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Use the menu below to view previous Topic of the Month archives... JULY 2007 TOPIC OF THE MONTH Living Your Yoga Yoga is not a series of postures, really! Somehow in the West we have come to know yoga by its physical form. The physical forms of yoga are about keeping the body, mind, and nervous system healthy to pursue a spiritual path. If we are diseased we must put our energy into healing leaving us less energy for other endeavors. Yoga is a Sanskrit word meaning to yoke—union. Taking yoga off your mat means feeling connection, being aware of how we react and treat others and the little things we do to dis-connect. We practice Yoga to be Enlightened, enlightenment is the realization that we are all one, realizing that we are all one is feeling our interconnected and interdependent relationships with all creatures great and small. Yoga is a peaceful practical philosophy enhancing our connections to those around us, those we don’t know, animals, plants, and nature! Living yoga requires compassion, patience, understanding, and devotion, serving others, and remaining aware of our own actions—adjusting our attitudes not only daily but during trying situations even hourly or by the minute! Living yoga requires awareness, awareness of our thoughts first and foremost. The mind is where our egos flourish. Our egos are the main causes of the feelings of dis-connect and un-ease with others. So we need to take inventory of our thoughts (this is part of the reason we meditate) and learn to laugh at some thoughts and recognize them as the ego taking over, and then to put our thoughts on more positive feelings and actions. Thoughts become words, words become our actions, so brewing on a thought can actually manifest into reality! Be aware of what you are manifesting! This first quote is from the 6th chapter where Krishna is telling Arjuna to meditate; this is what Arjuna has to say about controlling the mind: Bhagavad Gita 2:40 So as you hang out in Downward Dog, what are you manifesting? Practice bringing the mind to the present moment and experience what is real each down dog . . . and each pose . . . and as you walk out the studio . . . Ego Land vs. Soul Land
Identify with your soul not your ego. You are a soul going through an incarnation just like everyone else around you. Our egos give us the strength we need to do our dharma, so egos are not bad, we just need to learn to use our egos in this positive way. The good news is, if we end up living too much on the ego plane, we feel it! Our egos are easily hurt so we get lessons to try to teach us not to live in our ego, if you are suffering in some of the relationships with people around you, check to see if you are dealing with them on the ego plane, remember that everything we experience is to help us recognize our True Nature so as our egos cry our Souls rejoice! When trying to get off the ego plane the first step is DO NOT TAKE IT PERSONALLY, when you feel someone else’s ego attacking your ego, realize that is all it is and it is about their ego not you. When we live in Soul Land we rise above the ego plane of existence and we do not suffer those ego pains. Living in Soul land requires compassion. Most of us are in our “householder” stage of life (in this stage our life is about work, family, homes, etc—things that require ego!), during this stage it is our challenge to Live in the world but not allow the world to live in us. (The Gita was written for the householder who is trying to walk the spiritual path.) We must view life as a great teacher (remember everything we experience is to help us recognize our true nature) and strive towards a spiritual life of connectedness in the midst of worldly temptations and distractions. The Field and the knower of the field The gita explains our body/mind/ego as the field. Just as a farmer has a field, for many years he harvests his crops and works the fields, learning how to sow seeds, when to irrigate, how to keep the soil healthy. Then one year, perhaps a disaster strikes, ruins the entire crop—now the farmer has something to learn about that, if he is a good farmer he will figure out how to protect his crop against such a problem in the future. Of course he could choose not to grow and learn and think of himself as a failure, get angry at life . . . So time to go work in our fields . . . © 2007 Bobbi Misiti | BeFit Body & Mind YOGA |