The word ‘yoga’ is derived
from the Sanskrit word yuj which means ‘yoke’ attach or ‘join’. It means the
joining or uniting of the individual consciousness with the universal
consciousness, or self-realisation.
The science of yoga was
systematised by Maharishi Patanjanli in 285 yogasutras.
There are eight components
of yoga. These are:
1. Yama: Our attitudes
towards our environment.
2. Niyama: Our attitudes
towards ourselves.
3. Asana: The practice of
body exercises.
4. Pranayama: The practice
of breathing exercises.
5. Pratyahara: The
restraint of our senses.
6. Dharana: The ability to
direct our minds.
7. Dhyana: The ability to
develop interactions with what we seek to understand.
8. Samadhi: Complete
integration with the object to be understood.
Their respective meanings
are:
i) Universal moral
commandments.
ii) Self-purification by
discipline.
iii) Posture.
iv) Rhythmic control of
breath.
v) Withdrawal of the mind
from the domination of the senses and exterior object.
vi) Concentration.
vii) Meditation.
viii) Thoughtless state in
which one becomes one with the object of his meditation.
No comments:
Post a Comment