Sunday 12 February 2012

Improving your life through the 8 limbs of yoga; an excerpt from Mysore, India




I wake at 4:15am to the sound of a boisterous rooster who lives just down the block. I say a prayer of gratitude for another day and ask that all beings be free from suffering and peaceful.  I slip out from underneath my mosquito net, put my feet on the floor and touch the earth with my right hand and then to my heart. I thank mother earth for her constant love and support underneath me and all around me.  I flip the switch to the hot water geezer and wait... hopefully water will come this morning.  Right away it begins a slow stream and a silent sigh of relief comes over me.  I grab my stainless steel coffee pot that has come with me to India now since 2004, fill it with locally grown coffee that i get from the man down the block, and tread up 3 flights of stairs to the kitchen where a single burner awaits me. Ten minutes later with coffee in hand, I'm sitting outside on the foyer listening to the sound of the locals on their morning walk, rickshaw engines off in the distance, morning chanting and my friend the rooster who still continues to let his presence be known.  

Twenty minutes later a slow, steady stream of hot water has filled my 5 gallon bucket and i'm ready to squat down and take a "bath".  I dry off, throw on some old cotton yoga clothes and unroll my yoga mat and rug.  I stand facing east in my room as I step mindfully onto the top of my mat looking down and spreading my toes and making sure my connection to the earth  is grounded and yet gentle.  I bring my hands into prayer position in front of my heart, press my thumbs against my sternum, close my eyes and quietly begin to chant an opening mantra. This particular mantra asks for the veil of illusion and conditioned existence to be lifted so we many see clearly and know our Self and it also acknowledges, with tremendous gratitude, all of the teachers who have come before us and worked tirelessly on their own spiritual practice to ensure I can be standing here today reaping the benefits of this ancient science of yoga.

I open my eyes as the sun begins to rise, inhaling deeply I raise my arms up over head pressing my palms together and gaze up at my thumbs.  Exhaling, I bend forward touching my hands to the earth and bow my head with humility and grace. 
The next 90 min that follow will be a steady stream of long and smooth inhalations and exhalations coordinated with many different types of body postures (asanas) that bend the body forwards and back, side to side, twisting and eventually upside down for some time.  All of this breath and movement creates a deep internal heat INSIDE the body, flushing the muscles and skin, lubricating the joints and cleansing and massaging all of the internal organs as a gentle sweat pervades the body. Each inhalation is consciously taken in slowly and deeply down into the bottom of the ribcage and lower abdomen and each exhalation begins with a steady lower abdominal contraction moving the breath back out of the body as completely as possible.  The sound of this gentle glottal breath along with extremely mindful movement through the postures instantly brings the mind into a state of calm and peace.  A state of conscious focus as we continue to bring the mind back to "the present" each time it shows signs of wandering off.  Each inhale is a gift and each exhale an offering. At the end of the practice I lay down, cover myself with a light blanket and lie very still in body and mind.  I allow the healing energy of the practice to penetrate all aspects of my being.  After ten minutes i slowly rise up, chant a closing mantra of thanks and again ask for all beings to be happy and free from suffering.   Now the REAL practice begins.

Those 90 minutes on my mat focusing my mind sets the stage for the unwavering mindfulness I ideally want to sustain all day long as I interact with many different types of people in many different situations.  Throughout the day I observe my thoughts, my feelings, my actions and reactions, my speech, my intentions, my motives, and my behaviors.  My breath is a constant barometer of feedback as to the quality of my mind and emotions, as well as a priceless tool to help get me through those uncomfortable and "sticky" moments of life, just as it does on my mat.  The physical benefits that yoga brings are clear and necessary for us to go deeper in our practices to reap the benefits of a clear and focused mind as well as healthy relationships. The postures are the foundation and springboard for our practice but they are just the beginning.  If we really want to see if our yoga is working we must look at our relationships, our relationship with everything, particularly the one we have with ourself first and foremost.  

The practice of the 8 limbed yoga path is the most special gift we can give to ourselves each and every day. It helps to set us free from so much unnecessary, often self-induced, suffering. It connects us very deeply to our true nature and from that place so many questions are answered.  And in the process we feel better, think clearer, breath easier and love more. 
All we have to do is step onto our mat in a special place, set our intention and begin with an inhalation. The rest will unfold in time and the transformation that is possible goes beyond anything I could have ever imagined. I hope you feel inspired to begin and I wish you so much peace on your journey.

Blessings from India,
Stacy

Sunday 5 February 2012

SHARATH'S CONFERENCE YESTERDAY


FEB 4, 2012  completely cut and pasted from:  earthyogi.blogspot.in

SHARATH IN CONFERENCE: "I AM NOT IN FACEBOOK I MADE THAT MISTAKE BEFORE"

Sharath comes in through the main door and foyer, chatty students fill the room again and it looks like it is fuller than ever.  He sits in silence for an uncomfortable long period of time.  We all look at him, the walls, then him again. A cell phone rings.  "Some girl is calling him" he says, laughter ensues.  Another long silence.  OK! finished conference! he says with a smile.  Everyone laughs.  Must be hard to talk for an hour after leading 3 classes.

Sharath:  There was a young boy, enlightened, who did not talk.  He goes to a town that has a big population and sits by the Bayan tree which is where people gather to talk.  He sits there in silence, says nothing. He is 14 years old.  No talk, not a word.  In the morning by 5:30 AM there are 100 people sitting next to him, silent.  Nobody is talking, everyone is still.
Just like the Budda Boy of our times
Then two professors of Sanskrit from a university are angry. They cannot believe people are going to him while they have read all the books and know all interpretations. They decide to degrade him, to shame him. They will go to the boy and ask him about the interpretations of the shasthras, the scriptures.  They go, at first they sit for 2 minutes, then they forget everything.  Then they sit still.  They don't say anything.

Why am I telling you this?

If you read but don't experience yoga within, or if you are reading books and only that, it is useless.  That is why Pattabji Jois said 99% practice 1 % theory.  99% means experience yoga within you, to develop ourselves in a way so that yoga will happen.  People like to do 99% talk about yoga.

Why is Ashtanga Yoga so popular? because there is an energy there that changes us from within and happens through our practice, only then you realize yoga practically. Then, when we practice like this something will change within, many things will change.

Krishanamacharya and Pattabhi Jois, the greatness about them, is that they did it practically and they also read all the manuscripts, so they had complete knowledge of yoga which some people don't have.  Other places where you go they tell you yoga is not physical it is only chita vriti nirodaha (cessation of the fluctuations of the mind, yoga sutra 1.2), asana is not yoga.

Krishamacharya
But asana is the foundation for our spiritual practice.  Spiritual practice causes changes, but the change should happen from within.

If we are not doing yoga, then is like when you are thirsty, if you don't drink water for a while you die. Yoga becomes like that, I do it otherwise I die.  Someone asked me once why do I wake up at 1 O'clock to do yoga. Instantly I replied: Why do you eat food everyday? -  It is like that, it comes with practice, for a long time, not one day for 6 hours but many years.

Before people thought that yoga was only for sanyasis or renunciates, all these restrictions, but Jois and Krishnamacharya changed all that, they taught yoga to their own.  My grandfather taught his wife first.

Amma, Pattabhi Jois' wife, seen here with a very young Sharath
When my grandfather married his wife he took her to meet Krishnamacharya, he wanted to introduce her, and Krishnamacharya said "be careful with this man, if you ask him to bring Chamundi Hill he will carry it to you".  So they had a relationship like that of a father and son, it was so beautiful, he spent so much time with Krishnamacharya.

Once Krishnamacharya was giving a lecture to a few of his students and P.Jois did Kapotasana, and next thing Krishanamcharya was standing on top of Jois, there was a stone on the floor and it was hurting my grandfather's shoulder.  What would you do? I would have screamed!

But he stayed there, he did not say anything, then after 15 minutes Krishanamcharya finished his lecture and came out, P.Jois had blood coming out of his arm.  Krishnamacharya asked if he was OK, and Jois said that yes he was, he took some mud and put it on his shoulder. He had a scar there for the rest of his life, until the day he died.  That is how tough he was, he had to be cause to learn yoga was hard in those days people did not have food and as I told you last time, now we have everything and also a lot of problems.
Wonder if that was the moment, we know that is Jois
under Krihsnamacharya
Mind is a very tricky thing, you can go to higher level to make your mind clear, active , pure, so when we practice it is not only physical but how we can go through a spiritual path? only through devotion.

Some say "oh I just do bhakti yoga or Dhyana or Hatha. What is Hatha? in America these days they say, oh I do ha-tha yoga, but what is that? Hatha Yoga is bakthti and jnana and all of these are within Ashtanga Yoga.  Hatha is surya and chandra (sun and moon), but you also have devotion.  So within Ashtanga yoga we have all of them.

It is only through ignorance that we cannot realize it and then the practice can become physical because we look at others, then there is no meaning in the practice, we are just comparing.

Everyone has their limitations we cannot always compare with otters. Oh he can jump back so nicely, or why can I not do backbend (I know, guilty of that!).

Never follow the Buddha don't imitate him. Become the Buddha.  You are not to be a carbon copy of the Buddha. You can only become a Buddha when you are separated and try to find your destination on your own.  When you discover your path, try to reach for your goal then you become a Buddha.

Downtown here some people dress like Gandhiji and stand there, but they don't become Gandhiji, they would need to develop his qualities, like ahimsha (non-violence), to become like him.

All of our experiences are different but the goal is the same. When you do asana our experiences are different, we have different kinds of energy, but the goal is always the same. So do not compare to others. You see in practice, some senior students due a handstand, ekam dwi, (one two), and handstand, and others copy that, or they watch some videos and try to copy that.  They highlight that because they can do it, I guess is good they do not highlight the bad.

Doing handstands like that will make your shoulders suffer, you need to balance the practice.

People get frustrated with Mari D, Kurmasana, Backbends.  The practice is testing you.  Do you like your yoga or not? If your teacher goes too easy on you you will get less respect for it.

There was a yogi who had a student going along with him everywhere, he did sava (service) and cleaned his ashram for years but one day he became disillusioned and asked the guru why it was taking so long to become enlightened.  The guru took him to a lake and tried to drown him. He left him under water for 3 minutes and when he finally let him breathe he said: There is your answer, you have to want it like you wanted to breathe.

People say I am in a spirtiual path, they sit in asharam, like this (signals someone sitting and falling asleep).  Then they talk or gossip: oh this woman is now with another man.  Especially as they get older, they have less to do so they go to temple but they gossip: Oh did you hear?  People go to a temple because it gives a chance to connect with God, but some just go to get free food, as here in India sometimes different families do for the temples and so people go for the food.  So you get to eat.

This happens in yoga also, in Facebook.  "Oh Sharath gave me a new asana". "Sahrath did chatuary properly".  "Sharath stopped me on Mari D".  "I have been doing yoga for 35 years and he stopped me at Mari D!"  But they do not think why you were stopped at Mari D.

Guruji knew little English, sometimes that is good.

Pattabhi Jois, a very special person
I have seen 100,000 people come through here and so many people come with so much ego, or with their teachers energy, because our energy also comes from our teachers.

You see Krishnamacharya students and they are always so serious (laughter) they don't even smile (he mimicks someone really serious), but Guruji was not like that, the first thing with him was always a smile.  So people come with so much ego, they say: I am here a month and I want to show I know yoga very well, I know, but you don't know anything. I dont know anything either. Once we are humble we can learn something.

He mentions in Sanskrit the Yoga Laksha? the qualities of a yogi:

He says that a yogi talks with purity, whatever he is thinking or feeling he talks, it is always good things, so when you hear him is very impressive, a real yogi is impressive, has no impurities.  A yogi is also healthy, no physical or mental diseases. There are lots of delusions and we can't be yogis like that, we need to practice for many years.

OK, 20 minutes for questions

Q: People say that in traditional ashtanga yoga we don't use the wall but you told me once to use it and I saw a student in the afternoon using it, and I wanted to clarify that

A: You said "traditional" ashtanga yoga, those people don't know ashtanga, so you should say asana.  Phrase it like that.

So yes while doing the 3rd limb, when in asana, yes, I don't want a student to crash on the floor and break our shala, [laughter] so I told that student to use the wall.  Nothing wrong with that.

I am not there to help, so you can use the wall but not props, otherwise you end up using props for everything all your life, for trikonasana you use props and never get to grab your toe.

Q: You say Guruji was your inspiration. What was his inspiration, how did he just come to the shala even when old and sick?

A: As I told you you can't copy others.  Krishanamcharya was Krishnamacharya, Guruji was Guruji.  Although he was his student.  He had so much energy as Krishnamacharya.  He wanted to be there for his students, so he came and sat here.  He was there for all, for me and for all, he was a special person.

Q: Tell us about your yoga practice, about your spiritual practice...

A: After marraige I became wiser in my spiritual practice.  It is a cycle that should happen.  When you are a bachelor be a bachelor when you are a family be family.  Everyone should experience this, getting married, having children, then you understand the beauty of it.

Before for 4 years I did not practice, but once I added the practice to my life I did yoga for 7 years just for fun, then everything shifted to Gokulam, then for 6 years no practice.  Then when I was 19 my mother told me to come and help Guruji.  I resisted I said I would come tomorrow and then tomorrow again. One month went by, then one day I don't know what happened, I came and have been here ever since.

Once it became part of my life I became more serious about asana, like you are, 2, 3 hours like that, month by month. Then Guruji started me on philosophy and I became more spiritual. Before that I was doing aerobics.  Then I got married. I was one now I am four. I am divided into 4.  I don't know how many divisions I have here, students are like a family too.  As I said when everyone comes together like in chanting we develop a good energy, very high energy, meditation happens automatically here.

It does not happen in one moment, or if you go somewhere: "Oh if I go to America and breathe this air..." it is not like that.  Everyone is spiritual, only because of ignorance and our attention not going in the right places we do not see it.  When the attention comes then we realize we are spiritual.

We are all spiritual it just does not look like that
Nothing comes like a big light.  To grow a business someone might say that but if it comes like that it goes very quickly.

It is like a plant that has a seed and soil and what you put in it.  It grows, you have to water it.

--
A man outside, a seller of some sort, calls out trying to get attention.  Be careful of that man, says Sharath.  I tried giving him my old clothes and he refused them because he can make more money with his old clothes. He laughs.

---

I had a friend, he is a Brahman and he was always making fun of spiritual people, of priests.  Then his father and mother died within three months.  Then one day I went to visit him and he was doing puja (religious ceremonies).  Sometimes life changes us.

MY QUESTION: yes,  I dared ask.  I confess I was very nervous, especially because of the type of question, but since he had brought it up I thought it would be OK... so I asked:

Q: Are you in Facebook?

A: No.  (Laughter). I made that mistake once and within one day I had 1,600 requests for this and that [he laughs], I realized there that it was a mistake, and I corrected that mistake.


Q: How do you manage so much attention? So many people?

A: I never thought about that.  I am used to this, I have seen people come and go for 40 years.  I am one man to 200 students I try to do my best, to give everyone something. Most of our practice is giving.  Your attention should be on the yoga not on me.

Yoga is great, I am just the transmitter, it comes through me, I transmit to you. I try to become a stabilizer too, to stabilize the energy, but it is always about giving.

Krishnamacharya and Jois have already done a lot of work now we must first realize it ourselves and then pass it to the next generation.
-----

NOTES FROM CONFERENCE FROM FEBRUARY 5th 2012 taken from

FEB 4, 2012

SHARATH IN CONFERENCE: I AM NOT IN FACEBOOK I MADE THAT MISTAKE BEFORE

Sharath comes in through the main door and foyer, chatty students fill the room again and it looks like it is fuller than ever.  He sits in silence for an uncomfortable long period of time.  We all look at him, the walls, then him again. A cell phone rings.  "Some girl is calling him" he says, laughter ensues.  Another long silence.  OK! finished conference! he says with a smile.  Everyone laughs.  Must be hard to talk for an hour after leading 3 classes.

Sharath:  There was a young boy, enlightened, who did not talk.  He goes to a town that has a big population and sits by the Bayan tree which is where people gather to talk.  He sits there in silence, says nothing. He is 14 years old.  No talk, not a word.  In the morning by 5:30 AM there are 100 people sitting next to him, silent.  Nobody is talking, everyone is still.
Just like the Budda Boy of our times
Then two professors of Sanskrit from a university are angry. They cannot believe people are going to him while they have read all the books and know all interpretations. They decide to degrade him, to shame him. They will go to the boy and ask him about the interpretations of the shasthras, the scriptures.  They go, at first they sit for 2 minutes, then they forget everything.  Then they sit still.  They don't say anything.

Why am I telling you this?

If you read but don't experience yoga within, or if you are reading books and only that, it is useless.  That is why Pattabji Jois said 99% practice 1 % theory.  99% means experience yoga within you, to develop ourselves in a way so that yoga will happen.  People like to do 99% talk about yoga.

Why is Ashtanga Yoga so popular? because there is an energy there that changes us from within and happens through our practice, only then you realize yoga practically. Then, when we practice like this something will change within, many things will change.

Krishanamacharya and Pattabhi Jois, the greatness about them, is that they did it practically and they also read all the manuscripts, so they had complete knowledge of yoga which some people don't have.  Other places where you go they tell you yoga is not physical it is only chita vriti nirodaha (cessation of the fluctuations of the mind, yoga sutra 1.2), asana is not yoga.

Krishamacharya
But asana is the foundation for our spiritual practice.  Spiritual practice causes changes, but the change should happen from within.

If we are not doing yoga, then is like when you are thirsty, if you don't drink water for a while you die. Yoga becomes like that, I do it otherwise I die.  Someone asked me once why do I wake up at 1 O'clock to do yoga. Instantly I replied: Why do you eat food everyday? -  It is like that, it comes with practice, for a long time, not one day for 6 hours but many years.

Before people thought that yoga was only for sanyasis or renunciates, all these restrictions, but Jois and Krishnamacharya changed all that, they taught yoga to their own.  My grandfather taught his wife first.

Amma, Pattabhi Jois' wife, seen here with a very young Sharath
When my grandfather married his wife he took her to meet Krishnamacharya, he wanted to introduce her, and Krishnamacharya said "be careful with this man, if you ask him to bring Chamundi Hill he will carry it to you".  So they had a relationship like that of a father and son, it was so beautiful, he spent so much time with Krishnamacharya.

Once Krishnamacharya was giving a lecture to a few of his students and P.Jois did Kapotasana, and next thing Krishanamcharya was standing on top of Jois, there was a stone on the floor and it was hurting my grandfather's shoulder.  What would you do? I would have screamed!

But he stayed there, he did not say anything, then after 15 minutes Krishanamcharya finished his lecture and came out, P.Jois had blood coming out of his arm.  Krishnamacharya asked if he was OK, and Jois said that yes he was, he took some mud and put it on his shoulder. He had a scar there for the rest of his life, until the day he died.  That is how tough he was, he had to be cause to learn yoga was hard in those days people did not have food and as I told you last time, now we have everything and also a lot of problems.
Wonder if that was the moment, we know that is Jois
under Krihsnamacharya
Mind is a very tricky thing, you can go to higher level to make your mind clear, active , pure, so when we practice it is not only physical but how we can go through a spiritual path? only through devotion.

Some say "oh I just do bhakti yoga or Dhyana or Hatha. What is Hatha? in America these days they say, oh I do ha-tha yoga, but what is that? Hatha Yoga is bakthti and jnana and all of these are within Ashtanga Yoga.  Hatha is surya and chandra (sun and moon), but you also have devotion.  So within Ashtanga yoga we have all of them.

It is only through ignorance that we cannot realize it and then the practice can become physical because we look at others, then there is no meaning in the practice, we are just comparing.

Everyone has their limitations we cannot always compare with otters. Oh he can jump back so nicely, or why can I not do backbend (I know, guilty of that!).

Never follow the Buddha don't imitate him. Become the Buddha.  You are not to be a carbon copy of the Buddha. You can only become a Buddha when you are separated and try to find your destination on your own.  When you discover your path, try to reach for your goal then you become a Buddha.

Downtown here some people dress like Gandhiji and stand there, but they don't become Gandhiji, they would need to develop his qualities, like ahimsha (non-violence), to become like him.

All of our experiences are different but the goal is the same. When you do asana our experiences are different, we have different kinds of energy, but the goal is always the same. So do not compare to others. You see in practice, some senior students due a handstand, ekam dwi, (one two), and handstand, and others copy that, or they watch some videos and try to copy that.  They highlight that because they can do it, I guess is good they do not highlight the bad.

Doing handstands like that will make your shoulders suffer, you need to balance the practice.

People get frustrated with Mari D, Kurmasana, Backbends.  The practice is testing you.  Do you like your yoga or not? If your teacher goes too easy on you you will get less respect for it.

There was a yogi who had a student going along with him everywhere, he did sava (service) and cleaned his ashram for years but one day he became disillusioned and asked the guru why it was taking so long to become enlightened.  The guru took him to a lake and tried to drown him. He left him under water for 3 minutes and when he finally let him breathe he said: There is your answer, you have to want it like you wanted to breathe.

People say I am in a spirtiual path, they sit in asharam, like this (signals someone sitting and falling asleep).  Then they talk or gossip: oh this woman is now with another man.  Especially as they get older, they have less to do so they go to temple but they gossip: Oh did you hear?  People go to a temple because it gives a chance to connect with God, but some just go to get free food, as here in India sometimes different families do for the temples and so people go for the food.  So you get to eat.

This happens in yoga also, in Facebook.  "Oh Sharath gave me a new asana". "Sahrath did chatuary properly".  "Sharath stopped me on Mari D".  "I have been doing yoga for 35 years and he stopped me at Mari D!"  But they do not think why you were stopped at Mari D.

Guruji knew little English, sometimes that is good.

Pattabhi Jois, a very special person
I have seen 100,000 people come through here and so many people come with so much ego, or with their teachers energy, because our energy also comes from our teachers.

You see Krishnamacharya students and they are always so serious (laughter) they don't even smile (he mimicks someone really serious), but Guruji was not like that, the first thing with him was always a smile.  So people come with so much ego, they say: I am here a month and I want to show I know yoga very well, I know, but you don't know anything. I dont know anything either. Once we are humble we can learn something.

He mentions in Sanskrit the Yoga Laksha? the qualities of a yogi:

He says that a yogi talks with purity, whatever he is thinking or feeling he talks, it is always good things, so when you hear him is very impressive, a real yogi is impressive, has no impurities.  A yogi is also healthy, no physical or mental diseases. There are lots of delusions and we can't be yogis like that, we need to practice for many years.

OK, 20 minutes for questions

Q: People say that in traditional ashtanga yoga we don't use the wall but you told me once to use it and I saw a student in the afternoon using it, and I wanted to clarify that

A: You said "traditional" ashtanga yoga, those people don't know ashtanga, so you should say asana.  Phrase it like that.

So yes while doing the 3rd limb, when in asana, yes, I don't want a student to crash on the floor and break our shala, [laughter] so I told that student to use the wall.  Nothing wrong with that.

I am not there to help, so you can use the wall but not props, otherwise you end up using props for everything all your life, for trikonasana you use props and never get to grab your toe.

Q: You say Guruji was your inspiration. What was his inspiration, how did he just come to the shala even when old and sick?

A: As I told you you can't copy others.  Krishanamcharya was Krishnamacharya, Guruji was Guruji.  Although he was his student.  He had so much energy as Krishnamacharya.  He wanted to be there for his students, so he came and sat here.  He was there for all, for me and for all, he was a special person.

Q: Tell us about your yoga practice, about your spiritual practice...

A: After marraige I became wiser in my spiritual practice.  It is a cycle that should happen.  When you are a bachelor be a bachelor when you are a family be family.  Everyone should experience this, getting married, having children, then you understand the beauty of it.

Before for 4 years I did not practice, but once I added the practice to my life I did yoga for 7 years just for fun, then everything shifted to Gokulam, then for 6 years no practice.  Then when I was 19 my mother told me to come and help Guruji.  I resisted I said I would come tomorrow and then tomorrow again. One month went by, then one day I don't know what happened, I came and have been here ever since.

Once it became part of my life I became more serious about asana, like you are, 2, 3 hours like that, month by month. Then Guruji started me on philosophy and I became more spiritual. Before that I was doing aerobics.  Then I got married. I was one now I am four. I am divided into 4.  I don't know how many divisions I have here, students are like a family too.  As I said when everyone comes together like in chanting we develop a good energy, very high energy, meditation happens automatically here.

It does not happen in one moment, or if you go somewhere: "Oh if I go to America and breathe this air..." it is not like that.  Everyone is spiritual, only because of ignorance and our attention not going in the right places we do not see it.  When the attention comes then we realize we are spiritual.

We are all spiritual it just does not look like that
Nothing comes like a big light.  To grow a business someone might say that but if it comes like that it goes very quickly.

It is like a plant that has a seed and soil and what you put in it.  It grows, you have to water it.

--
A man outside, a seller of some sort, calls out trying to get attention.  Be careful of that man, says Sharath.  I tried giving him my old clothes and he refused them because he can make more money with his old clothes. He laughs.

---

I had a friend, he is a Brahman and he was always making fun of spiritual people, of priests.  Then his father and mother died within three months.  Then one day I went to visit him and he was doing puja (religious ceremonies).  Sometimes life changes us.

MY QUESTION: yes,  I dared ask.  I confess I was very nervous, especially because of the type of question, but since he had brought it up I thought it would be OK... so I asked:

Q: Are you in Facebook?

A: No.  (Laughter). I made that mistake once and within one day I had 1,600 requests for this and that [he laughs], I realized there that it was a mistake, and I corrected that mistake.


Q: How do you manage so much attention? So many people?

A: I never thought about that.  I am used to this, I have seen people come and go for 40 years.  I am one man to 200 students I try to do my best, to give everyone something. Most of our practice is giving.  Your attention should be on the yoga not on me.

Yoga is great, I am just the transmitter, it comes through me, I transmit to you. I try to become a stabilizer too, to stabilize the energy, but it is always about giving.

Krishnamacharya and Jois have already done a lot of work now we must first realize it ourselves and then pass it to the next generation.
-----

NOTES FROM CONFERENCE FROM FEBRUARY 5th 2012.

Wednesday 1 February 2012

Panchakarma is finished!!!


Just a quick note to let you know that I'm alive... I made it through the 8th and last day of Panchakarma.
I arrived at the Ayurveda clinic at 8:30am and was greeted with herbal tea and then an Abyanga massage. After that I was brought to sit in front of the puja room (altar room) as the doctors chanting over me, & I proceeded to eat an entire bowl of CASTOR OIL (vomit!)  & paste of nasty herbs... oh my God I thought for sure I would never get it all down, but I did.   About 20 min later me and the toilet bowl became very good friends and I stayed in my room until 5:30pm that evening reading, studying and going to visit my friend the mr. porcelain. ;)  All I was allowed to consume all day was hot water and lemon and a few raisins.  By the end of the day I was beyond exhausted and had a wicked headache from not eating for 20 hours.   Before I left to go home they fed me a rice "porridge"(that is really more like hot rice water) which tasted DELICIOUS!   I had 3 cups of it and then they took my blood pressure one more time to be sure I was OK, which I was. Then, I was homeward bound in a rickshaw just stopping briefly at a friend's home to pick up my nightly parcel of kitchadi for supper.

I slept like a baby for almost 8 hours and had an amazing practice this morning.  Strong, light, and bendy.... catching heels in Kapotasana... wow!   And even better than that is that I feel so happy and peaceful inside my head and heart!! Like a major shift occurred.  This was the best thing I could have gifted myself with in India. I will surely do it again next year here.  I am super grateful!

Below are a few pictures of the clinic and some of my new "family members" there... these people were absolute angels! God Bless them.

Peace and Love,
Stacy