Great primer on the yoga sutras and a focus on the primary purpose of yoga - to quiet the fluctuations of the mind stuff. Thanks for getting us yogis back to the basics and remembering that the practice of yoga is not about achieving the next challenging pose, but about releasing all our internal and external identities, quieting the mind, finding a sense of presence and reacquainting ourselves with our true essence. 🕉🙏💚🙏
Patanjali my man! The yoga sutra is was the beginning of my understanding that my superficial personality is dwarfed by the connection of my physical body to the universe through the disconnection of thinking and the mind. Awesome of you bringing the book into the mix and put in the hamsters back in the shoe box!🙏🕉💜
Very interesting and informative. I'm Buddhist and didn't realize yoga has such a similar goal to Buddhism - calming our wild monkey mind to reveal its underlying Buddha-nature (its true nature) that is inherent in all sentient beings.
Rachel, you are so knowledgable and have helped me in understanding so much. Thanks for your enthusiasm and expertise, you are so clearly passionate and it's fun to learn from you.
Great explanation on the sutras, I am doing my YTT and was having a mini meltdown over all the philosophy stuff, Im very practical and not very academic so I love the way you explain it in such a calm and fun way. Thankyou for taking the time to share this, I feel much better now X
Hahah it's funny that i've just started studying the first chapter exactly 2 days ago for my Ytt, and then was looking to your channel to find if more details... And tadaaaaaa, video was just uploaded 🤩🤩 that's made me smiiiile from the bottom of heart.. thank youu soo much Rachel, great lecture as usual 🙏🙏🙏
ohh dear you're my savior! I'm doing my YTC in India and I can't understand my teacher bc he has different English accent. You make it so straight and easy to understand though i have no ideas ab philosophy. Thank you so much for these amazing videos!
If you wanna learn yoga, you better learn atleast little bit of Sanskrit but TBH, English language sucks, it lacks vocabulary, wayyy too much. English have only 26 alphabets and lack many sounds because sanskrit has 108 billion words in vocabulary...like e.g. "ट" and "त" but you have only one sound which is "t" which makes it more difficult because the thing like accent doesn't exist when it comes to sanskrit. It's either right way or wrong way. It's mantras. That's why foreigners comes to Indian instructor because foreign instructor always mess up the pronunciation.
Speaking on the translation of “restraint” or “cessation”. I think it is important that the understanding for both is allow d and even implied. As we retrain the fluctuations of our mind while involved with daily life (conscious living, living meditation). But in order to reach a deeper state of consciousness, when we have the time, the lower (ruminating and calculating) functions of the mind must cease so that the higher portions of our mind may be expressed or find union with even higher portions above that.
I've just started learning the sutras as part of my YTT and it's sooooooo interesting! They are so much deeper than they seem at first glance, I'm loving teasing them apart and discussing them. Your videos are super helpful Rachel, thank you! 🙏💕
George Feuerstein in his book The Yoga Tradition also contains a translation of the sutras. It's not that deep, but it's worth the context of the book. Thanks for the class.
Muchas gracias Rachel. Que aproximación tan didáctica! Me hubiera gustado que en mi formación hubiesen comenzado explicando a Patañjali igual que tú. 👏👏
Love this! Thank You for explaining this. Can’t wait to watch the next one. Also I am intrigued by the use of the San skript words. In other sacred text the original translation is not present at all and I wonder about how the vibrations of the sans skript comes Into play.
Great point - there is an intention to the words used and the vibration ~ I wish I were more of a Sanskrit scholar to more accurately relay what the words/ sound imported. I would refer anyone interested to Christopher Hareesh Wallis or Carlos Pomeda who are scholar /practitioners with more understanding of this element :)
Gee, the chitta is the place where the mind stuff resides. Vritti is "modifications" or fluctuations that happen in the mind. When they are restrained, emptiness is. I like the comparison of Vritti to windiness. Some times the breezes can be gentle, sometimes they can be violent in intensity, sometimes they are replaced by their absence, a stillness. Existencence(Sat), Consciousness (chit, the holding cell of chitta), Bliss, (Ananda), satchitananda is likely not seen with all this wind.
Yoga was an established practice in ancient India. It was already an old practice at the time of the Buddha. Buddha was born about 2500+ years ago so yoga philosophy is older than 2000 years.
Yah, definitely older than 2,000 years ~ from what my scholar sources tell me, it was not so much a Vedic tradition as a shramanic traditions, and has closer ties to the ascetic practices of the Upanishads, so they place it more around 3,000 years old than, say, 5,000 ~ But it depends who you listen to! Thanks for mentioning this ~ it's certainly interesting to see what they continue to uncover about the tradition.
No yoga is purely Vedic concept please read rigveda first mention of om is in rigveda and secondly yoga meaning is described in upnisad and Vedas not in any shramic tradition@@RachelScottYoga
@@Chanakya2 Hello! Yes! OM is in the rgveda ~ As I understand, more as a sense of "So Be It!" rather than with the complexity of understanding developed later in the Mandukya Upanishad. And yes - yoga is certainly in the Upanishads! The clarification here is that the scholars I have studied indicate the INSPIRATION for the new paradigm and focus on meditation that we find in the Upanishads (which then became a part of the Vedas) were almost certainly sourced from shramanic traditions rather than existing Vedic work. Thank you for commenting!
In comment section I read so many comments here people are saying yogA , mantrA , sutrA , original words are yog, manter, sutrr , why this extra A if you can embrace whole thing of a culture why don't you embrace the original words . Why it's necessary to paint them to make it other language 's word . I have heard so many other words before like river Ganga ( Ganges) I guess. Karma it's again karam originated in ved. ( Vedas 😂 this is another example with extra A) . Please tell is it related to grammer or its just habbit to change little bit then make ..
Hi there - yes, it's a widespread inaccurate habit for sure. (After 20 years teaching, I'm just starting to learn more about Sanskrit pronunciation and beginning to learn how inaccurate my pronunciation is!!! 😅😳 Yikes! I am keen to do my best to improve this for future!) It's an excellent question: why did the default over here somehow include that extra syllable? I don't know! Perhaps the golden lining there is that westerners are trying to use the original words (even through we're pronouncing them incorrectly) rather than just translate them into an English substitute. I think that's at least the right step...but hopefully over time, we can get the pronunciation a little more aligned!
meditation tip; just be physically still, man. physical stillness often leads to mental stillness; that is a drawing away from the river of thoughts and itchiness that you experience.
HA! We do live in a wild and interconnected world these days! There is so, so much that I have yet to learn and understand ~ and frankly there is a lot that I can't understand as well because it's not my native culture, though I admire and respect this tradition enormously and will try my best. It is with great humility I offer this information in the hopes that it can be of service 🙏
@@RachelScottYoga yeh I appreciate that 😊 and even I see soo soo many things which are popular here in India and thousands of years old people all over the world following like Ayurved .,,. meditation,, yog saadhna, and many mantar like ooommm, like there are many things which originated here and people have recorded them for amazing thousands of years and many foreigners are learning it and following and embracing it. Ours are crazy about western culture 🙄
Rachel I still don’t get why it’s important to “know your true self”. Isn’t it more entertaining to let your mind fluctuate? A good example is watching social media like instagram or videos like yours on RUclips. The mind is happier doing this rather than sitting and doing nothing. It is so boring that few people stick with a meditation practice. If I knew why it’s important to know my true self then I might make the effort. For example if it will give me some super power or stop worrying then it would maybe be worthwhile. Help me understand.
You're right! The mind does do better when it has something to latch onto. (One of the reasons why meditating with an object to focus on...like a mantra, candle, visualization...is helpful. It gives your mind something to do.) Here's the downside of not meditating. An untrained mind will drag you all over the place. It is like a puppy, constantly bringing you toys, running after squirrels. In this case, the toys and squirrels are memories, imaginings, associations. It takes YOU on a joy ride. (When you start thinking about something and suddenly you're in tears remembering how you were a bad friend two years ago and thinking you're a bad person, for example.) This is not reality. This is a puppy joy ride. This is a series of neurological associations that just ran on autopilot. The purpose of meditation is to give you back both perspective and (if we're lucky) a modicum of control over your puppy so that instead of running all over the place it can serve you. The "you" that is not just a produce of your conditioning and experience, but the YOU that is at the center of the experience. You don't need to erase fluctuations...just develop the capacity and perspective to not be a slave to them. Do you have that now? If so, then perhaps you don't need to meditate! But if not...here are some reasons to stick with it. Will meditation reduce your stress and anxiety? Yes. Will it give you an enhanced sense of connection and aliveness? Yes. Will it give you a center in yourself to hold onto when your life goes to shit? Yes. Will it bore your mind? Yes, absolutely. But once your puppy is trained, it will be so very happy to play with you and be of service. Now, all that said, maybe you need some meditations that hold your attention better? Guided meditations, meditations with music, meditations with visualizations...? Does that help?
Hi Juan! I am not sure what you mean by "normally," I assure you this is quite normal for me, though I surely do appreciate concern over my posture. There is also no need to SHOUT in all caps and with exclamation points, I'd prefer that we keep communication on my channel kind and beneficial when possible.
@@RachelScottYoga I'm just starting your videos. I'm not sure if they'll lead where I'm hoping, but I'm gonna watch. I like that you are a native English speaker. There are many videos on the sutras, but I have a hard time understanding what the people say. I've never been amazing at understanding other accents. Scottish accents are also difficult for me. There's a lot of discussion on the 8 limbs as an overview. I've gathered from the few other videos I've seen that most of the limbs are restraints like don't steal etc However, the part I guess, that interests me are the actually yoga positions in the sutras. What's are they? How many are there? How does it help you control the mind? What do you do if you aren't physically capable of putting yourself in certain positions? I almost died a little over a year ago. Sometimes I wish I had. The result of almost dying is endless anxiety. Most of the time I can control it, manage it to a degree. But especially when I drive, my palms start sweating, my breathing becomes strained and forced, my mind becomes exhausted from the mental effort it involves being this anxious for hours. I have tried breathing deeply and controlling my breath, but it doesn't seem to work. I'm on 2 anxiety medications and I still can't trust that when I go to drive that I'm not gonna fall apart. I just need some peace.
@@samhowl1152 hi Sam. There are no yoga positions in the yoga sutras. It is almost entirely on meditation. The only thing that it says is that your meditation pose should be comfortable and steady.
I disagree with the time period asana was utilized. You should look at the yoga influence on martial arts. If patanjali was writing about asana 2000 years ago, then we have been doing this thing for much longer. I’ve read this idea of “modern yoga” and it being young. It’s just a new word, in a language old as time. It makes people sound much more important than they really are.
Hi Aaron, I am not sure what you mean. I don't believe more specific postural yoga was introduced til around the era of hatha - though of course as we know, practices may have been done much in advance of when they were recorded! Like the hatha ascetic practices and posture holdings. If you have alternative information - for example, when you say martial arts, I welcome you to share some of your resources so that we can all look into this.Thanks!
@@RachelScottYoga there are painted pictures, from before the time of Christ, of people in yoga poses, in a series of poses. I’m pretty sure the beginning the “Classical” yoga period was almost 3000 years ago. And What poses did “Hatha” yoga invent? What new breathing did it create? Did it show us the real right way to single minded focus?
@@aaronmurphy7967 Hi Aaron! That's interesting, I know that there are yoga looking like postures in the seals from the Indus Valley River civlization, but perhaps not enough contenxt to say "that's yoga." As Carlos Pomeda says, that could be a guy sitting on the ground! If you have a link to this reference, share it! My understanding is that that hatha yoga (500-1300) built on practices that had been happening in the ascetic communities and expanded upon them. (I would refer anyone interested to James Mallison, who is a hatha yoga scholar!) It's not that these postures (for example, being upside down) were unheard of, but that they became expanded upon as well as came out of secrecy and were intended for a wider audience. I suppose if we're discussing the Yoga Tradition, one of the questions is what do we define a tradition as? Isolated groups doing some practices doesn't quite get there, but when it becomes part of the cultural and social (or sometimes antisocial!) fabric, then we go, ah, there's a tipping point there where a set of practice have become recognizable and codified and part of the "tradition." With yoga, it's not just the shapes (as I'm sure you know!) but it's meditative or transformational intent! Thank you for sharing and if you have any references, send them~! :)
I see now. Thank you for your attempt at monetizing spirituality. You spread your hatha, like religion. Your way is way. It causes separation. You are not preparing the way, you are ushering people through a door.
@@aaronmurphy7967 Aaron, I see that you are passionately in defense of a point of view that feels important to you, and I want to acknowledge your strong feelings. But I am also disappointed that you feel the need to dismiss me as a monetizer of spirituality - though this RUclips channel is, well, clearly free - because I disagree with you on historical scholarship. It seems like an unnecessary attack. There is no "my hatha" over here, and I claim "no way." What I have shared is a point of view on timelines based on what I have learned from western academics ~ but that kind of scholarship is clearly not the only way to understand the yoga lineage. However, it's what I have learned, so it's the seat from which I am able to share. I wish you well!
Not "We're going to talk about..." what you mean is "I am going to....." be clear from the start. I'm sure you have something worthwhile to say.... but when? You just talk too much for the little reward in return. waste of time to wait forever
Hi there! I usually (but not always) do an intro at the beginning that is like a primer for what's to come in the video, then get into the content. If you like, you can also always fast forward any of those sections vids or listen on double speed, etc.til you get to what you are really interested in. But it also just may not be to your taste. Thanks for trying it out!
Great primer on the yoga sutras and a focus on the primary purpose of yoga - to quiet the fluctuations of the mind stuff. Thanks for getting us yogis back to the basics and remembering that the practice of yoga is not about achieving the next challenging pose, but about releasing all our internal and external identities, quieting the mind, finding a sense of presence and reacquainting ourselves with our true essence. 🕉🙏💚🙏
🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🥰
I love your videos! I'm currently doing my 200 hour YTT and your videos are helping me so much! Thank you
Awesome Isabelle! Nice to connect with you here and congrats on your YTT!
Patanjali my man! The yoga sutra is was the beginning of my understanding that my superficial personality is dwarfed by the connection of my physical body to the universe through the disconnection of thinking and the mind. Awesome of you bringing the book into the mix and put in the hamsters back in the shoe box!🙏🕉💜
Hahaha hamsters begone! 😆😁💗
Very interesting and informative. I'm Buddhist and didn't realize yoga has such a similar goal to Buddhism - calming our wild monkey mind to reveal its underlying Buddha-nature (its true nature) that is inherent in all sentient beings.
They are definitely from the same wellspring of philosophical thought! 💛
buddhism, jainism, and yoga were all part of the same indian milieu i think. same period i think.
Thank you so much Rachel. I'm also in the middle of a YTT, and your videos have given me a foothold in the mountain I'm exploring.
Glad to connect with you here, Jen :)
I’ve just returned from a week at Yogaville and finally understood what yoga is all about. Thank you for explaining this so well. Got the book too🧘🏽
😁😁😁
Learning more from you than my yoga instructor/teacher! Currently doing my 200 YTT.
Congrats on doing your YTT!! Glad that this channel can be a resource for you 🙏🏻🙏🏻
Rachel, you are so knowledgable and have helped me in understanding so much. Thanks for your enthusiasm and expertise, you are so clearly passionate and it's fun to learn from you.
I’m so glad Sophie, nice to connect here 😄
Great explanation on the sutras, I am doing my YTT and was having a mini meltdown over all the philosophy stuff, Im very practical and not very academic so I love the way you explain it in such a calm and fun way.
Thankyou for taking the time to share this, I feel much better now X
That’s great to hear Matthew ~ glad this hit the right note! Nice to connect with you here 👍🏻
Straightforward explanation of the Yoga Sutra or Yoga Philosophy
Glad to have you here!
Thank you so much for that, Rachel. You have a wonderful way to make things easy for us. ❤
Great to have you here Anat!
This was great! I was not expecting someone on RUclips to put these teachings so simply yet thoughtfully.
Thanks Michael! Good to have you here.
Hahah it's funny that i've just started studying the first chapter exactly 2 days ago for my Ytt, and then was looking to your channel to find if more details... And tadaaaaaa, video was just uploaded 🤩🤩 that's made me smiiiile from the bottom of heart.. thank youu soo much Rachel, great lecture as usual 🙏🙏🙏
YAY! Perfect timing!!
ohh dear you're my savior! I'm doing my YTC in India and I can't understand my teacher bc he has different English accent. You make it so straight and easy to understand though i have no ideas ab philosophy. Thank you so much for these amazing videos!
I am so glad that these videos are helpful to you on your yoga journey😄awesome to connect with you!
If you wanna learn yoga, you better learn atleast little bit of Sanskrit but TBH, English language sucks, it lacks vocabulary, wayyy too much.
English have only 26 alphabets and lack many sounds because sanskrit has 108 billion words in vocabulary...like e.g. "ट" and "त" but you have only one sound which is "t" which makes it more difficult because the thing like accent doesn't exist when it comes to sanskrit. It's either right way or wrong way. It's mantras.
That's why foreigners comes to Indian instructor because foreign instructor always mess up the pronunciation.
Thank you for creating this series!! Please keep more great content coming!! I love your teaching style!!
Thank you! I've been on a bit of hiatus because of the Nerve Tour, but there will be more to come ;)
love you Rachel, you are amazing. lots of love from Iran :*
💛💛💛💛
I like the dances choreography sign language that accompany your thoughts.
Speaking on the translation of “restraint” or “cessation”. I think it is important that the understanding for both is allow d and even implied. As we retrain the fluctuations of our mind while involved with daily life (conscious living, living meditation). But in order to reach a deeper state of consciousness, when we have the time, the lower (ruminating and calculating) functions of the mind must cease so that the higher portions of our mind may be expressed or find union with even higher portions above that.
This was so extremely helpful! Thank you 💞
✨🙏🏻I’m glad it was useful!!
I love your videos are really helping❤
So happy to hear it Adriana ~ welcome!
Love your passion !
🤍🤍
Let's gooooo Rachel (and algorithm)!
😘😘😘
This was perfect and just what I was looking for. Thank you so much!
🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻💛💛💛
Gracias 🙏🏼 Namaste ❤
De nada Judith!! :)
💛
Thank u so much, just got my first yoga book from your recommendations. Looking forward to learning ❤
YAY!!! Hope you enjoy :)
I've just started learning the sutras as part of my YTT and it's sooooooo interesting! They are so much deeper than they seem at first glance, I'm loving teasing them apart and discussing them. Your videos are super helpful Rachel, thank you! 🙏💕
Yay!! My pleasure ~ I agree, I love how they are SO relevant to daily life and the ongoing act of managing our crazy brains!
Love the content and how you present it. Thank you for sharing your wisdom with me. Best wishes.🙏💙
I'm so glad you're enjoying ~ great to have you here! :)
Nicely explained 👍
Glad it was helpful! :)
George Feuerstein in his book The Yoga Tradition also contains a translation of the sutras. It's not that deep, but it's worth the context of the book. Thanks for the class.
Excellent! Thank you for the reference 🙌🏻🙏🏻
Thank you for this
My pleasure Catherine!
Muchas gracias Rachel. Que aproximación tan didáctica! Me hubiera gustado que en mi formación hubiesen comenzado explicando a Patañjali igual que tú. 👏👏
🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻
Fantastic video. I've shared it.
Thanks Nick! 🤗🙏🏻
Great overview thanks kindly 😊
🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻my pleasure Steve!
Love this! Thank You for explaining this. Can’t wait to watch the next one. Also I am intrigued by the use of the San skript words. In other sacred text the original translation is not present at all and I wonder about how the vibrations of the sans skript comes Into play.
Great point - there is an intention to the words used and the vibration ~ I wish I were more of a Sanskrit scholar to more accurately relay what the words/ sound imported. I would refer anyone interested to Christopher Hareesh Wallis or Carlos Pomeda who are scholar /practitioners with more understanding of this element :)
This was great thank you 🙏🏽
🙏🏻🙏🏻
Sammeee attempting to finally wrap up my 200 hour YTT!
🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻
Thank you
Gee, the chitta is the place where the mind stuff resides. Vritti is "modifications" or fluctuations that happen in the mind. When they are restrained, emptiness is. I like the comparison of Vritti to windiness. Some times the breezes can be gentle, sometimes they can be violent in intensity, sometimes they are replaced by their absence, a stillness. Existencence(Sat), Consciousness (chit, the holding cell of chitta), Bliss, (Ananda), satchitananda is likely not seen with all this wind.
❤
Yoga was an established practice in ancient India. It was already an old practice at the time of the Buddha. Buddha was born about 2500+ years ago so yoga philosophy is older than 2000 years.
Yah, definitely older than 2,000 years ~ from what my scholar sources tell me, it was not so much a Vedic tradition as a shramanic traditions, and has closer ties to the ascetic practices of the Upanishads, so they place it more around 3,000 years old than, say, 5,000 ~ But it depends who you listen to! Thanks for mentioning this ~ it's certainly interesting to see what they continue to uncover about the tradition.
@@RachelScottYoga wow! You are very knowledgeable about this subject. 😊
@@roops2939 HA!I just have smart teachers ;)
No yoga is purely Vedic concept please read rigveda first mention of om is in rigveda and secondly yoga meaning is described in upnisad and Vedas not in any shramic tradition@@RachelScottYoga
@@Chanakya2 Hello! Yes! OM is in the rgveda ~ As I understand, more as a sense of "So Be It!" rather than with the complexity of understanding developed later in the Mandukya Upanishad. And yes - yoga is certainly in the Upanishads! The clarification here is that the scholars I have studied indicate the INSPIRATION for the new paradigm and focus on meditation that we find in the Upanishads (which then became a part of the Vedas) were almost certainly sourced from shramanic traditions rather than existing Vedic work. Thank you for commenting!
waiting for the series ☺
😄
I will add to description now, you can check out :)
In comment section I read so many comments here people are saying yogA , mantrA , sutrA , original words are yog, manter, sutrr , why this extra A if you can embrace whole thing of a culture why don't you embrace the original words . Why it's necessary to paint them to make it other language 's word . I have heard so many other words before like river Ganga ( Ganges) I guess. Karma it's again karam originated in ved. ( Vedas 😂 this is another example with extra A) . Please tell is it related to grammer or its just habbit to change little bit then make ..
Hi there - yes, it's a widespread inaccurate habit for sure. (After 20 years teaching, I'm just starting to learn more about Sanskrit pronunciation and beginning to learn how inaccurate my pronunciation is!!! 😅😳 Yikes! I am keen to do my best to improve this for future!) It's an excellent question: why did the default over here somehow include that extra syllable? I don't know! Perhaps the golden lining there is that westerners are trying to use the original words (even through we're pronouncing them incorrectly) rather than just translate them into an English substitute. I think that's at least the right step...but hopefully over time, we can get the pronunciation a little more aligned!
meditation tip; just be physically still, man. physical stillness often leads to mental stillness; that is a drawing away from the river of thoughts and itchiness that you experience.
Beautiful~ thank you for sharing this ~
Hahah i m finding it funny .. being indian , learning about yog from foreigners 😂😂😂
HA! We do live in a wild and interconnected world these days! There is so, so much that I have yet to learn and understand ~ and frankly there is a lot that I can't understand as well because it's not my native culture, though I admire and respect this tradition enormously and will try my best. It is with great humility I offer this information in the hopes that it can be of service 🙏
@@RachelScottYoga yeh I appreciate that 😊 and even I see soo soo many things which are popular here in India and thousands of years old people all over the world following like Ayurved .,,. meditation,, yog saadhna, and many mantar like ooommm, like there are many things which originated here and people have recorded them for amazing thousands of years and many foreigners are learning it and following and embracing it. Ours are crazy about western culture 🙄
Did Pantanjali develop any asanas? I thought I heard he had developed some basic asanas.
Not to my knowledge ~ just a meditation seat ~ 🧘
Is the time era CE the same as BC? (Sorry not an American,)
Excellent question! CE means common era, and BCE means before common era.
zazen!
Rachel I still don’t get why it’s important to “know your true self”. Isn’t it more entertaining to let your mind fluctuate? A good example is watching social media like instagram or videos like yours on RUclips. The mind is happier doing this rather than sitting and doing nothing. It is so boring that few people stick with a meditation practice. If I knew why it’s important to know my true self then I might make the effort. For example if it will give me some super power or stop worrying then it would maybe be worthwhile. Help me understand.
You're right! The mind does do better when it has something to latch onto. (One of the reasons why meditating with an object to focus on...like a mantra, candle, visualization...is helpful. It gives your mind something to do.) Here's the downside of not meditating. An untrained mind will drag you all over the place. It is like a puppy, constantly bringing you toys, running after squirrels. In this case, the toys and squirrels are memories, imaginings, associations. It takes YOU on a joy ride. (When you start thinking about something and suddenly you're in tears remembering how you were a bad friend two years ago and thinking you're a bad person, for example.) This is not reality. This is a puppy joy ride. This is a series of neurological associations that just ran on autopilot. The purpose of meditation is to give you back both perspective and (if we're lucky) a modicum of control over your puppy so that instead of running all over the place it can serve you. The "you" that is not just a produce of your conditioning and experience, but the YOU that is at the center of the experience. You don't need to erase fluctuations...just develop the capacity and perspective to not be a slave to them. Do you have that now? If so, then perhaps you don't need to meditate! But if not...here are some reasons to stick with it. Will meditation reduce your stress and anxiety? Yes. Will it give you an enhanced sense of connection and aliveness? Yes. Will it give you a center in yourself to hold onto when your life goes to shit? Yes. Will it bore your mind? Yes, absolutely. But once your puppy is trained, it will be so very happy to play with you and be of service. Now, all that said, maybe you need some meditations that hold your attention better? Guided meditations, meditations with music, meditations with visualizations...? Does that help?
Sutra in Malay refers to silk. And Malay has Sanskrit origins.
Brain Software, a Book and translation from the view a IT engineer.
SIT NORMALLY!
Hi Juan! I am not sure what you mean by "normally," I assure you this is quite normal for me, though I surely do appreciate concern over my posture. There is also no need to SHOUT in all caps and with exclamation points, I'd prefer that we keep communication on my channel kind and beneficial when possible.
3:45
You resemble Christopher Reeve. That's not an insult.
He was a remarkable human.
@@RachelScottYoga I'm just starting your videos. I'm not sure if they'll lead where I'm hoping, but I'm gonna watch.
I like that you are a native English speaker. There are many videos on the sutras, but I have a hard time understanding what the people say. I've never been amazing at understanding other accents. Scottish accents are also difficult for me.
There's a lot of discussion on the 8 limbs as an overview. I've gathered from the few other videos I've seen that most of the limbs are restraints like don't steal etc
However, the part I guess, that interests me are the actually yoga positions in the sutras. What's are they? How many are there? How does it help you control the mind? What do you do if you aren't physically capable of putting yourself in certain positions?
I almost died a little over a year ago. Sometimes I wish I had. The result of almost dying is endless anxiety. Most of the time I can control it, manage it to a degree. But especially when I drive, my palms start sweating, my breathing becomes strained and forced, my mind becomes exhausted from the mental effort it involves being this anxious for hours. I have tried breathing deeply and controlling my breath, but it doesn't seem to work.
I'm on 2 anxiety medications and I still can't trust that when I go to drive that I'm not gonna fall apart. I just need some peace.
@@samhowl1152 hi Sam. There are no yoga positions in the yoga sutras. It is almost entirely on meditation. The only thing that it says is that your meditation pose should be comfortable and steady.
@@RachelScottYoga well that's disappointing.
@@samhowl1152 Yoga for Emotional Trauma
by Mary NurrieStearns, Rick NurrieStearns
I disagree with the time period asana was utilized. You should look at the yoga influence on martial arts. If patanjali was writing about asana 2000 years ago, then we have been doing this thing for much longer. I’ve read this idea of “modern yoga” and it being young. It’s just a new word, in a language old as time. It makes people sound much more important than they really are.
Hi Aaron, I am not sure what you mean. I don't believe more specific postural yoga was introduced til around the era of hatha - though of course as we know, practices may have been done much in advance of when they were recorded! Like the hatha ascetic practices and posture holdings. If you have alternative information - for example, when you say martial arts, I welcome you to share some of your resources so that we can all look into this.Thanks!
@@RachelScottYoga there are painted pictures, from before the time of Christ, of people in yoga poses, in a series of poses. I’m pretty sure the beginning the “Classical” yoga period was almost 3000 years ago. And What poses did “Hatha” yoga invent? What new breathing did it create? Did it show us the real right way to single minded focus?
@@aaronmurphy7967 Hi Aaron! That's interesting, I know that there are yoga looking like postures in the seals from the Indus Valley River civlization, but perhaps not enough contenxt to say "that's yoga." As Carlos Pomeda says, that could be a guy sitting on the ground! If you have a link to this reference, share it! My understanding is that that hatha yoga (500-1300) built on practices that had been happening in the ascetic communities and expanded upon them. (I would refer anyone interested to James Mallison, who is a hatha yoga scholar!) It's not that these postures (for example, being upside down) were unheard of, but that they became expanded upon as well as came out of secrecy and were intended for a wider audience. I suppose if we're discussing the Yoga Tradition, one of the questions is what do we define a tradition as? Isolated groups doing some practices doesn't quite get there, but when it becomes part of the cultural and social (or sometimes antisocial!) fabric, then we go, ah, there's a tipping point there where a set of practice have become recognizable and codified and part of the "tradition." With yoga, it's not just the shapes (as I'm sure you know!) but it's meditative or transformational intent! Thank you for sharing and if you have any references, send them~! :)
I see now. Thank you for your attempt at monetizing spirituality. You spread your hatha, like religion. Your way is way. It causes separation. You are not preparing the way, you are ushering people through a door.
@@aaronmurphy7967 Aaron, I see that you are passionately in defense of a point of view that feels important to you, and I want to acknowledge your strong feelings. But I am also disappointed that you feel the need to dismiss me as a monetizer of spirituality - though this RUclips channel is, well, clearly free - because I disagree with you on historical scholarship. It seems like an unnecessary attack. There is no "my hatha" over here, and I claim "no way." What I have shared is a point of view on timelines based on what I have learned from western academics ~ but that kind of scholarship is clearly not the only way to understand the yoga lineage. However, it's what I have learned, so it's the seat from which I am able to share. I wish you well!
Not "We're going to talk about..." what you mean is "I am going to....." be clear from the start. I'm sure you have something worthwhile to say.... but when? You just talk too much for the little reward in return. waste of time to wait forever
Hi there! I usually (but not always) do an intro at the beginning that is like a primer for what's to come in the video, then get into the content. If you like, you can also always fast forward any of those sections vids or listen on double speed, etc.til you get to what you are really interested in. But it also just may not be to your taste. Thanks for trying it out!