the Western context, it affirms the stance of: 
				"Thy will be done, HERE as in heaven".It must be noted that the 
				word, isvara is a generic term for "that which is beyond form, 
				attribute, or symbolic representation, i.e., the highest Self 
				where words such as Brahman can not penetrate. Isvara pranidhana 
				when practiced invokes and affirms sacred presence. Thus all the 
				yam/niyams will eventually be seen as being interconnected (especially 
				by the principles of ahimsa and vairagya). As self realization 
				gradually dawns (their practice being self disclosing) the 
				practice will become very natural and spontaneous as the inner 
				love and wisdom is awakened and manifests from the inside out. 
				Through the practices of the yam/niyams a mutual synergy will 
				gradually be established leading the practitioner naturally to 
				the underlying principle and motive power of yoga which lies 
				behind these practices and supports the Heart. Moving toward 
				isvara is also the bhava of divine intention -- it is the "good 
				mind" seeking out the highest good in All Our Relations. As such 
				it involves the generation of the mind of lasting happiness and 
				enlightenment for all beings, the bodhi-citta. The incorporation 
				of these yam/niyams into our daily lives will serve as 
				guideposts to show us where we go astray and where we can better 
				connect up more completely and continuously with Source. These 
				guidelines of ahimsa, truthfulness, integrity, 
				non-possessiveness, continuity, purity, peacefulness, divine 
				passion, self study, and surrender can also be expediently 
				applied to our daily asana practice to accelerate its highest 
				accomplishment as well.
				
				Vairagya (non-attachment or letting go) which was introduced in 
				Pada I and the practice of isvara pranidhana form two sides of 
				one coin. They are mutually synergistic and incorporate the 
				fruition of sankalpa shakti which facilitates success in the 
				path of yoga. The physical or speech practices of isvara 
				pranidhana such as ceremonial or devotional practices devoid of 
				realization (as found in ritual, chanting. prayers, ceremony) 
				remain superficial and can not succeed without realizing the 
				HeartMind practice -- surrender to Universal Eternal Self in All 
				Our Relations.
				All the niyams have the inherent power of accomplishing yoga, 
				while isvara pranidhana is perhaps the most powerful. In a 
				second it can destroy willfulness, asmita, all the other kleshas 
				-- all ignorance as well. It has the power of divine grace and 
				guidance. It contains the most ancient teaching: "Thy Will be 
				done on earth as it is in heaven". It must be made clear that 
				one cannot nor should not surrender to some one or thing that 
				they cannot trust. Without fundamental trust in something, then 
				isvara pranidhana cannot work. here we are not addressing 
				obedience as trust, but rather at the minimum something reliable 
				wherein we can rest, abide, and go toward. That can be simply be 
				our affirmation and invocation of our innate higher potential -- 
				that which is around the corner. Even if we have difficult 
				issues of trust, we can surrender at least to this. Constant 
				strife, chronic self defense, hyper vigilance, and stress 
				creates while fighting for separate "self" is tiring sapping our 
				strength. It requires putting out too much energy, while 
				surrender to isvara bathes us in regeneration renewing the Self. 
				In THAT the war is over. The common man does not know how to 
				rest in trust or surrender. so they often need a segue like 
				surrender to a good teacher, priest, church, religion, ceremony, 
				ritual, and so forth. That can be a trap however, but isvara 
				pranidhana as All Our Relations is implicate, innate, 
				omnipresent, eternal, and universally available. Also see the 
				discussion of isvara in Pada II Sutra 1 (above) and Pada I. 
				Sutras 23-27, and the closely related practice of brahmacharya (Pada 
				II. Sutra 38) Here ends the discussion of yama and niyama, while 
				the discussion of asana and pranayama begins. II 46. 
				sthira-sukham asanam Asana should be self supporting, balanced, 
				(sthira) and joyful (sukham). Asana should be balanced and hold 
				itself up by itself. Our stance and position in life (asana) 
				should support us raising us up joyfully. Commentary: This sutra 
				can also be interpreted that as we sit in meditation we rest 
				upon our stable seat (asana) in steady joyousness. This can be 
				our always obtainable joyful base on or off the meditation 
				cushion or asana mat. This sutra says that while sitting in 
				asana for meditation one should remain strong and straight (sthira) 
				and joyful (sukham). This should be clear that effort, stress, 
				strain, or being pained or uncomfortable is not asana defined by 
				Patanjali. The next sutra Patanjali defines asana further as 
				being effortless (prayatna-saithilya).
				That is the short and to the point translation, but today with 
				so much attention placed upon hatha yoga asana practice more 
				commentary may be helpful. Firstly let us simply call asana our 
				always accessible base position which has the quality of steady 
				joy. Secondly we remain so centered in this base while 
				meditating. Thirdly this joyful base should be balanced and hold 
				itself up by itself as in being inherently self supporting in 
				All Our Relations where we will include of course hatha yoga 
				asana practice as well. This joyful stable and strong base (sthira) 
				depends on two opposing forces being balanced out perfectly so 
				that all torque, vectors, or force is balanced out or stilled -- 
				all resistance is eliminated. Here All Our Relations should be 
				self supporting, raising us up joyfully as we move into that 
				joyful self supporting alignment which is authentic asana. Thus 
				asana should support joy, while joy supports the asana. Asana 
				provide then a firm ground for joyful experiences as well. In 
				other words, according to Patanjali, you can't take the joy out 
				of asana and still call it asana, by his definition. Despite the 
				controversy about hatha yoga being hard work (as interpreted by 
				pleasure fearing nihilists), Patanjali did not say that the 
				asana should be merely comfortable, but rather that it should 
				connect us up with joy. The Sanskrit word, sukha really means 
				joy or happiness. But austere religious people who are 
				disinclined to mix religion and enjoyment continue to translate 
				the word sukham, as merely being comfortable. In other words, 
				according to Patanjali, you can't take the joy out of asana and 
				still call it asana, by his definition. Really I think Patanjali 
				was on to something. Here and in the next two sutras on asana, 
				the idea of no effort, but rather of receiving support through 
				balance, synchronicity, and release is presented. Strength and 
				ease are both present. The qualities of engagement are 
				complemented with letting go, but Patanjali says that this let 
				go is not a droop or sag, but should have the quality of 
				strength and stability (sthira). Thus our seat (asana) in the 
				muladhara provides the stable foundation for spiritual uplifting 
				-- we must take care of the root in order to feed the crown, an 
				important non-dual both/and teaching rather than an either/or 
				fear oriented affirmation.
				
				This is accomplished by keeping the nadis open and balanced and 
				the prana flowing. Balance is achieved in yoga when the crown 
				chakra (sahasrara) and earth chakra (muladhara) are 
				synergistically synchronized and aligned. This occurs in the 
				central non-dual channel or nadi called sushumna. In successful 
				asana practice, this balance and natural tonality are firmly 
				established and as such it provides a stable foundation or base 
				for success in meditation. The foundation or root chakra is the 
				one we sit on, the muladhara chakra. This is where the prana is 
				balanced and brought into a mutual synchronicity awakening the 
				dormant evolutionary energy (kundalini) and circuitry (chakras). 
				Asana meaning seat, foundation, or base; it becomes the way sit 
				and touch the earth in meditation and it is this connection 
				between body and consciousness, earth and sky, nature and spirit, 
				ida and pingala, root and crown which must be made continuous. 
				Here Patanjali means by the word, asana, on a coarse level the 
				way the body sits for meditation, as well on a more subtle level 
				as our stance or perspective in life, our attitude (free from 
				slant, bias, prejudice, or vrtti). When this bias or vrtti are 
				remediated and balanced out, then the asana so re-aligned and 
				activated becomes the universal ground of pure beingness -- 
				ultimate being. It is this ultimate asana of universal being 
				which brings in universal and ultimate consciousness free from 
				any bias, limitation, or vrtti. In meditation thus we place the 
				body in a strong, stable, and energetic connection with the 
				earth which forms the grounding pole for spirit to animate, 
				enliven, empower, inspire, and strengthen us. This earth 
				connection at the muladhara chakra which when activated and 
				harmonized unifies the female/male energies, forming as such a 
				ground rod for the sky energy to be conducted but at the same 
				time a link from the earth in which to touch the sky. In reality 
				this flow is not linear - one way up or down -- but non-dual 
				both up and down and neither up and down. It is not within the 
				realm of three dimensional definitions. Here the ida/pingala and 
				thus the kundalini flows through the central column of sushumna 
				linking earth with sky, mula with sahasrara, nature with spirit, 
				dissolving all tension and polar opposites. It is valuable to 
				know that a bandha is not a physical contraction, but rather it 
				is an energy redirection that allows for flow preventing energy 
				from being dissipated outward or energy from being inhibited 
				entirely. As such mulabandha is a specific bandha which forms 
				the energy valve in the earth chakra so that front and back, 
				left and right, top and bottom are unified so that the energy is 
				supported and flows in this life supporting vital center. In 
				mulabandha the energy between pubic bone and the tail bone are 
				linked (bound together) to form a connection and uplifting 
				energetic which supports the pelvis providing a stable and 
				joyous base for the spine and the rest of the body. Energy hence 
				is prevented from being dissipated, but rather is utilized to 
				support the body, neurology, breath, brain, and deeper 
				holographic trans-dimensional energetic alignment available at 
				the more subtle levels, deeper pulsations of existence, and 
				higher vibratory frequencies of consciousness. This supports the 
				asana and allows us to sit upright in meditation joyously for 
				long periods of time without dissipation or discomfort. Here our 
				connection with the earth must be made continuous in meditation 
				throughout the sit so that heaven and earth remain balanced and 
				connected through direct uninterrupted communion.
				
				It is a misinterpretation of Patanjali to suppose that this 
				word, asana, applies to the hatha yoga definition of asana, such 
				as found in the multitude postures used hatha yoga asana 
				practices. Patanjali did not teach or practice hatha yoga, but 
				rather raj yoga (meditation). This is not to say that raj yoga 
				and hatha yoga are incompatible (they are not incompatible at 
				all) but more important it should be made clear that what 
				Patanjali says about asana is meant to apply to meditation 
				practice. Thus this sutra pertained to the way one prepares for 
				meditation, not hatha yoga type asana practice. For more on the 
				differences between hatha yoga and Patanjali's raj yoga see Sri 
				Pungaliya's scrupulous essay. Sthira does not mean controlled or 
				rigid, but connotes strong, steadiness, continuity, easeful, 
				still (as in non-agitated) but not dead, supported and strong 
				with spirit, self sustaining and self supporting, empowered, and 
				as such connotes strength, activation, animation, energization, 
				alertness, instilled presence, endowment, uplift, endurance, and 
				inspired -- instilled with prana (with the continuous flow of 
				the chit-prana or chit-shakti) as in an alert and alive 
				embodiment. It is the opposite of a sagged out, numbed out, 
				droopy, slack, drained, blocked, imbalanced, dead, or fragmented 
				and distracted inattentive state. Just like sukha is often 
				mistranslated as comfortable, sthira too is often mistranslated 
				as a rigid or inert stillness, but when that is applied to the 
				body too often one interprets that as a kind of tightness, 
				contraction, tenseness, and frozenness, having become afraid of 
				letting the body move. Sthira does not mean tight or rigid, but 
				rather it implies an easy continuous flow, a peaceful 
				non-agitated stillness and restful position, resilience, 
				endurance, and a steady continuity connoting the successful 
				resolution of any unbalancing or disturbing forces eventually 
				producing a natural adamantine steadiness in meditation 
				effecting the eventual stillness of the vrtti. In graduated 
				stages of sitting in asana a great natural peace, ease, and 
				stillness of both body and mind gradually arises unless tension 
				or rigidity prevents it. After consistent practice (abhyasa) 
				grace arises, and then this joyous state becomes continuously 
				and steadily accessible, within reach, always at hand -- it 
				endures and becomes continuous.
				If we investigate the very nature of the living body in any 
				position, we will see that we can not control or hold it still. 
				Even a dead body is moving and decomposing. Not only do we want 
				the body to move with pulmonary respiration such as the chest 
				and diaphragm, but we also want the heart to continue to pump, 
				the lymph flow, the peristalsis to continue, the cell mitosis, 
				the millions of glandular and cellular functions all to flow and 
				support the body while we are in asana. At the same time the 
				earth is moving, mountains are moving, the planet rotates and 
				spins around its axis and circles the sun. The entire solar 
				system is moving in the Milky way, and all the galaxies ate 
				moving around the core/heart center. So we do not want to expend 
				unnecessary energy in a futile attempt to resist this natural 
				movement, rather what we do want to do is to move the spine in 
				synergistic alignment with the core/heart of the universe -- 
				with the central pillar of stillness which by itself does not 
				move, but from which all is in flux. When we practice we will 
				notice that sometimes it takes some movement in order to move 
				into this balance and synchronicity. Nay, it always requires a 
				movement when we move from duality into unity -- there occurs a 
				shift. To hold the body and energy static would to be to hold 
				back this shift. Therefore, one who meditates should not get 
				tight, rigid, or contracted; rather Patanjali says it should be 
				joyful. Why is that so, because the nadis remain open, the 
				chit-prana is balanced and harmonized -- the wavering of the 
				mind (cit-vrtti) are stilled and quieted (nirodha). Thus in the 
				correct application of this sutra, sthira and sukha are allowed 
				to manifest in asana also brings on great peace effortless and 
				joy without droop. It is important enough to repeat that sthira 
				is not rigidity, tightness, hardness, or holding still. The body 
				can never be held still -- it is impossible and to try is to 
				cause tension and conflict which we must learn to release. The 
				blood, lymph, and prana must flow, the heart must beat, the 
				craniosacral fluid, peristalsis, cell mitosis -- all must be 
				allowed to continue. However it is possible in yoga is to reach 
				that center where we witness the flow of the Great River -- all 
				that is on fire, all that is temporary, all the dynamic relative 
				world of creation as moving -- being in flux. That innate 
				stillness of infinite mind that self exists deep within at our 
				core center -- the axis mundi -- the tree at the center of the 
				world -- the hridayam. Thus when consciousness and beingness are 
				merged in sthira sukham asanam, stillness is achieved yet the 
				body although aligned with spirit/creator, being part of the 
				created world is allowed to move with the variegated ebb and 
				flows of life and creation. Sukham means more than happiness, 
				but joyfulness. It is much more than simply being comfortable. 
				Thus we must find a happy spot, be joyful, find that alignment 
				with Satchitananda and sit there. That is asana. So of course we 
				avoid tenseness and rigidity, moving out of those tight places 
				to that more expansive state of consciousness when we sit in 
				meditation practice (asana being the third limb of astanga 
				yoga). This type of seat feels like "home". It is a continuous 
				and happy alignment between the apparent poles of consciousness 
				(spirit) and beingness (nature) -- the crown and earth chakras 
				-- in the body through which these two polar energies are united 
				and flow. It is the opposite of being "uptight", tense, rigid, 
				contracted, and blocked.
				Thus it is futile to try to arrange the body into a fixed, 
				motionless, lifeless, and rigid position (rigor mortis), but 
				rather allow it to move, align, synchronize and attune its 
				body/mind and energy channels between the highest heaven and the 
				center of the earth. Then when the fundamental principle and 
				source of consciousness (spirit) is
				harmonized and merges with creation through your own embodiment, 
				then the body becomes steadfast in that union spontaneously -- 
				then the body can go into suspended animation. However to try to 
				freeze the body prematurely in order to bring about the 
				spiritual state is taking the cart before the horse…. The 
				ordinary body must first be allowed to become alchemically 
				transmuted through the spiritual-physical practice of authentic 
				meditation.This stage is greatly catalyzed by the practice of 
				the yams/niyams (especially authentic tapas) and also by the 
				gradual integration of the pranayama, pratyhara, (dharana) 
				concentration, and meditation (dhyana). Further one may just as 
				well take the word, asana, as seat, and then extend that 
				definition as to what is the seat of spirit -- the sacred temple 
				-- the abode of love? "The body is my temple and asanas are my 
				prayers." BKS Iyengar Regardless what technique, if any, that we 
				may implement in sitting in meditation it is useful to find 
				sthira and sukha (supporting joy). This, like all the other 
				limbs, can be extended in other practices in asana for example 
				as well as In All Our Relations. II 47. 
				prayatna-saithilyananta-samapattibhyam This profound state of 
				balance and synchronicity (samapattibhyam) is accomplished 
				through progressive and continuous relaxation (prayatna-saithilya) 
				by aligning within the great self existing, self supporting, and 
				self animating (ananta) endless Flow and Intelligence which 
				always awaits the true seeker as the Great Continuum (Infinite 
				Mind). Commentary: Saithilya means being loose, not tight, 
				relaxed, while prayatna means effort, striving, or a state of 
				tension. Here Patanjali is clearly stating that in asana one 
				must make an effort to relax effort -- to relax the tensions in 
				order to move into a balanced and synergistic self sustaining 
				state. This is not thus a dead relaxation into a collapse but 
				rather an energization. Rather that the relaxation (saithilya) 
				of effort and striving (prayatna) removes the expenditure of 
				energy, self effort, and any other energy suck as we move into a 
				greater shower and blessings of a physical and mental attitude 
				which is in balance and harmonious alignment with the universal 
				core/heart.
				
				True asana (versus an ordinary position), thus moves us into an 
				infinite (ananta) unity (samapattibhyam). In meditation we have 
				to avoid this stasis of tension/tightness where energy is 
				vectored in one direction or the other requiring resistance in 
				either the body or the mind to sit upright or else our energy 
				will be dissipated in the reactive contraction of the body, 
				muscle spasms, and other tensions. The body or energy channels 
				may tighten up or contract, thus necessitating that we release 
				that tension and energy blockage or else become drained by it. 
				In a parallel way the mind also may tend to contract itself, and 
				mental tensions spill over, thus one must make an effort to 
				release the contracted spin of the energy through awareness of 
				alignment -- the principles of the interconnected mandala of 
				body, speech (energy), and mind). Otherwise our mental and 
				physical effort will suck energy and attention away from the 
				meditation process of union if we allow it through lack of 
				awareness (ignorance). One result of functional meditation is to 
				de-stress, relax, and abide in the great peace that samadhi 
				brings -- to connect up with the transpersonal imperishable 
				infinite mind. The only effort we have to do is to show up -- 
				sit or similarly we make an effort to be less than effortless. 
				Another result of an expedient meditation is that we leave more 
				connected and energized -- more integrated and feeling vitally 
				whole. Practically when we sit we can become aware of the body 
				if it tends to harden, contract, tense up, and go into spasm 
				after awhile so that we have to soon we feel pain and feel the 
				need to get up and stretch, but we can learn how to keep the 
				energy and consciousness flowing through the channel of the 
				body/mind continuously through effective asana so that any 
				stagnant energy can be shifted -- so that the energy connection 
				stays open and softens (yet does not droop). Here we are 
				relaxing effort, letting go of tension and hardness, and letting 
				go of rigidity of mind as well. Here we are allowing the mind, 
				the energy, and the body to remain in continuous and harmonious 
				flow. Staying in that balance is synergistic to balancing the 
				energies discussed in the previous sutras. Thus when we sit we 
				can apply the techniques that Patanjali recommends like pure 
				thoughts and intents (yam/niyam), correct asana, pranayama, 
				pratyhara, etc. Here correct asana involves samapattibhyam which 
				is a balancing act, a harmonization -- an integration into the 
				world of All Our Relations. This is the perfect position. 
				Samapattibhyam means coming into balance and harmony -- aligning. 
				Here it means aligning with Infinite Source. Ananta means 
				birthless, deathless, endless, or infinite. Ananta is also the 
				Great Serpent that Vishnu rests upon as such it is apropos to 
				any discussion of asana. Asana could thus be looked at as 
				relaxing all effort and connecting up with infinite source like 
				Vishnu relies/relaxes upon Ananta. This relaxation of effort and 
				synchronistic alignment with continuous flow comes up in asana 
				with conscious practice. Albeit these are more subtle (sukshma 
				sharira) aspects of asana, they are also more causal and thus 
				affect the practice more powerfully.
				
				In this manner providing a kundalini or tantric interpretation, 
				then sutra 49 when combined with sutra 48, could be translated 
				as: "through the withdrawing of effort in asana while 
				contemplating the never ending continuum of our true nature, 
				then the bipolar afflictions of duality vanish and the asana 
				forms a balanced (samapattibhyam) and self supporting (ananta) 
				energetic creatix." Here kundalini located at the muladhara -- 
				the seat or root (asana meaning seat) is able to become 
				activated through this synchronicity and harmonization of any 
				tension in the psychic nervous system (nadis) and then that 
				juice flows through the sushumna activating the highest chakras 
				and manifesting in union (sahasrara and muladhara are united/synchronized 
				by the flow of the kundalini (serpent power) in the central 
				nerve. II 48. tato dvandvanabhighatah Asana resolves opposition. 
				Commentary: This way the polarities (dvandva) support each other 
				(creating ascension in the central channel-- holding the spine 
				erect by itself). Here lightness is achieved and gross heaviness 
				and coarseness is replaced with increasingly more subtle 
				qualities of effortlessness until the never-ending absolute is 
				touched. A literal translation is: "From asana practice which 
				rests in steady joy and relaxed synchronicity (tato) one becomes 
				invulnerable from the assaults (anabhighatah) of duality (dvandva)". 
				This is another characteristic our true support base (asana) 
				along with steady joy and balanced synchronicity. This is our 
				seat of support to be accessed in meditation as well as in 
				everyday life. Stress, tension, and conflict are thus resolved. 
				It is also accessed in hatha yoga asana and pranayama practice 
				as well. If we were to apply this to what a successful asana 
				practice would look like, there would be a mutually uplifting 
				self supporting synergistic balance which is realized where the 
				apparent conflicting dualistic energies are harnessed and 
				synchronized effortlessly acting as harmonious team or whole so 
				that the position becomes effortless, self supporting, self 
				sustaining, and self animating. How are the poles of opposition 
				balanced; how are imbalances resolved; how is tension, conflict, 
				stress and strife relaxed? Obviously this imbalance or polar 
				tendency to swing to or fro is due to not being aligned. Here we 
				are not speaking merely of aligning the bones and joints, but 
				also the energy centers, the breath, spirit, mind, and wisdom -- 
				our overall position mental, spiritual, energetic, and physical 
				with the created world, the force of creation, and timeless 
				spirit. here one may say that the central theme of this sutra is 
				alignment and for this to happen we will also suggest strongly 
				that the five koshas are to aligned here as well.
				
				Not being swayed to or fro the energy is balanced and in terms 
				of kundalini it is thus collected in the central column and 
				rises up effortlessly in the sushumna nadi so that levitation 
				and timelessness (ananta) is realized. So on a subtle and more 
				causal level Patanjali is addressing internal processes here. 
				Although Patanjali did not practice or advocate hatha, kundalini, 
				laya, kriya, or tantra yoga explicitly, which developed after 
				his time, it is evident that he experienced these energetic 
				transformations and was able to lay a foundation for its future 
				development by articulating it utilizing existing philosophical 
				terminology. Dvandva clearly means the pair of opposites and as 
				such the idea of balancing ida/pingala or siva/shakti becomes 
				invoked. Here polarity does not distort nor assault (anabhihatas) 
				the practitioner, rather they are utilized, balanced, harnessed, 
				and used for support No matter what technique is employed, here 
				internally the left and right, ida/pingala, apana/prana, tha and 
				ha, mula/sahasrara -- all constituent energies become balanced, 
				aligned, and synchronous. Here the physical body, mind, nervous 
				system, psychic channels, energy body, etc., all are placed in 
				non-dual synchronicity acting as a support to sustaining samadhi. 
				This also can be extended to all other yogic practices such as 
				hatha yoga -- in All Our Relations. II 49. tasmin sati 
				svasa-prasvasayor gati-vicchedah pranayamah [After establishing 
				a firm foundation or seat for spirit, balance, and a 
				synchronicity of freedom from duality in asana] then (tasmin) 
				the foundation for the next stage is established (sati) which is 
				called called pranayama or the bringing forth and extending the 
				life energy in this embodiment (sati). Pranayama is accessed 
				through breaking down and analyzing (vicchedah) the procession (gati) 
				of the individual aspects (vicchedah) of the dynamic motions and 
				energetic processions underlying the heretofore unconscious (gati) 
				processes of inspiration (svasa) and expiration (prasvasayor) [as 
				these dynamics operate and flow through the body/mind matrix]. 
				Commentary: A more succinct translation is that from success in 
				asana there (tasmin) is established a firm foundation (sati) to 
				observe and analyze (vicchedah) the processes (gati) of 
				inhalation (svasa) and exhalation (prasvasayor) in order to 
				effect the flow of prana more extensively (in the body/mind). 
				But what must be emphasized here is that prana means energy, not 
				breath, so at best we can see that the observation of the breath 
				is a coarse method to get us more in touch with the more subtle 
				energy and wholistic neurologic processes underlying the 
				breathing process. In short pranayama is to proceed from this 
				steady joyful self supporting non-dual base. After establishing 
				asana as the steady, joyful, and balanced seat of Infinite or 
				Boundless Mind, now then in pranayama the yogi learns how to 
				extend and spread spirit throughout the body, the breath, energy 
				channels, and Mind in a multidimensional transpersonal way -- 
				All Our Relations. Here shakti as prana shakti activates the 
				dormant centers in the sadhak.
				
				Simply and concisely this sutra describes a yogic practice 
				called pranayama where one starts off by first taking asana as 
				described immediately previously, then placing one's attention 
				upon the inhalation and exhalation of the breath in order to 
				extend and refine (ayama) the prana. Here Patanjali is explicit 
				that pranayama is an awareness/observation practice, not a 
				mechanical willful practice. We will thus break this key sutra 
				down into its component parts and then reconstruct it. First the 
				reader should know that the most common mistranslation of this 
				sutra usually reads: "pranayama is the control or regulation of 
				the inhalation, exhalation, and retention of breath". That 
				mis-translation reflects two common mistakes. The first is more 
				common -- the misinterpretation of the word, prana, as breath, 
				which would make the translation redundant as well as misleading. 
				Rather we shall translate pranayama as the extension, spreading, 
				thinning, refinement, or expansion of energy, where prana is 
				best translated as life energy (not breath) and "ayama" is 
				translated as expansion, thinning, rarefaction, or extension. Or 
				one can break the word, yama, down differently as in "ya" (to 
				bring forth) and ma (to nurture). On the other hand the 
				definition of yama as control or regulation, reflects an errant 
				school of hatha yoga which believed that liberation could be 
				attained through forcefulness and control of the body, breath, 
				and mind. The word, control, thus reflects another assumption 
				made by repressed and over objectified left brain dominant will 
				oriented top down intellectuals and ideologically based 
				religionists, just as these very same dualists mistranslate 
				nirodha as control, tapas as self abnegation, swadhyaya as 
				scriptural study, or brahmacarya as sexual restraint where there 
				exists no objective or experiential basis. Secondly no word 
				meaning retention, control, or suppression of the breath (kumbhaka) 
				is present in this sutra (see sutra 54 for more). Vicchedah 
				means making to break or cut apart, not control, restraint, or 
				stoppage. It is conjoined to the Sanskrit word, gati, which 
				refers to the procession of the breathing process. Thus we learn 
				to expand and refine the prana by observing and breaking apart 
				the movements of the breath as it occurs in inspiration and 
				expiration so that it is no longer controlled by the unconscious 
				winds of karma and unconscious habit, but rather it comes into 
				the light of consciousness -- vicchedah being an act of 
				consciousness not individual control over the breathing. In this 
				way our energy and mind changes as well as our karma. This will 
				be made even more clear in in next sutra (50) where Patanjali 
				introduces the very pertinent technique of paridrsto which means 
				to behold or to overview.
				
				Patanjali is mainly telling us that pranayama can be approached 
				at first as the process (gati) of becoming aware of our energy 
				by breaking it down into its gross external components as 
				manifest in the profound linkages between mind and energy 
				inherent in the breathing process -- how the energy enters our 
				body/mind,
				how it leaves it, and how it becomes discontinuous or inhibited. 
				Through this break down of these energetics (utilizing the 
				breath as its coarse tangible representative), then we obtain 
				awareness of how the energy is extended, refined, and made more 
				subtle so that we open up the nadis (the container of the prana) 
				which activates the body's higher circuitries and potential (the 
				manifestation of brahman in this very body as the Jivamukti). 
				With this awareness we can sit in asana so that the meditation 
				is energized without dissipation to activate its highest 
				potential (in an accomplished samadhi). This awareness (of the 
				cit-prana) is at first coarsely perceived through asana and/or 
				breath awareness, but that is so that we can eventually become 
				conscious of the energy, its various directions, and how to 
				redirect and harmonize it for spiritual evolution. Prana (with a 
				capital "P" permeates all of the Universe without it nothing 
				moves, but also prana with a small "p" denotes the vital energy 
				(prana) as it permeates the physical body. It is strongly 
				associated with the breath as the animating principle -- as the 
				sustainer -- linking creation with Infinite Source. When the 
				cosmic matrix is meshed and synchronized with the human matrix, 
				then Spirit's gifts become potenized in the now. Indeed 
				breathing is the most primal activity of human life, performing 
				a bridge between the unconscious (autonomic) and conscious (central) 
				nervous systems. In hatha. kundalini, and tantra yoga pranayama 
				is not just a powerful awareness tool, but a focused practice 
				capable of balancing and synchronizing not only the autonomic 
				and central nervous systems, but also the afferent and efferent 
				nervous systems and the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous 
				systems as all polarities can be accessed through the breath. 
				Similarly, hatha yoga tells us that by becoming aware of and 
				accessing the breath consciously in these ways we can also 
				access directly into our psychoneurology, the biopsychic 
				pathways, nadis, matrices, energy cysts, and cellular and 
				energetic imprints which hold the samskaras in place, thus 
				breaking them up, breaking up past karma, kleshas, and hence 
				vrtti. Thus the various pranayama exercises of exploring the 
				energetic processes of inhalation, exhalation, and stoppage of 
				breathing within hatha yoga are given to us in order to achieve 
				this awareness, observe this process, and thus eventually 
				achieve liberation (from karma and vrtti). The goal is not the 
				control of the breath, but rather it is the awareness of the 
				subtle and more causal intelligent primal operations of prana 
				shakti or kundalini shakti who further instructs.
				
				In many practices of hatha yoga , laya yoga, and prana vidya, 
				the interruption of the normal flow of the breath are given in 
				order to both provide awareness and communion, but also to 
				disrupt old mental patterns (vrttis) and karma harnessing the 
				previous dormant or energy to activate dormant evolutionary 
				circuitry. A salient point is that this is not really vicchedah 
				as meant by Patanjali, but rather through these innumerable 
				pranayama practices one has the opportunity to investigate the 
				action of these many types of breathing patterns upon on our 
				energy field and thus becoming aware of the breath processes (vicchedah), 
				then one becomes more aware and integrated with primal Prana. "Normal" 
				subconscious habitual breathing is thus called karmic breathing, 
				while pranayama practice not only breaks up (vicchedah) old 
				karma, but burns it up establishing the practitioner in a karma 
				free zone. Here various pranayama practices using the breath can 
				be used for healing, but pranayama here as presented by 
				Patanjali is meant to propel the practitioner beyond their past 
				conditioning and karma altogether. Just simple breath awareness 
				helps us to free the dissipations of monkey mind (vikalpa) and 
				concentrates the cit-prana, but pranayama practices in hatha and 
				tantra yoga go deeper and work faster combining, pranayama, 
				pratyhara, dharana, mudra, and asana as one integrated practice 
				that is used to jump start dhyana (meditation) and samadhi. 
				Pranayama as described by Patanjali (as raj yoga) is often 
				confused with the more elaborate pranayama as described in hatha, 
				kundalini, and tantra yoga, but they are not contradictory. Here 
				in this sutra, Patanjali is not directly addressing those 
				variegated and sometimes forceful pranayama techniques as found 
				in hatha yoga, rather he is addressing observation of the breath 
				and the refinement of the prana in the context of meditation. 
				Only in the next sutra he goes into methodology, albeit there 
				are those who translate vicchedah as the cutting off the breath 
				which this translator takes as a control freak's bias. Again 
				vicchedah is the conscious analysis of the breath which 
				admittedly hatha yoga pranayama practice can indeed enhance. In 
				simple meditation we can simply notice the changing qualities of 
				breath according to how the mind becomes distracted or focused. 
				We bring our awareness to the breath and refine and extend it if 
				it has become coarse or restricted. After practice this 
				relationship between the empty and quiet mind and the breath 
				becomes understood and a doorway opens into the operations of 
				the cit-prana and the operations of the mind. Then eventually 
				the origin of mind, the Infinite Mind, or simply the Natural 
				Unconditioned Mind is revealed through at first the very simple 
				method learning how to observe the breath and how it changes. 
				Then one learns how to balance and direct the cit-prana, the 
				mind, and the breath all at once effecting flow toward samadhi.
				In more advanced pranayama practice as taught in hatha yoga, one 
				(out of many) simple practice is called sushumna breath where 
				the inhalation (prana) energy with the exhalation (apana) energy 
				are equally balanced both in duration and intensity, generating 
				a spiritual synergy (in the central column called sushumna) of 
				supreme effortless (sunya). Here the individual will and 
				Universal Will have merged. Pranayama brings us into awareness 
				of the polar opposites, the expansion and the
				contraction of the divine pulsation of siva/shakti (spanda), the 
				movement of spirit as it inspires, and eternal dance of love 
				through the expiratory medium of the living temple. This is a 
				powerful but subtle pranayama method to jump start an align a 
				sitting meditation (dhyana) session. II 50. 
				bahyabhyantara-stambha-vrttir desakala-samkhyabhih paridrsto 
				dirgha-suksmah Through over-viewing (paridrasta) and analyzing (samkhyabhih) 
				the rapidity, the place or location (desa) and the duration or 
				length (kala) of the inhalation (abhyantara) and exhalation (bahya) 
				of the breathing operations (vrtti) in relationship to its still 
				points (stambha) and/or its spinning/movements (vrttir) the 
				energy is extenuated and becomes more refined and subtle (dirgha-suksmah). 
				A similar reading is: That through over-viewing (paridrsto) the 
				oscillations between the spinning patterns (vrttir) of the 
				inward and outward characteristics of the breathing process and 
				its operations of stillness (stamba) in regard to duration (kala), 
				location (desa), and the number of repetitions (samkhyabhih), as 
				to its degree of subtleness (suksmah) and extenuated fineness (dirgha) 
				while the breath spins internally, externally, or comes into 
				stillness (stamba) [pranayama is practiced]. Commentary: Here 
				Patanjali goes into more subtle detail, extending the previous 
				sutra. This is the gold for meditators to look for. Becoming 
				sensitive to, familiar with, and beholding (paridrasta) the 
				breath acting as a gateway to the source of prana allows us to 
				energize the psychic pathways, which in turn allows access to 
				the purification of our deepest internal body/mind circuits, 
				psycho-neuro-physiology, and bio-psychic energetic processes, as 
				well as allow us to harmonize and align with the infinite 
				non-dual Source of Prana. As the subtle process between the 
				breath and energy (prana) becomes revealed and refined, the 
				citta (mind stuff) becomes refined and thus the citta-vrtti are 
				attenuated.
				Some say that Patanjali is referring to the operation of three 
				types of breathing: inhalation (abhyantara), exhalation (bahya) 
				and retention (stamba) of breath. Others say that he is 
				referring to the hatha yoga techniques of internal retention, 
				external retention, and sahaj kumbhaka, referring to the flow of 
				prana in the pingala, the ida, and the sushumna nadis 
				respectively. However since retention of the breath in Sanskrit 
				is kumbhaka, not stamba, we will assume here he means stillness 
				as the breath increasingly becomes extended, refined, thinned, 
				and more subtle as the prana becomes more subtle and refined 
				leading up to the increased possibility of sahaja
				(natural) kumbhaka ( kevala kumbhaka) or setting its stage where 
				such occurs spontaneously in meditation. A point that 
				experienced practitioners all know, but here beginners may save 
				some time and avoid confusion, is that the techniques of sahita 
				(technical) pranayama exist not as an end in itself to master, 
				but as tools to explore the operations of the breath and prana 
				-- to harmonize and make more subtle the prana and the citta (collectively 
				the cit-prana) so that it is allowed to move into the central 
				column (sushumna) naturally. As such when the pranas stop 
				flowing in ida and pingala as prana and apana, then it is 
				automatically and naturally drawn up into the sushumna. Thus the 
				techniques (sahita) reveal the subtle actions of prana to our 
				consciousness so that we can merge, re-connect, or reintegrate 
				with our unconditioned natural true self (swarupa). When this 
				latter happens it is accompanied by sahaj kumbhaka and is thus 
				called called sahaj (natural) pranayama (as distinguished to 
				sahita pranayama). So to avoid confusion, yes the techniques 
				such as given in sahita pranayama is a prerequisite for the 
				completion which is accomplished in sahaja. Let it be said that 
				pranayama in hatha, kriya, kundalini, and tantra yoga is a 
				profound practice which can also be quite elaborate. In swara 
				yoga, which pranayama is a subdivision, and to a great degree in 
				hatha and tantra yoga, there exists an emphasis placed on the 
				location of the breath, its distance from the nose and lungs, 
				its characteristic strength/amplitude or force, the 
				characteristics of its spinning and swirling motion in the nose 
				and lungs, its rapidity, thinness, smoothness, evenness between 
				nostrils, etc. Swara yoga is considered to be the master science 
				which pranayama is derived and it appears that Patanjali was 
				well aware of this. Many books and oral teachings have pranayama 
				and swara yoga as subjects, but here we will focus on the raj 
				yoga aspects (in meditation) which we will assume is the point 
				of Patanjali's meaning. In the sitting meditation of Raj Yoga, 
				the first and essential stage is awareness or observation (paridrasta) 
				where we do not try to change the breath, but simply notice and 
				become aware of what is happening with the characteristics of 
				breath, how it changes with the thoughts (vrtti), and come back 
				to a smooth, subtle, and long breathing. Sometimes the mind will 
				come into stillness and there one may notice that the breath 
				also has become very long and subtle or even appear to be still 
				as well. When the mind wanders we can thus bring the attention 
				back to the breath noticing all the characteristics of the 
				breath and their relationship to the wandering or steadiness of 
				the energy and mind (the cit-prana or cit-shakti). In this way 
				the breath, the prana, and the mindstuff (citta) become refined 
				and more subtle eventually entering into an unwavering 
				non-agitated stillpoint (stamba) .
				
				When sitting we can notice to advantage where the breath is 
				concentrated, how the breath stops, becomes ragged, becomes deep, 
				long, short, interrupted, flows freely, fluctuates (vrttir), 
				wavers, becomes coarse or subtle, rapid or slow, imbalanced/balanced, 
				and so forth related to mental, emotional, and physical 
				correspondences which we become aware of, acknowledge, and 
				observe (paridrsto). We observe it according to many 
				characteristics moving from the gross and coarse into the most 
				subtle -- moving into the energetics of the breath and self 
				awareness of the internal energetics that are both inside and 
				outside so that we can align and harmonize this very body now 
				with the cosmic soul (param purusha) in the yantra of bliss (anandamaya 
				kosha or causal body). Thus we move from the coarse body (sthula 
				sharira) found in the annamaya kosha (or nirmanakaya) to the 
				causal body (karana sharira) which is found in the anandamaya 
				kosha or dharmakaya) through the working the energy or subtle 
				body (sukshma sharira) found in the pranamaya kosha or the 
				sambhogakaya). Thus through breath awareness, then energy 
				awareness, then pre awareness, we move from the coarse, to the 
				subtle, to beyond even the most subtle (nirvicara), and thus 
				learn how to commune with and stay in our core energy because of 
				the simple truth that the breath will reflect what is in the 
				body/mind. The breathing thus is more so a gateway furnished 
				through awareness provided by the activation of the energy body 
				(suksmah sharira) found in the pranamaya kosha) to the causal 
				body (karana sharira) or dharmakaya to unconditional formless 
				Source. In a more subtle sense then Patanjali is saying that a 
				subtle extenuation and refinement (dirgha-suksma) of the breath 
				also effects a corresponding pranayama (as an extenuation and 
				refinement of the prana) and hence the mind. Certainly 
				neuro-psycho-physiology and Psycho-neuroimmunology (PNI) 
				indicate that when the breath is long, thin, and subtle the 
				system is operating at a reduced level of stress, well being, 
				and health. In simple sitting meditation (dhyana) in the 
				beginning we at first simply just come back to the breath with 
				out analyzing it if the mind has wandered. In pranayama practice 
				proper we focus on the energy behind the breath as a 
				concentration exercise (dharana) and hence pranayama can be 
				considered a dharana as well as pratyhara (see sutra 54). 
				Through subtle awareness we learn how the breath eventually 
				kindles the inner light which destroys the veil of ignorance (see 
				sutra 52).
				
				In hatha and tantra yoga we augment this self awareness through 
				various conscious breathing processes which variously regulate 
				the length of the inhalations and exhalations, rate, intensity, 
				degree of subtlety, and location of the prana through exploring 
				the multitude positions of the breath in relation to location, 
				time, or other qualities and quantities for various permutations 
				and durations of time -- through becoming aware of the 
				subtleness of the breath, and through myriad and varied 
				combinations of the above.
				Eventually we find that this awareness exercise allows us to 
				break up old previously unconscious karmic patterns of breathing, 
				breaking up old dysfunctional body/mind patterns, while allowing 
				us to more continuously align with prana's infinite Source 
				through the prana-shakti siddhi. In beginning hatha yoga we 
				learn how to balance the ida and pingala energies through 
				experimenting with the breath in each nostril while exploring 
				the mores subtle energetics governing these gross movements. 
				Direct conscious access to the psycho-neurophysiology is 
				established, its circuits become opened, activated, and 
				harmonized through pranayama. Through consistent expedient 
				pranayama practice and meditation these connections of the 
				breath, prana, mind, subtle body (suksmah), and causal body (karana 
				sharira) become revealed. Here the past conditioning, 
				programming, habits, and karma is destroyed and hence the sadhak 
				is made fit for meditation. In hatha yoga through various 
				exercises we learn where to concentrate the force of the breath 
				and the flows of the energy in order to accomplish 
				transformation of the body/mind. Pranayama practice should 
				proceed first as an awareness practice. Only after establishing 
				that awareness and sensitivity first, then experiments can be 
				undertaken and gauged in that light. Such must be slow, natural, 
				and not forced. It should not be rushed nor mechanical, because 
				it is very powerful to work with the causal energies within. 
				Without sensitivity and awareness, suffering will result. 
				Emphasis must be put on opening the nadis and balancing the 
				energy. Thus it is best to avoid pranayama unless one has 
				already become sensitive to and has learned to recognize. 
				respect, and honor the body/mind energy. If this awareness of 
				prana is not reached through a breath oriented kinesthetic asana 
				practice, then an experienced, wise, and accomplished selfless 
				teacher is the only other alternative worth pursuing. When the 
				nadis are open and balanced, then karmic breath is destroyed -- 
				past karma becomes vanquished also. Pranayama siddhi also can 
				come about naturally through grace without formal practice (the 
				prana-shakti permeates our entire being). Thus it is debatable 
				whether or not Patanjali was recommending meditators to do a 
				formal practice pranayama as an external discipline like as 
				found in hatha yoga, or rather he was describing the processes 
				in which the breath changes in meditation and the methods that 
				can be used to bring about synergy. Certainly swara yoga and 
				other tantric practices are an advanced and elaborate extension 
				of pranayama which focus on the most subtle aspects of the 
				breath, its location, and types of swirling motions throughout 
				the day, according to various seasons, astronomical alignments, 
				etc. Swara yoga as an elaborate science will not be discussed 
				here.
				
				In general it is well worth repeating that prana means energy, 
				and ayama means to extend; so that through pranayama one extends 
				the Infinite Source of energy throughout the body so that every 
				cell in the body is unified with cosmic source -- so that the 
				nadis are open, balanced, and aligned. Thus in meditation we can 
				consciously keep the nadis open and the breath energetic, deep, 
				balanced, and nourishing. If this is not discontinuous then the 
				body will never become tight, tired, painful, or droop. II 51. 
				bahy-abhyantara-visaya-aksepi caturtah Then the fourth (caturtah) 
				realm (visaya) of successful pranayama, occurs when the prana is 
				withdrawn and ceases to move (aksepi) either internally (abhyantara) 
				or outwardly (bahya). Commentary: Concisely we can say that when 
				the breath and prana become so refined, subtle, and refined the 
				prana then changes from most subtle to beyond even the most 
				subtle (nirvicara). Here too then the prana ceases to flow in 
				the dualistic pathways of ida and pingala, but rather withdraws 
				into the central nadi (sushumna) as kundalini. In nirvicara 
				samadhi the dualistic winds that drive the distractive thought 
				processes (chit-vrtti) cease (nirodha). This is the gateway to 
				nirvicara samadhi or turiya (the fourth). In the previous sutras 
				we see that on a gross level through observing the energy during 
				the conditions (visaya) where the breath is moving inward, 
				outward, or is steady (stamba) and not moving constitutes the 
				three gross previous stages of pranayama (all of which have 
				corresponding psycho-neurological energetics and biopsychic 
				qualities not delineated here. But in this sutra Patanjali is 
				saying that there exists a fourth (caturtah) stage where the 
				breath exists zero-point space (visaya-aksepi) regardless if it 
				is at the end of the exhalation before the inhalation begins, at 
				the end of the inhalation before the exhalation begins, or 
				somewhere in the middle. In fact Patanjali is saying that 
				visaya-aksepi occurs separately from the previous three methods 
				when the fourth and final dominion (visaya) of pranayama is 
				achieved. Thus not necessarily during inhalation, during 
				exhalation, at the end of the inhalation before the inhalation 
				is withdrawn, nor at the end of the exhalation before the 
				exhalation is withdrawn, but at some other time (caturtah) or 
				rather at anytime in-between through the awareness of the 
				energetic quality existing in these spaces -- at this fourth 
				moment, a profound reality -- the fourth or turiya is revealed.
				
				Such can happen spontaneously in meditation and thus occurring 
				in the realm of natural and effortless (sahaj or kevala kumbhaka) 
				suspension or (visaya-aksepi) of breath, or rather more 
				importantly on the more subtle level the effortless suspension 
				of dualistic energetic motions (ida/pingala) without effort. 
				Here Patanjali is not talking about breath retention in the 
				ordinary sense, but rather visaya-aksepi as condition where the 
				energy (prana) is withdrawn from the energetic processes of 
				outward and inward tendencies and effortlessly by itself moves 
				into the integrative state in the central channel (which the 
				hatha yogis call sahaj kumbhaka). Here the energy no longer 
				flows dualistically in/out or up/down. Notice that Patanjali 
				does not mention the word retention here either, nor does he 
				indicate that this process of pranayama has anything to do with 
				active control or force (often associated with kumbhaka). Rather 
				it must be pointed out that the word, aksepi, means casting 
				aside or withdrawing from (withdrawing being actively passive). 
				It just happens by itself or as a result of cessation of effort 
				(aksepi). Here prana as energy (as well as the cit-prana) ceases 
				to spin inwardly (in the ida) as well as ceases to spin 
				extrinsically (in the pingala). Here the ida and pingala are the 
				two nadis or channels for intrinsic and extrinsic energy flows 
				in the energetic and psychic bodies. Here in the fourth stage, 
				Patanjali says the energy is withdrawn from normal dualistic 
				polar functions. It is attenuated, thinned, refined and made 
				extremely subtle. Rather this is taken to mean in Hatha, 
				Kundalini, and Tantric interpretations that the cit-prana is 
				withdrawn from duality into the non-dual channel (sushumna). 
				Esoterically when the kundalini is activated the yogi can move 
				into the fourth realm which is also designated as turiya. This 
				is the fourth (caturtah) practice of prana awareness (at first 
				brought to awareness through breath observation) where the 
				dualistic patterns of prana stop (as "in" and "out", but rather 
				through their balance and synchronization at zero point, then 
				the non-dual energy is experienced as it is now allowed to enter 
				the central nadi (sushumna) as kundalini. Patanjali points out 
				that we can observe and utilize four types of energetic 
				processes, i.e., the energetic process behind the inhalation, 
				the exhalation, the disruption of the inhalation or the 
				disruption of the exhalation, and fourthly the deepening 
				awareness at the energetic space which occurs at the beginning 
				of exhalation or inhalation processes where an effortless 
				natural suspension of the breath occurs which in turn leads us 
				to the siddhi of balancing and harmonizing the polar aspects of 
				prana (energy) leading it into the non-dual (sushumna). On the 
				gross level we can at first utilize breath techniques that 
				allows us to deepen our awareness of manifold activities of 
				prana. As we advance we see them simply as energy awareness 
				techniques. Only at their culmination do we see these techniques 
				as reflecting natural law. Hence the innate intuitive awareness 
				(prajna) is activated and no further practice is needed.
				
				On a practical level we can simply state that at these 
				increasingly more subtle and effortless "zero points" of breath 
				the prana and apana running through the ida and pingala can be 
				observed to meet and thus it is here that they lend themselves 
				most easily to reveal themselves and facilitate their self 
				synchronization. Since breathing in
				and out happens all the time, there is no need to "hold" the 
				breath, but rather we have to hold our attention (cit-prana) to 
				the process. We are educating the conscious mind and aligning it 
				with the energy body, while working with the cit-prana directly. 
				When we hold the attention, then the effortless and natural maha 
				kumbhaka, sahaj kumbhaka, kevala kumbhaka, or what the Buddhists 
				call the jnana kumbhaka (the effortless holding of the energy) 
				occurs naturally -- as the jnana prana is spontaneously 
				experienced as-it-is by the natural mind. Thus at this phase the 
				effort in pranayama practice is eventually totally relaxed as 
				the maha kumbhaka breathes us. One practice in hatha, kundalini, 
				and kriya yoga the sadhak listens to the mantra (deep energetic 
				messages) of the breath. Frequently hatha yoga uses the hamsa 
				and soham ajapa mantras to help effect this profound awareness. 
				In more elaborate schools of hatha yoga the internal stoppage of 
				the breath after inhalation (puraka) called antar kumbhaka or 
				puraka kumbhaka, and the energetic quality behind holding the 
				breath out after exhalation (rechaka) called bahir kumbhaka or 
				rechaka kumbhaka are also explored revealing further subtleties 
				until the maha kumbhaka is achieved which is a stillness of the 
				prana and apana (dualistic flows) and the arising of the 
				kundalini which has now been directed to the door of the central 
				nadi (sushumna) whose gates have welcomed it and drawn it home!. 
				We have to realize that pranayama is an ever increasingly subtle 
				process where on no longer is dealing with the breath, but 
				rather the breath reveals the energy. Then one's awareness 
				shifts to the prana dealing with that directly. Here prana no 
				longer runs in the dualistic circuitry of ida/pingala, but 
				rather no longer flows at all. Rather these two pranic currents 
				combine as one, activating the flow of kundalini in the sushumna 
				nadi (also called the madhya-nadi).When the prana ceases to flow 
				through ida and pingala, it is because the energy has become 
				synergistically synchronized into kundalini which flows in the 
				central column (sushumna) destroying the covering of ordinary 
				dualistic thought and awakening the sadhak into an ever-new 
				awareness beginningless time. "The mind functions through prana, 
				It is from prana that everything proceeds". CHANDOGYA UPANISHAD
				No thing nor the mind can move without energy, force, or 
				direction. Never force pranayama but use it to investigate the 
				nadis and the awareness of prana as it flows in the nadis. 
				Through that intimate knowledge, self knowledge will dawn, 
				knowledge of the Source of prana is known , and from all that 
				liberation follows. Thus when the prana is perfectly balanced, 
				so is the mind. Here the vrtti are balanced out and remediated. 
				This perfectly balanced mind (in perfect sattva) is coaxed into 
				manifesting into its highest evolutionary potential (as 
				kundalini) where then it spontaneously co-arises. Once brought 
				to the gate through the maha kumbhaka, then the energy flows 
				effortlessly as an expression of jnana prana beyond karma and 
				death.
				Here much regarding pranayama that has been left unexplained. It 
				is presented here without elaborations on the swaras, sahaj 
				kumbhaka, kevala kumbhaka, the jnana prana, and other such 
				esoteric terms which are part of the oral tradition. Pranayama 
				as a hatha, kriya, or tantric yoga practice is very powerful and 
				should be learned from an adept, however if practiced as an 
				awareness exercise as described above no harm will entail. II 
				52. tatah ksiyate prakasa-avaranam From that (tatah) [successful 
				practice of pranayama] the obscuration which is the veil (avaranam) 
				of the inner light (prakasa) is dissolved (ksiyate). Commentary: 
				Eventually liberation is gained through conscious awareness or 
				grace. HERE the yogi communes with the infinite Source of prana, 
				and thus, simultaneously, the heretofore suppressed inner light 
				which has been covered (avarana) by the veil of ignorance is 
				released into spontaneous self effulgence. Here the cit-prana is 
				no longer dissipated and extracted outward, but rather the 
				practitioner is firmly wedded to the path -- the pathways are 
				opened and energized. As a result of pranayama practice, the 
				heretofore obscured or latent potential of inner light is 
				disclosed as the embodiment of the kundalini. Through the 
				activation of our innate creative evolutionary power (kundalini) 
				the dormant circuitry including the chakras (wheels of light) 
				are activated. From here, the innate power and intelligence of 
				the life force (prana) as it flows throughout our embodiment is 
				acknowledged, starts to take over, and instruct. II 53. 
				dharanasu ca yogyata manasah and (ca) the ordinary mind (manas) 
				[and nadis] thus become purified and functionally prepared (yogyata) 
				for successful concentration (dharana) practice. Commentary: As 
				the mind rides the waves of prana, so too does prana become 
				altered by our thoughts. When the awareness and the energy is 
				united as one coherent agency -- when we are conscious that 
				where we place our awareness, we also place our energy, then we 
				then are able to focus our energy in special ways to effect 
				specific purposes (utilizing dharana, cit-prana, and prana vidya).
				Here Patanjali is really linking pranayama, pratyhara, and 
				dharana as one practice, but we will explain that later. In one 
				sense pranayama itself is a dharana (concentration) practice, 
				here focused on the universal prana. In turn through dharana 
				(the yogic practices that utilize concentration of the mind, 
				visualization, and focusing techniques), the mind becomes 
				stabilized and prepared for dhyana (meditation). After one is 
				able to feel, recognize, and work with the cit-prana consciously, 
				then the mental energy and attention can no longer wander far 
				and be dissipated. Through this attainment one is empowered to 
				balance one's prana and thus easily focus one's energy and mind 
				successfully. Pranayama will purify and open the psychic 
				channels (nadis) for prana to flow through the dormant 
				circuitries or chakras (wheels of light), thus the dharanas 
				utilizing the chakras can be performed and/or the mind can be 
				focused toward meditation much more successfully. In hatha, 
				kundalini, tantra, and laya yoga this refers to the practices of 
				mudras, dharanas, mantras, visualization, yantra, or prana vidya. 
				In fact asana, bandha, pranayama, visualizations (dharana) form 
				the basis of the advanced hatha yoga mudra practice. 
				Contemplation is also included as a specialized type of dharana 
				because the mind concentrates on a specific mental theme -- an 
				object of contemplation. In fact asana, bandha, and pranayama 
				are a form of dharana (concentration), when it is based on 
				focusing upon the source of prana-shakti. Successful pranayama 
				and dharana also includes pratyhara (as is defined in the next 
				sutra). A mature practitioner knows that pranayama, pratyhara, 
				and dharana mutually combine as one practice. Eventually Prana 
				Shakti becomes the self instructing guide throughout All Our 
				Relations -- acting as the breath that breathes us. II 54. 
				sva-visaya-asamprayogae cittasya-svarupa-anukara ivendriyanam 
				pratyharah Through pratyhara the matrix of apparent separateness 
				between the object that is viewed, the viewer, and the process 
				of viewing is laid aside and disengaged from (asamprayoge), thus 
				allowing the heretofore static and dissipated energy to gather, 
				ascend, and flow internally producing complete liberation from 
				sensory false identification (anukara) with appearances or 
				misperception and thus allowing ascension into the creatix of 
				the heart -- our true nature.
				
				Commentary: Pratyhara (the fifth limb of astanga yoga and the 
				next one after pranayama) is most often mistranslated as the 
				control of the senses or its withdrawal, thus often being 
				associated with repression. aversion, or catatonia. However what 
				is really going on is that in man's common corruptive overly 
				externalized state of avidya, his mind has become overly 
				objectified (lost in the objects of the sense world). Thus the 
				cit-prana has been drawn out and devitalized. In pratyhara we 
				reclaim that distracted and dissipated cit-prana and pull it 
				back into our core (heart) center. Thus mastery of pratyhara is 
				also at the same time freedom from coarse (vitarka) pratyaya 
				(the process of the dualistic mind toward fixation upon objects). 
				It is thus the natural mastery of the cit-prana where the 
				cit-prana is no longer distracted and dissipated into the gross 
				external world of the five senses -- into the illusory world of 
				I-It abstraction and over objectification. Here pratyhara means 
				turning back of the distracted cit-prana toward its Source. The 
				senses (indriyanam) thus cease their dualistic fixation with 
				separate objects (visaya-asamprayoge), then the mind's (cittasya) 
				true self nature (swarupa) is reflected back upon itself (redirected) 
				like a mirror (anukara) -- thus having the potential to reveal 
				the true natural self as swarupa. Even deeper, pratyhara is the 
				practice of withdrawing the mind's attention and energy (cit-prana) 
				from distraction and dissolution (through the nine gates of the 
				body). It is a means of redirecting the externally flowing 
				cit-prana to activate the core energy and eventually one's 
				dormant evolutionary energy, the kundalini. Thus pratyhara is an 
				essential element which links pranayama and dharana in the 
				practice of the advanced mudras, yantras, mandalas, and dharanas 
				of prana vidya which is the normal domain of hatha, kundalini, 
				tantra, and laya yoga. Basic pratyhara stabilizes the cit-prana 
				thus enabling one for successful dharana and meditation. 
				Accomplishing pratyhara as a technique also completes the 
				practice of vairagya (non-attachment), viveka, and tapas 
				remediating any residual "I-it" dualistic thinking (samyogah). 
				Raga can not exist within the energetic modality of successful 
				pratyhara implementation. Pratyahara also completes tapas, but 
				does not replace it. Normal consciousness is fragmented in the 
				dualistic world of I-It separateness, i.e., there appears to be 
				separate objects (sense objects) and a separate "i" (small self) 
				who is perceiving them. Pratyhara takes our attention and energy 
				away from this type of corruption and dissolution -- away from 
				the dualistic fragmentation -- and brings it back within -- 
				reuniting with Self. Here in All Our Relations energy and 
				attention are harnessed for dharana (concentration) and (dhyana) 
				meditation. II 55. tatah parama vasyatendriyanam Then (tatah) 
				the need to surpass the senses (vasyatendriyanam) is completely 
				over come (parama) (or surpassed itself).
				
				Commentary: Here there is no fear, aversion, tension, or 
				conflict between the sense world and the spiritual world as this 
				dualistic tug has been remediated. When pratyhara is successful, 
				the cit-prana is available to focus the mind at will, and thus 
				one experiences a huge jump start in meditation. Daily life also 
				becomes less dissipating and distracting. The dualistic tendency 
				itself is dissolved. Pratyhara is the energetic awareness (the 
				process of drawing in and up of the energy of consciousness and 
				beingness that is evoked in revealed in pranayama) in which we 
				no longer observe the sense objects in the world as individually 
				arising or existing separately, but rather experience that they 
				exist inside the purified heart (being accessible within) -- as 
				are all created things interconnected, non-dual, and inseparable. 
				By bringing our attention as cit-prana sufficiently inside we 
				find THAT deeper core space which is outside as well -- which is 
				all and everywhere. As such pratyhara is just the tip of the 
				iceberg.
				
				When in pratyhara the vital energy and energetic Source of 
				consciousness are no longer dissipated or drawn outside into a 
				fragmentary isolated dualistic relationship, but rather they 
				have become concentrated, refined and made available for the 
				higher practices of one pointed concentration and true devotion. 
				Pratyhara is the dynamic motion of reunification and self 
				empowerment which takes the extrinsic spinning of the cit-prana 
				and turns it back inside where cit-shakti and prana shakti 
				unite. This is also the evolutionary creative energy (kundalini-shakti) 
				is activated in the the realm of non-duality-- where the inner 
				and outer energies are balanced, harmonized, and unified. It 
				harnesses and helps activate the fire that feeds successful 
				dharana (concentration) and meditation (dhyana) which leads us 
				to success in samadhi. Some say that pratyhara is simply a 
				refined aspect of pranayama. As such it is said that pratyhara 
				is fructified by dharana, dhyana, and samadhi, which is the 
				major focus of Pada III. End of Chapter II -- The Sadhana Pada 
				of Patanjali ends completing discussion of the fifth limb (pratyhara) 
				of astanga yoga, while Pada III begins with the sixth limb, 
				concentration or dharana, followed by dhyana (the seventh limb), 
				and then samadhi (the eighth). Chapter III. Vibhuti Pada: The 
				Proficiencies or Adeptness (through the Process of Samyama) 
				Vibhuti chapter places much emphasis on the combined effort of 
				the sixth (dharana), seventh (dhyana), and eighth (samadhi) 
				limbs of ashtanga yoga which applied all at once is called the 
				three fold process of samyama which in turn leads to various 
				perfections, abilities, masteries, and of supra-personal states 
				of awareness variously called siddhis. In Vibhuti Pada also the 
				application of the three major parinama (transformations) are 
				described as well are many other practices and states of 
				realization.
				
				Patanjali's Third Chapter: Vibhuti Pada -- On Adeptness, 
				Completion, Fruition, Ability, Perfection, Boons, and "Mystic 
				Powers" that a Functional and Proficient Sadhana Creates The 
				Transition Between Pada II and Pada III: Introduction The Yoga 
				Sutras are presented as a mutually synergistic system. Chapter 
				One (Samadhi Pada) provides context and an overview. Chapter Two 
				(Sadhana Pada) gives the practices (sadhana). Toward the end of 
				Sadhana Pada, the first five limbs of ashtanga (eight limbed) 
				yoga were introduced. Then it begins to elaborate upon each limb 
				one at a time (to an extent), but the Pada II ends with 
				pratyhara (the fifth limb). Vibhuti Pada (chapter 3) begins with 
				dharana (concentration) which is the sixth limb. Thus dharana, 
				dhyana (the seventh limb), and samadhi (the eighth limb) taken 
				together compose samyama (which is the dominant theme of Vibhuti 
				Pada) and as such chapter three acts as a continuation of 
				chapter two. Many historians postulate that the four padas (chapters) 
				of the Yoga Sutras were first written down as one document, and 
				then posthumously divided into four separate partitions (padas). 
				What is clear however is that the presentation becomes 
				increasingly more subtle and inner as one proceeds. It is 
				noteworthy that the word, vibhuti, does not appear once in Pada 
				III (except the title given to it). Vibhuti can mean the 
				extinction of the gross elements (bhuti) into their most subtle 
				refinement or essence which is often symbolized by sacred ash 
				that often mysteriously appears in the presence of a siddha (accomplished 
				one). Some say that the appearance of vibhuti is itself a result 
				of siddhi (perfection). Vibhutir is often translated as the 
				personification/manifestation of powers, their fruition, and/or 
				opulence; while bhutida is the giver of powers and opulence. 
				Bhuti-vistara is the expander of powers and opulence. Note that 
				Chapter 10 of the Bhagavad Gita is titled, "Vibhuti Yoga"
				The central theme of the Yoga Sutras in general is how to 
				realize samadhi -- which no matter how many words scholars use 
				to define or distort it, ultimately one will have to agree with 
				Patanjali that words serve to obscure samadhi -- eventually they 
				have to be given up. It is difficult to use words to defeat 
				words, but Patanjali does this very well. Patanjali says that 
				samadhi appears when we are able to let loose of our mental 
				machinations, samskara, klesha, karma, vasana, and other 
				habitual impositions of conditioning and conditioned belief 
				systems which support the vrtti. This is realized in meditation 
				(or better the meditation of no meditation where we are doing 
				nothing at all) and involves the dawning of an extraordinary 
				transpersonal (more rarefied than the most subtle) consciousness 
				which can not be brought about without the complete stilling (nirodha) 
				of the ordinary mind which is constantly being modified, colored, 
				and disturbed (yogash citta-vrtti-nirodah). The profound and 
				sacred trans-rational and all encompassing truth of 
				Reality-As-It-Is is self disclosing. This non-dual "IT" which is 
				not a separate "it", is inherent and indigenous beneath the 
				vrtti, which when dissolved (nirodha) shines forth on its own. 
				It's also seductive (like taking the cart before the horse) to 
				think that it is necessary or important to practice yoga in 
				order to understand the Yoga Sutras. Granted the Yoga Sutras can 
				not be understood without some insight (of which yoga practice 
				provides), but more important we study the book (the Yoga Sutras) 
				in order to practice yoga successfully so that we can realize 
				the fruit and completion of yoga/union called samadhi. This may 
				seem like a small point to some, but actually the state of 
				spiritual alienation can reinforce the illusion of this 
				dichotomy. Too many people are already attempting to find "god" 
				in ancient books or whose spiritual practice has become reduced 
				to studying and thinking about these books. In other words for a 
				real yogi the truth or spiritual realization is not found in 
				some ancient scripture written down in a holy book, but rather 
				the truth is living -- it is to be realized inside -- in ALL OUR 
				RELATIONS -- in this very life. Thus it is emphasized that the 
				Yoga Sutras simply are a guidebook to yoga/samadhi complied by 
				Patanjali from the ancient oral traditions that preceded his 
				days. Although samadhi is not conditioned (by definition), the 
				guidebook itself necessarily must address the language, 
				symbolism, and prejudice of its time. It addresses the spiritual 
				malaise and fragmented conditioned milieu of that time/place 
				attempting to communicate a timeless and universal underlying 
				Presence. It is to Patanjali's credit that he does not buy into 
				those prejudices and tradition (pramana) which are themselves 
				vrttis (disturbances creating obstacles), but rather he 
				addresses these obstacles and remediates them. Those predisposed 
				to intellectual reductionist thought, tradition, and philosophy 
				mistakenly thought that Patanjali advocated such. All because 
				Patanjali addressed the ignorance of his day does not mean that 
				he bought into it. Because he used samkhya philosophical 
				terminology (the philosophical terminology of the day) it does 
				not mean that he was a samkhya adherent, rather it is clear that 
				Patanjali was a yogi, not a philosopher.
				But intellectuals and academicians in India and elsewhere will 
				not let go of their mistaken idea that Patanjali's system 
				belongs under the aegis of philosophy and is subject to 
				intellectual scrutiny. This self gratuitous institutionalized 
				tenacity by an entrenched academia is self serving in so far 
				that by so misrepresenting Patanjali, they attempt to own him 
				and also yoga, thus self appointing themselves as the authority 
				in a realm which otherwise they would be outcastes. Thus the 
				prevalent institutionalized misinterpretation of the Yoga Sutras 
				is explained, which in turn explains the prevalent morass of 
				unreadable translations and its resultant inaccessibility to 
				readers other than scholars. A simple straightforward reading of 
				Patanjali will prove that he wrote down the oral teachings of 
				Yoga for yoga practitioners in order to aid their practice, 
				rather than for philosophers to debate. Patanjali starts off 
				from the cultural time/place prejudice, bias, and milieu of his 
				day and from there leads the reader into the increasingly more 
				subtle -- into the "real" -- the universal and timeless -- which 
				can only be understood through inner experience either from 
				authentic spiritual practice (sadhana) or grace. The Sutras have 
				value then only as a written aid to our practice just as oral 
				instructions were intended. Although yoga can be interpreted or 
				described through samkhya philosophical terms (just like the Old 
				Testament can be paraphrased in English or Greek, or just like 
				quantum physics can address Newtonian ideas, the yoga of 
				Patanjali as he describes it aims at going far beyond symbolic 
				representation, philosophy, concepts, words, or other manmade 
				anthropocentric limitations. So here Vibhuti Pada begins with 
				the profound non-dual context of samadhi. It completes the eight 
				limbs of ashtanga yoga, by elaborating on the last three limbs (dharana, 
				dhyana, and samadhi) and puts them together in what is called 
				the three fold practice of samyama. Then it details how the 
				various applications of samyama can lead to the siddhis (accomplishments, 
				abilities, masteries, and powers but they are not to be seen as 
				attainments because who is it that attains it), and then the 
				latter part of Pada 3 elevates the discussion to the ultimate 
				spiritual accomplishment. The Siddhis: The Boons, Proficiencies, 
				Abilities, Talents, Powers, Perfections, and Adeptness This 
				chapter is often a stumbling block for many students mostly 
				because of the poor translations, but also because here in 
				Vibhuti, Patanjali tells us about the pitfalls of the siddhis (powers 
				and abilities) that are presented to a yoga practitioner (sadhak). 
				(See verses III. 37 III. 50, 51, and 52.) Much of the confusion 
				stems from the lack of a coherent context of the word, siddhi. 
				Here we are not talking about black magic, witchcraft, or 
				sorcery in the Western dualistic sense. That's not the kind of 
				power that Patanjali addresses.
				It should be clear that by the word, siddhi, Patanjali does not 
				mean power or control over others, comparative advantage, power 
				as in the sense of black magic, or power in the separate sense 
				of ego. As our practice matures so does our awareness and 
				connection points -- previously dormant energy circuits become 
				activated and hence evolutionary abilities that were previously 
				repressed manifest. In yoga, power or ability is not bad, nor 
				should it be feared, yet it is not something to strive for by 
				itself. Most these siddhis come naturally by themselves. Even 
				GOOD powers (like maybe you might see in White Magic such as in 
				the Lord of the Ring Trilogy for example) can be dissipative and 
				distracting. In pada three, Patanjali addresses the natural 
				latent innate powers within and how to evoke them for liberation. 
				Of course without non-dual transpersonal wisdom, one can do much 
				harm, so this invocation of the powers must go hand in hand with 
				the development of the latent innate wisdom in order to realize 
				true happiness and fulfillment. In other words, through a wise 
				balanced practice (sadhana) we gradually realize the requisite 
				wisdom, ability, and passion to succeed while heightened powers 
				abilities, freedoms, and latent talents become progressively 
				activated. Wisdom and wise practice leads to more wisdom and 
				more effective practice, and so forth. Obstructions are removed 
				and liberation eventually realized. So "siddhi" in the non-dual 
				transpersonal context of yoga is simply intermediate fruits of 
				yoga practice; i.e., various levels of perfections and adeptness 
				naturally come forth, evolve, and manifest as a result of our 
				sustained practice. We become more proficient and more able as 
				our horizon upon self deepens and expands -- as we become more 
				aware and conscious. Here we do not focus on attaining the 
				powers as a goal; but rather in a balanced sadhana the seductive 
				dangers of power misinterpreted by the dualistic ego are 
				overcome by the antidotal activation of the non-dual 
				transpersonal wisdom -- latent healing energy and compassion. 
				Although Patanjali warns us about the dangers of pursuing or 
				becoming seduced by the siddhis, he does not say that they are 
				bad or evil in and by themselves. As a matter of fact throughout 
				the Yoga Sutras Patanjali never uses the dualistic terminology 
				of good or bad (to his credit), but he does address distraction, 
				dissuasion, dissipation, and fragmentation. To avoid the 
				seduction of the siddhis we need to focus on and be dedicated to 
				liberation itself, which discloses itself within the context of 
				a transpersonal integrated context. This intent and bhava (mood) 
				of our sadhana provides the directed vector and requisite focus 
				in order to create success, thus avoiding the siddhis feeding 
				the diversionary side trip of fragmentary existence (the 
				illusory belief in ego or separate self).
				
				This potential seduction of the siddhis is reinforced when this 
				integral context of "ALL OUR RELATIONS" is diminished or 
				forgotten. In that fragmented state, if we did (prematurely) 
				succeed in obtaining some siddhis, it would feed our sense of 
				separateness (asmita) or self pride (one of the kleshas) and 
				thus hold our spiritual progress back (it would take us away 
				from the whole). We will get into this more in
				detail later when we study verses III 37, 50, and 51, but 
				suffice it to say, some siddhis will come by themselves, but how 
				we deal with them (as a benefit or an impediment) will depend on 
				the strength, intent, and sincerity of our practice and 
				preparation. All power (Shakti) comes from an Intelligent Source 
				(source of All Intelligence) -- from "THAT" which can not be 
				adequately named and which is ALWAYS present (doesn't change). 
				When "connected" (in yoga) - in grace -- in alignment we become 
				those arms and legs -- fingers and toes -- eyes and voice. In 
				that sense there are no individual siddhis that are capable of 
				being possessed, but if one "thinks" that an "I" (as a separate 
				self) have accomplished this, that this comes from "me" alone, 
				that "I" own this, then they disown the great "Self" and 
				eventually (unless grace comes back to them) continue to 
				fragment in dissolution (fall from grace). Thus in this way 
				there is no problem or fear in manifesting the powers as long as 
				we know where it is coming from -- as long our intent is clear, 
				i.e., what we are doing in context with ALL OUR RELATIONS -- all 
				of creator/creation (siva/shakti). Playing with fire is only 
				dangerous to some one who does not understand its nature and the 
				potential consequences. Thus it is grace that great power is not 
				given readily to those who may use it for destruction or 
				destruction of self. Power exercised without knowledge is thus 
				better not possessed at all (saving one from this burden). Now 
				many people understandably feel disempowered/powerless and 
				disconnected from their creative/evolutionary core dynamics. 
				This is the everyday lot of the neurotic consumer mentality; and 
				as such it is "normal" (but not natural) for these people to 
				thirst for power. Fearful and confused they seek security, order, 
				control, and power outside of themselves, but what they really 
				need is "connection/yoga" inside --to live in harmony with the 
				natural self existent order -- their true nature. THAT larger 
				whole is empowering and fulfilling. This "self" acceptance of 
				our own inner natural power may be a large leap for a lot of 
				people who have been brought up dysfunctionally (to fear and 
				disown their power). Thus authentic yoga should empower (bring 
				us into self empowerment), not further lead one to dependence 
				upon external authority, priesthood, or scripture. "Good or evil" 
				is a difficult trap for Westerners to let go of (which is mostly 
				cross cultural in nature and rooted in the dualistic mind), but 
				it is true that many abilities can be very helpful as long as 
				they do not feed the ego.
				Now if we state preferences, we an get into the trap of "desire" 
				and attachment; while in yoga practices we learn (sooner or 
				later) to focus our passion/love away from the subtle 
				attachments/desires which impose bias upon reality-as-it-is such 
				as preference, while placing more energy toward divine 
				acceptance -- toward liberation. This is what Patanjali is 
				saying -- Liberation requires one pointed passion and dedication 
				-- when your whole being gets into this direction -- there you 
				go -- no problem. When we have inner conflict our energy (and 
				success) is thwarted. Progress in yoga is stagnant. Ultimately 
				we wake up to the simple and yet profound truth that let us see 
				how we create our own dramas, problems, and have been stepping 
				on our own toes. Then we surrender that on the altar of divine 
				love. Simply sitting in meditation, the prejudicial mind becomes 
				purified by itself -- preferential thinking modalities gradually 
				are gladly abandoned/surrendered. Patanjali says in Samadhi Pada 
				(chapter I) verse 3: "tada drashtuh sva-rupe'vasthanam" After 
				the vagaries and disturbances (vrttis) of consciousness (cit) 
				cease (nirodha), then Yoga is accomplished. Then we abide into 
				our natural (swarupa) unconditioned state (verse IV). When the 
				vrtti cease the mind-field is silent and liberated, allowing 
				space for a greater wisdom to dawn. In tantric terminology here 
				the kundalini citta is activated. Yoga thus is the liberation of 
				the individual mind from its habitual illusory prison and 
				conditioned fragmented imprints of the discontinuous experiences 
				frame in duality and separateness; so it can fly again and dwell 
				in its rightful spotless natural abode (swarupa). The practice 
				of yoga evolved as the process of clearing out the pathways (the 
				psychic channels called nadis) within the body/mind and pranic 
				sheaths, the false beliefs of the vijnanamaya kosha, the 
				afflictive emotions based on negative beliefs (kleshas), the 
				samskaras (past cellular imprints and negative conditioning), 
				and negative karma through the purifying and vivifying agency of 
				the cit-prana or cit-shakti, thus allowing a gradual opening up 
				to and a communion with the source of consciousness and life -- 
				of unconditioned citta or principle of primal consciousness to 
				evolve and manifest. In the broader context of yoga (which is 
				ALL OUR RELATIONS) a three fold "potential" burden of the 
				siddhis can thus be discerned and avoided (all of which are not 
				necessary for the successful practice of yoga). 1) As above, we 
				can become preoccupied in pursuing them, and thus ignore/miss 
				where they really come from -- being distracted we remain 
				imprisoned in the veil of suffering. 2) As above, we can misuse 
				the powers and cause ourselves (and/or others) harm if we are 
				not ready with most likely leading to further negative 
				consequences. In Indian and Tibetan literature, there exists 
				many stories of the misuse of power and the generation of 
				negative consequences (bad karma)
				3) A third negative consequence is that our intention may be 
				relatively pure at first (or at least sattva may dominate) but 
				after realizing a siddhi or two (minor or major) this may 
				reinforce one's pride saying "I did this or that -- I am better 
				than others", and so forth which will reinforce the negative 
				tendency toward fragmentation (versus
				union/yoga), and thus such has the potential to act as a severe 
				impediment toward final liberation (Kaivalya). Patanjali says: 
				III 37 "te samadhav upasarga vyuthane siddhayah" which is 
				translated by Swami Venkatesananda, in Enlightened Living "But, 
				even such excellent sensations and feelings and all the psychic 
				powers discussed so far, which on the surface appear to be 
				desirable and encouraging aspects of perfection are in fact 
				impediments to enlightenment as they, too, distract and 
				externalize the attention." Overview of the Rest of Vibhuti Pada 
				One could also say that the student of the Yoga Sutras could 
				skip the entire Vibhuti Pada entirely as it on the surface may 
				appear that it simply caters to those who thirst for siddhis, 
				but careful analysis will prove its value. For example the 
				beginning and the end of Pada III) can be considered both 
				quintessential and profound and do not deal with mundane siddhis 
				at all. Even in the middle part which undergoes the most 
				misunderstanding (as long as the yogi does not get distracted) 
				these abilities can help us on the path just as any of the other 
				sadhanas are limbs of the great of tree of yoga. So Pada III 
				starts where Pada 2 leaves off, thus completing the first five 
				limbs (angas) of ashtanga yoga with a terse exposition of 
				dharana (concentration), dhyana (meditation) and samadhi. These 
				taken together as a simultaneous practice is defined as samyama 
				(which is also the major underlying topic of chapter 3). In 
				other words samyama can be applied to specific objects (physical 
				and mental) as well as processes. Samyama is not only how 
				various powers can be accomplished (which Patanjali warns may 
				wind up as an impediment and distraction if we mistakenly take 
				them as an end in themselves), but samyama is to be used for 
				liberation. Samyama lets us commune with a chosen object or 
				process of communion as-it-is without a filter. It lets 
				intimately know that process or object in an objectless 
				(non-separate way). Again in other words the siddhis do not have 
				to be a trap, but only that it is counterproductive to be 
				seduced into wasting time/energy to attempt to possess them 
				willfully as individual possessions in the ego sense. Besides 
				the valuable technique of samyama, the delineation of the three 
				kinds of parinama (movement or change) i.e., nirodha, samadhi, 
				and ekgrata is usefully presented in III 9-12..
				Parinama (transformation) especially may be a difficult term 
				because for some change (parinama) is judged "good" and to 
				others it is judged "bad" or feared. To clarify it may be 
				helpful to distinguish between parinama as a transformative 
				process from that of the fluctuations (vrtti) of the citta. Yes, 
				yoga aims at eliminating (nirodha) the agitations and 
				disturbances (vrtti) of the citta, but change or transformation 
				(parinama) from a constricted and obscured state of 
				consciousness to an expanded state of clarity is desirable in 
				yoga. First a definition of Parinama as: transmutation, mutation, 
				transformation, oscillation, movement, changes of state. So yes, 
				in regards to the mind, in meditation, or in samadhi such 
				fluctuations are a disturbance, so in practice these 
				disturbances are stilled. But for the average practitioner, 
				their pre-existing mind sets are stuck and frozen -- their karma 
				is a heavy burden that is smothering them. These practitioners 
				need to utilize transformative practices. Ultimately in the 
				absolute sense there is stillness (or Siva), but in the relative 
				sense all things are interdependent, moving, and dynamic (or 
				Shakti) -- the only constant is change and morph-ability. One 
				may distinguish between favorable and unfavorable changes, but 
				the process of judgment itself gets in the way and is not 
				necessary, because it creates fear of change (change being "bad" 
				or undesirable). From our point of view movement and change by 
				itself may or may not be "undesirable", but it is dependent upon 
				"what" it is that is moving and/or rather more so in what 
				direction it is moving, that may be either deemed helpful or 
				destructive to our yoga practice. Indeed to become frozen in 
				fear, grief, trauma, the past, or immobility is not helpful, but 
				rather to mobilize the prior rigidity of the body or the mind 
				will, if skillfully done, lead to liberation. To be able to 
				become aware of these changes and to be able to effect (siddhi) 
				and liberation (kaivalyam) is desired in yoga. The 
				practitioner's point of view thus becomes key when it comes to 
				understanding parinama. Thus in III-9-12 one may easily 
				interpret that Patanjali describes parinama as a transformative 
				technique to apply in meditation to still the wandering mind (nirodha 
				parinama), then samadhi parinama, and lastly ekgrata parinama. 
				Notice that the direction is one of refinement coming from the 
				coarse and discordant into the subtlest and unitive. This 
				direction of transformative energies accomplishes yoga (unification/integration). 
				Thus it is noted here that even a practice that leads eventually 
				toward stillness is itself transformative until the final 
				conclusion is integrated.
				From Sutra 13-16, Patanjali changes direction assuming a 
				different viewpoint (which is no individual viewpoint at all, 
				but rather a universal, transpersonal, non-dual, changeless, 
				eternal, and all encompassing). From this unitive viewpoint of 
				ALL OUR RELATIONS that is realized via samadhi and ekgrata 
				parinama, then "isolated" changes of state can not independently 
				exist as such, but rather all flows as a unified and liquid 
				whole; i.e., no single thing changes. Thence from the point of 
				view of Sanatana Dharma or eternal law, nothing changes, but 
				rather what appears as potential energy, manifest energy as 
				matter, decay or even undefined and unclassifiable -- all 
				reflect a unifying interdependent causality. This is the dance 
				of Shiva/Shakti. A trans-rational one taste permeates the soup 
				in that nothing changes, but at the same time everything is in 
				flux. This might appear mystical to the probings of the 
				intellect, but is familiar fare to the meditator. This is why 
				Patanjali says in IV. 7, that the actions of yogis are 
				inscrutable by the intellect -- the causes of their actions lie 
				outside of linear time and space -- outside of duality. Many 
				traditional translators confuse the word, parinama (transformation 
				or change) with that of vrtti (perturbation, vagary, agitation, 
				turmoil, disturbance, modification). Let us focus on vrtti more 
				succinctly. It should be clear that vrtti refers to the 
				variegated "patterns" of the various modified states of 
				consciousness. The vrttis thus obstruct and color our perfected 
				unbiased universal view of Reality as-it-is. But vrtti is not to 
				be confused with change itself. Parinama is different, as it 
				simply connotes the process of change or transformation itself, 
				not the patterning upon the citta. Similarly, samskaras are the 
				imbedded patterns of past experiences which activate latent 
				tendencies or syndromes (called vasana). Samskaras are imbedded 
				in the body/mind , cellular memory, psycho neuro-physiology, 
				neuromuscular system, and energy body or as John Lilly says 
				inside the programming of the "human bio-computer". As long as 
				they are not deprogrammed they will create vrttis and other 
				unfavorable changes of consciousness. Most effective yoga 
				techniques aim at destroying and uprooting the samskaras 
				(negative past conditioning) -- and as such yoga is designed to 
				reprogram these patterns -- remediate conditioned consciousness 
				back into its unconditioned natural state. Thus sutras 1-15 of 
				pada III (especially III -12) may be helpful in understanding 
				the valuable practice of samyama (three part communion). The 
				action of parinama (applied transformation) which may be defined 
				as parts of our sadhana (part of our spiritual practice) is 
				discussed in III 9-12 as the application of the three main 
				process of nirodha parinama, ekgrata parinama, and samadhi 
				parinama), while III-13-16 discusses parinama from the non-dual 
				viewpoint of interconnectedness where the absolute and relative 
				perspectives are unified and not disparate. III 16-48 (the 
				middle part of Pada III) is often characterized as a sketchy 
				list of abilities/powers (siddhas) with their associated means 
				of attainment (usually through samyama), however this 
				translation will treat these as practical yoga sadhana.
				
				Toward the end, Pada III becomes very lofty delineating such 
				practices as a spiritual means for complete liberation (from 
				sutra 49 onward); while the ending of chapter 3 leads us to the 
				grandeur of kaivalyam (absolute liberation) as discussed in 
				chapter four. So, yes, Vibhuti Pada (Chapter III) although 
				generally judged to be the least important and least useful of 
				the four chapters (it could be skipped entirely without 
				lessening the purport of the sutras); it is strongly suggested 
				that the profundity of samyama and parinama alone may well make 
				the chapter well worth studying. The reader is always encouraged 
				to do a deeper reading than what the most common translations 
				offer. One finds that after abhyasa (consistent practice) that 
				various insights and abilities come by themselves. Vibhuti Pada 
				attempts to explain these as well. Thus refreshingly, this 
				translation will not be based on the so called authoritative 
				academic tradition, but rather on meditative experience and 
				contemplation. From Swami Venkatesananda ("Enlightened Living"): 
				III -54 "Such wisdom born of intuitive understanding is the sole 
				redeemer. It is everything. It has everything. It encompasses 
				everything. It is the unconditioned and undivided intelligence 
				spontaneously functioning from moment to moment in the eternal 
				now, without sequential relationship." III -55 "When thus there 
				is pure equilibrium which is non-division between the indwelling 
				consciousness and all objective existence, between the nonmoving 
				intelligence and the ever moving phenomena, between the 
				unconditioned awareness and the rise and fall of 'The thousand 
				thoughts' -- there is freedom and independence of the infinite (kaivalyam)". 
				After putting Vibhuti Pada (this chapter on the abilities/siddhis) 
				aside, we can enter the last chapter, (Pada IV) Kaivalyam (Absolute 
				Liberation), which is by far the shortest, but also the most 
				lofty. III. 1 desa bandhas cittasya dharana Concentration (dharana) 
				consists of directing the consciousness (cittasya) with 
				attention within a chosen field, place, or point of focus (desa), 
				without distraction of the energy (bandha), but rather by 
				allowing the psychic energy (cit-prana) to flow into and 
				activate the nadis (psychic energy channels). Commentary: 
				Dharana is unifying, focusing, collecting, and binding together 
				(bandha) the consciousness principle that exist in the mind (cittasya) 
				and then focusing it (bandha) upon an object (desa). The place (desa) 
				can be internal (antar) or external (bahya) or it can be very 
				subtle (suksma) or secret (gupta).
				Since the mind is directed by energy and energy is directed by 
				mind, one follows the other. We call that cit-prana or 
				citta-shakti. This concentration of and focusing the cit-prana 
				upon an external or internal object not only focuses the mind, 
				but also the energy. This focusing calms the mind and makes it 
				fit for dhyana (meditation). Physical focusing (dharana) with 
				the eyes is often called dristhi or tratak of which the most 
				subtle is on the internal light. Dharana may also be utilized 
				upon listening to the eternal sound (as in sabda or nada yoga), 
				visualizing mystic diagrams (yantras), or other such 
				combinations of concentrative practices such as utilizing 
				mantras, visualizations, breath, etc (sometimes called laya yoga 
				and/or prana vidya). Later in this chapter, Patanjali does 
				discuss some of these laya yoga practices in samyama (discussed 
				further on in this chapter) , however here he is discussing 
				dharana to steady, calm, and focus the mental distractions of 
				the ordinary mind as a precursor to dhyana (meditation). Since 
				concentration requires an object to focus upon and thus in the 
				Western sense it can be called, "focusing". This direction 
				allows one to get in direct contact with two fundamental 
				dynamics that are to be intimately linked; i.e., consciousness (cit) 
				and energy (prana) ort what is called the cit-prana. This 
				depends on the mental principle that says that wherever our 
				consciousness flows, so does our energy follow. Wherever our 
				energy is directed, so does the physical also follow. As we will 
				show later, this principle is put to work throughout chapter 
				three and especially in healing work, asana, pranayama, and 
				pratyhara practices. In hatha yoga, directing the cit-prana in 
				the body is accomplished through the energy valves (bandhas) and 
				the mudras (which combine dristhi, asana, pranayama, bandha, and 
				visualization all together. In hatha yoga pranayama, pratyhara, 
				and dharana (as visualization) are utilized to direct the energy 
				and consciousness (cit-prana) in the advanced practices which 
				are called prana vidya or the dharanas. laya, tantra, hatha, and 
				kundalini yoga take this sort of concentration internally often 
				utilizing the internal energy circuits, nadis, chakras, yantras, 
				and/or mandalas eventually creating a sympathetic resonance with 
				the inter-dimensional realms or lokas. In functional hatha yoga 
				practice, even asana practice is more than physical exercise, 
				but rather as a method of focusing on the life force (prana) and 
				awareness (cit-prana) eventually allowing us to access the 
				workings of karma within the body/mind. Pranayama of course is 
				also a way of focusing (dharana) on the breath and life energy 
				combing again the principles of cit-prana. At first most 
				practitioners are given elementary practices such as tratak or 
				dristhi which first teaches us how to focus upon physical 
				objects utilizing the eyes. Objects can be as simple as a candle, 
				a color, symbol, or picture, or as complex as the Sri Yantra. 
				This stabilizers the cit-prana and in the case of symbols and 
				yantras directs the cit-prana. Practitioners may also be given 
				sounds to listen to (such as the pranava (om), or mantras to 
				repeat (japa) such as hamsa, soham, etc.). Later as one 
				progresses in getting in touch with the more subtle (vicara) 
				inner lights and chakras, one learns to effect profound change 
				in the body/mind organism. Much of chapter three utilizes the 
				powerful practice of samyama of which dharana is an essential 
				ingredient.
				
				So if we focus on a philosophical concept, esthetic, or 
				spiritual principle that object of thought can also be called 
				dharana. Here then, it is obvious that this kind of 
				concentration can also be called contemplation. Many people 
				confuse contemplative techniques as being meditation (dhyana), 
				but contemplation on a specific theme, an object of thought, a 
				specific idea, principle, intent, or concept is more correctly 
				the practice of concentration (dharana) because it focuses on 
				that mental/spiritual object. Where dharana is the process of 
				gathering up and objectifying upon an object within the 
				framework of object relations. meditation (dhyana) on the other 
				hand is the process that allows us to drop all such object 
				relationships entirely -- all sense of I/it duality, all limited 
				self identifications including attachment to themes, concepts, 
				ideas, or thought itself. It is simply an semantic trap (of 
				inexact definitions) where one school may define the English 
				word, "meditation", as concentration practice (such as a chakra 
				meditation, a meditation on some specific subject, etc.), while 
				defining "contemplation" how Patanjali defines dhyana. So I hope 
				that this short discussion will avoid those semantic confusions 
				translating dharana as concentration and contemplation with 
				objects) while translating dhyana as meditation (without 
				Biodetoxification or referents). In raj yoga, dharana as 
				concentration is learned in the beginning in order to stabilize 
				the cit-prana and still the mind. It is used as a precursor to 
				meditation (dhyana) where the "i-it" dualistic relationship 
				between the one who sees and the object which is perceived (pratyaksa) 
				is eventually dissolved revealing the underlying transpersonal 
				non-dual light of samadhi. III. 2 tatra pratyaya-ekatanata 
				dhyanam From there (tatra) [after the mind has been settled in 
				dharana], then, it's contents of an object and the observer (pratyaya) 
				is one pointedly extended (ekatanata) to merge with pure 
				non-dual Mind itself, so that the duality or separation inherent 
				in ordinary dualistic objective thinking processes (pratyaya) 
				cease. This cessation process os called meditation (dhyana). 
				Commentary: When the tendency to extend (tanata) consciousness (citta) 
				to an external object (physical) or internal object (mental), 
				which is called pratyaya, is stretched/extended to its ultimate 
				limit (tanata), then limited objectification processes (internal 
				or external) cease. This extends dharana (focusing on a specific 
				object (physical or mental) to the practice of meditative 
				absorption (dhyana). Dhyana thus occurs when dualistic processes 
				of the mind cease (pratyaya-eka-tanata).
				
				Thus the limiting predilections of the ordinary dualistic 
				conditioned mind with its perceived contents (pratyaya) are 
				eliminated (no longer objectified as referents), then when those 
				arising thought processes which direct consciousness to an 
				object (pratyaya) also cease. Therein one resides in dhyana 
				(meditative absorption). Pratyaya as was defined in previous 
				sutras refers to the ordinary dualistic cognitive functions (carried 
				out in the frontal lobes or cerebral cortex) where there is 
				discerned an object of observation, a separate observer, and the 
				process of observation. Here we go beyond the dualistic results 
				of this function of the non-integrated human neuro-physiology to 
				the transpersonal non-dual synergistic intelligence that 
				animates all of existence and non-existence (ekatanata) 
				including the inner ecology of the brain, neuro-endocrine 
				system, neurophysiology as well as the external ecology and all 
				of externality. This is the non-dual bridge of simultaneous 
				inner and outer synchronization that meditation (dhyana) affords. 
				This is the non-dual and non-directional bridge which ekatanata 
				denotes. Where dharana (concentration/contemplation) in the 
				previous sutra involved gathering together and focusing on an 
				object, here dhyana then starts the process of expansion of 
				consciousness -- the field of consciousness is thus extended (tanata) 
				into non-dual unity (eka tanata) eliminating the artificially 
				dualistic separations of the fabricated mind that fragment the 
				object of consciousness, the observer, and the process of 
				observation dissolving ordinary dualistic "I-it" ego separations. 
				Thus meditation (dhyana) is the process that allows us to move 
				beyond a limited focused object of concentration (dharana) or 
				any constructed/contrived artificial field of consciousness at 
				all. Here through dhyana the universal unbiased Mind is 
				approached. Indeed there is no object in dhyana except at the 
				start, but such fields then become expanded. Thus the I-it 
				duality of that is produced by ordinary cognition (pratyaya) 
				based on observed events or ordinary objectivity based on sense 
				perception which is digested and processed by the frontal cortex 
				of the brain) is eliminated. Rather through meditation we no 
				longer remain addicted to pratyaya (apparent separate objects or 
				contents of the mind), but extend our range of experiencing and 
				knowing. Thus there can be said to be three separate and 
				distinct practices of dharana and dhyana; i.e., concentration on 
				external (bahya) objects, concentration on internal (antar) 
				objects, and concentration on nothing -- the process of voiding 
				or rather the cessation of the objectification process entirely. 
				This last technique is a decent definition of meditation.
				
				How is this done? Dharana is useful in the beginning only, in 
				order to gather together the wandering outward flowing energy 
				and consciousness and bring it back within to the heart (yam, 
				niyam, asana, pranayama, the breath, and pratyhara all are 
				synchronized and combine in one dharana). The synergistic 
				combination of this pratyhara/dharana allows us to let go of the 
				distracting and dissipating outflowing cit-prana, thus 
				establishing a state of peaceful vairagya all at once 
				accomplishing all the other limbs up to and including dharana. 
				This dharana/pratyhara activates/synergizes a trans-dual state 
				deep inside which establishes the steady base that ripens the 
				mind for meditation (dhyana). HERE through pratyhara and dharana 
				vairagya is accomplished instantaneously while at the same time 
				an awareness of the presence of the All and Everything is 
				approximated. Through this shortcut (of pratyhara/dharana) one 
				can sit in meditation with far less wandering or monkeying of 
				the mental processes. HERE consistent meditation (dhyana) for 
				loosens up and removes the more subtle mental impediments and 
				limitations. As Patanjali says, dhyana is the process where all 
				objects (contents) of the mind (pratyaya) are emptied -- where 
				the artificial limits imposed by the limiting contents of the 
				mind are freed. This is extension is thus obviously accomplished 
				by emptying the contents. So where dharana was a process of 
				gathering, there is an element of emptying and releasing in 
				dhyana that is culminated in Sutra III.3 (samadhi). So part and 
				parcel of the technique of dhyana involves learning how to drop 
				all intent and object relations upon separate things (vairagya) 
				-- HERE occurs simple but profound abiding. The limited contents 
				of the ordinary mind that was mired in duality and self 
				limitation is extended out in all directions to the pure light 
				of the great unconditioned true nature of mind which is allowed 
				to shine forth. A circle is completed in the process, for it may 
				be realized in the end that the underlying Source of the 
				individual intelligence and consciousness resides in a 
				transpersonal all inclusive and encompassing Reality 
				simultaneously co-existing non-dually within and without. In 
				other words dhyana leads us to samadhi.As a process it 
				transcends and self liberates itself. Meditation goes beyond the 
				veil of ordinary knowledge, the process of differentiated 
				thought, or ordinary mentation which creates a limited view and 
				content (pratyaya). As we saw in chapter one, pratyaya pertains 
				to the process of ordinary cognition a process of 
				objectification governed by the cerebral cortex (frontal lobes). 
				Such cognitive processes are useful in certain applications but 
				are self limiting in the spiritual pursuit which yearns for 
				direct communion with the innate transpersonal spirit with in 
				all. Limited views are anchored in dualistic and comparative 
				thought processes, reductionism, distinction, differentiation, a 
				process of weeding out, analysis, and separation. When these 
				thought processes, fixations, and ordinary mentation processes 
				(the monkey mind) end as if all thoughts are gathered up as one 
				large thought (pratyaya-ekatanata), then they can be surrendered 
				and dissolved. HERE meditation is fructified -- the thoughts 
				cease coming. HERE the intrinsic clear light of consciousness 
				dawns in glimpses of samadhi.
				
				While concentration requires an object to focus upon (a specific 
				content of the mental field is thus structured and delimited), 
				dhyana on the other hand is the process of
				moving into a far more expansive (tanata) whole. When we get "there" 
				at the end of meditation, then the process of expansion itself 
				stops by itself. Here universal non-dual consciousness itself, 
				the unfabricated natural mind or Infinite Mind dawns as the 
				great expanse of consciousness. Through consistent practice of 
				dhyana a deeper non-dual awareness is amplified eventually 
				disclosing that even the objectification of a an apparent 
				separate meditator who is meditating is dissolved as the 
				hallucination of limited dualistic thinking, Even the process of 
				meditation becomes a contradiction -- superficial and illusory. 
				Dhyana is the gateway to transpersonal and universal 
				supra-wisdom -- it is not conceived nor contrived, but 
				trans-rational, natural, spontaneous, and unlimited. It is not 
				dependent upon the artificially imposed activities of dualism 
				and separation, but rather the cit-prana is now redirected and 
				gains momentum toward the Great non-dual integrity -- toward 
				union. The key in understanding the intent of this sutra is to 
				understand the specific limits of pratyaya (ordinary cognitive 
				processes and their results), and the value of meditation that 
				allows us the ability to extend beyond that limitation and bias. 
				Thus dhyana goes beyond the inherent duality of pratyaya which 
				always has an I/It referent or subject/object (duality). Here we 
				define pratyaya as being the relational and comparative contents 
				of the fixated dualistic mind-set -- the view of the ordinary 
				dualistic mind in terms of external objects -- the "normal" 
				realm of I-it separation -- the tendency for the cognitive 
				functions to hold us prisoners in habitual objective extraction, 
				abstraction,a nd spiritual self alienation where it appears that 
				objects (mental or physical) are possessed or fixated by the 
				mind. This is the realm of "normal" perception which occurs in 
				the corrupted/fallen state where separate objects appear to be 
				solid and real, while the observer appears to live in a 
				chronically estranged and disconnected world detached from the 
				apparent separate objects as a separate viewer which defines the 
				biased context of ignorance of the true nature of mind -- 
				Satchitananda. Through authentic practice of 
				virama-pratyaya-abhyasa (see Sutra 1.18) in meditation, we begin 
				to see how this fragmented dualistic and relativistic view has 
				become artificially acquired through negative conditioning and 
				then we are able to let it go. It is of value to note that 
				pratyhara is the transformative energetic remediation of 
				pratyaya, thus this will give us a good preliminary feeling for 
				how pranayama, pratyhara, dharana, dhyana, and samadhi all 
				combine in the main practice of Vibhuti Pada, which is samyama. 
				(See Sutra 12, 19, and 35 for more on pratyaya). Through 
				meditation the chitta-vrtti ceases, and what shines forth is 
				pure unimpeded primordial consciousness as our natural 
				unconditioned true nature (swarupa).
				
				"Some great meditators say that mind's nature is difficult to 
				grasp. It is not at all difficult. The error is in not 
				understanding meditation. There is no need to seek meditation 
				and there is no need to buy it. There is no need to make it and 
				no need to go for it. There is no need to work at meditation. It 
				is sufficient to remain in the state of allowing the free 
				arising of whatever occurs in the mind. From the very beginning 
				your mind has been present and so there is no need for losing or 
				finding, having or not having. The mind has been present from 
				the very beginning, so whether thinking when thinking or not 
				thinking when not thinking, this mind is just itself. For 
				whatever arises in the mind it is sufficient to remain without 
				artificiality, calmly and unwaveringly on whatever is occurring. 
				Happiness and ease will come without effort." Patrul Rinpoche, 
				Self-liberating Understanding, translated by James Low in "Simply 
				Being. Texts in the Dzogchen Tradition", Vajra Press, London, 
				1994. pp 97-98. So dhyana (meditation) can be also defined as 
				the discipline of surrender to our true nature or unconditioned 
				state beyond the the bias of the vrttis. Natural (sahaj) 
				meditation as grace can and does happen, but for most of us it 
				occurs only after making an effort in sitting for meditation 
				where the vrttis are given opportunity to unwind and settle 
				down. All of us have experienced samadhi to some degree. Little 
				children do so often subjectively, but they have no conscious 
				awareness of their experience and can not integrate nor repeat 
				it reliably. At first in meditation we get small instances of 
				stillness, emptiness. and openness where the nadis, chakras, 
				dna, body, and mind are aligned with the entire universe. Such 
				periods of grace bring us into a deep heart felt harmony which 
				cause a positive imprint (samskara). These moments increase in 
				depth and moment through consistent meditation and samadhi 
				experiences. Then samadhi may last two seconds, ten, 15 seconds, 
				maybe 5 minutes, etc. Eventually this pathway into grace becomes 
				broadened out and made more accessible via consistent meditation 
				practice which leads to consistent samadhi experience. As the 
				old programming becomes deconditioned, the pathway to Grace 
				becomes more effortless and more natural and spontaneous. 
				Eventually through consistent practice (abhyasa) then, samadhi 
				as grace becomes a natural and spontaneous (sahaj) inclination. 
				Sutra I.39 describes spontaneous dhyana as being drawn into a 
				natural agreeable meditation. Also see Sutra II.11 for more on 
				dhyana as a practice for its benefits. III. 3 Tad 
				eva-artha-matra-nirbhasam svarupa-sunyam iva samadhih Samadhi is 
				realized when the artificial separations between the object (artha-matra) 
				being meditated upon (the observed), the meditator (the observer), 
				and the process of meditation (observation) are voided (sunya) 
				completely such appearances having disappeared into its true 
				state as it is. Here the true nature of seemingly separate 
				phenomenal objects (artha-matra) as well as the separate nature 
				of the observer who observes these objects are known as being 
				empty (sunya) of any separate essential nature (swarupa). Then 
				the natural self existing effulgent source of the luminosity (nirbhasam) 
				of the object in its natural unbiased universal place in all of 
				existence as-it-is (swarupa) is known as effulgent clear light 
				luminosity -- its ultimate natural unconditional precondition. 
				Swami Venkatesananda deftly translates this sutra as: When the 
				field of observation and the observing intelligence merges as if 
				their own form is abolished and the total intelligence shines as 
				the sole substance or reality, there is pure choiceless 
				awareness without the divided identity of the observer and the 
				observed – that is illumination. Commentary: In samadhi all 
				prejudice and limited consciousness not only are illuminated but 
				are also dissolved in the implicate self effulgent light of 
				ultimate truth which is our true nature (natural precondition). 
				Just as sutra two above signals the end of dharana (concentration) 
				and the beginning of dhyana (meditation), sutra three signals 
				the end of dhyana and the dawning of samadhi. This is where 
				dhyana leads. Eva means precise, thus (tad) this is the precise 
				and self effulgent (nirbhasam) meaning (artha-matra) of samadhi 
				which is, in Patanjali's own words is "nirbhasam-svarupa-sunyam" 
				is the shining forth in clear lucidity and luminosity (nirbhasam) 
				of the true nature of self (svarupa) which is devoid or empty (sunya) 
				of a separate self. Such occurs upon the non-dual realization 
				that all objects are empty of separate self (svarupa-sunya). 
				There is no separation in ALL OUR RELATIONS as everyone is kin 
				in the larger family of Universal love. there is no reality 
				behind subject/object duality except for ignorance of our true 
				nature. Sunya can also be seen as empty and open -- the pathways 
				of the nadis then are able to transport prana and light where 
				before they were blocked (dense, filled up, and obstructed). 
				Sunya is known as the central nadi (sushumna) by the mahasiddhas. 
				For them samadhi was that simple (allowing the central energy to 
				fill their vessel to its brimless brim). This indeed denotes the 
				full extension of the rainbow bridge as the self luminous 
				god-filled true nature of all things in the truth of ALL OUR 
				RELATIONS.
				
				Notice how this has integrity with Samadhi Pada (chapter 1), 
				Sutra 4 where Patanjali defines the fruit of yoga as "tada 
				drastuh svarupe vasthanam", which means; "Then the seer/observer 
				rests in that profound light of our true unconditioned original 
				self nature" or "Suchness". There in Sutra I.4. Patanjali tells 
				us that the goal of yoga is to reside in our true natural state 
				-- swarupa/suchness and that this occurs upon the cessation of 
				the vrttis (spinning out of the mind). did not then expand upon 
				swarupa but rather directed pada one toward nirbija samadhi as 
				the summum bonum of yoga. Now however in this definitive sutra, 
				Patanjali links samadhi and swarupa. Samadhi can be translated 
				as absorption or mergence, but in the context of English, there 
				is no suitable equivalent single word, because even mergence 
				assumes two separate things in the first place, where yoga 
				affirms that our true nature (in Reality) is non-dual, 
				transconceptual, -- inseparable, unlimited, and eternal. Thus 
				Patanjali uses the word, sunya (empty) where nothing exists by 
				itself, but rather everything is real only in context with the 
				whole -- when the obstructions are removed and pathways are 
				open. This is not a nihilistic statement, but rather a non-dual 
				affirmation of the fecund reality of ALL OUR RELATIONS. From 
				"The Lesser Discourse on Emptiness", The Collection of The 
				Middle Length Sayings of the Buddha, Vol III, translated from 
				the Pali by I. B. Horner "And again, Ananda, a monk, not 
				attending to the perception of the plane of no-thing, not 
				attending to the perception of the plane of 
				neither-perception-nor-non-perception, attends to solitude 
				grounded on the concentration of mind that is signless. His mind 
				is satisfied with . . . and freed in the concentration of mind 
				that is signless. He comprehends thus: ‗The disturbances there 
				might be resulting from the perception of the plane of no-thing 
				. . . from the perception of the plane of 
				neither-perception-nor-non-perception do not exist here. There 
				is only this degree of disturbance, that is to say the six 
				sensory fields that, conditioned by life, are grounded on this 
				body itself. He comprehends: ‗This perceiving is empty of the 
				plane of no-thing . . . empty of the perception of the plane of 
				neither-perception-nor-non-perception. And there is only this 
				that is not emptiness, that is to say the six sensory fields 
				that, conditioned by life, are grounded on this body itself.' He 
				regards that which is not there as empty of it. But in regard to 
				what remains there he comprehends, ‗That being, this is.' Thus, 
				Ananda, this too comes to be for him a true, not mistaken, 
				utterly purified realization of (the concept of) emptiness.
				
				And again, Ananda, a monk, not attending to the perception of 
				the plane of no-thing, not attending to the perception of the 
				plane of neither-perception-nor-non-perception, attends to 
				solitude grounded on the concentration of mind that is signless. 
				His mind is satisfied with, pleased with, set on and freed in 
				the concentration of mind that is signless. He comprehends thus, 
				‗This concentration of mind that is signless is effected and 
				thought out.[ 13 ] But whatever is effected and thought out, 
				that is impermanent, it is liable to stopping.' When he knows 
				this thus, sees this thus, his mind is freed from the canker of 
				sense-pleasures and his mind is freed from the canker of 
				becoming and his mind is freed from the canker of ignorance. In 
				freedom is the knowledge that he is freed and he comprehends: ‗Destroyed 
				is birth, brought to a close the Brahma-faring, done is what was 
				to be done, there is no more of being such or so.' He 
				comprehends thus: ‗The disturbances there might be resulting 
				from the canker of sense-pleasures do not exist here; the 
				disturbances there might be resulting from the canker of 
				becoming do not exist here; the disturbances there might be 
				resulting from the canker of ignorance do not exist here. And 
				there is only this degree of disturbance, that is to say the six 
				sensory fields that, conditioned by life, are grounded on this 
				body itself.' He regards that which is not there as empty of it. 
				But in regard to what remains he comprehends; ‗That being, this 
				is.' Thus, Ananda, this comes to be for him a true, not mistaken, 
				utterly purified and incomparably highest realization of (the 
				concept of) emptiness. And those recluses or brahmans, Ananda, 
				who in the distant past, entering on the utterly purified and 
				incomparably highest (concept of) emptiness, abided therein . . 
				. all these, entering on precisely this utterly purified and 
				incomparably highest (concept of) emptiness, abided therein. And 
				those recluses or brahmans, Ananda, who in the distant future, 
				entering on the utterly purified and incomparably highest (concept 
				of) emptiness, will abide therein . . . all these, entering on 
				precisely this utterly purified and incomparably highest (concept 
				of) emptiness, will abide therein. And those recluses or 
				brahmans, Ananda, who at present, entering on the utterly 
				purified and incomparably highest (concept of) emptiness, are 
				abiding in it . . . all these, entering on precisely this 
				utterly purified and incomparably highest (concept of) emptiness, 
				are abiding therein. Wherefore, Ananda, thinking: ‗Entering on 
				the utterly purified and incomparably highest (concept of) 
				emptiness, I will abide therein' . . . this is how you must 
				train yourself, Ananda. Thus spoke the Lord. Delighted, the 
				venerable Ananda rejoiced in what the Lord had said." Here we go 
				beyond the process, act, and/or technique of both dharana (concentration) 
				and dhyana (meditation) into samadhi (non-dual integration -- 
				the intimate experience of transpersonal sacred integrity). 
				Meditation becomes accomplished in a profound simple abiding 
				where the seer perceives herself in all that can be seen within 
				a universal non-dual context -- when THAT smiles back at Self as 
				Self. Meditation is a technique, not the end. One must step out 
				of the boat in order to step upon the further shore. Only when 
				the distinction between the meditator and the meditation is 
				removed -- when the meditator no longer looks down at himself as 
				meditating -- when that becomes also voided (sunya) as a 
				separate object -- then the dualistic veil of ego is dissolved 
				--then one sees, thus all is known, the meditation is over and 
				samadhi is achieved -- Grace becomes self actualized. Ho! It is 
				sacred!
				Vibhuti Pada (III), Sutra 4 and 5 continue defining the 
				technique of samyama:
				4. trayam ekatra samyamah 5. taj-jayat prajna-alokah Taken 
				together as a three part whole (trayam ekatra), that is, when 
				dharana (concentration), dhyana (meditation), and (samadhi) as a 
				mutually synergistic and simultaneous process is synchronized (trayam 
				ektra) such is called samyama. From the success in samyama (taj-jayat), 
				true and authentic vision and wisdom (prajna) without prejudice 
				or bias bathes us in its effulgence (alokah). Commentary: 
				Everywhere the self effulgent limitless wisdom shines forth in 
				ALL OUR RELATIONS. Mastery, success, or victory (jaya) in 
				samyama provides the gateway into a non-dual transpersonal and 
				trans-rational wisdom space. Here the inner and outer dynamics 
				are perfectly balanced, harmonized, and synchronized. In mature 
				samyama practice mergence/communion with any object can be 
				achieved by stepping out of the dualistic world of separateness. 
				We can not truly know some thing from outside of it -- from a 
				fragmented view, rather in dualism our perspective is biased and 
				prejudicial. But through success in samyama we approach any 
				specific object of attention in a different "light". Through 
				success in samyama we see reflected the light of universal 
				wisdom in all things/beings. That is called true insight (prajna). 
				Thus by applying samyama as the synchronization of concentration 
				(dharana), meditation (dhyana), and absorption (samadhi), to any 
				process or object, intimate knowledge of "that" through union/communion 
				with it is truly known without bias or distortion, in the great 
				overall perspective that we are one! Eventually by mastering 
				samyama we are able to merge into the trans-rational and 
				transpersonal holographic reality at will and from that realm 
				where the veil of duality has become lifted and dissolved, the 
				true nature of reality is known in ALL OUR RELATIONS. Samyama is 
				a powerful practice. First the object of concentration is fixed 
				upon (dharana), Then the duality of the object and the observer 
				is dissolved in non-dual oneness extending into ALL OUR 
				RELATIONS (dhyana). Then one merges into absorption with the 
				object non-dually, void of subject/object duality (in 
				sabija-samadhi). This is the way to know all things as they are 
				without prejudice, bias, or distortion (citta-vrtti). III. 6 
				tasya bhumisu viniyogah Tasya (dharana, dhyana, and samadhi) are 
				thus applied together as one interconnected whole, but are 
				usually learned and applied in graduated sequential (viniyogah) 
				stages (bhumi).
				Commentary: First you practice dharana and then focus the energy 
				and intent, being enabled to sense the flow of cit-prana and 
				empowered to redirect it. Then through dhyana (dissolving the 
				separation), the mind shines forth uninhibited in its innate 
				self effulgent lucidity, thus the state is set for samadhi. In 
				samadhi the apparent separate distinctions between a separate 
				object and observer is voided (sunya) while the universal light 
				is recognized in ALL OUR RELATIONS. After regular practice over 
				time, these parts or segments of samyama (dharana, dhyana, and 
				samadhi) are simultaneously and spontaneously deepened and 
				integrated together as an instantaneous coherent action that is 
				applied non-dually and effortlessly. This (tasya) wisdom light 
				and luster (prajna-alokah) that is produced by samyama is to be 
				used and directed to all dimensions of our experience (bhumisu) 
				thus acting as a spiritual eye gradually becomes acknowledged as 
				our everyday experience. Yogiraj Shyamacharan Lahiri says: 
				"Concentrate on the Chitta Vrtti. After the mastery over the 
				Chitta Vrtti, the other subtle objects are concentrated upon and 
				Meditation and Samadhi are also mastered. You attain yoga within 
				yoga. Yoga leads to yoga. And yoga dwells within yoga." III. 7 
				trayam antarangam purvebhyah Their distinct phases (purvebhyah) 
				of these three (trayam) limbs (angam) [dharana, dhyana, and 
				samadhi taken together as samyama] become increasingly subtle, 
				rarified, and internalized (antar). Commentary: No longer are 
				their distinctions as separate limbs (angam) made as in 
				beginning samyama as a coarse or external sequenced practice, 
				but eventually samyama happens altogether as a whole 
				effortlessly as an internal spontaneous process (antar).
				
				Most commentators have this sutra comparing the last three limbs 
				of ashtanga yoga (dharana, dhyana, and samadhi) with the first 
				five limbs (yama, niyama, asana, pranayama, and pratyhara) as 
				being grosser, more physical, less subtle, less mental, or 
				lacking in inner or esoteric aspects. But it has been shown that 
				all the limbs of the ashtanga tree have subtle, esoteric, mental, 
				inner, and esoteric meaning. All the limbs are concerned with 
				harnessing and gathering the biased outward and distracted flows 
				of pranas toward the center (inward), albeit sabija samadhi is 
				the only stage where this sadhana (practice) is no longer called 
				for.
				Although the eight limbs of ashtanga yoga can be presented in 
				stages, it is not my belief that Patanjali intends such a 
				discursion here. Albeit in particular we have shown how 
				pranayama and pratyhara become two aspects of dharana (concentration), 
				once that is mastered having activated the inner flows through 
				the nadis so they stay centered toward the central channel, then 
				the comparatively even more subtle and inner (antar) practices 
				of samyama become successful, these distinct phases (purvebhyah) 
				are to seen in the light of ashtanga yoga as an integrated whole 
				-- increasingly more subtle (antarangam) so that the sequenced 
				distinctions fade away beyond all subtlety . III. 8 tad api 
				bahirangam nirbijsya In comparison to the seedless (nirbijsya) 
				goal of enlightenment (nirbij-samadhi), even samyama is to be 
				viewed also as a coarse and external (bahir) practice or 
				technique (no matter how powerful or subtle).
				
				Commentary: In other words, Patanjali is attesting to the power 
				of samyama, but also warning us that samyama is only a technique 
				and practice (sadhana), not the end. It is samadhi with seed (sabija 
				samadhi). Only in nirbija-samadhi (seedless samadhi) even the 
				most subtle, esoteric, and most internal effort ceases. That is 
				the end of striving and practice. In nirbij-samadhi there is no 
				object, no samyama, no meditator, no effort and no separation. 
				Practice falls away to an all inclusive integrative experience 
				devoid of even the most subtle object (nirvicara). Now begins 
				the discourse on the three Parinamas (transformative practices) 
				that of nirodha-parinama, samadhi parinama, and 
				ekagrata-parinama. All the parinamas condition/transform the 
				samskaras (old imprints capable of being triggered from latent 
				tendencies to kleshas (negative emotions) or vasana (bad habits). 
				III. 9 vyutthana-nirodha-samskarayor abhibhava-pradhurbhavau 
				nirodha-ksana-chittanvayo nirodha-parinamah Nirodha parinama 
				occurs when the the stillness of the thought waves is achieved.
				
				Commentary: Here Patanjali brings up the powerful practice of 
				nirodha parinama. where one can instantaneously transform the 
				outflowing of the mind entering into stillness (nirodha). 
				Nirodha parinama is a technique that stills the mind. It is 
				normally applied in meditation. It occurs when the samskaras (mental 
				imprints) which trigger the mind's outflowing distractive 
				tendency (vyutthana) are blocked and cease (nirodha). 
				Simultaneously this supercedes and overpowers the further 
				arisings, cessations, and permutations (abhibhava-pradhurbhavau) 
				putting an end to any further successive associative changes of 
				the wandering monkey mind (nirodha-ksana-chittanvayo). In this 
				one sutra Patanjali uses the word, nirodha (cessation), three 
				times successively. The movements (parinama) of consciousness (chittanvaya) 
				-- the monkey mind -- cease (nirodha). Changes in state (parinama) 
				which are created by past programmed imbedded psychic 
				impressions and latent tendencies (samskarayor) cease (nirodha) 
				at the same moment (ksana) that the outward arising energy of 
				consciousness (vyutthana) cease (nirodha). Thus when one sits in 
				meditation one may allow for the still moment (ksana) wherein 
				the arising thought wave and the receding thought wave cancel 
				each other out (as in an absolutely still wave). This is truly 
				being present allowing for sacred presence). That could be 
				termed the application of nirodha-parinama (where the 
				transformations of the chitta are stilled (nirodha) which in 
				turn create the opposite wave of the samskaras (conditioned 
				impressions, negative programming, and tendencies) destroying/deprogramming 
				them over time. See III.18 following for more on samskaras. Thus 
				meditation is a two way street i.e., the samskaras create the 
				oscillations and permutations (parinama) of consciousness (chittaanvayo) 
				which create the obstructions to meditation, but also meditation 
				reverses the wave process (parinama) where the samskaras become 
				annihilated (nirodha). This is what is meant by the application 
				of nirodha parinama. Here ordinary karmic mentation ceases and 
				the profound great silence can arise. Nirodah parinama (the 
				first transformative technique to be learned) is itself first 
				learned to be applied in meditation, but one eventually learns 
				how to apply it at any time. First we learn how to "be present", 
				through nirodha parinama. When one's mind is quiet we are able 
				to hear the more subtle sounds. We apply this increased 
				awareness back into our own mental process. This inner stillness 
				and emptiness hence creates the foundation for increased 
				awareness and thus prepares us for the applications of the next 
				two following parinamas (samadhi parinama and ekgrata parinama) 
				in order to be filled with the source of consciousness itself -- 
				in sacred presence. III. 10 tasya prasanta-vahita samskarat 
				Although it may seem like an effort at first to apply the 
				antidote to arising thoughts (nirodha parinama), this action 
				eventually becomes effortless as the negative samskaras become 
				subdued and eliminated. When the samskaras are thus eliminated, 
				the practice becomes not only effortless, but tranquility, peace, 
				and lightness appear spontaneously.
				
				Commentary: Of which (tasya) from the previous practice of 
				nirodha parinama samskaras which produced discursive thought are 
				destroyed and cease (nirodha). This
				stillness produces a beneficial imprint (samskara) which was 
				realized through the sustained implementation of nirodha 
				parinama. This positive imprint (samskara) of calmness flows 
				forth effortlessly (prasanta vahita). At first in meditation, 
				when thoughts appear (as the result of past samskaras) the 
				beginner will get lost in them and the ordinary dualistic mind 
				will wander in agitation. These imprints must be annulled -- 
				their disturbing thoughts cease. Normally by continued 
				observation and the application of awareness in meditation, the 
				average meditator will awaken to an awareness that their 
				attention has drifted. Then at that point they go back to 
				bearing witness, watching and pure abiding again -- cultivating 
				purusha consciousness, until the mind usually wanders again upon 
				another object of thought. Such is the common plight of the 
				beginning meditator, but such is not to be his/her fate. After 
				some practice, the meditator will begin to catch a thought at 
				the beginning of the thought process (vrtti) and then let it go 
				(vairagya) and cease (nirodha). First maybe after a paragraph or 
				two, then after a sentence, then after a word. then before the 
				first word, then even before the impetus of a thought -- such 
				ceases. In other words after some practice (sadhana) proficiency 
				occurs. Then the subtle tendency of the ordinary discursive 
				thinking process (cit-vrtti) itself is eliminated in nirodha 
				parinama. Abiding in this stillness/cessation in itself creates 
				a positive imprint. See III.18 below for more on samyama on 
				samskaras. After much awareness through consistent practice, 
				awareness is increased, the process of nirodha parinama is 
				learned, becomes implemented more effectively eventually 
				becoming instant, natural and effortless. This sutra thus 
				explicitly attests to its application as such -- to be applied 
				instantaneously with no effort -- naturally and all at once. No 
				energy is thus wasted or dissipated in wandering thoughts, but 
				rather the energy is freed to uplift us, creating a feeling of 
				completeness and tranquility (prasanta). This accomplishment is 
				called nirodha parinama which brings success (jaya). III. 11 
				sarva-arthata-ekagratayoh kshaya-udayau cittasya 
				samadhi-parinamah After stillness of the mind field (nirodha 
				parinama) is achieved, then room has been made for the more 
				subtle awareness -- the awareness of the source of awareness 
				dawns in samadhi-parinama (integration/union) where one is 
				always aware of the integrative state, although the integration 
				itself may not be complete.
				
				Commentary: Here Patanjali brings up samadhi parinama. Samadhi 
				parinama is a transformative tool when learned like nirodha 
				parinama it can be applied to eradicating the arising (kshaya-udayau) 
				of the tendencies of the mind's (cittasya) , it's habitual 
				objectification of I-it duality and fixation tendencies (sarva-arthata) 
				which in turn disturb the mind's one pointed intent (ekagratayoh). 
				Samadhi then is achieved through the gradual settling out and 
				eventual calmness of the rising and receding waves of mental 
				distractions where the dualistic forces of alienation, 
				extraction, or separation causing the milieu of objectiveness (sarvarthata) 
				ceases altogether, so that one becomes one pointed in the source 
				of consciousness and bliss (sat chit ananda) abiding in samadhi. 
				Here consciousness (chitta) is no longer enslaved serving 
				separate objects, but all is experienced in the living union of 
				the all inclusive matrix -- of ALL OURRELATIONS -- with 
				universal integrity. This is the change of state (parinama) 
				which when applied brings forth samadhi. Here again 
				sarva-arthata (the tendency of the mind to objectify a separate 
				I/it referent reality) is destroyed (ksayah) through the 
				technique of directing the mind one pointedly (ekagratayoh) as 
				cittasya samadhi parinama. Samadhi parinama destroys the 
				dualistic tendency to objectify (sarva-arthata). Samadhi 
				parinama when implemented consistently over a period of time -- 
				with practice, creates a positive imprint on the mindstuff (citta) 
				acting as a positive samskara that transforms old negative 
				samskaras, eventually paving the way to non-dual integration in 
				nirbija samadhi. See Samadhi Pada Sutra 50. III. 12 tatah punah 
				santa-uditau tulya-pratyayau chittasyai-ekagrata-parinamah Here 
				Patanjali brings up the powerful practice that achieves ekgrata 
				parinama. In this way (tulya) by balancing out (in equipose or 
				canceling out the opposites) of the energy of the arising 
				distracting centrifugal thoughts (udita) with the energy of the 
				subsiding (santa) centripetal thoughts, a stilling and balancing 
				wave transforms and remediates (parinama) the apparently 
				discrete separate objects which form the contents of the 
				ordinary dualistic mind (pratyaya) into a one-pointed 
				unification/integration (ekgrata) consciousness (cittasya). Here 
				in ekgrata parinama a state no effort and no movement (nirodha 
				parinama) is realized -- one rests in the synergistic balance 
				and is embraced in the non-dual harmony, supported by the 
				ineffable. Ekgrata parinama is usually applied in meditation, 
				but can be applied at any time as well as arise spontaneously.
				Commentary: Once ekgrata parinama is accomplished as the 
				fruition of nirodha and samadhi parinama, as such it is the end 
				of parinama itself, as no other transformations are needed. 
				Ekgrata occurs through the exercise unified intent upon and 
				eventually of our authentic self -- our true nature. It is like 
				implementing an instant reminder or an instantaneous wake up 
				call that transforms all opposites, dualistic and polar thought 
				process. Here there is nothing more to transform, because 
				dualism itself has become transformed in the success (jaya) of 
				ekgrata parinama. The citta-vrtti has become stilled (nirodha). 
				In the previous sutra the sequential arising of linear thinking 
				has been quelled, one enters into the ability to know things as 
				they are through focusing on an object or thing (dharana) be it 
				an object of thought or a sensory object, then absorbing oneself 
				into that that without distinction for subject/object duality (dhyana), 
				and thus through this dissolution of separation, merge the 
				observer with the object and the process of observation (awareness) 
				as one integral process revealing the universal timeless 
				unbiased true nature of any phenomena. III. 13 etena 
				bhuta-indriyesu dharma-laksana-avastha-parinama vyakhyatah By 
				these former processes (etena) [through the accomplishment of 
				first nirodha parinama, then samadhi parinama, and then ekgrata 
				parinama], then the causative laws (dharma) that underlie the 
				process of transformation (parinama) itself reveal the essential 
				true nature of all creation -- the way the senses perceive the 
				elements (bhuta-indriyesu) are fully revealed (vyakhyatah) 
				whether they be transformations of the sequences of events (laksana 
				parinama) -- transmutation of the limitations of straight line 
				sequential time, or if by avastha parinama (knowledge of and 
				transformation of the limitations of the processes of decay and 
				evolution -- of parinama itself). HERE the limitations of the 
				sense organs (indriyas) and elements (bhutas) are overcome and 
				fully integrated while their apparent discontinuity and 
				unconnectedness are transmuted and remediated . One's entire 
				being becomes spiritually integrated and united as the power of 
				ekgrata parinama (as unified intent of the authentic self) 
				shines forth as a revelatory (vyakhyata) effect. Commentary: 
				This is often misinterpreted as another parinama practice, but 
				rather it seems that Patanjali is clearly stating that the 
				consistent application and accomplishment of the first three 
				parinamas will effect dharma-laksana-avastha-parinama. One could 
				just as easily say that dharma-laksana-avastha-parinama comprise 
				a transformative exercise when taken as a whole. Regardless the 
				aspirant must transform the previous disparate elements of 
				"self" into the overall unitive whole -- in ALL OUR RELATIONS.
				Thus through the power effected by the previous parinamas up to 
				and including ekgrata parinama (as unified intention) instead of 
				analyzing phenomenal analytically -- all of nature is known 
				through that one universal all pervasive spirit which 
				inter-connects us all. HERE Patanjali goes beyond even the need 
				for any further implementation of parinama as a willful 
				technique. After all parinama as a technique assumes that there 
				exists something desirable to be transformed. Here however the 
				need of parinama as an applied transformational technique, 
				attainment, or practice is obviated. So from the perspective of 
				ordinary dualistic consciousness the word, parinama, refers to 
				the process how normally the mind objects or contents of the 
				mind (pratyaya) change (parinama) and are in the process of flux, 
				but when the dualistic mind is emptied and opened through yogic 
				practice, then all temporal existence is viewed as the sacred 
				river. Parinama is often defined as a negative transformation (parinama) 
				pertaining to the ordinary wandering/discursive mind that is 
				undergoing constant change devoid of ekagrata. As the latter it 
				fluctuates and spins in patterns of bias (vrtti). Of course in 
				that stage of constant transformation, the ordinary plastic mind 
				can not know the true nature of Reality as-it-is. There the mind 
				moves from symbolic fixations on objects, symbolic 
				representations, various patterned sequences, and all sorts of 
				such agitated movements in inefficient dualistic and distracted 
				"meditation". But as one becomes more aware by observing, we can 
				then find and rest inside the intrinsic underlying unitive 
				Reality which is self existing as our true nature (swarupa). 
				Here then efficient meditation becomes a positively 
				transformative process where pre-existing negative samskaras 
				Imprints) are transformed and cease through nirodha parinama, 
				samadhi parinama, and ekgrata parinama. From there (as a result 
				of ekgrata parinama) everything (all temporal phenomena) appear 
				to flow like a river when we are centered and focused in that 
				universal still core center of the Heart (hridayam) --when our "viewpoint" 
				no longer changes with that which is viewed. In this sacred 
				place, the limits of relativity (of time and space) no longer 
				constrain us in a flat line existence. In that sacred context of 
				ALL OUR RELATIONS all the transformations of nature, the 
				elements, of all of creation can then leave a positive imprint 
				as well. As one continues to meditate through effective practice, 
				one masters in sequence all the parinamas, up to ekgrata 
				parinama. Then various insights as to the true nature of the 
				sense objects (indriyas), elements (bhuta), their essential 
				nature (dharma), the process of qualitative distinctions, time, 
				state, and evolution (laksana-avastha) become clear and revealed 
				(vyakhyatah) through direct experience. Simply put we see ALL 
				OUR RELATIONS through awakened eyes. With that insight, we are 
				empowered to interact more expediently, harmoniously, 
				synergistically, and creatively, thus remaining free from error. 
				Notice this ability does not arrive through intellection or 
				analytical effort, but from first applying ekgrata parinama, in 
				meditation, eliminating the negative samskaras, and then through 
				that grace being able to apply it in ALL OUR RELATIONS as the 
				play of the Divine Leela. III 14 
				santa-udita-avyapadesya-dharma-anupati dharmi [Thus through 
				these transformations via samyama] the dharma holder (dharmi) 
				beholds all processes as it corresponds (anupati) in their true 
				interconnected nature (dharma) whether or not they are resting, 
				arising, ceasing or not. Commentary: The dharma in its ordinary 
				sense is defined as that underlying causative energetic pattern, 
				principle, blueprint or substratum that underlies the common 
				properties of temporal phenomena, whether they be latent or 
				quiescent (santa), uprisen and manifest (udita) or undenotable, 
				impossible to describe or grasp or understand through the senses 
				or cognized (avyapadesya). Such is the definition of the dharma 
				of "individual separate things". But in truth they do not truly 
				exist as separate things. When the causes are really known then 
				we intimately know the underlying laws and principles of of the 
				universe, or the Santana Dharma -- Eternal Law within the 
				context of ALL OUR RELATIONS. In the non-dual or extraordinary 
				definition then, Dharma with a capital "D", is the essential 
				underlying true nature of all phenomena in the unitive sense (not 
				as being unconnected or separate). That Dharma is unbiased and 
				universal truth and reflects the law of reality as it truly is 
				in it's true nature- Suchness. Then from that perspective "things" 
				are thus revealed and unmasked revealing the underlying (and may 
				we add over-riding) Dharma -- as the underlying connective (anupati) 
				causative characteristic, substratum, or unitive "nature" which 
				does not change as the temporal world of sense objects go 
				through their continuous changes (anupati). Only through samyama 
				(not through objectification) utilizing the combined technique 
				consisting of dharana, dhyana, and samadhi can the true non-dual 
				awareness of phenomena be known. Why do I say non-dual, because 
				non-duality is the nature of dhyana and samadhi -- because 
				samyama is doomed to failure if applied within s dualistic 
				fragmentary approach. An object is known only by the entire 
				constituents of its parts and how they differ from all other 
				constituents in the entire universe. This is how reality is 
				known. Yogiraj Shyamacharan Lahiri says: "The dharma is the 
				power underlying the principles of shanta, udita, and 
				avyapdeshaya.. The shanta nature is the state when the present 
				characteristics have been transformed to the real nature of the 
				objects; udita is the state when the real nature is transformed 
				into a manifested form of the objects; and avyapdeshaya is the 
				state when the manifestation has not yet taken place and exist 
				in the form of an energy, and could not be stated in clear terms. 
				In whatever state, the dharma of the object remains one 
				undifferentiated." Swami Venkatesananda says of dharma:
				"... a substance itself is put together and recognized as such, 
				and is non-different from a particular characteristic, which may 
				be in a dormant state, in an emerging state, or in an uncertain 
				or potential state." In general the word, "dharma" is used as 
				the underlying, causal, and governing principle. Dharma is the 
				characteristic that remains the same in the potential stage, in 
				the manifesting stage, in the manifest stage, or in the 
				undefined ineffable stage and as such as it relates; to nature, 
				dharma is the substratum or matrix that has a seminal stage, a 
				becoming stage, a manifest stage, and a mysterious stage and is 
				also subject to dissolution. In the dualistic/materialistic view 
				is not an immutable essence if such can be attributed to any one 
				phenomena, it is the patterned result of causes (karma). This 
				kind of temporal definition of dharma is subject to the rules of 
				cause and effect itself. Although it appears to be causative, it 
				is not ultimately causative, unless we trace it back to the 
				causeless cause -- the Source. There Dharma then takes on a 
				different meaning.
				
				Another way of using the word, Dharma, can also be translated as 
				our nature. For example, in India one may say: "there is no 
				reason to say, "thank you", rather it is my very nature to serve 
				you, this is simply natural, it is my dharma ". As such, the 
				word, dharma, is meant to be a natural manifestation or result 
				of a cause, but in Yoga we look to the cause of the cause until 
				all karma is annihilated (nirodha) and final liberation (mukti) 
				is achieved. At that "time", what is it that manifests, but pure 
				and eternal Dharma, is it not? Here Patanjali is getting to what 
				is called Sanatana Dharma in Hinduism or simply "The Dharma" in 
				Buddhism. So in the pure context, Dharma with the big "D" means 
				the immutable law of Reality as-it-is -- natural law 
				unconstructed or modified by the mind, and thus he/she who knows 
				the true Dharma, knows Reality. It is noteworthy to point out 
				that Patanjali in the next seven sutras talks about sequential 
				activities (kramah), death, samskaras, and karma, which in turn 
				can all be correlated to dharma. Again in Sutras 13-16 Patanjali 
				does not present parinama as a practice, but rather as temporal 
				phenomena or the flux of creation/creativity. See discussion 
				above on parinama for more. III. 15 krama-anyatvam 
				parinama-anyatve hetuh This constant reordering or changing (parinama) 
				of the various sequences (krama) of the above phases (anyatvam) 
				is the cause (hetuh) for all the myriad differentiations and 
				variegations (anatve) [of creation and evolution]. Here the 
				inherent order underlying the differentiated relative world is 
				disclosed and revealed. That evokes the knowledge of our kinship 
				with all of creation-- the wisdom that surpasses all 
				understanding -- that which is the operating modality in ALL OUR 
				RELATIONS, that which explains all, as it resolves all.
				Commentary: Yogiraj Shyamacharan Lahiri says: "Many 
				characteristics of a manifestation result in many successions, 
				which in turn result in manifold evolution. This multiplicity of 
				manifestations (of the one undifferentiated) leads to 
				non-attachment to the phenomenal world" (and success in yoga)." 
				Commentary: The yogi is focused on liberation and as such he/she 
				observes the underlying interconnectedness of all phenomena (dharma) 
				underlying all changes of state -- all of creation/evolution (like 
				a river on fire) when viewed from the still center of Source or 
				samadhi. Abiding in that unitive place, we are instantaneously 
				free from prisons of habit, limited identifications, and karmic 
				waves and propensities. Differentiated reality can only be known 
				in the integrity of its completion -- when it is married to the 
				undifferentiated absolute -- when it is known unbiased from a 
				universal viewpoint. This, when maintained, unswayed, and 
				undismayed, is authentic brahmacharya and here all of nature 
				instructs as the divine play (leela) of siva/shakti (creator/creation). 
				III. 16 parinama-traya-samyamad atitanagata-jnanam The siddhi of 
				the knowledge of past and future (atitianagata-jnanam) is 
				accomplished through samyama (the synchronization of dharana, 
				dhyana, and samadhi) upon the three (traya) transformations (parinama) 
				i.e., nirodha parinama, samadhi parinama, and ekgrata parinama. 
				Commentary: Here we can say that Patanjali sums up sutras 9-15. 
				Just as well one could say that this knowledge is the result 
				through samyama on dharma parinama, lakshana parinama, and 
				avastya parinama as they relate to evolution and the dimensions 
				of time; but since their success is due to success in nirodha, 
				samadhi, and ekgrata parinama, they are mutually implicit. Here 
				Patanjali is connecting everything together as it is not just 
				the past and the future, but also the nature of cause and effect 
				that becomes clarified as the fruits of proficient authentic 
				sadhana become integrated. The past limitations of three 
				dimensional time and space become replaced with the awareness of 
				the holographic/wholistic fourth dimensional reality called 
				turiya.
				Just as when ekgrata parinama siddha is realized wherein the 
				arising of linear thinking has ceased (nirodha), one abides in 
				the ability (siddha) to know things as they are through focusing 
				on an object or thing (dharana) be it an object of thought or a 
				sensory object, then absorbing oneself into that object without 
				distinction for subject/object duality (dhyana) -- becoming that 
				so to speak, and thus through this dissolution of the illusion 
				of separation separation, thirdly merges the observer with the 
				object and the process of observation (awareness) as a samadhi 
				-- as one integral conscious process revealing the universal 
				timeless unbiased true nature of any phenomena free from time/space 
				bias or prejudice. These practices take practice. The most 
				difficult part is that the practitioner does not understand that 
				the process is not intellectual or willful. Albeit dharana is 
				necessary at the beginning, mastery of dhyana (non-dual 
				meditative absorption) is necessary. Here one has to understand 
				the empty nature of subject/object duality and thus be able to 
				dissolve it while remaining conscious of that process. Here the 
				artificial/arbitrary thee dimensional boundaries of time and 
				place are dissolved and phenomena are known as they are without 
				the individual bias of a separate observer or point of view. 
				Things are known from the universal timeless deathless Source or 
				are known as illusion. Once ekgrata parinama is mastered, one 
				can then enter into other specific samyamas which reveal the 
				timeless spirit in ALL OUR RELATIONS with little effort. III. 17 
				shabdartha-pratyayanam itara-itara adhyasat samkaras 
				tat-pravibhaga-samyamat sarva-bhuta-ruta-jnanam The meaning of 
				sacred sounds, prayers, mantra, and music of the spheres is 
				heard and understood -- the siddha of all sounds (ruta-jnanam) 
				is accomplished through samyama on distinguishing (pravibhaga) 
				and giving sounded/phonetic words and meaning to all individual 
				objects and processes of attention that had previously become 
				co-mingled, undifferentiated with sound, or confused (samskarah) 
				creating a predisposed limited mental fixation (pratyaya) which 
				had not yet been assigned reciprocal relationships (itara-itara), 
				thus one became deaf to the intrinsic ongoing and continuous 
				sacred song and divine symphony. Commentary: The above 
				translation attempts to be literal, but is difficult perhaps to 
				access. Succinctly, the process of such phonetic naming clears 
				confusion and provides clarity and liberation in relationship to 
				sound and meaning. Here through samyama the yogi goes beyond the 
				limitations imposed through limited conceptual impositions and 
				analytical comparative relationships based on duality, 
				separateness, fragmentation, and objectivism (pratyaya), but 
				rather the sounds are seen as integral parts of the song -- the 
				melody reveals the ongoing overall orchestra/orchestrator. III. 
				18 samskara-sakshatkaranat purva-jatijnanam Knowledge of the 
				cause of births (purva-jatijnanam) and knowledge of past life 
				forms is accomplished when one applies samyama on the workings 
				and causes of one's samskaras (imbedded latent tendencies and 
				impression) which in turn activates the power of penetrative 
				awareness (sakshatkaranat).
				Commentary; The creation and the destruction of the samskaras 
				are associated with kleshas and karma. When samyama is applied 
				to the samskaras we are able to know their cause and eliminate 
				them thus liberating our self. See the discussion on applying 
				nirodha parinama, samadhi parinama, and ekgrata parinama in 
				order to create positive samskaras especially III.9 and III.10 
				above. III. 19 pratyayasya para-chitta-jnanam Samyama on the 
				contents of the mind (pratyaya) provides knowledge (jnanam) of 
				the transpersonal, universal, non-dual infinite consciousness 
				(para chitta) which when accessed provides knowledge of all 
				minds. Commentary: This is simply practicing self inquiry and 
				mindfulness, by asking where is my mind now -- what am I 
				thinking of? When our field of consciousness is clear,lucid, and 
				present, we are also able to notice the mind contents of others 
				who are not. By placing our attention back into the contents of 
				our own minds, its mental field and field of consciousness, 
				etc., then those contents no longer will color our perception, 
				i.e., clarity of perception and instantaneous awareness becomes 
				available not only of our own mind, but we are able to perceive 
				the operating principles at work in others as well -- what it is 
				that is occupying and occluding their stream of consciousness. 
				In that way of true listening we are able to avoid skew and bias. 
				We can help bring others back home -- present the opportunity to 
				be fully present or clear as well. We are able to avoid skew or 
				bias. Here also able to listen and see with clarity others. III. 
				20 na cha tat salambanam tasyavishayi-bhutatvat Swami 
				Venkatesananda says: "However this does not imply particularized 
				knowledge of the others' personalities --e.g., the motivations, 
				the conditioning, or the background of the others' minds -- for 
				knowledge of the others' mind is impersonal and devoid of images 
				and details." Commentary: Samyama on pratyaya allows us to 
				understand and know the contents of our own minds so they will 
				not color us or create bias/prejudice. Then we know that we can 
				apply that knowledge to situations with others -- we can be 
				unbiased and recognize and understand the minds of others from 
				this place as well as understand the operating principle 
				underneath their actions. But this sutra does not explicitly say 
				(which many interpret) that we will know all the particular 
				facts about others, nor is Patanjali saying that this will allow 
				us to enter their minds and bodies as some commentators 
				interject.
				
				III. 21 kaya-rupa-samyamat tad-grahya-shakti-stambhe 
				chakshuh-prakashasanprayoge 'ntardhanam
				Normally we look on only the form of bodies (kaya rupa). But if 
				look more deeply with the inner eye utilizing samyama we know 
				that form to be mere appearance. Thus we are allowed to suspend 
				(stambe) the imposition of such a coarse modality and thus allow 
				the causal intelligent energy (shakti) which is the essence of 
				the body (and all creation) to be revealed (if only we look for 
				it in samyama). Commentary: When we are not caught up in 
				appearances, hut learn to look more deeply, we utilize the 
				ability to read between the lines. When we look with wisdom we 
				see all things in integral context with the whole of which we 
				are also a part. This way of seeing reveals the Reality of "ALL 
				OUR RELATIONS" and thus allows to see through limited 
				appearances. The whole world is alive and connected and this 
				context all of creation is our kin. III. 22 sopakramam 
				nirupakramam cha karma tat-samyamad aparanta-jnanam arishtebhyo 
				va Karma may be dormant (nir-upakramam) or manifest (sa-upakramam) 
				-- it arises, rests, and ceases. Samyama on how that arises, 
				rests, and ceases and on the signs and omens of nature which 
				portend good or ill, and of our own temporal nature will reveal 
				knowledge of the physical death and final conclusion of the body 
				(aparanta-jnanam). Commentary: Our life is shaped by karma and 
				so of course is its end. Yet the contemplation and communion 
				with all this allows us to be free from karma. Through 
				understanding its workings we liberate ourselves. We see the 
				eternal spirit (that which never dies -- which was never born -- 
				which always is) in all things and events as a practice which 
				brings about joyful fulfillment and completion being able to 
				identify with that living imperishable spirit which is eternal 
				and universal HERE while embodied. III. 23 maitry-adishu balani 
				By communion with the nature of friendliness and kindness (maitri), 
				and the alike (adishu), their strengths (bala) and powers are 
				increased in us. Commentary: Thus accelerated spiritual 
				purification can be promoted through this type of samyama. . III. 
				24 balesu hasti-bala-adini Samyama on the strength (bala) itself, 
				such as the strength of an elephant (hasti) and others (adini), 
				the power of strength (bala) itself is known.
				
				Commentary: Here (bala) strength and power is not limited to 
				physical strength, but also mental, psychic, and spiritual. III. 
				25 pravritti-aloka-nyasat sukshma-vyavahita-viprakrishta-jnanam 
				Through samyama upon (nyasat) the activities of the inner lights 
				(pravrtti-aloka), knowledge (jnanam) of the subtle (sukshmah), 
				the vyavahita (the secret and hidden), and the remote (viprakrishta) 
				is revealed. Commentary: Another way of translating this is that 
				by calming down or settling out (nyasat) the mental processes 
				that produce the agitations of the mind (pravrtti), then the 
				inner energy and light that becomes freed up by that process can 
				be directed to (aloka) reveal knowledge (jnanam) of what has 
				been previously subtle, hidden, and remote. A third 
				interpretation is by directing samyama upon (nyasat) the 
				activities of the inner light (pravrtti-aloka) knowledge of the 
				subtle, veiled, and heretofore unobtainable becomes realized. 
				Again Yogiraj Shyamacharan Lahiri says: "Samyama on the inner 
				light (by prãnãyãm), one gets knowledge of sukshma (subtle), 
				vyavahit (hidden) and viprakrishta (far distant) objects and 
				phenomena." III. 26 bhuvana-jnanam surye samyamat Samyama on the 
				solar principle (surya) within as well as the sun provides 
				access to the universal order of all the elements -- the 
				physical constellations -- or macrocosm -- both the outer and 
				inner universe including the chakras (bhavana-jnanam). 
				Commentary: Here the hatha, tantric, laya, or hatha yogin may 
				perform samyama on the function of the solar nadis (pingala) and 
				solar energy, but it helpful to the yogi to note that in terms 
				of non-duality -- the solar energy exists within the overall 
				context of unity of both the macrocosm and microcosm -- the both/and 
				non-dual reality where THAT which is outside is within as well. 
				The solar energy flows in the pingala nadis and is associated 
				with the right side of the body, the right nostril, and the left 
				brain functions (motor functions, activity, intellectual thought, 
				external thought, outward motion, centrifugal motion, objective 
				consciousness, etc.). Surya is thus the energy of external or 
				physical existence, so here the samyama focuses on the macrocosm, 
				of which the body, the organs, nervous system, brain, and atoms 
				are also included.
				III. 27 chandre tara-vyuha-jnanam Samyama on the moon elements (chandre) 
				and stars (Sara) both within and without accesses knowledge of 
				order of the entire logos or divine Creatrix (vyuha-jnanam), the 
				microcosm or blueprint which forms the underlay of all existence. 
				This includes the body, the cells, the dna, chakras, and nadis 
				as well. Commentary: The firmament and moon are visible and 
				dominant at night. Just like 28 above the yogi can apply samyama 
				inside to the ida nadi and its function as the moon energy which 
				is associated with the right brain, the left nostril, and the 
				left side of the body. This is the right brain energy of 
				receptivity, innate wisdom, intuition, instinct, microcosm, 
				sensory nerves, restfulness, para-sympathetic nervous system, 
				female, earth, nature, and similar). Again the yogi is reminded 
				that in the great balance of REALITY -- where yoga is 
				accomplished -- the microcosm and macrocosm are bound together 
				in the state of ALL OUR RELATIONS, i.e., we are not separate, 
				but rather united. The Sun and Moon are simply used as methods 
				of focus upon the polar opposites -- siva/shakti who are in 
				terms of non-dual Reality eternally inseparable. Vyuha is a well 
				discussed term in both Hindu and Buddhist philosophy. The 
				fundamentalists say that vyuha is not knowable by humans, but 
				rather one must rely on scripture, however yogis say that all is 
				accessible within and must be experienced.
				
				Vyuha connotes that in each "part" of the whole, the entire 
				whole can be accessed and known -- within a holographic Realty (see 
				for example the work of Dr. Stan Grof, M.D. author of "the 
				Holotropic Mind" , founder of holotropic breathwork, and 
				transpersonal training). Vyuha can be found to non-exclusive 
				from the modern western idea of morphic resonance, morphic 
				fields, and morphic genesis as presented by Dr. Rupert Sheldrake 
				(See his dialogue with Matthew Fox (the founder of Creation 
				Spirituality), the Physicist David Bohm (River of Truth) and 
				also Bohm's dialogue with Krishnamurti, Joanna Macy, Fritjof 
				Capra, and many others. III 28. dhruve tad-gati-jnanam Samyama 
				on the polestar (dhruve) and the highest spiritual position (sahasrara) 
				which lies within, provides access to the knowledge of the "causal 
				movement and flows" of prana (gati-jnanam) of the logos and 
				their integration/harmonization with the patterns of the nadis 
				inside and outside of the body (tad referring to sutra 27). 
				Commentary: Here the yogi may perform samyama also to the 
				brahmarandhra (the vertex of the crown) -- the point where 
				Source consciousness enters and leaves the physical body. This 
				integration/harmonization of the causal principle through 
				gati-jnanam is realized after sustained practice (abhyasa) as 
				part of the manifestation of the non-dual unity of microcosm/macrocosm 
				embodiment (the evolutionary process later called kundalini).
				III. 29 nabhi-chakre kaya-vyuha-jnanam Through samyama upon the 
				workings of the navel chakra (called variously nabhi or 
				sometimes manipura). The inner knowledge (kaya-vyuha-jnanam) of 
				how all the nadis (energy channels) of the body and their 
				interrelated dynamics are revealed.
				
				Commentary: In yoga and Ayurveda all the nadis and marmas (psychic 
				and energy channels) come together at the nabhi/manipura center. 
				This terse statement about the importance of the nabhi chakra 
				can be expanded as a system of actively performing energy 
				healing not only in the well known and ancient eastern systems 
				of Ayurveda, acupuncture, chi gong, hatha yoga, kundalini yoga, 
				laya yoga, Tibetan medicine, psychic healing, and similar where 
				energy is brought into the navel center, but also in the more 
				modern day wholistic healing systems, of Chi Nei Tsang, Reiki, 
				Pranic Healing, BMC work, Postural Integration, Core Energetics, 
				Hakomi, and others where techniques are used to clear, energize, 
				and direct the energy at the navel center so that it can be 
				moved throughout the body for healing and activating our 
				creative and evolutionary potential (kundalini). Also see sutra 
				40 as a further evolution of this process.See also sutra 40. III. 
				30 kantha-kupe kshut-pipasa-nivrittih Samyama on the throat 
				chakra (vishudda), one is able to be liberated from thirst and 
				hunger. Commentary: Literally kantha is the throat and kupe is 
				the notch above the sternum, thus the energy of jalandhara (the 
				abode of water) bandha is utilized to move the energy to connect 
				body with head through the throat, by softening the throat, 
				lengthening the cervical spine, and removing any obstructions at 
				the vishuddha (throat) chakra. By preventing the outflow of 
				energy at this chakra which connects the head with the heart, 
				outward desire is turned inward toward divine passion and 
				reunification. III. 31 kurma-nadyam sthairyam The power of 
				strength, steadiness, and balance (sthairyam) is revealed 
				through samyama on the kurma nadi (the energy that runs in the 
				psychic nerve between the eyes and the navel).
				Commentary: Through samyama on kurma nadis one is able to remain 
				centered and connected to their core energy no matter how strong 
				the external distraction or noise may appear to others. Kurma 
				literally means, turtle. In Ayurveda it refers to the pranic 
				dynamic air associated with the eyeball movements (and the head 
				energies in general) which flow through a tube connecting the 
				head with the belly closely associated with the esophageal/pharynx. 
				This energetic also has a subtle psychic aspect as well as 
				physical. However in the tantras and agamas, but especially in 
				the Bhavana Upanishad of the Sri Vidya tradition, kurma is 
				associated with the muladhara chakra while in the Jnanasankalini 
				Tantra, kurma is situated in the chakras. It is well worth 
				mentioning that in Hindu wisdom stories (the Puranas) Vishnu 
				assumed the form of a tortoise (as Lord Kurma) and took the 
				newly created earth on his back in order to render stability to 
				the trembling globe. It is believed that even to this day the 
				earth is supported on the back of this tortoise, A more 
				elaborate recount of the legend is that at a very remote period 
				when the gods felt their powers weakened and were desirous of 
				obtaining amrita the beverage of immortality, Vishnu directed 
				them to churn, together with the demons, the ocean of milk. For 
				this purpose they took the mountain Mandara as the churning 
				stick. But they could succeed only when Vishnu himself consented 
				to support the mountain on his back; after having assumed the 
				shape of a gigantic tortoise. From the churning of the ocean, in 
				addition to the ambrosia of immortality, the following 
				substances came forth: 1). Dhanvantri, the physician of the gods, 
				2). Lakshmi, the goddess of fortune, 3). Varuni, the wine 
				goddess, 4). Soma, the sacrificial elixir, 5). Apsaras, the 
				celestial nymphs, 6). Uccaihshravas, the divine horse, 7). 
				Kaustubha, the celestial jewel, 8). Parijata, the celestial tree, 
				9). Surabhi, the wish cow, 10). Airavata, the royal elephant, 
				11). Panchajanya, the conch, 12). Sharanga, the bow, and 13). 
				Halahala, the poison.
				
				See Kurma, the second Avatar of Vishnu for more. There thus 
				exists a a correspondence to an American Indian story about the 
				earth being a turtle island The Siva Samhita in Chapter V 43-45 
				43 it is said: "43.Let the Yogi seat himself in the padmasana, 
				and fix his attention on the cavity of the throat, let him place 
				his tongue at the base of the palate; by this he will extinguish 
				hunger and thirst. 44. Below the cavity of the throat, there is 
				a beautiful nadi (vessel) called kurma; when the Yogi fixes his 
				attention on it, he acquires great concentration of the thinking 
				principle (chitta). 45. When the Yogi constantly thinks that he 
				has got a third eye – the eye of Shiva – in the middle of his 
				forehead, he then perceives a fire brilliant like lightening. By 
				contemplating on this light, all sins are destroyed, and even 
				the most wicked person obtains the highest end." Thus one 
				differentiates between the kurma prana and the kurma nadis. III. 
				32. murdha-jyotishi siddha-darshanam Samyama on the light (jyotishi) 
				that appears in the crown of the head (murdha) during meditation, 
				one has the vision (darshan) of the siddhas (realized beings -- 
				those who have obtained perfection in union). The eternal ones 
				are always HERE to help us. III. 33. pratibhad va sarvam Or (va) 
				these can happen spontaneously and naturally all at once (sarvam) 
				like an intuitive inner flash of light (pratibhad). Commentary: 
				By opening the intuition the inner wisdom, teacher, and 
				teachings are revealed -- HERE all is known. All such siddhas, 
				knowledge, or abilities (sarvam) can appear through the 
				activation of the inner light, inner wisdom, intuition, the 
				normally dormant inner self abiding teacher in all which not 
				only produces temporary flashes or glimpses into the true nature 
				of the whole of creation, but always exists in truth as the true 
				nature of Universal Natural Mind when it shines forth 
				uninterrupted in grace. Likewise samyama on the inner light, 
				inner most teacher, inner wisdom (pratibhad), the true authentic 
				self, etc., can augment and activate this process. All we need 
				is for the inner wisdom/teacher to be activated bringing the 
				cit-prana to zero in onto the subject. This can occur as grace 
				through practice or simply grace (through past karma) as well. 
				III. 34. hridaye chitta-samvit By the practice of samyama on the 
				spiritual heart (hridaya) knowledge of the heart-mind (hridaye 
				chitta-samvit) -- the origin of transpersonal all inclusive 
				consciousness itself is known. Commentary: The hridayam center 
				is the heart of hearts -- the holy of the holies -- the sacred 
				temple -- the seat of God Source -- the holographic axis mundi, 
				or what can be called our core heart center is realized when we 
				arrive at an integrative realization (samvit) of the true nature 
				of citta as the true nature of the inherent intelligent 
				consciousness principle. This understanding is accompanied by 
				true vision (samvit) and is beyond ordinary understanding based 
				on words or objectification/cognition processes. It normally 
				remains ineffable and elusive toward articulation. It is fitting 
				that Patanjali brings up the hridayam after the crown chakra 
				which in turn is preceded by the central channel and the other 
				higher chakras. When we act from this heart center our actions 
				embody the essence of all the yam/niyams -- all the limbs of 
				yoga manifest naturally. This then is the heart of the practice 
				-- to be centered in our core/heart energy -- to realize our 
				true Self nature -- to embody that in ALL OUR RELATIONS. III. 35 
				sattva-purusayor atyanta-samkirnayoh pratyayavisesah bhogah 
				pararthavat svartha-samyamat purusa-jnanam By samyama on the 
				origin and true nature of intent and samyama itself (svartha-samyamat), 
				the false distinction (asamkirnayoh) between perfect sattva (absolute 
				beingness) and pure purusha (absolute consciousness) ceases to 
				be experienced (bhoga). Through this realization (called 
				purusa-jnananam) this unity of sattva-purusayor is everywhere at 
				once experienced (bhoga) as the Eternal Self (as purusha) in all 
				things and beings, as it truly exists, and as it always has been 
				(atyanta) -- as the true knowledge and untainted absolute 
				consciousness (the realization of purusha-jnanam). Here our 
				intention and directions of thought (pratyaya) no longer wavers 
				(avisesa) from this realization of self (purusa-jnanam) with the 
				unification of sattva and purusa (sattva-purusayor). Commentary: 
				By samyama on the highest (para) purpose and meaning in life (para-arthatvat) 
				we experience the state (bhoga) where we no longer confusedly 
				make false assumptions and artificial arbitrary discrimination (asamkirnayoh) 
				thus separating ourselves from the eternal true nature of all 
				things (atyanta) in the sacred space of ALL OUR RELATIONS. Then 
				perfect beingness (sattva) and highest self (purusa) in 
				sattva-purusayor is experienced (bhoga).
				
				Atyanta means beyond any end or beginning, unbroken, continuous, 
				absolute, or perfect. Asamkirnayoh means no longer confused, 
				mixed up, or rather pure. Svartha-
				samyamat means performing samyama for its own purpose (svartha). 
				Thus one may say that by performing samyama upon samyama itself 
				brings about the experience which resolves the confusion between 
				the doer and the deed -- between pure beingness (sattva) and 
				pure consciousness (purusha). In other words it reveals their 
				unity in satchitananda -- pure beingness -- pure consciousness 
				and pure bliss. This is another place which can't be experienced 
				via the intellect, but only through experienced through practice. 
				In a profound sense then purusha really exists only where there 
				is no separation between beingness (sattva) and consciousness 
				(in sat-chit-ananda). For example in that deep state of 
				stillness -- of non-doing, only then do we rest in pure 
				receptivity (non-doing) beingness. At the same time in this 
				non-doingness, we are absolutely receptive. To be absolutely 
				receptive is to merge with absolute awareness and consciousness. 
				So here through perfect and absolute beingness (sat) we merge 
				with absolute consciousness (chit) whose nature is bliss (ananda) 
				-- in Satchitananda. HERE and only here does pure and absolute 
				subjectivity and pure and absolute objectivity merge as one. 
				HERE in purusha-jnanam, is purusha is at once absolute and 
				universal Being and absolute and universal Consciousness. Swami 
				Venkatesananda says: "The external object is totally distinct 
				and different from what the experiencing personality thinks it 
				is. When, in a state of ignorance, the personality forgets this, 
				and as the object is imagined to be external for the enjoyment 
				of another (which is the enjoyer), he experiences pain and 
				pleasure. However when samyama is directed at the essence of 
				this (false) self or personality, there (eventually) arises the 
				knowledge (jnana) of the INDWELLING intelligence, (disclosing 
				its previously) obscured conditioning (which is ignorance)." III. 
				36 tatah pratibha-sravana-vedana-adarsa-asvada-vartah jayante 
				Since knowledge of ignorance is the antidote for ignorance, when 
				the innate intuitive intelligence (pratibha) that comprehends 
				the mental conditioning which then becomes deprogrammed, then 
				self luminous flashes of psychic or transcendental hearing (sravana), 
				feeling (vedana), seeing (adarsa), tasting (asvada), and 
				smelling (vartah) self arise (jayante) -- free from the normal 
				contaminating distortions, limitations, and dissuasions (perversions) 
				that are the products of ignorance. Hence is born spontaneously 
				an evolved natural and intuitive non-dual and trans-personal 
				form of hearing, touching, seeing, tasting, and smelling not 
				dependent upon individual cognitive functions (such as pratyaya, 
				pratyaksha, samprajnata, etc.). Yogiraj Shyamacharan Lahiri says: 
				"By performing the above described samyama, the knowledge of the 
				six super sensory perceptions are evolved:- 1. Pratibha = 
				clairvoyance; 2. Shravan = super sensory hearing capability to 
				hear divine sounds; 3. Vedana = super sensory sense of touch; 4. 
				adarsha = ability to see the divine beings; 5. asvada = ability 
				to sense subtle tastes; 6. Varta = super sensory capability to 
				smell divine fragrances. By doing the above Samyama, all of 
				these sensory perceptions become Nitya (permanent)." III. 37 te 
				samadhav upasarga vyutthane siddhayah Although to the worldly (vyutthane) 
				these samadhis (samadhav) appear as perfections or attainments (siddhayah), 
				they are the cause of impediments (upasarga). Commentary: The 
				goal of yoga being total transpersonal integration, a wise yogi 
				stays focused on the goal and avoids the possible temptation of 
				the siddhis as mere side trips to be avoided. Others become 
				infatuated by them or worse mistakenly think that they do not 
				come from universal Source but rather from individual will. Such 
				pride and confusion eventually creates a separation from Source, 
				Grace, and the Natural Mind and thus these aspirants eventually 
				fall back into the hell realms through ignorance and the 
				negative karma generated by acting on such ignorance. The more 
				powerful the action, the more potential negative karma. Swami 
				Venkatesananda warns us that little children should not play 
				with matches. "But, even such excellent sensations and feelings 
				and all the psychic powers discussed so far, which on the 
				surface appear to be desirable and encouraging aspects of 
				perfection are in fact impediments to enlightenment as they, too, 
				distract and externalize the attention." from Swami 
				Venkatesananda "Enlightened Living" III. 38 
				bandha-karana-saithilyat prachara-samvedanach cha chittasya Thus 
				by loosening (saithilyat) the bonds (bandhas) of the causes (karana) 
				of ignorance because of the coming forth (prachara) of knowledge 
				(samvedanat), consciousness of self and of others (chittasya) 
				come forth.
				Commentary: It is from this sutra that many interpret Patanjali 
				as saying that this process pertains to the way of entering and 
				controlling the consciousness and body of other beings, but here 
				he is simply saying that as one understands how to loosen one's 
				own bondage unraveling its causes, one also instantly 
				understands the causes of bondage operating in others, and thus 
				one is able to help direct them toward liberation if favorable 
				karmic opportunities arise. Here simply being in the presence of 
				a highly realized being is often enough to directly assimilate 
				that state. Here bandha refers to a gate process which can 
				either prevent something from entering or to hold something that 
				may wander off in distraction inside or redirected. Here it is 
				used in the former sense, to let something in. III. 39 
				udana-jayat-jala-panka-kantaka-adishu asanga utkrantis-ca 
				Through knowledge of how the energy of upward motion (udana vayu) 
				occurs in the nadis, freedom (asanga) from material and earthly 
				attachments (imperviousness to mud (panka), water (jal), thorns 
				(kantaka), etc. (adisu) and even the ability to rise up or 
				levitation (utkrantih) occurs. Commentary: Udana is the upward 
				moving energy vector in the body operating from the region of 
				the navel upwards to the head. III. 40 samana-jayaj jvalanam 
				Self effulgent radiance shines forth (jvalanam) by itself when 
				the yogi masters (jayaj) samana (the knowledge of how the energy 
				located in the navel region and which is responsible for the 
				fire of digestion) operates in the nadis. Commentary: Samana 
				prana is the centripetal energy moving from the periphery of the 
				body into and towards the interior centered at the navel and 
				which is responsible on a multidimensional level for digestion 
				and integration; i.e., physical, mental, emotional, energetic, 
				and physical, It is literally translated as the balancing and 
				equanamous air. Here nourishment and charisma pervades the 
				body/mind of such a being. Also see commentary on sutra 29. III. 
				41 srota-akasayoh sambandha samyamad diviam srotam Samyama on 
				both the connecting valve (sambandha) between the area behind 
				the ear (strota) and the seat of akasha (the ether/akasha center 
				is located at the throat - vishuddi chakra), hence establishing 
				(chit-prana or conscious energy flow through the nadis), 
				activates the supra-mundane divine hearing (diviam srotam) or 
				clairaudience which thus becomes awakened.
				
				Commentary: Specifically we can hear the conversations of the 
				enlightened ones, the subtle mental conversations of others, the 
				celestial music, and receive messages through the ether both 
				awake or while asleep, as if they were spoken or whispered 
				whether or not they exist through the medium of sound waves as 
				such. Likewise we can hear the language of all beings and things 
				(past, future, or present), but not in the terms of the human 
				language which we have learned, but rather they speak to us in 
				their energetic/spiritual terms which our subtle inner ear has 
				to become attuned to. Just as the activation of the third eye 
				allows for the seeing of the non-physical realms, the activation 
				of the spiritual nose for the supra-mundane smelling, so does 
				the opening of the spiritual ear allow for the immersion into 
				the divine sound energy (sabda) and the realization of the 
				divine name. III. 42 kaya-akashayoh sambandha-samyamat 
				laghu-tula-samapatteh ca akasagamanam By communion (samyama) on 
				the connections (sambandha) within and between the etheric body 
				(kaya-akashayoh) - while opening up that connection -- one 
				becomes absorbed (samapatteh) in the power of the upward (laghu) 
				etheric motion (akasa-gamanam) and is able to raise upward like 
				a single cotton fiber (tula). The power of weightlessness and 
				lightness is achieved through such samyama/communion. III. 43 
				bahir akalpita vrttir maha-videha tatah prakasa avarana-ksayah 
				In this way the etheric body (kaya-akashayoh) provides the 
				portal for the removal of the habitual processes of externally 
				directed (bahir) conceptual thought (akalpita) which cause the 
				fluctuating patterns of thought waves (vrtti) allowing them to 
				be dissolved. Thus the veil (avarana) which occlude the 
				effulgent light of consciousness (prakasa) is thus pierced (ksayah) 
				revealing the great formless incorporeal body (maha-videha). 
				Swami Venkatesananda says: "Beyond all these is the state of 
				consciousness which is not the product of thought: and that is 
				the cosmic intelligence which is independent of the body (or 
				bodies - physical, astral and causal}. By communion (samyama) 
				upon that, the veil that covers that light of cosmic 
				intelligence is removed."
				
				Yogiraj Shyamacharan Lahiri translates this as: "The 
				externalized thought waves of the mind which is attached to the 
				body and the ego is illusory, whereas the internalized thought 
				waves generated in the mind without the attachment of the body 
				and ego are called Mahãvidehã. By making a samyama in
				that Mahãvidehã, the shell obstructing the inner light is 
				destroyed, and all hindrances are removed." III. 44 sthula 
				svarupa suksma anvayarth-arthavattva samyamad bhuta jayah 
				Samyama on the underlying essential true nature (swarupa), both 
				gross (sthula) and subtle (suksma), of the correlative 
				interactive connections (anvaya), and their specific qualities 
				and functional processes (arthavattva) leads to successful 
				understanding (jayah) of the creative elements (bhuta) that 
				constitute all existence. Commentary: Mastery of elemental 
				matter is achieved after samyama on the true nature which 
				connects and underlies it all, rather than upon separate 
				isolated phenomena. After much meditation one perceives that all 
				coarse (sthula) matter is in motion -- dancing in its 
				characteristic pattern in its place with all of nature. The rock 
				is dancing energy. The heretofore mystery of energy and matter 
				is revealed as part of the Divine dance of shiva/shakti. The 
				yogi no longer is fooled by gross physical appearances nor 
				subtle superficialities, but rather knows "Self" to be the 
				unitive flow of that dance and dancer. It is said that such 
				understanding will allow a yogi to change form/shape at will. 
				HERE the yogi has entered into the Tandava (Siva's dance which 
				reveals the underlying emptiness of the constituents of material 
				temporal existence which are always in the stage of flux, thus 
				removing such obscurations.) As our consciousness becomes more 
				clear, the more subtle (suksma) relationships occurring within 
				the etheric body are revealed and hence also ALL OUR RELATIONS. 
				III. 45 tatah anima-adi-pradurbhavah kaya-sampat-tad 
				dharma-anabhighatas ca From that follows (tato) the ability to 
				become as small as an atom (animah-adi) and similar abilities to 
				change visible appearances (pradurbhava) of the body (kaya) so 
				that bodily invulnerability or unassailability of the body (dharma-anabhihatas). 
				The perfect body is achieved (kaya sampat) from where one 
				remains free from the onslaught of the variegated laws of nature 
				(dharma) such as the five elements etc. Commentary: The true 
				omniscient Self is everywhere -- in all things. The dance 
				continues -- large or small -- light or heavy. As a progression 
				from the understanding gained in the previous three sutras about 
				the etheric body, lightness, and levitation, but all the 
				previous sutras can be seen as a steady progression. We are 
				moving here into increasingly more stages. Not only is the 
				physical body perfected, but the rainbow or vajra body free from 
				destruction of the elements is achieved (adamantine and 
				impervious). Besides the kaya-sampat and dharma-anabhighatas 
				siddhis listed in sutra 45, it is traditional here to list the 
				eight major siddhis which are: 1. Anima: power to become very 
				small; 2. Laghima: power to become very light; 3. Mahima: power 
				to become very large; 4. Prãpti: power to obtain anything. (These 
				above four are achieved by samyama on the sthula or gross 
				elements). 5. Prãkãmya: fulfillment of any desire at will; This 
				is attained by the samyama on the Svarupa (the characteristics 
				of the gross elements). 6. Vashitva: control of all the gross 
				elements and their material manifestations. This is attained by 
				the samyama on the sukshma rupa (subtle bodies) of the elements. 
				7. Ishitritva: power to create and destroy the gross and 
				material manifestations; This power is attained by the samyama 
				on anvayaya. 8. Kãmavashãyitva: fulfillment of what is 
				determined by the yogi. This power is attained by the samyama on 
				the arthavatva. III. 46 rupa-lavanya-bala-vajra-samhananatyani 
				kaya-sampat And as a result then, beauty (rupa), grace (lavanya), 
				strength (bala), and indestructible endurability (vajrasamhananatyani) 
				manifest spontaneously as attributes of the body of perfection (kaya 
				sampat). Commentary: As a natural result of the previous 
				practices, accomplishments, and harmonization we become 
				permeated with shakti's divine grace, form (which is beauteous), 
				and strength regularly. In grace the yantra of the integration 
				of body, mind, spirit, nature, and breath shines forth from the 
				inside reflecting the universal truth of Creation/Creator as 
				omnipresent. As such it must exist inside us as well. III. 47 
				grahana-svarupasmita-anvaya-arthavattva-samyamad indriya-jayah 
				Samyama on the sense objects, on their their grasping (grahana), 
				their qualitative nature as they are (svarupa), their 
				fragmentary appearance as separate objects (asmita), their 
				mutual or comparative co-relationship (anvaya), and their 
				projected or ascribed significance given to it (arthavattva) in 
				relation to the non-dual indwelling intelligence (without which 
				they would be unable to function) will bring forth a complete 
				direct understanding and hence proficiency and mastery over the 
				function of sense organs (indriya-jayah) i.e., freedom from 
				their bias ensues. Commentary: Although Patanjali is not 
				tarditionally categorized as being a tantric yogi, this sutra 
				lays the foundation of tantric practice where the yogi 
				investigates the created universe, the elements, the bodily 
				functions, etc. all as an integral part of the all inclusive 
				unbiased non-dual whole -- as a path back to total integration 
				with creator/creator (siva/shakti). When perception through the 
				human faculties of eye, ear,
				nose, throat, tongue, and touch becomes clarified through 
				samyama (through their modalities) then the anthropocentric 
				prejudice of such organs become refined so that we may see 
				things as they really are without the ordinary limitations of 
				the five senses -- through a multidimensional and holographic 
				universal perspective (through the sixth sense), When we have 
				understood the limitations of the five senses by practicing 
				samyama on their functions then a deeper awareness (often called 
				the sixth sense) arises -- beyond the temporal limitations of 
				time/space. Then we are centered beyond bias or skew, but rather 
				in the light of Universal Intelligence (Infinite Mind) -- the 
				context of ALL OUR RELATIONS. III. 48 tato manojavitam 
				vikarana-bhavah pradhana-jayash cha Thus (tato) when such 
				understanding has been gained, the senses function with the 
				coordinated and integrated frictionless swiftness (javitvam) 
				quickening the mind (manas), and thus there is direct perception 
				without the need of intermediary instruments (even the sense 
				organs) creating supramundane sensory awareness and ability (vikaranabhavah) 
				and more importantly realization of oneness with the one's 
				essential cosmic nature (pradhana). Commentary: Here the 
				limitations of the five senses are liberated (vikarana) 
				bestowing victory to the original Source or Spirit (pradhana-jayash) 
				which in turn amplifies and quickens the mind (manojavitam) so 
				it is said that one is functioning in a supersensory mode (vikarana-bhavah). 
				Body, mind, spirit are HERE integrated. HERE in this 
				transpersonal integrative state one has transmuted the ordinary 
				mind and sense perception rooted in the separateness (Sutra 47) 
				and thus it is figuratively said that one is seeing with the 
				sixth sense (or through third eye). One is permeated by spirit 
				and animated by shakti recognizing Self in all -- divine 
				presence is experienced unto the tips of the toes, the spaces 
				between the atoms, and throughout the furthest reaches of the 
				universe. HERE one acts spontaneously, naturally, fully, 
				completely, unrestrained, hindered, joyfully, and creatively. 
				Not only is the timeless heart sensitivity awakened. but this 
				awakening simultaneously amplifies the other five senses acting 
				as a catalyst. Then (after Sutra 47) The non-dual transpersonal 
				Reality of ALL OUR RELATIONS -- of Shakti shining through all of 
				Creation becomes revealed and even apparent. Yogiraj 
				Shyamacharan Lahiri says:
				"By the mastery of the sense organs, one attains the mastery 
				over the Nature by: Manoja Vitvam = becoming as fast as the mind 
				(by the samyama on Grahana); Vikarna Bhavah = manifestation of 
				the power of sensory perceptions in acquiring information which 
				is beyond the scope of the body (by the samyama on Svarupa);
				Pradhãna_Jayah = control over all manifestations of the Prakriti 
				(by samyama on AsmitManoja_Vitvam Vikarna_Bhavah Pradhãna, 
				Anvaya, and Arthavatva)." III. 49 
				sattva-purusa-anyata-khyati-matrasya sarva-bhava-adhisthatritvam 
				sarva-jnatrtvam ca The self knowledge of being a knower (jnatrtvam) 
				is grasped by making the distinction (anyata) between purusa (witness 
				consciousness) and sattva (the pure and balanced wave of pure 
				beingness). These two poles of consciousness and beingness -- 
				Self and Nature -- Source and Creation form between them the 
				unitive basis of all knowledge. they are indeed one in 
				satchitananda. Swami Venkatesananda says about this esoteric 
				sutra: "The direct realization of the independence of the 
				indwelling intelligence from the mind, that is from the 
				conditions to which the psychic and the physical nature is 
				subject, brings with it superintendence over all states of being, 
				an omniscience." Commentary: "Everything" appears to exist 
				between the two poles of pure consciousness and pure beingness 
				-- between unmanifest absolute witness consciousness (purusha) 
				and manifest creation -- between creator and creation. These are 
				the two poles of existence which are married as one in the 
				creative process -- the unity of siva/shakti -- the sky and 
				earth, the crown and earth chakras -- the same uncreated self 
				nature of the absolute undifferentiated and formless 
				consciousness on one hand and the myriad forms of differentiated 
				creation on the other. Within these poles all that can be 
				grasped or known exists. Here Patanjali discusses the first step 
				of our journey from corruption to integration -- from 
				fragmentation to unity, that of recognizing the difference, 
				i.e., first to discriminate between the seeming disparity 
				between these two primary forces of sattva and purusha (pure 
				beingness and pure consciousness) in our ordinary or normal 
				every day dualistic and fragmented existence where the illusion 
				of a known and he/she who knows exists. This is our normal (but 
				unnatural) pre-existing milieu where theory and practice do not 
				harmonize and synergize. From this recognition of their present 
				fragmentation and disparity, we begin to see with clarity, 
				eventually becoming able to consciously consummate their divine 
				marriage in absolute liberation (kaivalyam) in Sutra 55.
				The meaning of this sutra is inscrutable only when it is studied 
				out of context with the following five sutras. Here the gross 
				impediments of the fragmentary way of seeing and being are being 
				purified, as we move from power struggles and attachment over 
				objects and toward things (from the dualistic fragmented world 
				of separation) into the non-dual, non-linear, and egoless world 
				of an unconditioned natural pre-existing unitive living 
				consciousness -- where struggle, strife, and slavery is nought. 
				In other words the separation of shiva/shakti is the illusion, 
				while in Reality they are married/united. Separate things appear 
				as real in making the dualistic distinction between purusha and 
				sattva -- consciousness and beingness -- spirit and nature -- 
				creator/creation or just plain shiva/shakti. In truth Purusa is 
				the great being (Param Purusa or Jnanam Purusha (see III.35 
				above). this realization leads to absolute liberation (kaivalyam). 
				See below (III.55, the final sutra in Vibhuti Pada ) and 
				Kaivalyam Pada. Sutra 34 (the final Sutra of the Yoga Sutras). 
				III. 50 tad-vairagyad api dosa-bija-kshaye kaivalyam Through 
				non-attachment (vairagyat) [to the difference between sattva and 
				purusa] the seed causes (bija) of diseases and imbalances (dosa) 
				cease (ksaye). What remains is absolute liberation (kaivalyam) 
				-- complete integration/unification in oneness without 
				limitation -- the experiential Reality of ALL OUR RELATIONS. 
				Swami Venkatesananda says: "When there is no craving or 
				attraction (vairagya) even for such supremacy and for such 
				omniscience, all of which suggest a division in consciousness, 
				and when the sense of duality which is the seed (bija) for 
				imperfection, impurity, or conditioned existence ceases (ksaye), 
				there is total freedom and a direct realization of the 
				indivisibility and hence the in-dependence of intelligence (kaivalyam)." 
				Likewise, Yogiraj Shyamacharan Lahiri says: "When one has 
				vairãgya (non attachment) even for these attainments, all the 
				seed of any sort of weakness are destroyed -- and then the 
				Kaivalya is attained."
				
				Commentary: It may be worth pointing out that Patanjali places 
				an extremely high value on vairagya -- letting go (or 
				non-grasping) -- as being capable of leading us to kaivalyam 
				(ultimate liberation as the summum bonum of yoga. Although it 
				may be implied that Patanjali is referring to not being attached 
				to the siddhis in general, it appears that he is referring to 
				non-attachment to any object in general and specifically to any 
				specific qualification whatsoever, especially it must be applied 
				to the immediately preceding sutra (49) to the cessation of (non-grasping 
				upon) the process of making distinctions (anyata) between sattva 
				(beingness) and purusha (absolute consciousness). In other words 
				Patanjali is saying that beyond the boundary called knowledge, 
				there exists a non-dual unitive stage beyond the dissonance 
				between the
				cognitive state and our experiential state -- between theory and 
				practice which he makes clear in sutra 55, stating quite clearly 
				that one must transcend viveka in order to realize absolute 
				liberation (kaivalyam) by realizing the pure unitive state (suddhi-samye) 
				of sattva-pursushaye (the profound uncontrived marriage of 
				absolute beingness and absolute consciousness). III. 51 
				sthany-upanimantrane sangha-smayakaranam punar anishta-prasangat 
				Decline (akaranam) to display or identify (sanga) with [your] 
				accomplishments in yoga, even when invited by (upanimantrane) a 
				respected source (sthani), because such has the potential of 
				reinforcing one's sense of separate self -- the small self, ego 
				sense, pride, or arrogance (smaya) which in turn (punar) is an 
				impediment (anista) toward further spiritual unfoldment; [but 
				rather it is more productive to attribute it to the grace of the 
				causeless Source of all.] Again Swami Venkatesananda: "Invitations 
				that involve the demonstration of such powers or of the 
				characteristics of enlightenment, even when extended by those in 
				authority whether on earth or in heaven are summarily rejected 
				without being swayed by attachment or even curiosity. Otherwise, 
				undesirable consequences may arise again, by the revival of 
				duality, superiority, hope and despair, etc." Again Yogiraj 
				Shyamacharan Lahiri: "One should not get allured or flattered 
				when tempted by the many, once the respective stages of yoga 
				have been attained by yogis." Commentary: Here this sutra says 
				that there can exist no draw, no seduction, no attraction, and 
				no momentum back into the realm of attachment and pride once one 
				has become well established (sthani) once the taste of kaivalyam 
				has been reached (see sutra 50).
				Patanjali gives us warning that the powers do not come from 
				separateness, fragmentation, or the small "self". Rather any 
				such achievements are to be attributed to the process of yoga (integration) 
				itself that discloses the non-dual transpersonal reality -- the 
				Sat Guru. The trap that Patanjali is warning us about is that if 
				a practitioner is seduced into attributing siddhi to individual 
				effort, then that has the potential to reinforce or increase 
				one's identification to (sanga) ego pride and arrogance (smaya), 
				thus perpetuating an eventual fall into corruption (note that 
				accomplishment in yoga by definition comes from integration, not 
				fragmentation). Similarly even attributing success to your guru, 
				lineage, teaching, cult, religion, or practice in many cases 
				harbors the undesirable identification with a group pride -- an 
				attachment and imprisonment to separateness, aloofness, or 
				similarly contribute toward fortifying arrogance and thus serves 
				to holds the practitioner back from ultimate liberation. Here 
				one must be clear to avoid reinforcing the insidious 
				ossifications of pride or ego, yet still be able to be 
				instructive to some one who is genuinely seeking instruction 
				upon the spiritual path. To this end the application of the 
				non-dual transpersonal wisdom and its realization is most 
				helpful, while the one who instructs as well as animates us all 
				is, in reality, the union of Source and Creation (siva/shakti). 
				In the non-dual yoga framework then any such instruction is a 
				gift to both the "instructor" and the "instructed" -- both can 
				identify as a spiritual friends and fellow seekers who are 
				dedicated to the process of spiritual exploration -- a further 
				journey into the large all encompassing"Self".
				
				So in this way we can thus revert back again to the discussion 
				of the development of the siddhis as a perverted end itself 
				within the fragmented context of separateness (ego) on one hand, 
				and that of siddhis as a natural evolution of consciousness in 
				the transpersonal non-dual context of what is called the Long 
				Body of the Iroquois Nation, or the Long Body of the Great 
				Integrity, the all encompassing body of Hatha Yoga, the 
				Visualization Sadhana of the Kalachakra Tantra, or the Self 
				Woven body of the Nirmanakaya in Vajrayana Buddhism (caution: 
				this last document is large, in PDF format and is an advanced 
				treatise on the manifestation of transpersonal space). To sum up 
				this process, as a certain amount of obscurations are removed 
				from the field of consciousness, then simultaneously the field 
				of consciousness proportionately becomes illuminated and thus 
				revealed. What previously was called extra sensory or super 
				sensory perception and powers become revealed in the light of 
				the greater expanse as the underlying reality of "what-is". 
				However these revelations are not revealed to the viewer in the 
				framework of duality, i.e., they are not individual powers that 
				can be possessed or even borrowed, because the very point of 
				view of duality and separateness veils and obscures it.
				Thus it becomes clear that in the non-dual context of yoga, 
				seeking the siddhis as an end in itself is a counterproductive 
				folly. So Patanjali says to avoid flattery or praise from anyone 
				even if they claim high authority (even if they appear as gods). 
				Avoid invitations by others (even if they appear to be well 
				meaning) to show off your powers, list your qualifications, or 
				even espouse your accomplishments or achievements for such has 
				the potential to feed your sense of separateness and pride, and 
				thus eventually create obstacles toward ultimate integration (samadhi) 
				and liberation (kaivalyam). Patanjali's advice should be taken 
				to heart on an every day basis as well. For example when some 
				one asks you how long you meditate, how long you practice, can 
				you wrap your legs around your head, who are your teachers, what 
				books have you read, or any such questions that may be 
				attributed to "personal accomplishments", Patanjali suggests 
				that this snare be side stepped in order to avoid undesirable 
				effects (anista). III. 52 kshana-tat-kramayoh samyamad vivekajam 
				jnanam Thus letting go of all that, one then practices samyama 
				upon vivekajam jnanam itself allowing one to destroy the 
				limitations of straight line reality, third dimensional thinking 
				of time and place, and thus enter the sacred instantaneous 
				moment (kshana) of the eternal now. Again Swami Venkatesananda "Undistracted 
				by these, one should proceed to transcend time. By the practice 
				of the three-fold discipline in relation to the truth of the 
				moment, without the interference of thought which creates the 
				false sequence of time, there arises understanding which is born 
				of the faculty to perceive the false as false and hence truth as 
				truth." Commentary: Ordinary or coarse knowledge of apparently 
				separate things (the dualistic I-It world) is an artificial 
				imposition of sequential ordering upon the profound non-arisen 
				and unobstructed instant presence. This profound sacred presence 
				can not be talked about successfully with words, but must be 
				experienced through functionally applied yoga practice (abhyasa). 
				This is not a mere intellectual concept that can be reached 
				through philosophical inquiry. memorization, or logic, but 
				rather it is the summum bonum of meditation. Samyama on the 
				profound instantaneousness of each moment -- being in the sacred 
				moment -- being truly present --here --living in the moment, the 
				profound knowledge (jnanam) of the processes that transcend the 
				application of discriminatory knowledge (vivekajam) blossoms 
				forth. At the beginning of our meditation practices viveka (watching 
				the mind) in order to prevent it being distracted and dissipated 
				is necessary, but we also can apply samyama to achieve similar 
				goals and even to direct the mental, physical, energetic, and 
				wisdom bodies so that they align up with the holographic reality 
				that is not bounded by linear time or three dimensional space -- 
				turiya. Some translate this as the realization of the siddhi of 
				time travel through the seeing through (by samyama) of the 
				illusion of time or the illusory and arbitrary ordering of 
				sequential linear events. Thus this can also be translated as 
				the observance of the eternal spirit or sacred unborn eternal 
				unending presence. See also sutra 49.
				Samyama on discriminatory awareness itself frees us from the 
				limitations of linear straight line thinking. Here we enter into 
				the holographic transpersonal inter-dimensional timeless realm 
				called turiya- ALL OUR RELATIONS.
				III. 53 jati-laksana-desair anyata-anavachchedat-tulyayos-tatah 
				pratipattih From Swami Venkatesananda "From such understanding 
				flows knowledge or the natural ability to distinguish between 
				reality and appearance, even where they do not have other 
				obvious distinguishing marks related to their species, 
				characteristics and location and hence seem to be similar. The 
				possibility of confusion is thus completely overcome." 
				Commentary: Having first understood the difference between the 
				object being observed and the one who observes it, then one 
				understands the limitations of comparative knowledge itself 
				through realizing that no two apparently individual things or 
				objects can be fully known through mere reductionist comparative 
				processes (just as the blade of grass in the valley cannot be 
				fully understood without the knowledge of the valley floor, the 
				rain, the sunshine, photosynthesis, the air, etc. Thus the 
				dualistic veil is lifted. A revelation between limited 
				appearances and reality is realized (pratipattih). From the 
				non-dual context "things" are not limited by differences (anyata) 
				be it of: origination or genetic matrix (jati), ascribed 
				appearances, manifested qualities, or symbolic representation (lakshana), 
				setting or context (desaih).
				Although the ability to separate and discern still exist, it no 
				longer dominates or occludes the mind. The practitioner is no 
				longer seduced into the disparate dualistic linear temporal 
				world of illusion/confusion, but rather observes the sacred in 
				all -- residing in the non-dual all inclusive universal 
				beginningless/never ending realm of ALL OUR RELATIONS (anavacchedat) 
				in the eternal moment. III. 54 tarakam sarva-vishayam 
				sarvatha-visayam-akraman ca-iti viveka-jam jnanam Viveka-jam 
				jnanam is a integrative (taraka) wisdom (jnanam) that allows us 
				to go beyond viveka (the process of discriminatory awareness), 
				which allows us to join up with a universal unitive perspective 
				(which has no limitations in respect to place, setting, or time) 
				--which is not limited by reductionist/analytical thought -- 
				which simultaneously encompasses all objects (sarva visayam), 
				processes, or conditions (visaya) -- reaching beyond all endings 
				(sarvatha) where all impositions and limitations of sequential 
				time or linear thinking (akrama) are liberated.
				Swami Venkatesananda says:
				"Such wisdom born of intuitive and immediate understanding is 
				the sole redeemer. It is everything. It has everything. It 
				encompasses everything. It is the unconditioned and undivided 
				intelligence spontaneously functioning from moment to moment in 
				the eternal now, without sequential relationship." Commentary: 
				Here we are not addressing ordinary discriminatory wisdom -- 
				comparative knowledge of "things", dualistic objects of thought, 
				or processes as compared to other things, objects, and processes 
				to which those who are slaves to reductionist modes of logic are 
				addicted, but rather the broadening (taraka) of ordinary 
				discriminatory awareness (viveka) and three dimensional linear 
				ways of thinking, toward an intimate, non-linear, 
				multi-dimensional direct knowledge of the process of this 
				awareness itself (viveka-jam jnanam). HERE in this way we move 
				from the fragmentary, corrupt, dual and linear straight line 
				contexts of separate objects visayam akraman) into the circular 
				open-ended boundless context of non-dual wisdom which provides 
				in itself knowledge (jam jnanam) and understanding of the 
				relativistic limitation of the processes of viveka (analytical 
				discrimination). Thus this special liberatory wisdom (tarakam) 
				provides its own remediation to to the boundaries of ordinary 
				discriminatory thought (which is based on objective comparison 
				and isolation) because it has lead us to abide in the intrinsic 
				light which is all inclusive, non-sequential, non-linear, and 
				unbounded. Risking repetitiveness, this nonlinear transcendental 
				wisdom (tarakam) should not be confused with ordinary 
				discriminatory knowledge (viveka), but rather the all inclusive 
				integrative wisdom (taraka) which is the result of the direct 
				non-dual experience of ALL OUR RELATIONS. In other words by 
				applying viveka with pure awareness, we become aware of the 
				principle of awareness itself which illumines the process of 
				discrimination which obviates its need. In a parallel way, in 
				hatha, kundalini, laya, and tantra yoga, one practices pratyhara, 
				by withdrawing attention and energy from the duality of "i-it" 
				consciousness -- the "appearance" of independent sense objects 
				-- the artificial dualistic illusion of a material reality, and 
				then enter into a deeper non-dual awareness which binds all 
				things together -- thus the practitioner abides inside of and is 
				embraced by the Great Implicate Integrity of All things by 
				embracing "IT". HERE as a separate object (visayam) the 
				practitioner (as ego) must get out of the way in order to 
				experience (bhoga) sacred presence. See commentary under Sutra 
				52. III. 55 sattva-purusayoh shuddhi-samye kaivalyam
				By perfectly balancing (samye) pure beingness (sattva) with pure 
				undifferentiated universal consciousness (purusa) the 
				obstructions are removed (shuddhi) thus disclosing and opening 
				the gate to kaivalyam (absolute liberation).
				Swami Venkatesananda: "When there is pure equilibrium (shuddhi-sumye) 
				which is non-division between the indwelling consciousness and 
				all (objective) existence, between the nonmoving intelligence 
				and the ever-moving phenomena, between the unconditioned 
				awareness and the rise and fall of the 'The thousand thoughts' - 
				there is freedom and independence of the infinite -- it is no 
				longer confined, restricted, or bound." Commentary: HERE 
				Patanjali addresses the profound power of balance and 
				synchronicity in yoga. HERE the purity (shuddhi) of purusha (consciousness) 
				and beingness (sattva) are synchronized (samye). This is the 
				point of III.35 and III.49 (the union of absolute beingness with 
				absolute consciousness in Sat-Chit-Ananda). HERE all dissonance 
				between the cognitive "reality" and experience is eliminated. 
				HERE the vrttis are annihilated. Purusha (as pure universal 
				witness consciousness) does not move and as such it is usually 
				identified with Undiminished Source -- Siva -- Eternal and 
				Absolute Reality. HERE, the word, shuddhi is used for, purity; 
				while by sattva, Patanjali means the synchronistic ground of 
				pure beingness, embodied existence, and/or creation which is 
				always moving in harmony with purusha. Thus when eternal spirit 
				or pure undifferentiated consciousness (purusha) is allowed to 
				merge into its natural state of balance, harmony, synchrony and 
				unity (samye) with and as pure absolute beingness, pure 
				existence, pure subjective experiential reality -- when nature/creation 
				in the overall non-dual context of the unity of siva/shakti --- 
				heaven and earth -- prana and apana, inhalation and exhalation, 
				sahasrara and muladhara chakras are married into a profound 
				synchronicity in authentic yoga, then ascension has occurred in 
				a liberation that knows no bounds (kaivalyam) -- total or 
				absolute freedom is realized while alive (jivamukti). In tantric 
				practice the yogi learns how to balance and synchronize the 
				pingala and ida energies and thus allow them to meet at the 
				mouth of the sushumna in the muladhara chakra thus activating 
				one's highest creative/evolutionary potential symbolized by the 
				awakened goddess, lady kundalini, or kundalini shakti. Aligning 
				mother earth with father sky -- the divine will and individual 
				will are in synch, heaven and earth. muladhara and sahasrara, 
				consciousness and beingness, and as such the prana shakti 
				reaches its highest state of expression (the goddess kundalini 
				blossoms forth) manifesting in this very body as embodied love! 
				HERE Patanjali ends Pada III with the word, kaivalyam, which 
				means ultimate liberation, not surprisingly the title/subject of 
				the loftiest and final chapter, Pada IV where this subject is 
				elaborated upon.
				
 Pada Four: Kaivalyam: Ultimate Liberation – Freedom without Negation or 
				Qualification When at first we practice meditation (dhyana), we 
				see how deeply entrenched the monkey mind‘s attachments and 
				propensities have become, how conditioned the mind has become, 
				our accumulated imprints (samskaras), tendencies (vasanas), and 
				the like, and how all these are connected to karma, to ignorance 
				(avidya) and to desire/aversion (raga/dvesa). Thus at first 
				meditation is a bit rocky, interspersed with periods of calm 
				lucidity which gradually deepen and lengthen between periods of 
				wandering/restless mentations (vrtti). With continued applied 
				practice (abhyasa) and the practice of authentic self study (swadhyaya) 
				eventually these revelations produce more continuity of clarity, 
				calm, strength, and creative insight into our everyday life as 
				well. In yoga the inner work which is produced from practice and 
				experience, rather than from books, external teachers, 
				intellectualization, logic, memorization, or conformity starts 
				to bear fruit. We gradually realize the underlying truth which 
				has been in front of our faces all our life – during sleep and 
				waking – before birth and after death – residing in the great 
				continuum which is yoga. This unbiased unconditioned universal 
				Reality in turn reveals the workings of the relative world of 
				cause and effect -- all things come together into an organic 
				synchronicity ( in ALL OUR RELATIONS, because the cobwebs and 
				obscurations of the mental process have now been cleansed.
				Meditation thus brings direct insight – it activates the inner 
				wisdom and our dormant creative/evolutionary potential. Thus 
				through yogic practice (sadhana) we gradually awake and emerge 
				out of the sleep of dualistic ignorance. This awakened power, 
				instinct, intuition, insight, awareness, inner wisdom, and/or 
				authentic knowledge of Self has many names, but it is not at all 
				the same as knowledge memorized from books or from external 
				authority. Rather self realization has to come from inside -- 
				from our own direct experience. In yoga only this experiential 
				approach is authentic, self empowering, and brings authentic 
				self confidence, security, fulfillment, and peace. Generally 
				speaking, we start off in a comparatively insensitive, coarse, 
				gross, materialistic, and low vibrational state of awareness (savitarka, 
				savicara, saguna). A wisely applied and consistent yoga practice 
				over time (abhyasa) gradually purifies and removes the denseness, 
				coarseness, and occlusions from the field of consciousness (ignorance) 
				so that the obscuring tendencies gradually lose power and 
				validity, and fall away (the reality of nirvitarka, nirvicara, 
				and nirguna). The mind becomes clear and self luminous as the 
				old impurities, afflictions, blockages, and compulsions (klesha, 
				samskara, negative karma) are liberated --citta-vrtti-nirodah 
				begins to dawn. The process is not complex, but rather it is a 
				profound simplification -- a gradual waking up from a dross 
				sleep contaminated by confused habituation -- as a purification 
				through the means of a functional practice so that our intrinsic 
				true nature spontaneously is revealed (swarupa). Spiritual 
				change happens by itself -- self actualizing -- in the process 
				of authentic yoga, albeit one will meet with resistances. In 
				what has been termed, the raj yoga system, as written down by 
				Patanjali, the general focus and primary means to melt down this 
				resistance is meditation (dhyana) which denotes raj yoga (the 
				other practices mentioned by Patanjali being supplemental to 
				meditation). We also must realize that meditation is the 
				technique, while the goal is the absolute liberation, kaivalyam 
				(the purport of this final chapter of Patanjali's Yoga Sutras). 
				Thus we learn about our own mind which has become conditioned 
				and how to uncondition/reprogram it. We do not have to memorize 
				the specific pathologies or modalities of the mind, like 
				studying for an academic test at school in order to attain 
				authentic spiritual knowledge. Neither does one have to study 
				books of grammar, philosophy, semantics, and the like, but 
				merely to become acquainted inside, to recognize what is 
				wholistic and functional about the nature of awareness itself, 
				recognizing the underlying Source of Intelligence and 
				Consciousness and use these inner eyes whose cobwebs have become 
				cleansed to ―see‖. This is vidya or jnana which is the 
				antitheses of and antidote to avidya (ignorance).
				An analogy here might be that Pure Universal Consciousness (cit) 
				is like the Sun while the individual mind (manas) is like its 
				rays. Sometimes the rays get cloudy, refracted, distorted, 
				dissipated, or even blocked out. Yoga teaches us how to keep the 
				pathways, open, light, bright, and in delight. This way we 
				commune with, embrace, and form an ever more intimate 
				relationship and alignment with Source and become 
				trans-substantiated -- in tune with the transconceptional, 
				transpersonal, non- dual, unconditioned, infinite universal 
				mind, – the true Self, naturally as an authentic natural, and 
				organic teaching occurring from the inside out that has become 
				activated through authentic yogic practice. Again this is 
				process is to be juxtaposed to ordinary knowledge, which is 
				imposed from the outside through external authority, tradition, 
				book knowledge, and acquired beliefs, which too often reinforces 
				the very boundaries and prisons that yoga is designed to remove. 
				This is a valuable distinction to emphasize because most 
				students mistakenly think that the purpose of studying the Yoga 
				Sutras is to understand the text, but rather the opposite is 
				true (we study the Yoga Sutras to help understand the Self). For 
				many centuries prior to Patanjali's birth authentic Yoga 
				teachings were made available through a living oral tradition. 
				there was no studying texts on yoga, because none existed, 
				rather the study was the nature of the mind and existence and 
				the removal of suffering (Satchitananda). The Raj Yoga yoga 
				tradition taught the art of meditation which is essentially the 
				art of self study -- of knowing the mind beyond its most subtle 
				and minute manifestation. Patanjali intended the Yoga Sutras to 
				be a means toward that rather that limb in the tree and then 
				realize total integration, samadhi -- ALL OUR RELATIONS. Instead 
				in modern academic and overly intellectual approaches circles, 
				the study of the book has become the misplaced end in itself, 
				while direct experience has taken the back seat. Patanjali was 
				aware of the possibility of this perversion and that is why he 
				categorized pramana as a vrtti, but the ordinal purport of the 
				text has become expropriated and distorted. The Yoga Sutras 
				point to a way to authentically ―own‖ and integrate true 
				spiritual teachings -- a message still valid today; while at the 
				same time as Patanjali says, external authority, words, 
				tradition, the reductionist mind, inference, ordinary methods of 
				dualistic perception, distractive modalities of thought, stupor, 
				torpor, and past impressions (in short pramana, vikalpa, nidra, 
				and all the rest of the vrttis) join together with samskaras, 
				vasana, klesha, karma, desire, aversion, and avidya (ignorance) 
				to create dukha (suffering). Tellingly, one can not find in the 
				Yoga Sutras any instance where Patanjali has even suggested 
				studying scripture, worshipping deities, following gurus, or 
				conventional moral codes (see the commentary in Pada II 
				regarding the true meaning of yama/niyama including isvara 
				pranidhana). Precisely, nothing replaces direct realization and 
				this is what Patanjali advocates, i.e., samadhi. From the 
				increasingly deepening glimpses that authentic practice affords, 
				one naturally gains confidence of the true nature of mind.
				
				Having explained the general assumptions in Pada One (defining 
				Yoga and Samadhi as a transconceptional alignment, communion, 
				harmonization, transubstantiation, and wholistic transpersonal 
				non-dual integration); explaining the practices (sadhana) in 
				Pada Two; the attainments (Vibhuti) in pada Three; here in Pada 
				Four (Kaivalyam) Patanjali describes the ultimate liberation 
				which is a self liberation without qualification as realized in 
				nirbija-samadhi (seedless samadhi). Kaivalyam: Ultimate or 
				Absolute Liberation In this fragmented and spiritually alienated 
				society surrounded by dualistic religionism and philosophies the 
				non-dual yogic idea of liberation and happiness often becomes 
				perverted or at best widely misinterpreted. When yogis speak 
				about happiness, they do not mean relative happiness -- a 
				freedom from, transcendence of, escape or alleviation from 
				suffering in a relative sense, but rather yoga is about 
				attaining and abiding in a lasting and ultimate absolute 
				happiness and freedom -- an unconditional, unqualified, true, 
				and lasting happiness without falling back into the illusion of 
				suffering which is termed nirbij (seedless) samadhi. We shall 
				see that this authentic and lasting happiness is not dependent 
				upon "things" or temporal conditions -- it is not due to absence 
				in any sense -- but is only due to a realization of a totally 
				integrated all inclusive Universal Self -- a life that both 
				acknowledges and is filled with sacred presence. This 
				realization can not be obtained with the manipulation of words 
				or the intellect, because by its nature it can not be defined in 
				human terms/words. That which is all inclusive contains us. We 
				can only contain it when we become "it" -- when we identify with 
				the Great Integrity as-it-is. This Great Integrity defines the 
				human world, all other worlds, times, and dimensions, as well. 
				Humans can do well with philosophical systems, but it is 
				valuable to know the limitation of such systems, i.e., where 
				philosophy, ideology, and religionism ends and where authentic 
				yoga begins. Thus the intellectual translations (which forms the 
				vast bulk of the translations) contain a common mistranslation 
				of the word, kaivalyam, as being an isolation, a withdrawal, or 
				transcendence. It is an error of dualistic thinking -- of the 
				ego sense (asmita) stemming from habituated separateness and 
				confusion (avidya) that proposes that kaivalyam is isolation. 
				Kaivalya can not be seen in terms of freedom from anything, in 
				terms of escape, fear, transcendence, aversion, or even striving 
				for an attainment (terms which all stem from duality as their 
				basis). In kaivalyam (as an absolute and unconditional 
				liberation versus a relative liberation) there exist no 
				conditions of a relative (normal) freedom from anything -- there 
				is no where to go, no where to hide, nothing to be separated 
				from, rather yoga occurs, at its end, in abiding in one's true 
				natural self (swarupa).
				
				Thus in pada four Patanjali evinces the end of striving where 
				our mind is no longer occupied by the distinctions of a separate 
				object of concentration be it physical or mental where all 
				apparent differentiated phenomena cease to be as such (sunya), 
				and as such this is the end of endless relative and comparative 
				objectification (in nirguna). As such it is not reached by 
				objectification or differentiation, but rather by its release. 
				It is not realized by the intellect, by manas (the ordinary 
				mind), by will, by separateness (asmita), or by any other klesha, 
				but rather dualism is instantaneously realized when we have 
				finally given all these up - released them. Again we do not give 
				these up as an intellectual decision and it is not the ego who 
				gives up anything, rather this surrender occurs simultaneously 
				with the genuine spiritual experience, from the expansion of 
				conscious wrought from authentic realization. Thus philosophers 
				in their special way of analytical logic and reductionism have 
				attempted to define kaivalya as an isolation rather than as 
				union. Taken to its logical end (as is true with all fragmented 
				thought), they wind up with absolute withdrawal or catatonia. 
				Indeed, this is often how Western philosophers have "understood" 
				samadhi. In one sense only can this absurdity be said to have 
				any merit. They are correct only in the sense that nirbij 
				samadhi (as the ultimate integration) is dependent upon first 
				separating the cit-prana from separation itself -- from false 
				identification with a separate self (asmita) which is called 
				egoism but rather it includes embracing the transpersonal 
				non-dual all encompassing Integrity. So then an isolation from 
				isolation (separation) in reality brings on an integration (which 
				is nirbij samadhi) when the yogic context is not corrupted, but 
				rather acknowledged and honored. Indeed the means of how this 
				non-dual liberation (which is not a separation) is accomplished 
				forms a central theme throughout Pada Four -- Kaivalyam. In 
				authentic yoga playing with words is not only not necessary, it 
				most often becomes counterproductive, unless it is used to 
				defeat the tendency to play on words in the first place. Thus, 
				within the scope of authentic yoga, kaivalyam, or ultimate 
				liberation, is not an escape from any "thing"; it is not an 
				aversion, hatred, a fear, a dislike, or even a desire in the 
				common usage of the word (as all kleshas and karma are 
				eventually burned up through yogic practice). It is not a 
				relative isolation, avoidance, control over, repression, 
				transcendence from, an overcoming of, nor denial of anything in 
				any form. Kaivalya is not achieved through strife, from control 
				over anything, aloofness, nor transcendence. Indeed 
				transcendence has to be given up as well. Simply one abides in 
				the Uncolored Universal without striving. All analogies or words 
				are by definition inadequate when one attempts to describe the 
				boundless and immeasurable -- the Infinite Mind. One such image 
				is the mahamudra, the open sky or clear heart space -- the Great 
				Intrinsic All Pervading Perfection -- a simultaneously occurring 
				synchronicity of holographic multi-dimensionality. Another "image" 
				is the multidimensional unification of the microcosm and 
				macrocosm as in the symbolic representation of the hologram 
				often drawn as the Sri Yantra (mystic diagram). Distinctions 
				between the terms yoga, swarupa, nirbija samadhi, kaivalyam, 
				purusha, and isvara. are not necessary once we enter the sacred 
				mandala. But to Patanjali's credit, he does not get lost in 
				symbolic representation, analogy, nor images.
				
				Surely in ordinary dualistic contextual systems, freedom is 
				defined as a freedom from something, and thus in many religious 
				systems the idea of transcendence over or freedom from 
				afflictions, suffering, past karma, and even ignorance (avidya) 
				are expounded. However such a tactic has the danger of 
				reinforcing aversion and desire unless it moves into the 
				unconditional and non-dual realms. Only in the non-dual both/and 
				interpretation will the alienation of heaven and hell, spirit 
				and nature states, mind and body, etc., be resolved. Thus in 
				order to cut through the confusion surrounding the dualistic 
				interpretation of kaivalyam, it is wise to ask absolute 
				liberation from what? Does one disappear completely or just the 
				ego bias (the illusion of referencing the universe from a 
				temporary separate self)? Simply our bias and point of view 
				shifts to unbiased universal heart ... not to worry about losing 
				anything of value except our prejudices, fears, and narrow 
				minded views. In an embodied, non-dual tantric and wholistic 
				interpretation of kaivalya, we can take the all inclusive both/and 
				(versus either/or) approach to advantage and ask, where is it 
				that Brahman does not exist except in the illusory (dualistic) 
				mind? Here we will assume the non-dual tantric assumption that 
				Patanjali implied, i.e., the difficulty on how liberation can be 
				embodied (jivamukti) in an awakened body/mind who has aligned 
				their entire being and opened up the light pathways for the rays 
				of the sun to shine. By first differentiating between the 
				striving for freedom as an escape from something as opposed to a 
				state of ultimate liberation (the end of sorrow or nirbija 
				samadhi), we can approach the profundity of the freedom of 
				freedom. Ultimate liberation is not from the body and Patanjali 
				never says or indicates that it is other worldly or transcendent 
				(even though as has been pointed out scholars, religionists, 
				dualists, and intellectuals, want to impose that type of 
				institutionalized and sterile conclusion), rather liberation is 
				in the acceptance and integration of the eternal Present HERE 
				and Now. To get HERE one must be able to drop all fear, aversion, 
				clinging, preconception, conditioning, samskaras, and ignorance 
				(avidya). A careful student will find that it is here in Pada 
				Four that the sophistry of the numerous academic philosophic 
				interpreters of Patanjali is taken to its most absurd heights. 
				One will find (should one engage in a comparative study) that 
				institutionalized and self serving academia have misinterpreted 
				sutra after sutra (which was originally intended to be a 
				meditation manual in order to realize samadhi) having reduced it 
				to trivial, useless, and irrelevant philosophical and 
				metaphysical speculation and abstractions.
				
				Now again if we look at the Yoga Sutras as a meditation manual, 
				then we can see that Patanjali is referring to ultimate 
				realization in meditation or samadhi. Once samadhi is realized 
				in yogic practice, as jivamukti, then it is to be embodied in 
				ALL OUR
				RELATIONS – at all times. Any action coming from that very 
				sacred and profound non-dual Clear Heart Space which manifests 
				in the world (as behavior) is profoundly altered -- it has a 
				touch of divine love to it. Patanjali thus is not attempting to 
				give us a moral code, rules, techniques, formulas, or even 
				methods of attacking the world, but rather ways of first getting 
				clear and free ourselves (reestablishing connection with Source) 
				in successfully realizing the "fruit" of meditation. From that 
				place of intrinsic knowing, non-dual and trans-rational action 
				naturally follows. This reflects the enlightened view that we 
				can not help others out of ignorance, but only out of wisdom 
				which follows that we strive for enlightenment IN ORDER to help 
				"Self" – in order to heal self as others -- in the non-dual and 
				non-separate sense as all other beings. This type of wise action 
				is manifested in natural love, empathy, compassion, and 
				equanimity which are called upaya, or skillful means, in 
				Buddhism. Meditation is simply a practice which Patanjali is 
				trying to help us understand (and master) which brings this 
				realization home. Liberation while alive or Jivamukti is a big 
				topic in itself, but the important point is that meditation 
				practice not be seen as an escape, withdrawal from, or 
				transcendence of the world (like many externally oriented 
				materialists say), but rather as a renunciation of dualism, 
				separatism, ego, and self imposed limited belief systems. As we 
				study Kaivalya Pada (chapter Four) we will see that Patanjali is 
				describing yoga as a pathway of connection between the absolute 
				and the relative, Spirit and Nature, Mind and Body -- 
				Consciousness and Being – the unification of the objective world 
				with the subjective world -- the integration of ultimate truth, 
				happiness and freedom in order that it will become embodied and 
				expressed. As such Patanjali presents yoga as unification and 
				integration -- as the process of disclosing the underlying all 
				inclusive non-dual self existent integrity between consciousness 
				and being, sky and earth, crown and root as Swarupa -- our 
				natural unconditioned authentic true ―self‖ which is the 
				completion of yoga. Isn't the difference between the eternal 
				present and time -- eternal and temporal -- absolute and 
				relative just artificially delineated (separated)? Is it not 
				simply a programmed, conditioned, and acquired process, rather 
				than a reflection of Reality-As-It-Is. Reality and Truth becomes 
				"heavy" to deal with just because of our false conditioning; 
				while it is that very conditioning which meditation attacks, 
				disrupts, and frees us from. And it is that meditation which 
				transcend the words completely, which go well beyond the process 
				of human mentation and contrivation which Patanjali eloquently 
				attempts to describe (in words).
				
				Kaivalya is not conditioned nor contrived, hence it is ALWAYS 
				present. It is not separate from embodiment, rather ingrained 
				and programmed ignorance (avidya) makes it seem so. When we find 
				ourselves more "connected", our conscious awareness of ―THAT‖ – 
				of all things in all things -- which intrinsically exists by 
				itself without avidya or ignorance is naturally increased a 
				thousand fold. Knowledge and insight (jnanam comes by itself and 
				with it siddhis are gifted without ever striving for them. When 
				we are able (ability is another word for siddhi) to commune 
				deeply with nature or even inanimate objects such as rocks 
				onepointedly in samyama, then naturally knowledge of their 
				nature is communicated. This can happen with herbs (as an 
				herbalist/shaman) or with patients (as a doctor/shaman), or with 
				our "self" as self knowledge, etc. In a sacred and powerful 
				place, Grace cautions us to be careful about what to ask for; 
				and thus as we increasingly focus in the process of yoga, 
				kaivalyam becomes realized. Thus ultimately in Pada Four 
				Patanjali answers the question of what is ultimate liberation 
				through the processes of yoga (in the context of yoga which 
				means to join together -- or to merge as one) , Thus, Kaivalya 
				includes the freedom from "limited" identification- from 
				separateness itself -- from ego – the freedom from separateness 
				and here it becomes ultimate freedom because only in ultimate 
				unity – within the Great Integrity of all ALL OUR RELATIONS is 
				there no longer a possibility of being separate – no longer a 
				possibility of being ―free from‖ any thing else. Here all fear 
				and desire have become remediated. This is the freedom of 
				freedom a natural state. Thus Kaivalyam is isolation (freedom 
				from) only in the sense that it dissociates itself from the 
				process of aversion, isolation, duality, and separateness or ego 
				itself. Yoga is thus culminated with the realization of 
				nirbij-samadhi where any separate self is seen as part of the 
				illusory process and is no longer drawn into it, hence all vrtti, 
				all bias, all perturbations and agitations of the psychic field 
				rests in the empty field of separateness -- Kaivalyam being our 
				natural state. Patanjali says in the first verse of Pada 4 (Kaivalya) 
				Sutra 1 janma-osadhi-mantra-tapah-samadhi-jah siddayahsamadhi 
				Siddhi (attainment) can come because of inborn traits from karma 
				and genetics (janma), from herbs (aushadhi), mantras, the 
				kindling of the psychic fire (tapas), and/or from samadhi.
				One witnesses that one may gain siddhis increasing thence one's 
				latent abilities become enhanced through the wise utilization 
				and communion with nature's medicines and elixirs (aushadhi) 
				which in turn trigger/activate the inner evolutionary circuits (including 
				the body's neuro-endocrine system), clear out obstructions in 
				the nadis, and in general remove obstructions both in the 
				cellular memory and neuro-psychic pathways. The wise use of 
				certain herbal combinations are known to the tradition of yoga 
				to stimulate/catalyze the production of inner elixirs (soma, 
				amrita, etc.) which are also activated by other factors. Just as 
				in chapter three samyama brings forth many abilities (siddhas), 
				so too is the process enhanced through inborn traits, the wise 
				use of herbs, mantra, tapas, and meditative absorption (samadhi). 
				Chief among the producer of siddhis is the state that samadhi 
				offers. From samadhi, the third eye, transcendental knowledge, 
				and transensual perception become accessible as if the body/mind 
				were plugged into a huge main frame computer which encompassed 
				all the data since beginningless time. Parents notice that 
				children are born with innate propensities, wisdom, personality 
				traits, and abilities. These inborn/innate abilities (janma) are 
				due to karma and genetics. All beings have inborn traits and 
				special abilities, certain propensities to attain the highest 
				realization (Buddha nature) but few realize it in their 
				incarnation. Similarly, our genetic constitution at birth is the 
				result of past karma. One who has looked into the situation 
				fully knows that infants are born into this world with their 
				unique karma, some possessing amazing advanced abilities (siddhis) 
				right from birth, while others may be severely blocked or 
				lacking either physically and/or psychically. These latent 
				abilities can be enhanced and awakened through the practice of 
				tapas (see II.1 II.43) because tapas eliminates and redirects 
				the outward flowing misdirected and dissipating energetics of a 
				distracted dualistic mind thus providing the fuel to catalyze 
				the latent but natural evolutionary inward flow (kundalini) 
				which is our natural evolutionary potential. Tapas thus is an 
				important practice in quickening our success (vibhuti). Likewise 
				the practice of focusing upon the specific dynamic energetic 
				qualities of specific sound vibrations (mantra) will open up 
				previously dormant pathways that activate heretofore hidden 
				abilities. Lastly the understanding of nature's botanical and 
				mineral energetic potential (osadah) allows the yogi who 
				understands her to join into a mutual synergistic partnership 
				which activates various psycho-neurophysiological processes 
				precipitating in liberation from illness, increased strength, 
				power of concentration, wisdom, and other heightened abilities. 
				Although specific techniques have been developed for specific 
				abilities, Patanjali recommends that the wise sadhak does not 
				become sidetracked on specific siddhis, but far better focus 
				upon developing ultimate liberation -- freedom from spiritual 
				obstructions to nirbija (seedless) samadhi. See III. 37. IV 
				Sutra 2 jati-antara-parinama prakrty-apurat
				The diverse new embodiments (of spirit) jati-antara) are 
				conveyed through the ever abundant flux of creative natural 
				evolution. Spirit, as such, is an intrinsic
				part of our essential nature, although hidden by ignorance in 
				the “normal” condition. Commentary: "We" exist not in a fixated 
				state, frozen in time and space. Rather phenomena is ever 
				changing (parinama) as diverse multitudinous creative 
				manifestations or evolutionary (prakrti) flux of the divine 
				Creatrix (prakrti). As such in Reality, WE collectively, are 
				THAT -- whole, since in non-dual Reality WE are not separate 
				entities (egos) and phenomena as such does not exist apart. Here 
				we have the ABILITY to channel this infinite abundance into many 
				avenues of creation -- giving birth in embodied love (jati-antara-parinama). 
				Here we take "prakrty-apurat" as the innate abundant (apurat) 
				power of nature (shakti) while "jati-antara-parinama" is the 
				ability to give birth to our highest transformative potential. 
				Spirit, as prana, naturally is imbibed (apurat) inside all 
				generated forms (jati-antara) as the intrinsic source of 
				spiritual inspiration. When we are allowed to see and 
				participate in this natural innate process consciously (when we 
				approximate or align with our intrinsic natural state), then 
				Infinite dawnless Source thus manifests as the diverse and rich 
				expressions of the one Spirit – within the overall boundless 
				transpersonal context of intrinsic kinship and unity of ALL OUR 
				RELATIONS. Although there exists only One formless eternal and 
				absolute Beginningless Source (creative Spirit), THAT manifests 
				in terms of a continuous creative evolutionary act of creation 
				which appears within temporal space and time, as evolution. This 
				great creative force is our greater identity which we have 
				dissociated (dismembered) from through negative conditioning -- 
				through the acclamation/distraction of avidya. In this way 
				reincarnation is also explained and is at the same remediated. 
				IV Sutra 3 nimittam aprayojakam prakrtinam varana-bhedas tu 
				tatah ksetrikavat Through our daily intercourse and experience 
				with nature/creation the coverings (varana) which are obstacles 
				to the realization of the Great Integrity and continuity of THAT 
				manifestation are removed (bhedas) naturally without 
				necessitating force; but rather can occur naturally like a 
				cultivator with a green thumb who naturally gravitates toward 
				cultivating both the soil and the plants as part of one’s larger 
				family or kin – as a partner or co-creator.
				Commentary: tatah means, from that. Bhedah means, to remove or 
				separate. Nimittam means causal ground or overall motif. 
				Ksetrikavat is one who cultivates the soil or literally a farmer 
				of a land (in this sense one who cultivates samadhi). Thus in 
				yoga it is the practitioner's wholistic non-dual identification 
				of body/mind/spirit which is the territory and thus the field 
				that is being attended to and cultivated by the sadhak (practitioner). 
				Aprayojakam means without imposing force -- without artifice, 
				but naturally through establishing a harmonious interactive 
				co-creative relationship. 
				This is the natural enfoldment or evolution of consciousness 
				without interference, resistance, or attachment such as some one 
				with a ―green thumb‖ goes about working in a garden as kin – as 
				mutual participants in the non-dual reality of the eternal 
				gurukula in ALL OUR RELATIONS. Thus this sutra assumes that like 
				an inspired or talented gardener, the practitioner acts in 
				harmony with an organic process, as a co-creator with 
				beginningless Spirit which if cared for wisely is allowed to 
				bloom and bear fruit within this very field (ksetrikavat) 
				naturally. Like a master gardener one removes (bhedah) the 
				obstructions (varana) and noxious material allowing the abundant 
				natural potential to flow forth, bloom, and bear fruit. Here 
				Patanjali says that a wise man does not mistake the process of 
				removing of the obstacles to attainment, with the natural 
				tendency toward its innate attainment. The light illumines 
				itself (it is self effulgent). IV Sutra 4 nirmana-cittani 
				asmita-matrat Consciousness becomes bonded and limited to an 
				apparent material form which creates the error of materialism -- 
				the false assumption that only coarse form (nirmana) the only 
				true existence (nirmana). This limited way of perceiving 
				existence (nirmana-cittani) is due from the more fundamental 
				afflictive emotion of asmita (the false identification of a 
				separate and limited self). Commentary: Consciousness evolves 
				naturally (as in Sutra 3 preceding) as the flooding of prakrti 
				except for the interference of asmita (the assumption of the 
				reality of separate self and things) where it then appears 
				exclusively bound to form, bounded, coarse, gross, and inert. 
				Nirmana is the realm of form or material reality. It can also be 
				defined as pertaining to that which is fabricated/created. 
				Matrat means limitation, boundary, or exclusion. Asmita 
				(separate ego sense) is one of the five kleshas which are the 
				afflictions or poisons which consist of avidya (ignorance), 
				asmita (egoism), raga (desire or attraction), dvesa (repulsion 
				or aversion) and abhinivesah (fear of death or transformation). 
				Samadhi destroys all that Thus "form based" mental fabrications 
				arise from asmita (the error of egocentric fixations). Thus in 
				our meditation practice (sadhana) our attempts to transform the 
				mind and cultivate samadhi through the fabrications stemming 
				from asmita are doomed to failure. All such schemes must 
				eventually surrender to the flood gates of prakrti (shakti). At 
				least this is the advice of sahaj yoga and the siva/shakti 
				practitioners. See Sutra 34 "kaivalyam svarupa-pratistha va 
				citi-saktir iti").
				
				It should be clear that here, Patanjali is not only addressing 
				the affliction of separate or small ―self‖ in creating a severe 
				limitation of ―reality‖ as a false identification and an 
				affliction, but also the affliction of asmita as applied to any 
				separate thing which as
				such creates discontinuity from the world of ALL OUR RELATIONS– 
				from the non-dual transpersonal Great Integrity which is the 
				realization of our natural unfabricated state (swarupa) -- the 
				true Universal ―Self‖. Here Patanjali is directing us to the 
				highest power of consciousness (citi-saktir) -- our larger 
				natural Self. Nothing exists in a vacuum, i.e., even the vacuum 
				tube or vacuum in reality exists inside a room -- in context 
				with the rest of the universe; while to view it out of context 
				would distort its "reality". Form surrounds form, but the 
				boundless mind simultaneously surrounds all and is inside of all 
				-- all pervasive, universal, and eternal. IV Sutra 5 
				pravrtti-bhede prayojakam cittam ekam anekesam Although there 
				can be distinguished (bhede) apparently separate multitudinous 
				and and apparently diverse (anekesam) activities and 
				modifications (pravrtti) of spirit and consciousness, the 
				underlying causative source (prayojakam) of these "states of 
				mind" or "fields of consciousness" (cittam) will be revealed in 
				the end as to be non-dual, not born of separateness. Rather in 
				reality they are intimately interconnected as one (ekam). 
				Commentary: Prayojakam means causative precursor or causal and 
				necessary factor which has created the present situation. 
				Through the power of the kleshas, of ignorance (avidya), and 
				negative programming (negative karma) the common man finds 
				himself in a fragmented, disconnected, and confused world where 
				he is not aware of the true nature of his mental or emotional 
				states and seems unable to find lasting happiness. In reality 
				however, the All comes from All. What is born from meditative 
				absorption (samadhi) is stainless and pure. Patanjali says that 
				we must rejoin the stream of fresh pure water and bathe within 
				its golden waters and thus the stains of the mind will be washed 
				away -- the agitation (pravrtti) of the waters will become 
				stilled, thus the innate overall single Source of consciousness 
				(prayojakam cittam ekam anekesam) will be self revealed by 
				itself as it is. Again Patanjali reiterates in different ways, 
				the Reality of ALL OUR RELATIONS while summing up Sutras 2-5. 
				Swami Sivananda in ―Light of Yoga‖ says: ―Yoga is the method by 
				which the finite self or the individual soul is united with the 
				Infinite Self or the Supreme Soul. Yajnavalkya defines Yoga, "Samyoga 
				yoga iti ukto jivatma-paramatmano iti—the conjunction of the 
				individual soul and the supreme soul is called Yoga." IV Sutra 6 
				tatra dhyana-jam anasayam  In that milieu (tatra) it is 
				meditation (dhyana) that frees us from the residues of past 
				impressions (anasayam) Commentary: So how does fragmented 
				existence become remediated and made whole and interconnected 
				again? How does the vrtti become stilled? Patanjali here 
				recommends meditation (dhyana). Anasayam means free from 
				residues and impression i.e., devoid of samskaras. Dhyana-jam 
				means literally, ―born of meditation‖. Here Patanjali prescribes 
				meditation as the cure for the residues of samskaras and hence 
				with the samskaras destroyed through meditation, the kleshas, 
				vasana, and negative karma are broken up -- asmita is destroyed, 
				thus restoring the ―self‖ to final integration (in 
				nirbij-samadhi) with the ―Big Self‖ – Brahman or the Great 
				Integrity without end or beginning – Infinite/Boundless Mind. In 
				ashtanga yoga, dhyana (meditation) comes after dharana (concentration 
				and contemplation). In dharana one focuses on an object, but in 
				dhyana the observer and the object of observation are not 
				separated. Source is found as an innate continuous presence 
				which success in dhyana (practice) reveals. Hence in that way 
				Sutra 6 follows as a natural evolution from Sutras 1-4. IV Sutra 
				7 karma-asukla-akrsnam yoginas trividham itaresam The actions 
				(karma) [of a yogi who has thus rid himself from the residues by 
				mastering meditation] are no longer able to be measured (neither 
				white nor black, pure or impure, etc) in ordinary relative terms 
				– his or her actions are no longer caused in turn by the winds 
				of karma; while the actions of ordinary non-meditators can be 
				judged to be three-fold (trividham) -- pure, impure, and mixed. 
				Commentary: Yogis (those who practice yoga and meditate) have 
				burned off their karma. Thus their actions are not dependent 
				upon past actions, thus their actions do not depend on effects 
				of past causes. Their actions can not be judged in temporal or 
				material terms like that of others who are governed by the winds 
				of the vrttis composed of karma, dvesa, raga, klesha, and 
				samskara, and vasana. They can not be evaluated within the 
				framework of conditioned space or duality (black and white). 
				Here the originless beginningless unconditioned cause arises 
				spontaneously. Such actions are through Grace -- the play of 
				Lila. So in ordinary life, there is an action and a result 
				(karma). That is the simple situation, but it can become complex 
				when these results act as causes for future actions, and/or when 
				many results combine together to influence future actions -- 
				become causes for future causes. The main point pertaining to 
				karma to keep in mind is that past karmic shells which occlude 
				the present and tend to dictate and impose a future, creeps up 
				upon the ordinary man unconsciously, out of ignorance. That 
				ignorance then displaces the creative potential in the organic 
				freshness of the moment. By abiding with this process of karma 
				and accepting it as-it-is, in the moment as it arises without 
				ignoring or denying it allows us to discern its previously 
				occluded influence. Eventually like the cultivated garden, it 
				will bloom in concert with the natural true spiritual self -- 
				swarupa -- our intrinsic potential Buddha (the Tathagatagarbha). 
				This way the momentary fragmented excursions into disconnect 
				will be naturally eliminated. IV Sutra 8 tatas 
				tad-vipaka-anugunanam eva abhivyaktir vasananam Those being 
				propelled on the waves of karma, their vasana ripen according to 
				conditions and environmental factors which are conducive, or 
				they do not ripen according to external circumstances which are 
				non-conducive. Commentary: Vasananam are latent tendencies and 
				propensities in the forms of compulsions, negative habits, 
				reflexive patterns, etc. They are like an electronic circuit 
				which performs a function or a computer program which performs a 
				task. It sits in wait, waiting for the program call to be 
				activated (by a samskaric residue) or the switch or button of 
				the circuit to be completed. These switches, buttons, or "calls" 
				of the program (karma0 are samskaras (latent imprints in the 
				cellular memory like the doping of a computer chip waiting for 
				the current to be switched on). These circuits when energized 
				form vasana (negative habits), which can be activated through 
				external conditions and sensory input when karma (external 
				situations of cause and effect ripen or come together) or they 
				may be activated by mental/emotional conditions (karma). Thus 
				―the buttons" of reflexive habit patterns, conditioned responses, 
				compulsions, and even the seeds of dormant and potential future 
				karma become pushed -- vasanas, as a result, become activated. 
				So when karmic conditions ripen, a vasana will manifest (due to 
				past karma).
				
				Such is a two way street, i.e., past samskara and karma create 
				vasana and klesha and also acting on klesha and acting out in 
				vasana can in turn create even more negative kleshas and karma. 
				They are to be eliminated through sadhana (here specifically 
				meditation) or failing that by applying conscious awareness (viveka) 
				upon the contents of the mind (pratyaya) and emotional contents 
				to determine if a vasana or klesha triggered by a samskara or 
				past karma has disrupted our energy and attention (cit-prana) 
				out if our core/heart center. This is also the practice of 
				authentic swadhyaya (self study). This conscious abiding with 
				our process eventually will reveal and dislodge the underlying 
				biopsychic imprints and energy signatures of the more subtle 
				samskara itself. Then one applies vairagya, tapas, isvara 
				pranidhana, or other such remedies. Less subtle than viveka, is 
				dharana and samyama when one concentrates/focuses on the breath, 
				the chakras, or other upon specific objects of concentration as 
				reflective aids such as found in the previous padas. In daily 
				life then, we often carry around with us "baggage" and issues 
				from the past which become triggered again and again until we 
				stop ignoring, denying, or running away from the mechanism. 
				Vasana can be remediated or nullified by creating positive 
				sattvic conditions in the home, by associating with sattvic/spiritual 
				people, by living in a sattvic spiritual environment such as a 
				forest ashram, peaceful power spots, holy places of pilgrimage, 
				near enlightened beings, by sadhana (spiritual practice), 
				cultivating compassion, loving kindness, equanimity, wisdom, and 
				so forth. Tantrics on the other hand believe that the former 
				method may simply create a temporary state of dormancy for the 
				vasana, which is still capable of coming out in the future 
				through dreams, in the bardo after death, in future lives, or 
				other karmic events when conditions ripen (karma) and so on. 
				Tantra proposes methods to root out the vasana by creating 
				conditions which bring it to the surface in order to exorcise it 
				and attain catharsis, purification, and exorcism. Vasana, 
				samskaras, past negative karma, and the kleshas are all like 
				hidden ghosts, shadows, or inner demons carried around by people 
				like dark clouds in their aura preventing them from having a 
				creative and happy spontaneous and open life. In hatha yoga 
				these demons can be accessed and exorcised via the body, breath, 
				neuro-physiology, energy circuits, and penetrative wisdom. IV 
				Sutra 9 jati-desa-kala-vyavahitanam apy antantaryam 
				smrti-samskararayor eka rupatvat The psychic imprint (samskara) 
				and the cellular memory of the event which produced the samskara 
				often are associated together as one event (ek rupa) in the 
				ordinary conditioned mind. Thus a desire which is not fulfilled 
				in the past forms a samskara (a repressive or reactive imprint 
				and tendency) which can manifest in the future as a neurosis 
				whose reactive mechanism is hidden as in a fog, or occluded and 
				confused cloud formation even though this same compulsive 
				unconscious mechanism may recur repeatedly (jati-desa-kala-vyavahitanam 
				spy antantaryam) -- even through many lifetimes until one is 
				awakened from the reactive mechanism.
				
				Commentary: When we awake to our true nature – real true self or 
				Buddha Nature (Tathagatagarbha), then vasana, samskara, klesha, 
				karma, and vrtti are destroyed.
				Here Patanjali recommends meditation as the major remedy. 
				Without realization, the consciousness is bounded subject to the 
				vrtti. We will see that the bad habits as vasana are all built 
				up by samskaras, klesha, and karma which are annihilated through 
				functional yoga practice. It is a well recognized pathological 
				mechanism in the psychology of trauma that a symbol will remind 
				us of the pain of a past unresolved event to the point that the 
				symbol creates pain and becomes misidentified as a cause of pain, 
				while in fact it is the old unhealed memory which is the cause 
				of the pain. Thus a specific color, taste, sound, tonality,word, 
				smell, object, series of events, etc., may trigger such a 
				reaction and re-traumatization. Since the trauma victim can not 
				easily recognize what is going on they can easily confuse and 
				project that the symbol or representation is threatening them or 
				causing them harm. In this misidentification one shoots the 
				messenger and is ruled by the demons of one's shadow world. The 
				remediation of course is to confront one's demons as self 
				projections and thus fear is also destroyed. We will see that 
				much of Kaivalya Pada is concerned on how to remove these 
				samskaric triggers from past trauma from our cellular memory and 
				thus become liberated from compulsion, false identifications, 
				and unconscious activity. Here Patanjali makes a cogent 
				observation; i.e., that memory and samskaras are of one form (smrti-samskarayor 
				eka rupatvat). IV Sutra 10 tasam anaditvam ca asiso nityatvat 
				These mechanisms (tasam) such as vasana, samskara, and karma) 
				have no ultimate cause (anaditvam) in themselves, [but rather 
				are the result of a fragmented mentality (as described in Sutra 
				9 above)] as all phenomena must be viewed as a continuous 
				process and integral (in context) with eternity (beginningless 
				time and the never-ending co-existing in the eternal now). When 
				we lose that connection between Infinite Source or Boundless 
				mind, our true present condition, then in that predicament there 
				arises desire, craving, anguish, suffering, and thus the 
				manifold neurotic compensatory mechanisms to assuage or fulfill 
				the gap/absence -- assuage the pain of this suffering. Thence 
				the habituation to continual craving and mechanisms of 
				compensatory consumerism manifest (asiso nityatvat).
				
				Commentary: This is the first noble truth of Buddhism, i.e., 
				that ordinary dualistic life creates craving and suffering 
				because it abides in a dualistic and artificial place and time 
				that is defined as being separated/alienated from the Source of 
				nurturance. Such an artificial mental construct creates a 
				disharmony and discontinuance, albeit the common malaise. Thus 
				in trauma, a rend or split occurs where the experiencer 
				dissociates from the pain and suffering, numbing that part off 
				from the whole which in
				turn creates a sense of lack, absence, longing, craving, or 
				desire which results in a steady state of unfulfilled familiar 
				discomfort (asiso nityayvat). Remediation back into wholeness 
				then is being able to own all our experiences in continuity. 
				Thus santosha (complete fulfillment is experienced in each 
				moment even though we are still actively propelled by love. To 
				realize that goaless goal -- that complete remediation, 
				meditation (sadhana in the form of dhyana) is practiced. So 
				according to the above, in the relative world of cause and 
				effect (pratityasamutpada) all things/beings are in Reality 
				interconnected and whole, but the normal man who is lost in 
				fragmented consciousness does not see it as such. Rather the 
				ordinary dualistic view is that separate phenomena is "real", 
				independent, fragmented, and hence disconnected. In that 
				fragmented and corrupt milieu thus often mistakenly defines 
				oneself also as separate and independent, and craves what is 
				lacking/absent.This craving can not be adequately compensated 
				for in terms of substitutes. Only the reconnection to Source 
				will so suffice. So here Patanjali is saying that such a 
				disparate view of separation or dualistic existence causes us to 
				fall into discontinuous, disrupted, and fragmented consciousness 
				as well which in turn allows the negative karma to operate upon 
				us without our knowledge as we ignore/deny it in avidya (ignorance) 
				or just call it unconscious dualistic unawakened existence. In 
				meditation we bear witness to these mechanisms without coloring 
				them with judgments (good/bad, horrible/welcome, ugly/beautiful, 
				desirable/undesirable or feared, painful/preferred, etc). We 
				realize through practice that it is counterproductive to 
				incessantly analyze the cause of these judgments just as it is 
				dysfunctional to try to inhibit them, but rather to simply 
				acknowledge the composite of these mechanisms as they arise (as 
				vrtti), then release them as such and let them go; while going 
				back to the Great River of Continuity – of the Great Integrity 
				-- of ALL OUR RELATIONS which exists in the Sacred Present/Presence. 
				From that perspective of the Great Integrity which is no place 
				at all, we no longer have a need to analyze the source of the 
				thoughts because we have arrived at the Source or rather we 
				realize that "WE" in the non-dual and wholistic identification, 
				are the Source. Swami Venkatesananda says: ―However, it is 
				difficult to determine their exact operation, and it is futile 
				to analyze them.‖
				Confusion, by definition, does not make sense. Following 
				confusion with the intellect or analytical mind only leads to 
				further fragmentation and dissolution. It does not lead to 
				consolidation/integrity or wholesomeness. It should suffice that 
				its general cause is a primal ignorance (avidya) and false 
				identification which gives birth to what appears as a primal 
				desire. But realize that this ignorance and desire is not 
				eternal nor beginningless, rather it is the result of a primal 
				split/fragmentation or corruptive process.
				
				IV Sutra 11 hetu-fala-ashraya-alambanaiha sangrahiitatvat esham 
				abhave tad-abhavah Vasana and samskara arise out of (asraya) and 
				are supported (alambanaih) by causes (hetu) based on ignorance 
				and as such having ignorance as its cause) must be abandoned and 
				dissolved back (abhave) to whence it came. Ignorance exists in 
				ignorance, so a wise man allows such mechanisms of ignorance to 
				dissolve by themselves (abhavah) when allowing the innate wisdom 
				to perform this task (allowing it to melt in the light of innate 
				wisdom – our true self nature by cultivating that (swarupa). 
				Commentary: From Sutra II.4 we see that the primary cause (hetu) 
				of suffering is avidya (ignorance or confusion). It is self 
				defeating or futile to try to figure out confusion with the 
				ordinary analytical mind or intellect because such is built upon 
				the dualistic illusion of separateness (a basic fallacy) – it 
				thus lacks integrity. Ignorance can not reveal ignorance. Thus 
				analyzing the cause (hetu) and effect (phala) samskaric milieu 
				that is based on an illusion only enhances the illusion. Such 
				will not make sense or lead anywhere productive. What is being 
				advocated here is that one has to let go completely of such 
				grasping (abhave). This is not to beconfused with contemplating 
				the laws of karma (the world of cause and effect) which 
				discloses the intrinsic unity of the temporal nature of the 
				relative world with that of the ultimate or absolute eternal as 
				the ever present Reality as-it-is. rather when one realizes this 
				relative truth of inter-dependence of all things (pratityasamutpada) 
				then the limitations of the dualistic mind melts. What is 
				revealed is beyond the realm of ego delusion, separateness, or 
				ignorance, thus the Reality of Ultimate truth is entered upon. 
				On the other hand, ignorance, karma, habitually attempting to 
				seek pleasure in the grasping unto or running away from the 
				continual rising and falling of "external" phenomena by the 
				fixation upon seemingly solid sense objects and the processes of 
				inhibition, fear, desire, and the rest only serve to feed and 
				support vasanam. Such is ruled by psychic imbeded imprints (samskaras) 
				and vasana. Swami Venkatesananda says: ―Yet, since these 
				tendencies have acause-and-effect relationship with ignorance (that 
				is, they are the result of ignorance and also the cause of its 
				perpetuation) they disappear when the cause (ignorance of the 
				spiritual truth) is dispelled, and vice versa: they support and 
				promote each other and are bound to each other.‖ IV Sutra 12 
				atitanagatam svarupato 'sty adhva-bhedad dharmanam
				The past (atita) or that which has occurred and that which is to 
				come in the future (anagatam) are not really separate states, 
				but exist (asti) as they truly are
				(swarupa) when seen as a continuity (adhva) [in their inherent 
				Integrity], but the ordinary mind tends to break them down, 
				separate, fragment, and reduce them (bhedat) classifying them 
				into countless qualities (dharmanam). Commentary: The citta 
				(mind) under the influence of the vrttis (cit-vrtti) ordinarily 
				rides the winds of karma. It tends to be colored and pulled to 
				the past or future as if they existed within the confines of 
				linear time, but here Patanjali is clearing the ground to 
				expound on effective meditation which brings forth samadhi where 
				such artificial distinctions, limitations, and separations are 
				no longer habitually imposed. We will again see how past traumas 
				as samskaras hold us to the past and color future experiences. 
				Our conditioned concepts of linear time and hence succession 
				become a severe limitation in experiencing the Reality of the 
				timeless moment – the realization of samadhi or turiya. In 
				Reality separate incremental events do not exist outside of the 
				all inclusive Great Integrity -- in fact they are intimate parts 
				of ALL OUR RELATIONS. IV Sutra 13 te vyakta-sukshmah gunatmanah 
				These manifold tugs on the mind (vrtti) may be subtle (suksmah) 
				or coarse (vyakta). They may be described through as the 
				operation of the gunatmanah. Commentary: We have seen how the 
				vrtti are dissolved in meditation through dissolving the 
				limiting thought patterns of samskara, vasana, karma, linear 
				time, etc. all held together overall by ―ignorance‖ (avidya). 
				Now Patanjali uses the philosophical terminology of his day (samkhya) 
				to tell us that the vrttis can be broken down as to 
				individualized (atmanah) characteristic qualities (gunas). It is 
				not necessary to understand the morass of Samkhya philosophy (which 
				elaborates upon the gunas) to understand what Patanjali is 
				saying here in the yogic sense. It is sufficient to know that 
				the three gunas (sattva, rajas, and tamas) simply represent 
				three (triadic) primary constituent forces in nature much like 
				the yin and yang in the dualistic Chinese system. In this 
				framework rajas and tamas are polar opposites, while sattva is 
				balanced and pure. IV Sutra 14 parinamaikatvad vastu-tattvam The 
				gunas themselves travel on the winds of change (parinama) and as 
				such the manifest world of objects (vastu) exist as they are (tattvam); 
				yet they arise from the same Great Integrity (ekatvad).
				
				Commentary: The gunas are the qualitative filter or 
				philosophical framework which samkhya philosophers use to break 
				down the phenomenal universe (in this case into a triad i.e., 
				tamas guna, rajas guna, and sattva guna). Simply stated the 
				world of form (gunas) is created. It is dependent upon cause and 
				effect and is the result of karma. Regardless, how it is 
				differentiated, the phenomenal/temporal or relativistic world is 
				on fire, inter-dependent, ever changing, and in constant 
				vibratory flux. Causes create effects, effects create new causes, 
				and so on. Just so even the mountains and stars move subtly even 
				now and even more grossly over time. Although in the relative 
				sense, objects appear to the sense organs as real and 
				substantial (indeed in the relative sense they only appear "real" 
				if time and space could be frozen), but such frozen frame 
				"reality' is the not the case. Thus it is a severe limiting 
				mistake (an illusion) to mistake that limited perception 
				artificially stepping out of the integral continuum as being 
				real, placing it (pratyaksha) out of context with the intrinsic 
				unity of timeless absolute truth, i.e., that any object has any 
				inherent existence of itself -- out of context from the absolute 
				whole of the Great Integrity. That error is the all too common 
				mistake of corrupted and fragmented ordinary dualistic thought 
				patterns, mind sets, and conditioned belief systems which is 
				based on the shaky foundations of illusion (the fragmented 
				mistake of separateness) which Patanjali is addressing and 
				therein lies the repetitive error of ignorance. Indeed there 
				exists infinite diversity, but it exists as-it-is without 
				distortion only within its true context -- only in the profound 
				wholistic non-dual integrity which affirms the unity of being 
				and consciousness -- nature and spirit. Both worlds, relative 
				and absolute are integrated as an organic continuity only within 
				the overall organic context of the Great Integrity. In the 
				non-dualistic context of ALL OUR RELATIONS all created things 
				are sacred -- bound together and Whole; hence the non-dualistic 
				"wholographic" context of samadhi is gradually integrated 
				replacing the ordinary dualistic mind patterns and fractual 
				corrupted frameworks based on static isolation, partial truths, 
				sophistry, and similar discontinuities. This is also the same 
				basic idea of the sunyata of the Buddhists -- the inherent 
				egolessness or emptiness of all things an beings -- that they do 
				not exist as separate in themselves. See sutra 34 (the last 
				sutra of kaivalya pada) for more on sunyata in this context. IV 
				Sutra 15 vastu-samye chitta-bhedat tayor vibhaktah panthah Due 
				to habitually fragmented consciousness with its reductionist 
				tendencies (chitta-bhedat) the same object or phenomena (vastu-samye) 
				will be perceived differently (tayoh-vibhaktah) depending upon 
				the position/bias of the viewer (panthah).
				Commentary: Everyone has their individual ―view‖, i.e., it is 
				valid to them and appears real. One person‘s view or path (panthah) 
				is not better or worse than
				another‘s, only different (vibhaktah). Thus another pull of 
				consciousness or vrtti (chitta-bhedat) is identified and 
				remediated. All the many paths of our spiritual journeys will 
				hopefully lead us to the realization of the Great Integrity – 
				where the paths all merge as One. HERE in non-dual sacred 
				presence the path and journey is over, completed, and fulfilled. 
				Only Universal Consciousness – Infinite Mind – is capable of 
				viewing Reality uncolored and complete -- as-it-is – without 
				bias or prejudice that stems from the relative positioning of 
				the viewer – the dualistic and confused world of I-it or asmita 
				(ego). This occurs when the vrtti cease (in nirodha) -- when all 
				fragmented spins become stilled. Notice how this coincides with 
				Einstein‘s theory of relativity and time. This is where we 
				reside in deeper meditation. Thus in meditation the futility of 
				defining a distinct object is recognized and let go (vairagya) 
				of increasingly through viveka (vigilantly recognizing the 
				difference). In the beginning a dualistic thought might creep in 
				and last for a long while, it may distract us. Through viveka we 
				recognize that the individual consciousness has become carried 
				away by the monkey mind into a dualistic fixation. Then we are 
				able to let go by relaxing the fixation -- redirecting the 
				cit-prana -- while we go back resting in the larger light of the 
				all encompassing transpersonal non-dual universal Self. This 
				larger light starts to be recognized increasingly through 
				repeated practice. With intermediate practice achieved, the 
				dualistic thought‘s start to arise, but before the process is 
				completed it is recognized as such and not followed. The 
				non-dual state is thus amplified through such practice, and 
				after awhile, the distractions die away by themselves, so that 
				new thought processes (vrttis) do not even arise. For example 
				the counterproductive illusion of the separateness of the one 
				who is meditating and the room or objects in the room, or the 
				rigid dualistic separate sense of self from that of nature, or 
				the dysfunctional and counterproductive sense of a separate self 
				who is meditating, the illusion of a separate object of the 
				meditation, and the illusion of even the meditation itself -- 
				all such limitations of separate fragmented illusions die down 
				by themselves as non-dual wisdom spontaneously arises.
				"Homage to Manjushri The understanding of ordinary people is 
				defective. Recognition itself is not disclosed by words. Turning 
				from what draws you in, Grasp the refinement of what is to be 
				done; Doing thus, the facticity of mind is recognized. Thought 
				formation is not bound by tenseness; Likewise the fundamental 
				continuity is self-contained, Since action, exertion, and the 
				matrix of purposeful grasping do not exist. Doing thus is the 
				ongoing meditation. Because the realm of voidness is like the 
				clouds, All the various thought formations are like their ebb 
				and flow, When pacified through lack of benefit or injury. Doing 
				thus is self-liberation. This is the teaching of the essential 
				point in three words. By experiencing within, one understands." 
				By Mipham Rinpoche IV Sutra 16 na ca-eka-citta-tantram vastu 
				tad-apramanakam tada kim syat [In this habitually fragmented 
				state] one individual weave of consciousness (eka-citta-tantram) 
				is not capable of determining (apramanakam) a solid belief of 
				the reality of any object (vastu) or phenomena as-it-is, for 
				what would become of a so-called separate object or phenomena 
				when the weave of individual consciousness is withdrawn? 
				Commentary: The above is a statement of a double negative as it 
				starts with the word (na) which is translated as nor and 
				contains the word, apramana, which means devoid of belief. 
				Because it ends in a question and is thus rhetorical, such makes 
				it difficult to translate. Another translation could be ―No one 
				train of thought or belief about the reality of phenomena can be 
				all authoritative, determinate, or truly accurate to coincide 
				with the actual reality of such phenomena, rather it is simply a 
				belief." All this sutra says is that despite disparate views, 
				the reality of an object is independent upon what the mind may 
				make it out to be; i.e., whether or not we believe a grape to an 
				orange or another person believes the grape to be an apple, such 
				does not change its intrinsic nature as a grape. In other words 
				all because people can not agree, conventional and consensus 
				reality is prejudicial, or because some one is biased (influenced 
				by vrtti), it does not mean that unbiased universal Reality does 
				not exist as-it-is. Whether or not the mind views it or not, 
				phenomenal objects exist as they are unchanged in themselves. 
				Another similar way to translate this sutra (more common) is as 
				follows. Just as consciousness does not depend upon separate 
				objects, the reality of separate object does not depend upon 
				consciousness itself or even any individual consciousness. "Things" 
				exist as they are, regardless of our beliefs about them or state 
				of consciousness. This latter "interpretation" however may be 
				more an indulgence toward the Hindu academic quarrel with the 
				mind-only Buddhist sect of the early first millennium about 
				whether or not "reality" depends on the mind or not. Such 
				counterproductive quarrelling occurred up until the 13th century 
				AD when the ―evil‖ Buddhists were exterminated by the invading 
				Moguls and does not concern us here.
				
				Avoiding double negatives, a positive non-dualistic translation 
				could read: "Is not the dualistic appearances and beliefs in the 
				fragmented/separate phenomena (vastu tad-apramanakam) remediated 
				through the integrated weave of consciousness (eka-citta)?" In 
				short, Patanjali is amplifying the reality of ALL OUR RELATIONS– 
				that we should not become dissuaded into a fragmented/discontinuous 
				world of apparent separateness –we should not allow ourselves to 
				become corrupted by the forces of avidya, neither have our 
				consciousness become colored by fragmented appearances, nor be 
				very concerned about having the world conform to our beliefs. 
				"In terms of your own mind, as is the case with everyone, 
				Samsara and Nirvana are inseparable. Nonetheless, because you 
				persist in accepting and enduring attachments and aversions, you 
				will continue to wander in Samsara. Therefore, your active 
				dharmas and your inactive ones both should be abandoned. However, 
				since self-liberation through seeing nakedly by means of 
				intrinsic awareness is here revealed to you, you should 
				understand that all dharmas can be perfected and completed in 
				the great total Self-Liberation. And therefore, whatever (practice 
				you do) can be brought to perfection within the Great Perfection. 
				SAMAYA gya gya gya!" Excerpted from Self-Liberation through 
				Seeing with Naked Awareness by John Myrdhin Reynolds, 1989 and 
				2000 IV Sutra 17 tad-uparagapeksitvac cittasya vastu jnatajnatam 
				[In the ordinary dualistic dysfunction] ordinary consciousness (cittasaya) 
				governed by avidya is colored (uparaga) by preference, prejudice, 
				expectation, or tends toward a predisposed attraction (apeksitvat) 
				to an apparently separate sense object or phenomena which in 
				this state can not be known correctly as it is (jnatajnatam). It 
				is rather known for what it is not. Commentary: We see this 
				phenomena in dualistic reality all the time, where different 
				people suffer from misconceptions and prejudice, are fooled by 
				unrealistic expectations (apeksitvat), suffer from 
				disappointment, become happy or sad by the various 
				manifestations of uparaga. Likewise it is wise to defeat uparaga 
				before meditation and thus not to fall victim or be distracted 
				in determining the correct appearance of disparate phenomena. 
				Such is also a futile distraction as the underlying dualistic 
				assumption itself is an illusion, being based on a false 
				identification or avidya. IV Sutra 18 sada jnatasth 
				citta-vrittayas tat-prabhoh purushasyaparinamitvat   
				All the citta-vrttis are revealed (jnatasth) from the changeless 
				nature (aparinamitvat) of purusha (the process of eternal, 
				undifferentiated, pure, and absolute consciousness) which itself 
				is unmoving and ultimately determinate (prabhoh) from which 
				everything unceasingly revolves from as flux) Commentary: When 
				we know how the our mind works as a manifestation of Infinite 
				Mind – of pure undifferentiated and eternal consciousness (purusha), 
				then all the modifications disclose themselves. Thus it is 
				futile to try to figure out all the manifold individual 
				modifications of the citta-vrtti) ordinary consciousness) from 
				the basis of duality, but rather instead focus on the Supreme 
				Identity (prabhoh) -- the Great Integrity – the true innate 
				spiritual authority which exists within the context of ALL OUR 
				RELATIONS. Purusha thus provides the sacred context and thus we 
				should recognize when we are ignoring it – when it is absent and 
				then remediate the malaise and/or cultivate its presence through 
				yoga practice (sadhana). Purusha is the Samkhya way of 
				attempting to name the Great Integrity. Purusha as Pure 
				Universal Consciousness does not move or change. It exists as 
				the Axis Mundi at the core/heart center of the universe (the 
				Hridayam) where the entire creation is in flux. From HERE the 
				river flows. "By having the single yoga, All mandalas are 
				accomplished. Therefore this itself Develops as well as perfects 
				The realm of Samantabhadra. Moreover as above, In regard to 
				elaboration, There are complex and very complex, and also 
				supremely complex. Inconceivable to thought, the limitless 
				mandalas Become spontaneous presence." THE GREAT PERFECTION: THE 
				NATURE OF MIND, THE EASER OF WEARINESS, by Longchenpa IV Sutra 
				19 na tat svabhasam drishyatvat    [The ordinary 
				dualistic consciousness agitated by citta-vrtti] is not 
				effulgent -- it is not alive, it can not truly see. Rather this 
				self illuminating light (svabhasam) stems from pure 
				undifferentiated consciousness itself (purusha)-- the absolute 
				ultimate union of the seer, seen, and process of consciousness 
				which bestows the self luminous (svabhasam) light of 
				consciousness and animates our vision. Thus (tat) the [citta-vrtti] 
				is not (na) self luminous (svabhasa) because of the nature of 
				what is seen (drshyatvat). Commentary: An object is not knowable 
				by itself, but rather is known only through its integrity 
				as-it-is in relationship to everything else -- in ALL OUR 
				RELATIONS. One should thus not become fooled by appearances 
				where the consciousness "appears" as the object of consciousness 
				or as an apparent separate "I". Svabhasam is self luminosity or 
				effulgence which is does not exist in separateness, but rather 
				is non-dual and holographic. It arises simultaneously as self 
				recognition within the context of the greater whole. This is our 
				true nature (swarupa) which is intrinsic and self existing. 
				Through functional meditation we increasingly learn to recognize, 
				recall, and abide in this innate transpersonal non-dual Self 
				continuously (without disturbance). Honoring the light, we seek 
				it out where meditation, worship, passion, and practice merge as 
				one motion in ALL OUR RELATIONS. Just as buddhi, the intellect 
				is intelligent, it‘s light is lit by the Purusha or pure 
				undifferentiated consciousness – pure citta (―citi-sakter iti‖) 
				as such individual consciousness stands only as a reflection (poor 
				as it is in its normal state) of Universal Undifferentiated 
				Consciousness (Purusha). In the tantric sense then attempting to 
				bridge the two systems of Samkhya and Tantra, then one may say 
				that Prakrti thus represent differentiated consciousness (Cit-sakti) 
				– the two being united as one in Shiva/Shakti. (see also III.35 
				and III.49 for the unity of absolute beingness and absolute 
				consciousness).
				
				"Non-dual Samsara/ nirvana, is one within the mind: A variety of 
				rivers are one within the ocean. All has the equal taste of 
				single co-emergence. The change of the four elements is one in 
				the state of space, One in freedom from mental negation or 
				assertion, One because whatever arises is liberated, One in the 
				purity of non-duality. The play of waves is one with the water 
				that is their substance. Whoever realizes this can be said to be 
				sagacious.Here all dharmas are not grasped as different. These 
				reflections have the nature of non-duality. This play has no 
				good and evil, accepting or rejecting. Let us rest where the 
				mind does not fixate duality. Fixed objects do not arise when 
				there are no reference points. Insight without fixation is the 
				completeness of being, The nature of the great perfection, the 
				natural state."
				from THE NATURE OF MIND, THE EASER OF WEARINESS, (called the 
				Great Chariot) by Longchenpa IV Sutra 20 eka-samaye 
				chobhayanavadharanam And (cho) ordinary dualistic consciousness 
				colored by vrtti can not perceive simultaneously subject and 
				object. Both (ubhaya) that which is seen and the seer should not 
				be identified (anavadharanam) as one and the same (eka-samaye). 
				Commentary: When one pointed Unity consciousness is disturbed, 
				the ordinary mind thus perceives an apparent disparity and 
				disunity between the objective and subjective states. Here 
				objective reality and subjective experience are not aligned or 
				synchronized. This is the antithesis of yoga (it is non-joining, 
				non-union, fragmentation, or disharmony), but rather the milieu 
				of cit-vrtti -- the ordinary malaise of the dualistic mind. 
				Although it is often of value to discern one thing from another 
				avoiding confusion in that sense, it is also a mistake of 
				corrupted thinking to reduce things into its parts while losing 
				the sight of the overall context of the whole. This is 
				dysfunctional as it breaks up our concentration (dharana) upon 
				the Great Integrity while dissipating our consciousness into 
				disparate fragmentation. Yoga addresses the profound non-linear 
				―Reality‖ of Unity where subject and object appear BOTH 
				differentiated AND unified at the same time. This realization 
				and much more is the result of meditation, not the discernment, 
				reductionist thought, nor the intellect (buddhi). IV Sutra 21 
				cittantara-drisye buddhi-buddher atiprasangah smriti-sanskaras 
				ca If one focuses one’s attention to the process of 
				consciousness itself, thus recognizing its source, then 
				liberation can be attained. But if one points it to the 
				externalized outgoing individuation of the consciousness as 
				manifested in the intellect (buddhi) and fragmented existence -- 
				then directing that dualistic and limited awareness to the 
				previous process -- then a fixation of externalization or 
				objective dissociation occurs. The valley can not be seen from 
				the bottom of the well. At best one becomes aware of being aware, 
				but then only a convoluted self centered regression (atiprasangah) 
				sets in (frozen in ordinary limited "self" consciousness) which 
				reinforces a limited dualistic reference structure which in turn 
				maintains psychic imprints (samskara) upon the memory (smrti) [which 
				is to be avoided].
				
				Commentary: Here Patanjali describes a common trap which occurs 
				both in everyday life and also in meditation , i.e., ordinary 
				self centered consciousness, being ―self conscious‖, of being 
				aware that you are aware of being aware of oneself and so on. 
				Again we are to be reminded that buddhi, intellect, is a 
				function of manas and the separate self (belonging to the small 
				self). It's filter must be removed, for us to see the underlying 
				transconceptional Intelligence as Universal and Omnipresent 
				Immeasurable Sacred Presence -- Buddha (vs buddhi) is of a 
				trans-personal, non-dual and universal nature. Buddha is found 
				within all things. Being self-conscious of a separate self as 
				the focus i.e., as being afflicted by asmita (ego), we not only 
				become self engrossed, but we wind up in a regression of being 
				aware of self being aware of self, ad infinitum. Although in 
				this milieu one may become aware of one‘s physical actions, we 
				certainly are not aware of the true nature of our thought 
				processes, the surroundings, nature, and our higher Self. This 
				is the very narrow, limited, and convoluted contracted state of 
				self consciousness which is to be avoided. This is to be 
				contrasted with the expansive state that we find in yoga when we 
				talk about consciousness, transpersonal awareness, awareness of 
				our true non-dual nature, and so forth. Especially in meditation, 
				the beginner may waste time sitting being aware that one is 
				sitting. Thinking and being aware that we are thinking, or even 
				worse being aware that one is aware that one is thinking, 
				meditating, or similarly obsessing on our individual mentation 
				process exclusively creates a very limited boundary of 
				consciousness -- a diversion which is to be avoided. In that 
				state meditation has not yet begun. This malaise is made 
				contra-distinct by the next sutra. We will see later that the 
				correct application of viveka will avoid this possible 
				difficulty. Viveka is neither lax awareness nor is it 
				hypervigilence. Rather viveka points toward a balanced (sattvic) 
				awareness of the Source of awareness, consciousness of the 
				Intelligent Source of all Intelligence, or Universal Purusha 
				Consciousness and as such will not be confused with nor 
				reinforce the limitations of buddhi (individual intellect), 
				manas, asmita, or dualistic consciousness. Swami Venkatesananda 
				translates Sutra 21: "If it is assumed that there are two minds 
				the observer and the observed - this would result in logical 
				absurdity (since both are based on the same intelligence, who 
				designates the distinction?) and also confusion of memory or 
				universal schizophrenia, which is not found to be the case." IV 
				Sutra 22 citer apratisankramayas tad-akarapattau 
				svabuddhi-sanvedanam   When we reside in the effulgent 
				light of that unchanging universal witness consciousness (citer 
				apratisankramayayas) then the true nature of the machinations of 
				the intellect (svabuddhi) as well as the objects of 
				consciousness  and the processes of consciousness is known. 
				From here all vrttis can and are to be avoided. Commentary: From 
				the universal transpersonal non-dual consciousness (citta devoid 
				of vrtti) – from the state of swarupa (true self), all 
				aberrations of consciousness cease on their own [without 
				ancillary compensatory efforts]. From the top of the mountain 
				can the entire valley be seen, while the bottom of the lake can 
				only be explored by those who can dive deeply. Likewise the 
				individual intelligence and intellect (buddhi) is only a dim 
				reflection of this universal supreme unbiased intelligence, thus 
				our true self self nature (swarupa) can only be known thoroughly 
				(realized) when one has stilled the wanderings of the citta (citta-vrtti-nirodha) 
				and can abide in the universal unchanging light of consciousness 
				(citer apratisankramayas). For perspective Patanjali reminds us 
				of the goal of yoga as stated in Pada One, Sutra Three. Our 
				sorry (dukha) ordinary state is due to false and limited 
				identifications (akarapattau) we impose upon what-is (reality) 
				as coming from an intellect (buddhi) which possesses a separate 
				intelligence from the universal Self, but in fact the intellect 
				and individual motive power are charged by the Universal Source 
				from which they can not stand apart except in illusion. So when 
				we ordinarily see, we identify the process of seeing as being 
				from our eyes and intellect toward a separate object, then we 
				are lost in dualism and false identification, but spiritual 
				vision involves the awareness of that greater power of seeing -- 
				our higher potential so that when we gaze at a seemingly 
				separate object we know in a deeper non-dual sense that is a 
				Self rememberance -- that it is Self knowing Self -- love loving 
				love in the Integrity and Great Binding together of ALL OUR 
				RELATIONS. IV Sutra 23 drashtri-drishyoparaktam cittam 
				sarvartham When we abide in this light where the seer (drashtr), 
				the seen (drisya) and the process of seeing are known to be part 
				of the same universal interconnected overall integral process of 
				infinite all encompassing consciousness (sarvaartham), then this 
				consciousness (belonging to the true omniscient universal self 
				or purusha) is no longer colored, tainted, biased, or impure (uparaktam).
				
				Commentary: In ordinary dualistic consciousness, the object of 
				consciousness colors the individual consciousness. Even the 
				process of seeing as well as the seer and the seen are seen as 
				separate phenomena, but the truth is that they are all products 
				and players of the universal Self (purusha). Through practice 
				one learns how to see and be through the light of this universal 
				consciousness. Normally, the preexisting colorings and bias of 
				the individual consciousness, then colors the way we see the 
				object, thus Reality as-it-is is not known and it is said that 
				truth is not known, for it is fractured and tainted. This 
				ordinary dualistic way of seeing is dualistic and corrupted, as 
				well as only relative; while only through a universal 
				perspective can we see Reality as-it-is unbiased, uncolored, and 
				untainted. Liberation (kaivalya) in both Samkhya and Yoga is 
				neither the acquisition of a new or cultivated state, nor merely 
				the destruction of an old one, because either are merely framed 
				or colored by the mind as something other than "Reality". Rather 
				liberation (kaivalya) arises by itself (self arises) 
				spontaneously as-it-is (as swarupa) as the disappearance of the 
				conditioning factors i. e. the removal of the self imposed 
				limitations of time/space (the limited postulation of three 
				dimensional succession and form as a filter to explain our 
				subjective experience). Kaivalya then occurs to disclose the sky 
				in its own true form after the clouds (colorings) are lifted. It 
				discloses Purusha (as pure undifferentiated universal 
				consciousness - pure receptivity and awareness) which is no 
				longer colored or obscured by dualism or fragmented existence. 
				this again is where pure and absolute beingness (sattva) merges 
				with pure and absolute consciousness as shiva/shakti), which is 
				another way of saying that the Prakritic mirror no longer 
				obscures nor substitutes for Purusha because All and Everything 
				-- eternal and temporal - the absolute and the relative -- 
				Consciousness and Experience -- Spirit and Nature -- objective/subjective, 
				or Shiva/Shakti -- ALL are put into their natural synchronicity 
				once again. HERE the "self" ceases the false and neurotic 
				identifications with objective realities outside this central 
				unitive context of the Great Integrity -- of ALL OUR RELATIONS. 
				IV Sutra 24 tad asankhyeya-vasanabhish chitram api parartham 
				sanhatya-karitvat Even though (api) [the consciousness of the 
				untrained yogi] is pulled at every junction by the 
				aforementioned diverse and manifold vagaries of reactive, 
				conditioned, and compulsive habits (asankhyeya-vasanabhish 
				chitram), at the same time (sanhatya) [the consciousness of the 
				trained yogi] has activated an intrinsic power to act in concert 
				with his/her highest potential, i.e., one acts from their core 
				energy self empowered. Commentary: At this stage the vasana, 
				samskara, old karma, and klesha have become over powered; the 
				new pathways of light from the Source are open and flowing; and 
				harmony, unity, and integration acts as the dominant symphony. 
				IV Sutra 25 visesa-darshina atma-bhava-bhavana-vinivrittih  
				One is no longer fooled – no longer swept away by the artificial 
				distinction (visesa) introduced by being absorbed in a disparate 
				relativity and bias that is maintained in the dualistic 
				perception of a separateness of seer and seen. Then one can 
				attain self realization (atmabhava) which requires no further 
				psychic cultivation (bhavana). When the seer (atma) knows that 
				he/she is seeing from the power of the true Universal 
				consciousness (Brahman) and not from some individual or separate 
				power, then the veil of duality become lifted, the vrttis are 
				undone (vinivritti), and the true vision (darshina) of our true 
				nature (on swarupa) is realized. All seemingly individual 
				consciousness and intelligence stem from the Great Integrity of 
				which we are its eyes and ears, arms and legs, and so forth. 
				Swami Venkatesananda says; "One who sees this completely and 
				clearly is freed from the false and imaginary of self." IV Sutra 
				26 tada hi viveka-nimnam kaivalya-pragbharam cittam Inclined (nimnam) 
				towards this method of non-dual discernment (viveka), then 
				consciousness (cittam) gravitates and is propelled toward (pragbharam) 
				kaivalya (liberation). Commentary: With viveka (vigilant 
				awareness) one can only move toward Kaivalyam, approach it, and 
				knock on its door so to speak; but it can not be entered into 
				because viveka still employs dualistic cultivation albeit subtle. 
				The word viveka is often misunderstood because its use in the 
				yoga is very different from that used in the samkhya context. It 
				is also very different from that of the more popular vedantic 
				definition of viveka (say that of Sankaracharya which occurred 
				1000 years after Patanjali). In the modern day popular 
				definitions viveka is most often translated as discriminatory 
				awareness for example, making the distinction between the real 
				and the unreal, knower and that which is known, subject and 
				object, and other dualistic and comparative analytical 
				techniques/methodologies. This misunderstanding is also 
				compounded by the samkhya definition of viveka (which 
				approximates that of Vedanta).
				
				However one of the signal differences between Yoga and samkhya 
				is that samkhya's "enlightenment" is based upon philosophical 
				abstraction and isolation (as is most popular schools of Vedanta), 
				while that of yoga is based on integrative experience or union (samadhi). 
				Yoga (versus samkhya) thus defines the word, viveka, as a 
				meditation tool to practice over time (abhyasa) in order to 
				experience the fruits of yoga practice (sadhana) -- as an 
				elementary means of awareness where one is aware of the citta 
				wavering and thus allowing the practitioner to refocus the 
				awareness back to the awareness of awareness.
				After consistent practice over time then one develops the 
				ability of viveka-khyatir (the self illuminating wisdom of 
				discrimination) where this awareness of awareness shines forth 
				more steadily and continuously. Thus the meaning of viveka for a 
				meditator who is practicing raj yoga is very different than one 
				who engages in the discipline of philosophic inquiry or analysis 
				(which is reductionistic).Thus in samkhya and Vedanta, viveka is 
				interpreted as an intellectual or discriminatory tool within 
				what is generally termed as jnana yoga (philosophic or 
				intellectual inquiry into "self"), rather than as a self 
				luminous innate awareness found in an authentic raj yoga context 
				which is used in dhyana. Here viveka is a pointer that brings 
				about a realization/recognition of the innate light (the param 
				purusha). Dhyana (meditation) practice is utilized 
				experientially within an overall objectless/formless context, 
				where even the most subtle object of thought or activity of 
				mentation (vrtti) must become still (nirodha). Viveka wakes us 
				up that the awareness has become distracted and then points us 
				to the eternal Source of that awareness -- to the awareness of 
				that awareness. In the previous padas, Patanjali addresses 
				dharana (concentration), samyama, and pratyaya where the mind 
				still has objects of concentration be they subtle or coarse. 
				Viveka meant here thus is the application of awareness or 
				vigilance which grows through consistent meditation practice, so 
				that the practitioner (sadhak) becomes increasingly aware of the 
				contents of the mind (pratyaya) when it wanders and as soon as 
				it begins to wander, eventually learning how to recognize even 
				the very beginning tendency of vrtti, and hence being able to 
				empty those contents freeing the mind (cit-prana) before they 
				even arise. In dhyana, unlike dharana or samyama, in classical 
				raj yoga meditation, the sadhak does not bring the awareness 
				back to an object (be it the breath, the energy centers, or even 
				subtle thought processes), but rather no object -- just pure 
				awareness -- awareness of awareness leading up to viveka-khyatir 
				(self revealing luminosity of discriminatory awareness). At the 
				beginning of meditation, it is a time to experience and rest in 
				the empty mind. Then as the sword of viveka becomes sharpened (through 
				abhyasa), then distraction, agitations, and dissipation (vrttis) 
				eventually cease. We follow this awareness back to its Source (see 
				pratiprasava in Sutra 34) .
				In normal beginning practice we become aware that the mind has 
				wandered and we simply notice that occurrence and tendency, and 
				return to focusing upon watching, observing, and witnessing the 
				individual mind itself as an object -- the process of 
				consciousness itself rather than watching the object of the 
				mind. This type of sharpened pure awareness (vigilance or viveka) 
				opens the door to purusha, consciousness without an object and 
				as such it is not the same technique as the discriminatory 
				awareness or discernment which is advocated in vedanta or 
				samkhya philosophical processes. In either practice we must have 
				patience and show loving kindness -- honoring our intent by 
				flooding it with healing energy, albeit, viveka as awareness is 
				an extremely valuable tool in meditation sadhana, but it, like 
				all "techniques", must eventually be given up like a boat, in 
				order to cross over to the yonder shore (samadhi). A special 
				grace of viveka is that it discloses the nature of the wandering 
				mind through its own application by focusing on the intelligent 
				principle underlying consciousness itself. It thus makes space 
				for the transpersonal non-dual primordial awareness of universal 
				undifferentiated conscious (the purusha) to enter. As such it 
				gets out of its own way. Repeated application of viveka is 
				needed at first in order to take us across the river, but it too 
				must also be left at the shore, like a boat and its oars, in 
				order to step upon the shore. This is where yoga practice and 
				even meditation ends. HERE we are no longer locked into the 
				world of form, there is no longer the separate object of the 
				meditation, no meditation, and no one who is meditating. Then 
				there is non-dual integration in nirbijah samadhi. In other 
				words this sutra says that viveka is used to prime the pump of 
				the refocusing process upon kaivalyam, then the new awareness 
				takes off by itself but is hindered until the past samskaras are 
				completely eradicated. Swami Venkatesananda translates Sutra 26: 
				Then the whole mind flows towards wisdom and the realization of 
				complete freedom or liberation. IV Sutra 27 tach-chidreshu 
				pratyayantarani sanskarebhyah The disruption/interruption of 
				that (tach-chidreshu) propensity toward kaivalyam arises (bhyah) 
				from old samskaras. Old samskaras may still arise causing 
				interruptions of this process toward kaivalya and thus the field 
				of consciousness will remain limited (pratyaya). Commentary: The 
				word, pratyaya, is used to describe the total content of the 
				mind which occupies the field of consciousness at a particular 
				time. The ordinary mind perceives objects as contents (physical 
				or mental objects). Pratyaya is thus a limited dualistic mindset 
				through the action of karma, klesha, vasana, and samskara. 
				Pratyaya is also the way the ordinary person conceptualizes and 
				ascribes meaning while identifying self as separate. It is a 
				limited cognition establishing one‘s limited world view, 
				viewpoint, or discolorations which produce what we call the 
				contents of the mind.
				
				This sutra then pertains to the process of cleansing the mirror 
				via meditation until kaivalya is attained and how this process 
				becomes interrupted. In these cases viveka is helpful in 
				noticing that the mind has become distracted and/or an old 
				samskara has been activated. Viveka allows us to recognize the 
				samskara, to bring consciousness toward it, and thus one is no 
				longer unconsciously victimized by it. Applying viveka and 
				awareness to its energetic dynamic (cit-prana) constantly, 
				samskara and vasana are deprogrammed and uprooted because their 
				operations are no longer ignored, denied, or run away from in 
				chronic ignorance (avidya). One slowly awakens out of 
				subconscious and limited thought processes not by incessantly 
				gathering facts, acquiring more objects of ordinary knowledge, 
				nor by analyzing such, but rather by abiding in the self 
				revealing Source of the knowledge itself. This is accomplished 
				through the power of vidya or the cit-shakti. This is likened to 
				the shining the Light of Grace (when the holes in the past karma 
				have become pierced), "Shining the Light", or opening up the 
				flood gates of shakti. We must begin where we are at, while 
				avoiding the unfortunate impatient propensity to start where we 
				want to be in the future. So by embracing/recognizing the 
				samskara, we come to terms with it, truly understand it, and are 
				able to no longer be reactive nor victimized by it. Eventually 
				the residual samskaras are dissolved and annulled ("taj-jah 
				samskaro'nya-samskara-pratibandhi ") through the samskara of the 
				Age-old Supreme Truth Bearing Wisdom (rtam-bhara prajna), See 
				Sutra I. 48-51. Such is the immediate precursor to Sabija 
				Samadhi. Then of course the recurring mental obscurations of the 
				mind-field will also no longer recur. Eventually even viveka 
				must be given up as well, as it is still a practice that is 
				applied to eliminating the samskaras, kleshas, ignorance, karma, 
				and vasana as we will see in the following. IV Sutra 28 hanam 
				esham kleshavad uktam Likewise those samskaras which create 
				kleshas (esham) can also be eradicated (hanam) by the same 
				previously mentioned (uktam) remediation procedures that were 
				used with eradicating the kleshas, samskaras, vasanas, and 
				avidya above. Commentary: See Sutra 30-32. Swami Venkatesananda 
				translates Sutra 28: "These habit-molds are also to be treated 
				as sources of psychic distress or disturbance and got rid of in 
				the manner described already." IV Sutra 29 prasankhyane 'py 
				akusidasya sarvatha viveka-khyater dharma-meghah samadhih
				Thus free from selfish motivation (akusidasya) while abiding 
				steadily (sarvatha) in self luminous discriminatory awareness (viveka-khyater) 
				the rain-cloud of natural law (dharma-megha) is accumulated (prasankhyane) 
				and absorbed (samadhih). Commentary: Pure awareness or vigilance 
				(in viveka) applied steadily will create viveka-khyatir (luminous 
				self revealing conscious and lucid unbroken awareness) which is 
				the remedial propensity where old samskaras, old mind habits (vasanas), 
				and vrtti become nipped in the bud as soon as they arise or 
				before they arise. This does not mean that the kleshas are 
				suppressed or repressed, but rather that the very process of 
				their arising has become reversed. It is normal in meditation 
				for beginners to get carried away by discursive thoughts for 
				long durations. These durations can be measured in length as 
				words, sentences or even multiple paragraphs in length. Books, 
				volumes, and many symphonies may be written by the discursive 
				mind, but that greater all encompassing symphony which includes 
				all and everything is known to the accomplished meditator as 
				residing within. As our practice evolves, the sadhak notices the 
				appearance of the wavelike motions of these discursive thoughts 
				sooner and quicker (in less sentences or fewer words) through 
				applying vigilant attention (viveka) upon the contents and 
				direction of the mind and the process of consciousness itself. 
				Then through practice a diamond edged sharpness (viveka-khyatir) 
				is created where one notices before a half sentence is created, 
				then the beginning of word, even more subtly before any arising 
				of even the faintest upswelling of a word, even before the 
				tendency to wander appears. The awareness is then drawn back 
				into that Source of awareness itself. That is the operation of 
				viveka-khyater, not as an end in itself but as a pointer or 
				functional tool. Here one naturally is drawn to rest their 
				attention back into the intrinsic luminous source of awareness 
				itself. In this way one rests longer in the silence and 
				stillness and in such a way samskara, vasana, klesha, avidya, 
				and karma gradually become reprogrammed. The internal conscious 
				energy becomes purified, activated, and expanded, so that one 
				becomes accustomed to and familiar with abiding for increasingly 
				longer periods of time in the non-dual universal – the samadhi 
				where the clouds of the wandering mind (vrttis) no longer 
				obstruct the Pure Universal Source of Consciousness. Thus we 
				absorb the rain from the dharma cloud, so to speak. Swami 
				Venkatesananda translates Sutra 29:
				Where there is no interest in or attraction whatsoever even for 
				the highest kind of intellectual knowledge and experience and 
				where there is uninterrupted self-awareness there comes a state 
				of enlightenment which is like a cloud that showers virtue or 
				order.
				IV Sutra 30 tatah klesha-karma-nivrttih In this way (tatah) the 
				waves of karma and klesha are completely reversed and cease (nivrttih). 
				Commentary: The cessation of the machinations (nivrttih) of both 
				karma and kleshas is realized through dharma-meghah samadhi. 
				Through the powerful self reprogramming technique of meditation, 
				utilizing awareness tools (such as viveka-khyater), the roots of 
				the samskaras and vasana in form of kleshas and karma are 
				destroyed. The awareness has been pointed back toward its source 
				and that light now illumines all that one sees. Final liberation 
				is thus close at hand. Karma can also be seen as the sum of "complications", 
				relationships established through fear, attachment, and 
				ignorance (in short through acting on the kleshas) that we have 
				constructed through all our past actions as well as our present 
				desire, fear, and hope. Here the kleshas must be burned up so we 
				do not create more negative karma, but also the past karma must 
				be dissolved. Both must be annihilated. The end of karma is the 
				starting point of divine grace (citi-shakter iti). IV Sutra 31 
				tada sarvavarana-malapetasya jnanasyanantyaj-jneyam-alpam Then 
				all veils (sarvavarana) and impurities (mala) are removed (apetasya) 
				so that the knowledge of infinite mind (jnanasyanantyaj-jneyam) 
				is revealed which leaves little more (alpam) to be disclosed. IV 
				Sutra 32 tatah kritarthanam parinama-krama-samaptir gunanam Then 
				the dualistic differentiations appearing as the nearly infinite 
				combinations and transformative diverse qualities (parinama) of 
				the constituent elements of the created universe (gunas) cease 
				their apparently disparate actions disclosing their profound 
				interconnectedness (innate integrity), giving way to their 
				intrinsic completeness, wholeness, wholesomeness, and total 
				integration which ultimately fulfills (samaptir).
				Commentary: The sharpened edge of viveka honed from years of 
				meditation practice bears fruit in freeing the mind from 
				wandering, becoming fixated, or bound upon any separate object (mental 
				or physical), even the most subtle. Here the awareness rests in 
				awareness of its true nature and source while the operation of 
				the gunas (defining and comparing "reality" in terms of relative 
				qualities to other phenomena -- saguna) becomes unnecessary 
				because their essential integrity, purpose, inherent order, and 
				meaning is directly perceived in a non-dual perspective 
				intrinsic order. Here the I-it world of separateness -- the 
				world of apparent and discrete form -- is broken asunder (nirguna) 
				because its underlying true nature is revealed.
				When we wake up through viveka that our awareness had become 
				corrupted/seduced in a disjointed/distorted connection/union 
				into the vagary dualistic world of fragmented "reality" (saguna), 
				then this unsatisfactory connection is sundered and severed (sunya 
				produces the realization of formless or nirguna -- where we are 
				no longer bounded by dualistic qualities of the gunas). When we 
				disengage from the false identification with ego (asmita) -- 
				when we isolate ourselves from the illusion of separate form (it-objects), 
				then we can join with the "real" -- a complete and lasting 
				integration (nirbija samadhi) is established. Then the mind 
				rests and all false identification ends. Thus kaivalyam is the 
				simultaneous co-arising isolation from asmita (from the delusion 
				of separate existence) on one hand, conjoined with the Greater 
				All encompassing interconnection with the beginningless unborn 
				eternal weave/weaver of All (shiva/shakti) on the other hand of 
				god. Here in union of pure undifferentiated consciousness and 
				pure instantaneous beingness, wholeness, fulfillment, and 
				completion in nirbij samadhi is achieved by realizing the innate 
				underlying Great Integrity. As such then there arises no further 
				need to apply the remediation of viveka while abiding the 
				non-dual trans-personal state of ALL OUR RELATIONS. IV Sutra 33 
				kshana-pratiyogi parinamaparanta-nirgrahyah kramah Abiding in 
				the timeless holographic undifferentiated present that is not 
				limited by linear concepts of time or succession, or by any 
				degree of separateness, limitation, or duality, one realizes the 
				co-arising mutuality of all phenomena from that absolute 
				stillness where nothing moves.
				
				IV Sutra 34 purusartha-sunyanam gunanam pratiprasavah kaivalyam 
				svarupa-pratistha va citi-saktir iti Absolute liberation (kaivalyam) 
				reigns by remediating (pratiprasavah) all dualistic qualities (gunas) 
				by realizing that they do not exist individually by themselves, 
				separate and disparate (purushartha-sunyam), but rather our 
				innate true self nature (swarupa) shines forth as the intrinsic 
				intelligent power of consciousness itself (cit sakti).
				Commentary: Kaivalyam is realized from within the profound 
				non-dual all inclusive scope of ALL OUR RELATIONS. Self abiding 
				HERE, the goal of yoga (swarupa) is fulfilled where all vrttis (distortions) 
				of the infinite mind-field have become annihilated, the purpose 
				of purusa consciousness as pure beingness in swarupa has been 
				achieved HERE in swarupa (recognizing itself as its own true 
				self nature when the differentiations (gunas) are dissolved (sunya) 
				and seen as temporal insubstantial. HERE All and Everything is 
				seen as Eternal Self. HERE all phenomena are self revealed by 
				the self liberation and libation of absolute undifferentiated 
				consciousness residing in its true nature (swarupa). Thus any 
				externalized false and limited identifications or fixations of 
				separateness are annihilated and disappear as empty illusions (sunyata) 
				which they truly are. Liberation from karma, klesha, samskara, 
				and vasana is complete. HERE, in the eternal now, all tendencies 
				to project a "separate self" into any external framework 
				composed of any separate qualities have become totally 
				extinguished and only the creative intelligent power of 
				evolutionary consciousness shines forth (citi-shakter) in all 
				directions (omni-directionally) simultaneously, therein Absolute 
				Liberation reigns by itself, unimpeded forever as it always has 
				and will be. End of the Fourth and Final Chapter
				This is what I was talking about. So, 
				sense it as it is. Questo è quanto, quindi imparate a sensire le 
				cose come sono.
				                                
				 
				
				
				53,500,000   JEDI SEARCH
				 
				
				Jedi' religion most popular alternative faith (2012 )
				
				Today's Census figures show that 176,632 people in England and 
				Wales identify themselves as Jedi Knights, making it the most 
				popular faith in the "Other Religions" category on the Census 
				and the seventh most popular faith overall
				. 
				
					
					The new figures reveal that the lightsabre-wielding 
					disciples are only behind Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, 
					Sikhism, Judaism and Buddhism in the popularity stakes, 
					excluding non-religious people and people who did not answer.
 
				
					
					Following a nationwide 
					campaign, Jedi made it onto the 2001 census, with 
					390,127 people identifying themselves a decade ago as 
					followers of the fictional Star Wars creed.
 
				
					
					Although the number of Jedis has dropped by more than 50 per 
					cent over the past 10 years, they are still the most 
					selected "alternative" faith on the Census, and constitute 
					0.31% of all people's stated religious affiliation in 
					England and Wales.
 
				
					
					The number of people specifically identifying as Atheists 
					was 29,267, while over 13.8 million refused to identify with 
					a faith at all, ticking the "No religion" box on the census 
					form.
 
				        
				
					- 
					Australia - 65,000
- 
					Canada - 9,000
- 
					Czech Republic - 15,070
- 
					England and Wales - 176,632
				
				Source: 2011 census data   2011
				     Here is 
				the Doctrine definition of Jediism from the jedichurch website
				 
				
				
					- 
					Category: Information
- 
					Written by Temple Of The Jedi Order
				Jediism is 
				a religion based on the observance of the Force, 
				a ubiquitous and metaphysical power that a Jedi (a 
				follower of Jediism) believes to be the underlying, fundamental 
				nature of the universe. Jediism finds its roots in philosophies 
				similar to those presented in an epic space opera called “Star 
				Wars”. It is a religion in and of itself.
				
				The Jedi religion is an inspiration and a way of life for many 
				people throughout the world who take on the mantle of Jedi. Jedi 
				apply the principles, ideals, philosophies and teachings of 
				Jediism in a practical manner within their lives. Real Jedi do 
				not worship George Lucas or Star Wars or anything of the sort. 
				Jediism is not based in fiction, but we accept myth as a 
				sometimes more practical mean of conveying philosophies 
				applicable to real life.
				
				 
				
				JEDI BELIEVE
				
				In the Force, and in the inherent worth of all life within it.
				In the sanctity of the human person. We oppose the use of 
				torture and cruel or unusual punishment, including the death 
				penalty.
				In a society governed by laws grounded in reason and compassion, 
				not in fear or prejudice.
				In a society that does not discriminate on the basis of sexual 
				orientation or circumstances of birth such as gender, ethnicity 
				and national origin.
				In the ethic of reciprocity, and how moral concepts are not 
				absolute but vary by culture, religion and over time.
				In the positive influence of spiritual growth and awareness on 
				society.
				In the importance of freedom of conscience and 
				self-determination within religious, political and other 
				structures.
				In the separation of religion and government and the freedoms of 
				speech, association and expression.
				
				 
				
				THE THREE TENETS
				
					
						| Focus Knowledge
 Wisdom
 | 
						When used correctly, the Jedi Tenets allow us to better 
						ourselves and overcome any obstacle. They help us 
						improve the world around us and fulfil our purpose in 
						life as a Jedi. 
						Wisdom is 
						the sound application of accrued knowledge and 
						experience through patient, good judgment. Knowledge can 
						be acquired by focusing on the task at hand. Focus is 
						the art of pruning the irrelevant and pouring the best 
						of your mind into what you are doing. | 
				
				
				 
				
				THE CODE
				
				The Jedi Code comes in two versions which are different ways of 
				understanding the same teaching.
				
					
						| Emotion, yet Peace. | There is no Emotion, there is Peace. | 
					
						| Ignorance, yet Knowledge. | There is no Ignorance, there is Knowledge. | 
					
						| Passion, yet Serenity. | There is no Passion, there is Serenity. | 
					
						| Chaos, yet Harmony. | There is no Chaos, there is Harmony. | 
					
						| Death, yet the Force. | There is no Death, there is the Force. | 
				
				
				 
				
				THE CREED
				
				I am a Jedi, an instrument of peace;
				
				Where there is hatred I shall bring love;
				Where there is injury, pardon;
				Where there is doubt, faith;
				Where there is despair, hope;
				Where there is darkness, light;
				And where there is sadness, joy.
				
				I am a Jedi.
				
				I shall never seek so much to be consoled as to console;
				To be understood as to understand;
				To be loved as to love;
				For it is in giving that we receive;
				It is in pardoning that we are pardoned;
				And it is in dying that we are born to eternal life.
				
				The Force is with me always, for I am a Jedi.
				
				 
				
				 
				
				THE 16 TEACHINGS
				
				1. Jedi are in touch with the Force. We are open to spiritual 
				awareness and keep our minds in tune with the beauty of the 
				world. We are forever learning and open our minds to experiences 
				and knowledge of ourselves and others.
				
				2. Jedi maintain a clear mind; which can be achieved through 
				meditation and contemplation. Our minds can become unduly 
				troubled and concerned with the happenings of the world. We must 
				work on overcoming our individual issues through training and 
				diligence.
				
				3. Jedi are aware of the future impacts of action and inaction 
				and of the influence of the past, but live in and focus on the 
				Now. We let ourselves flow like water through the events around 
				us. We embrace the ever changing and fluid world, adapting and 
				changing as it does.
				
				4. Jedi are wary of attachments, both material and personal. The 
				obsession over possessions and people creates the fear of losing 
				those possessions and relationships which can cause ourselves to 
				be trapped in a state of depression and loss.
				
				5. Jedi understand that well-being consists in the physical, the 
				mental and the spiritual. A Jedi trains each to ensure they 
				remain capable of performing their duties to the best of their 
				ability. All of these are interconnected and essential parts of 
				our training in becoming more harmonious with the Force.
				
				6. Jedi use their skills to the best of their ability. We do not 
				use our knowledge and skill to boast or be prideful. We are 
				mindful of the ego and mindful of our actions, exercising wisdom 
				and humility.
				
				7. Jedi understand their limitations. We recognise, and take 
				responsibility, for our failures and develop a level of modesty 
				about them. We respect the right for others to disagree and 
				understand that they themselves are not perfect.
				
				8. Jedi are patient. We work on training ourselves not to 
				precipitate events around us. We know that becoming a Jedi is 
				long and hard and requires rigorous dedication and commitment. 
				Jedi train to act with a conscientious state of calmness.
				
				9. Jedi have integrity. We are authentic to what we believe and 
				are open, honest and true to our purpose and our minds. We 
				remove all masks to reveal ourselves as courageous and noble of 
				heart. We do not hide from fear of damage to our image because 
				we know that our image cannot be blemished from the words and 
				actions of others.
				
				10. Jedi serve in many ways. Each action performed, no matter 
				the scale, influences the world. With this in mind Jedi perform 
				each action with peace, caring, love, compassion and humility. 
				So it is that each Jedi improves the world with each deed they 
				perform.
				
				11. Jedi are mindful of their thoughts. We recognise the beauty 
				in others and we provide help to those who come seeking it. 
				Through our benevolent actions we strengthen not only ourselves 
				but also our communities. Jedi act without prejudice.
				
				12. Jedi believe that love and compassion are central to their lives. 
				We must love and care for each other as we must love and care 
				for ourselves; by doing this we envelop all life in the 
				positivity of our actions and thoughts. We are providers and 
				beacons of hope.
				
				13. Jedi cultivate empathy. We try to view things from another’s 
				perspective making us sensitive listeners. We provide the 
				confidence people need when talking through their difficulties 
				and we share our learning with those who would benefit. We do 
				this to help create a more harmonious society. 
				
				14. Jedi are guardians of peace. We believe in helping all those 
				that are in need, in whatever form, to the best of our ability. 
				We recognise that sometimes providing help requires courage in 
				the face of adversity but understand that conflict is resolved 
				through peace, understanding and harmony.
				
				15. Jedi believe in eternal life through the Force. We do not 
				become obsessed in mourning those who pass. We may grieve at 
				their passing but we are content, knowing that they will forever 
				be a part of the Force and so always a part of us.
				
				16. Jedi make a commitment to their cause and to humanity. Our 
				ideals, philosophies, and practices define the belief of Jediism 
				and we take action on this path for self-improvement and to help 
				others. We are both the witnesses and protectors of the Jedi way 
				by the practice of our convictions.
				
				 
				
				THE 21 MAXIMS
				
				Prowess: To seek excellence in all endeavors expected of 
				a Jedi.
				
				A Jedi strives to acquire greater skill and expertise in what 
				they do at all times so that it may be used in the service of 
				the greater good, and not for personal profit. This requires 
				discipline, patience and perfect practice.
				
				Justice: To always seek the path of ‘right’.
				
				A Jedi is unencumbered by bias or personal interest. Justice is 
				a double-edged sword, one that protects the weak, yet also 
				passes judgements according to a set of values. A Jedi tolerates 
				that which is not Jedi and does not pass judgement on that which 
				causes no harm for it is just.
				
				Loyalty: To have faith in your Jedi brothers and sisters.
				
				A Jedi remains true to what they have learned and to their own 
				teachings. A Jedi always serves those who wish to learn more of 
				the ways of the Force and in doing so, remain loyal to the way 
				of Jediism and their Order.
				
				Defense: To defend the way of Jediism.
				
				A Jedi is sworn by oath to defend their faith and all it 
				encompasses.
				
				Courage: To have the will.
				
				To be a Jedi sometimes means choosing the more difficult path, 
				the personally expensive one. A Jedi knows they must make the 
				right choice, take the right side and that the weak they have 
				sworn to defend often stand alone.  A Jedi puts aside fear, 
				regret, and uncertainty yet know the difference between courage 
				and sheer stupidity.
				
				Faith: To trust in the ways of the Force.
				
				Although the ways of the Force may seem strange at times, a Jedi 
				always knows their place and their role within it.
				
				Humility: To accept the ego for what it is.
				
				A Jedi does not boast of their accomplishments and knows that 
				their accomplishment is its own reward.
				
				Fearlessness: To have no self-imposed limits.
				
				Fear is that which prevents a Jedi from accomplishing their 
				duty. A Jedi learns to let go of their fears through their faith 
				in the Force and has no shame in admitting their shortfalls when 
				they occur.
				
				Nobility: To act with honour.
				
				A Jedi does not engage in petty, mean or otherwise dubious 
				activities. Acting with stature and distinction influences 
				others, offering a compelling example of what can be achieved by 
				those who follow Jediism.
				
				Honesty: To avoid lies.
				
				A Jedi is honest with themselves and seeks to always go beyond 
				appearances. There can be no honest self without the knowledge 
				and wisdom to see truth.
				
				Pure Motive: To act with motive and purpose.
				
				Without a sound motive and purpose, action has no meaning, no 
				destination and lacks a foundation. A Jedi moves with the Force, 
				trusts in its ways. A Jedi’s actions are firmly based upon a 
				deep motivation to be as their path dictates.
				
				Discipline: To let the self be sole master of the self.
				
				A Jedi’s mind is structured, peaceful, unencumbered by emotions, 
				physical state or external stimuli.
				
				Focus: To select what matters most.
				
				A Jedi focuses in the task at hand. Although a Jedi is aware of 
				the past, and wary of the present's impact on the future, 
				through discipline they know how to select and concentrate on 
				priorities.
				
				Discretion: To become invisible.
				
				A Jedi knows there is a time and place for all things. They do 
				not actively interfere in worldly affairs and refrain from 
				overtly supporting or opposing other individuals or 
				organizations.
				
				Meditation: To exercise the mind.
				
				Through regular meditation a Jedi examines their  motivations, 
				and are certain that they are not allowing emotion, ignorance, 
				or passion to intrude upon them.  Meditation can be used by a 
				Jedi to improve their mindfulness, focus, or patience.
				
				Training: To know one's ignorance.
				
				A Jedi knows there is always something more to learn and seeks 
				new lessons every day.
				
				Integrity: To be consistent.
				
				A Jedi lives as a Jedi at all times. Hypocrisy is their worst 
				enemy. 
				
				Morality: To know the danger of belief.
				
				A Jedi knows how contradicting beliefs of what is right and 
				wrong can lead to devastating crimes and conflicts. A Jedi takes 
				a step away from the subjectivity of opinion in favour of the 
				peace of objectivity. A Jedi does not force their values upon 
				others.
				
				Conflict: To know when to fight.
				
				A Jedi knows the conflicting nature of the Force but they also 
				know its peace and serenity. A Jedi never blindly enters 
				conflict and always does so for the greater good.
				
				Intervention: To know when not to act.
				
				A Jedi knows how inaction can have as great an impact as action 
				and how some of the greatest lessons are self-taught. To be a 
				victor is also taking that victory from those you protect. A 
				Jedi intervenes only when a Jedi's intervention is required.
				
				Harmony: To be connected to the Force.
				
				A Jedi seeks to live in harmony with the Force, for that is the 
				reason to be a Jedi. To better understand its ways, to better 
				know one's place within it.
				                                     About 
				numbers....
				 
					
						
							
								
									
										
										Modern times comes 
										with modern beliefs, and what’s more 
										modern and trendy than the legendary 
										Jedi from Star 
										Wars, in fact 
										today the Jedi phenomenon has stepped 
										into a whole new era called Jediism. 
										It’s a nontheistic new religious 
										movement based on the philosophical and 
										spiritual ideas of the Jedi as depicted 
										in Star Wars media. This phenomenon is a 
										grassroots movement that was initiated 
										in 2001 for residents of a number of 
										English-speaking countries, urging them 
										to record their religion as "Jedi" or "Jedi 
										Knight" (after the quasi-religious order 
										of Jedi Knights in the fictional Star 
										Wars universe) on the national census.
										
										It is believed the majority of 
										self-reported Jedi claimed the religion for 
										their own amusement, to poke fun at the 
										government, or as a protest against the 
										inclusion of the religion question on 
										the census form.
										
										Although followers of Jediism 
										acknowledge the influence of Star Wars 
										on their religion, by following the 
										moral and spiritual codes demonstrated 
										by the fictional Jedi, they also insist 
										their path is different from that of the 
										fictional characters and that Jediism 
										does not focus on the myth and fiction 
										found in Star Wars. The Jedi follow the 
										"16 teachings", which are based on the 
										presentation of the fictional Jedi, as 
										well as "21 maxims".
										History Although inspired by elements of 
										Star Wars, Jediism has no founder or 
										central structure.
										Early websites dedicated to drawing a 
										belief system from the Star Wars films 
										were "The Jedi Religion" and "Jediism". 
										These websites cited the Jedi code, 
										constituting of 21 maxims, as the 
										starting point for a "real jedi" belief 
										system.
										
										Temple of the Jedi Order in Texas 
										registered as a non-profit organization 
										and has promulgated a code, 'The 16 
										Teachings of the Jedi'.
										Census phenomenon and recognition
										
										Jediism received press coverage 
										following a worldwide email campaign in 
										2001 urging people to write "Jedi" as 
										their answer to the religion 
										classification question in their 
										country's census. The majority of such 
										respondents are assumed to have claimed 
										the faith as a joke.
										
										In the 2001 England and Wales census, 
										390,127 respondents indicated Jediism as 
										their faith. 2012 census figures had 
										dropped to 176,632, although this was 
										still more common than some other 
										"alternative" faiths, and was the 
										seventh most common response overall.
										
										The Australian Bureau of Statistics 
										chose not to recognise Jediism as a 
										religion, and the decline in subsequent 
										years was seen as an indication that it 
										was a transitory "fad". Statistics New 
										Zealand assigned Jedi an official 
										religion code, but noted that the total 
										was combined with groups such as "The 
										Church of Elvis" and "Rugby, Racing and 
										Beer" under "responses deemed outside 
										the scope of recognised religions". An 
										SNZ spokeswoman noted that there was no 
										"magic number" of followers which would 
										turn a census result into a religion.
										The phenomenon attracted the attention 
										of sociologist of religion Adam Possamai 
										who analyzed Jediism in the framework of 
										what he dubs "hyper-real religion".
										
										During the drafting of the UK Racial and 
										Religious Hatred Act, an amendment was 
										proposed that excluded Jedi Knights from 
										any protection, along with Satanists and 
										believers in animal sacrifice. The 
										amendment was subsequently withdrawn, 
										the proposer explaining that it was "a 
										bit of a joke" to illustrate a point 
										that defining religious belief in 
										legislation is difficult.
										
										In 2008, 23-year-old Daniel Jones 
										founded the "International Church of 
										Jediism" with his brother Barney, 
										believing that the 2001 UK census 
										recognized Jediism as a religion, and 
										that there were "more Jedi than 
										Scientologists in Britain". In 2009, 
										Jones was removed from a Tesco 
										supermarket in Bangor, North Wales, for 
										refusing to remove his hood on a 
										religious basis. The owner justified 
										Jones's ejection by saying, "He hasn't 
										been banned. Jedis are very welcome to 
										shop in our stores although we would ask 
										them to remove their hoods. Obi-Wan 
										Kenobi, Yoda and Luke Skywalker all 
										appeared hoodless without ever going 
										over to the Dark Side and we are only 
										aware of the Emperor as one who never 
										removed his hood."
										
										In 2010, a man who described himself as 
										a "Star Wars follower" and "Jedi Knight" 
										was thrown out of a Jobcentre in 
										Southend, Essex, for refusing to remove 
										his hood, and later received an apology. 
										The man said that "The main reason is I 
										want to wear my hood up and I have got a 
										religion which allows me to do that."
										The Jedi Church A Jedi "church" has been 
										born in a galaxy far far away - North 
										Wales.
										The Holyhead chapter of the self-styled 
										Jedi Church, which claims up to 400,000 
										members worldwide, has sprung up thanks 
										to brothers Barney and Daniel Jones, 
										both Star Wars obsessives.
										The "church" is only one of a handful 
										around the planet, said hairdresser 
										Barney, 26, the Anglesey Order Minister, 
										also known as Master Jonba Hehol.
										
										The 
										force: Barney 
										Jones 26, aka Jonba Hehol, and his 
										brother Daniel Jones, 21, aka Morda 
										Hehol, have formed the first Jedi 'church' 
										- in Holyhead informing dailymail.
										
										The Jidiism teachings based is based on 
										the popular Star Wars character Yoda - 
										the 900-year-old grand master - as well 
										as readings, essays submitted meditation 
										and relaxation, visualisation and 
										discuss healthy eating.
										The Jedi religion is about life 
										improvement, inner peace and changing 
										your lifestyle so you have a more 
										fulfilling existence said the same 
										source.
										Impact Australia: In Australia more than 
										70,000 people (0.37%) declared 
										themselves members of the Jedi order in 
										the 2001 census. The Australian Bureau 
										of Statistics issued an official press 
										release in response to media interest on 
										the subject. The ABS announced that any 
										answers that were Jedi-related in the 
										religion question were to be classified 
										as 'not defined' and stressed the social 
										impact of making misleading or false 
										statements on the census. An ABS 
										spokesperson said that "further analysis 
										of census responses has been undertaken 
										since the release of census data on June 
										17 to separately identify the number of 
										Jedi-related responses". It is believed 
										that there is no numerical value that 
										determines a religion per definition of 
										the ABS, but there would need to be a 
										belief system or philosophy as well as 
										some form of institutional or 
										organisational structure in place.
										
										The push for Australian's to declare 
										themselves as members of the Jedi order 
										was one of the first examples of a 
										concept going "viral" on the internet in 
										Australia. The website which was set up 
										to promote the concept was visited over 
										100,000 times in a five week period and 
										was first archived by the Wayback 
										Machine on the 21st of October, 2001
										The 2006 census recorded 58,053 Jedi. In 
										the 2011 census, the numbers listing 
										their faith as Jedi had picked up from 
										the 2006 census to 65,000.
										
										The Jedi Census phenomenon attracted the 
										attention of sociologist of religion 
										Adam Possamai who discusses it in his 
										book Religion and Popular Culture: A 
										Hyper-Real Testament. Possamai’s study 
										placed Jediism in the context of a 
										specificmethodological classification (‘hyper-real 
										religions’) and attempted to demonstrate 
										that hostility existed towards new 
										religions in Australia.
										
										In the lead-up to the 2006 census, there 
										were reports that writing Jedi on the 
										2006 census could lead to a fine for 
										providing 'false or misleading' 
										information. This is despite previous 
										admissions by the ABS that they were 'fairly 
										relaxed' about the issue in 2001 and 
										that nobody had been prosecuted in at 
										least 15 years.
										
										The Census form is strictly confidential, 
										and as the first page containing the 
										details of the citizen is removed from 
										their given answers it is impossible for 
										the Australian government to prosecute 
										for false or misleading answers to the 
										census questions, as they would have to 
										break the privacy act in doing so.
										
										
										Canada: In 
										the 2001 census, 21,000 Canadians put 
										down their religion as Jedi Knight. This 
										fact has been referenced by the prime 
										minister's office as a rationale for 
										making the 40-page long census form 
										voluntary. In the 2011 National 
										Household Survey the number has fallen 
										to 9000. The phenomenon is rumoured to 
										have started in Vancouver, BC. Two radio 
										DJ's formerly of Jack FM discovered the 
										rule and announced it on air. They 
										further stated that if one puts Jedi 
										down on the census it then makes one a 
										Jedi Knight.
										
										CROATIA: IN THE 2012 CENSUS 303 CROATS 
										PUT JEDI AS THEIR RELIGION.
										
										
										Czech 
										Republic: The 
										2011 census preliminarily recorded 
										15,070 people answering the voluntary 
										question on religion as belonging to the 
										Jedi religion, described by the Czech 
										Statistics Office as "the moral values 
										of the Jedi knights". The office noted 
										that this is an international phenomenon. 
										As the 2011 census form did not list 
										religions, these having to be filled 
										out, the total number of Jedi is not 
										artificially boosted by those who were 
										not aware of the phenomenon prior to 
										filling out the census form. On the 
										other hand many people encouraged others 
										in discussions and then media to fill 
										the Jedi religion prior 2011 census (as 
										a form of protest against range, overall 
										cost and obligatory filling of the 
										census), which is probably the cause. 
										The highest number of Jedis were 
										recorded to live in Prague.
										
										
										Ireland: In 
										a May 2012 review of the 2011 census, 
										the Dáil Public Accounts Committee asked 
										the Central Statistics Office about the 
										reliability of self-reported answers, 
										instancing people listing Jedi as their 
										religion. The response was "We could 
										probably tell you the number of people 
										who have declared themselves as such, 
										but we don't publish it".
										
										
										Montenegro: In 
										the 2011 census in Montenegro, a group 
										of young men declared themselves as 
										"Jedi" on the ethnicity question, as 
										they believe that ethnicity should not 
										be an issue today.
										
										New 
										Zealand: Over 
										53,000 people listed themselves as Jedi 
										in New Zealand's 2001 census. New 
										Zealand had the highest per capita 
										population of reported Jedi in the world 
										that year, with 1.5% marking "Jedi" as 
										their religion. The city of Dunedin had 
										the highest population of reported Jedi 
										per capita.[1] Statistics New Zealand 
										treated Jedi responses as "Answer 
										understood, but will not be counted". If 
										Jedi were counted it would have been the 
										second largest religion in New Zealand. 
										The percentages of religious 
										affiliations were:
										
										There was a fall in the number of New 
										Zealand Jedi five years later, with some 
										20,000 people giving this as their 
										religion in the 2006 census. It is 
										unknown whether the numbers have 
										continued to fall as the 2011 census was 
										not completed due to an earthquake in 
										Christchurch.
										
										SERBIA: 640 SERBIANS IDENTIFIED AS JEDI.
										
										
										
										England and Wales: In 
										England and Wales 390,127 people (almost 
										0.8%) stated their religion as Jedi on 
										their 2001 Census forms, surpassing 
										Sikhism, Judaism, and Buddhism, and 
										making it the fourth largest reported 
										religion in the country.[24] In the 2001 
										Census, 2.6% of the population of 
										Brighton claimed to be Jedi.
										
										It was confirmed prior to the census 
										that citizens were not liable for a fine 
										in relation to question 10 (on 
										religion). This was based on section 
										1(2) of the Census (Amendment) Act 2000, 
										which amended section 8 of the Census 
										Act 2000 to state that "no person shall 
										be liable to a penalty under subsection 
										(1) for refusing or neglecting to state 
										any particulars in respect of religion". 
										The change in the law was implemented by 
										The Census (Amendment) Order 2000 and 
										The Census (Amendment) Regulations 2000.
										
										Jedi was assigned its own code in the 
										United Kingdom for census processing, 
										the number 896. Officials from the 
										Office for National Statistics pointed 
										out that this merely means that it has 
										been registered as a common answer to 
										the "religion" question and that this 
										does not confer on it the status of 
										official recognition. John Pullinger, 
										Director of Reporting and Analysis for 
										the Census, noted that many people who 
										would otherwise not have completed a 
										Census form did so solely to record 
										themselves as Jedi, so this joke helped 
										to improve the quality of the Census. 
										The Office for National Statistics 
										revealed the total figure in a press 
										release entitled "390,000 Jedis there 
										are".
										
										In June 2005, Jamie Reed, newly elected 
										Labour Member of Parliament for Copeland 
										in Cumbria, declared himself to be the 
										first Jedi Member of Parliament during 
										his maiden speech. The statement, made 
										in the context of an ongoing debate 
										regarding the Incitement to Religious 
										Hatred Bill, was confirmed by Reed's 
										office to be a joke instead of a serious 
										statement of faith. During a subsequent 
										committee debate on the bill, the 
										Conservative Member of Parliament for 
										Beaconsfield, Dominic Grieve, proposed 
										as "a bit of a joke" to exclude Jedi 
										Knights from the protection of the 
										proposed act, along with Satanists and 
										proponents of animal sacrifice, 
										illustrating the difficulty of defining 
										religious belief in legislation. 
										Similarly, in April 2006,Edward Leigh, 
										the Conservative Member of Parliament 
										for Gainsborough, asked whether he would 
										be allowed to set up a Jedi knights 
										faith school during a Committee debate 
										on the Education and Inspections Bill.
										
										On 16 November 2006, two Jedi delivered 
										a protest letter to UN officials in 
										recognition of the International Day for 
										Tolerance. They requested that it be 
										renamed the "UN Interstellar Day of 
										Tolerance" and cited the 2001 Census 
										showing 390,000 Jedi in England and 
										Wales.
										
										According to 2011 census figures, the 
										number of Jedi had fallen to 176,632, 
										placing it in seventh place, having been 
										overtaken by Judaism and Buddhism, but 
										still comfortably outnumbering any other 
										alternative or mock religions. The 
										magazineMetal Hammer also encouraged 
										readers to mark "Heavy Metal" as their 
										religion, leading to over 6,000 
										responses.
										Scotland: In Scotland, 14,052 people 
										stated that Jedi was their current 
										religion (14,014 "Jedi", 24 "Jedi Order" 
										and 14 "Sith") and 2,733 stated that it 
										was their religion of upbringing (2,682 
										"Jedi", 36 "Jedi Order" and 15 "The Dark 
										Side") in the 2001 census. The 
										proportion of people stating their 
										religion as Jedi in Scotland was lower 
										than that in England and Wales, at 
										0.277%.
										In April 2009, it became known that 
										eight police officers serving with 
										Scotland's largest police force, 
										Strathclyde, listed their official 
										religion as Jedi in voluntary diversity 
										forms. The details were obtained in a 
										Freedom of Information request by Jane's 
										Police Review.
										Criticism Some atheist groups object to 
										non-religious individuals answering with 
										any joke answer, because this would lead 
										to a census undercount of non-religious 
										people, and lessen their political 
										influence.
										 
 
								 
							 
						 
					 
				 
				From Jediism way page
				
				Jediism is a very personal and individualistic religion but as 
				you look through the website you will see there are many 
				different paths in Jediism. Some of the members here follow very 
				different paths in life though here at Jediism many of us share 
				similar viewpoints. First, there is only the Force. This is the 
				foundation of Jediism. The Force is our religion and in that, it 
				is not a question of belief in a God or not, for us it simply 
				doesn't come into play as we believe the guidance of the Force 
				will bring us to a course of right action. As a result some have 
				been guided to a belief in a God and others have not, but all 
				believe that the Force will set them on their best path possible. 
				The root of the word "Jediism" is "Jedi". To find out more about 
				what a Jedi is and learn what Jedi believe and do, please 
				continue on to the section about Jedi.
				
				Jediism does not require prayer, worship, or other such actions 
				as some other religions might. Instead of ceremonies, members of 
				Jediism share common beliefs and ideals. One of the definitions 
				for religion is a sharing of common beliefs and that's exactly 
				what makes Jediism a religion. Our fundamental belief in the 
				Force is the overall common belief shared by all Jediism members. 
				You will also find other belief systems in the forum; however 
				this site is solely intended for discussing Jediism, although 
				all views and people of differing beliefs are welcome on the 
				forum and blogs and currently do participate. As mentioned 
				before, it is our views of the Force that make Jediism what it 
				is. In the Jedi Community you will find many Christian Jedi, 
				Muslim Jedi, Jewish Jedi, and many other faiths incorporated 
				with the Jedi path. What separates us all is how we feel about 
				the Force. There are certain core views and beliefs that must be 
				present for someone to be able to call themselves a Jedi that 
				you can learn about in the Jedi section.
				
				What unites all of us is our beliefs/philosophies of the Jedi 
				path. There is definitely some room for debate in what exactly 
				are the Jedi beliefs and philosophies but this is not part of 
				the religious aspect. As you look through the website and forum 
				we hope that this helps you understand Jediism. If you have any 
				further questions please do not hesitate using the contact us 
				form on the homepage of the website or else post some questions 
				in the forum. We hope you find what you are looking for and if 
				Jediism can help you out that journey we welcome you!!
				
				We at Jediism Way will never ask for money, donations (unless 
				donating towards a cause), will not ask you to take vows, oaths, 
				or any other form to be a member, if is simply a belief in only 
				the Force and that is the home of Jediism.
				 
				 
				 
				  Jedi Search 11/2010 to 
				3/2015 
				 
				
				Le jediisme est 
				un nouveau 
				mouvement religieux non-théiste 
				non-organisé basé sur les enseignements philosophiques et 
				spirituels des Jedi, 
				qui sont originellement des personnages imaginaires issus des 
				médias Star 
				Wars.
				
				Les Jedi affirment l'existence d'une entité métaphysique 
				mystérieuse qu'ils appellent la Force et préconisent l'adhésion 
				au Code Jedi. Selon différents recensements dans certains pays 
				anglophones, plus de 500 000 personnes ont indiqué que leur 
				religion était Jedi, dans ce qui a été appelé le phénomène Jedi 
				de 2001. Il existe au moins trois « temples » Jedi (qui 
				correspondent à des églises) enregistrés et organisés aux 
				États-Unis et au Royaume-Uni.
				
				Les Jedi interprètent et utilisent les enseignements 
				philosophiques de Star 
				Wars dans la vie 
				de tous les jours. La philosophie du jediisme est un mélange de Taoisme, 
				de Bouddhisme, 
				et des travaux d'Alan 
				Watts et Joseph 
				Campbell1. 
				Le jediisme partage des idéaux avec de nombreuses religions 
				ainsi que les aspects spirituels de certains arts martiaux. 
				Malgré une grande diversité idéologique liée à l'abondance de 
				ressources Star Wars, les Jedi partagent un ensemble de valeurs 
				fondamentales essentielles à leur voie. La plupart des Jedi 
				suivent un code de conduite similaire au code de la chevalerie, 
				le Code 
				Jedi. Cependant, parce qu'il n'y a pas de voie unique ou 
				de livre saint dans le jediisme, il y a beaucoup de codes, tous 
				plus ou moins basés sur la philosophie, codes et leçons de Star 
				Wars.
				
				La Force est ce dont tout provient, ce en quoi tout existe, et 
				ce en quoi tout retourne. Beaucoup l'appellent un champ 
				d'énergie et elle 
				peut être comparée au qi ou 
				au dieu 
				cosmique du panthéisme. C'est l'énergie derrière l'existence 
				de tout ce qui est connu ou non de l'Homme, et la pensée qui l'entoure 
				est comparable à la théorie 
				du tout en 
				physique théorique et en philosophie. La Force ne demande ni 
				prière ni adoration ou autres actions similaires présentes dans 
				d'autres religions, cependant la plupart des Jedi pratiquent 
				quelques formes de méditation.
				
				La plupart des Jedi choisissent de se concentrer sur la Force à 
				travers l'un des trois aspects spirituels les plus acceptés : La 
				Force personnelle, La Force de vie, et la Force unificatrice.
				
				À cause des origines de culture pop du jediisme et de l'utilisation 
				du web pour organiser, partager et attirer les autres vers les 
				communautés Jedi, les organisations Jedi ont tendance à attirer 
				des individus assez insolites. Le site webthejediismway.org, 
				l'un des plus gros forums Jedi en son temps, alerte ses 
				visiteurs des sites web et individus « toxiques »2.
				
				La communauté Jedi semble incapable de garder, organiser et 
				partager ses propres informations. La communauté semble 
				constamment souffrir de drames et menaces juridiques causant la 
				perte de sites et contributeurs importants3.
				
				Le jediisme est souvent rapporté sur Internet et dans les 
				articles de presse de façon non-importante, fausse et 
				généralement négative. La mauvaise presse du phénomène Jedi de 
				2001 et un reportage de la BBC ont contribué à la création des 
				termes « jediism » (jediisme) et « jedi realism »3.
				
				Deux Jedi auto-proclamés portant des robes Jedi de Star Wars 
				ainsi qu'une tierce personne s'étant déguisée en wookieeont 
				demandé que l'ONU change la journée internationale de la 
				tolérance en la journée interstellaire de la tolérance4. 
				Ce type d'actions contribue à donner du jediisme en général une 
				image excentrique, parfois de façon injuste.
				
				La Church of 
				Jediism, une société privée à responsabilité limitée 
				(private limited company) établie à Holyhead au Royaume-Uni par 
				Daniel Jones apparait régulièrement dans les médias dans des 
				controverses avec Tesco (chaîne de supermarchés), Jobcentre 
				(pôle emploi), combat avec jouets Star Wars sur plateau TV ainsi 
				qu'une attaque par « Dark Vador », un homme en état d’ébriété 
				vêtu d'un sac poubelle noir. D'autres organisations Jedi 
				éprouvent régulièrement leur mépris pour cette entreprise
				
				Ce phénomène est un mouvement qui eut lieu à partir de 2001 dans 
				divers paysanglophones et 
				qui consista, pour les citoyens de ces pays, à indiquer sur leur 
				formulaire de recensement que 
				leur religion était 
				« Jedi » 
				ou « Jedi Knight » (chevalier Jedi), dit aussi Jediisme, en 
				référence à l'ordre religieux de l'univers fictionnel de Star 
				Wars.
				
				La campagne fut organisée en faisant circuler des courriels prétendant 
				que si assez de personnes écrivaient « Jedi », cette religion 
				serait officiellement reconnue par le gouvernement. Les 
				courriels demandaient parfois aux gens de dire que leur religion 
				était « Jedi » « parce que vous aimez Star Wars » ou « juste 
				pour ennuyer les gens ».
				
				D'autres raisons ont été évoquées pour expliquer ce comportement, 
				comme l'esprit frivole, l'envie de protester ou de se moquer du 
				recensement ou de la religion, ou le désir d'affirmer ou de 
				prétendre qu'on est un chevalier Jedi.
				
				Tout ceci montre que le jediisme peut être également revendiqué 
				comme religion de façon humoristique ou parodique, comme par 
				exemple le pastafarisme et 
				le culte de la Licorne 
				Rose Invisible, et non uniquement de façon sérieuse (présupposant 
				un respect des préceptes des Jedi), excentrique, commerciale, ou 
				malveillante.
				
				
				À ce jour, seuls les États-Unis ont 
				reconnu ce mouvement comme un religionEn Australie, 
				plus de 70 000 personnes se 
				sont déclarés membres de l'ordre Jedi lors du recensement de 2001. 
				L'Australian 
				Bureau of Statistics a 
				publié un communiqué annonçant que toute réponse liée aux Jedi serait 
				classée dans la catégorie « religion non définie », tout en 
				rappelant que fausser la pertinence du recensement pouvait être 
				coûteux pour la collectivité, car les données qui en résultent 
				sont très utilisées
				
				En Nouvelle-Zélande, plus 
				de 53 000 personnes furent 
				listées comme étant Jedi[Quand ?], 
				équivalent à 1,5 % de la population, le plus grand score dans le 
				monde, cette année-là. Considérée comme « Notée, mais non prise 
				en compte », la religion Jedi aurait été la deuxième de 
				Nouvelle-Zélande ; les résultats de ce recensement ayant été :
				
				
				Lors du recensement de 2006, 
				il y eut une forte baisse de « Jedi », avec seulement 20 000 
				personnes l'indiquant comme leur religion.
				
				
				Au Canada, 20 000 Jedi furent 
				comptés lors du recensement de 2001
				
				En Angleterre et 
				au Pays 
				de Galles, 390 127 personnes (près 
				de 0,8 % de la population) indiquèrent que Jedi était leur 
				religion sur leur formulaire de recensement en 2001, faisant 
				d'elle la quatrième religion indiquée. Les plus grands 
				pourcentages venaient typiquement de villes avec une importante 
				population étudiante. Les pourcentages des affiliations 
				religieuses (sans compter les athées et 
				ceux qui n'ont pas répondu) étaient :
				
				
				Le jediisme n'est pas reconnu comme une religion officielle dans 
				les pays où le mouvement a eu lieu, bien que le Royaume-Uni lui 
				ait assigné son propre code pour le dépouillement des résultats 
				du recensement. L'Office britannique des statistiques a indiqué 
				que le fait que « Jedi » ait son propre code ne lui confère pas 
				le statut de religion officielle ; cela veut simplement dire qu'il 
				a été enregistré comme une réponse courante.
				
				
				Bien que le phénomène ait débuté en 2001, le recensement de 2011 
				en République 
				tchèque compte 
				15 070 chevaliers Jedi
				 
				As you may notice no up to date numbers 
				or statistics can be found. Very interesting.... 
				Link to the best web site on Jediism, 
				publications, books, topics, etc...
				http://instituteforjedirealiststudies.org/library/
				
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