YOGA WHAT IT IS AND WHAT IT IS NOT
by Swami Chidananda
In Sanskrit, the primary definition of the term Yoga is the state of union with the
Divine or the experience of oneness with the great Reality. Yoga, therefore, represents
the experience of Truth, the consciousness of Reality, the union with the Divine. There
are also secondary meanings of the term Yoga. Yoga is also a set of scientifically evolved
and intelligently formulated practical techniques enabling man to shed himself of all the
impurities imposed upon him by the nature of his body, mind and senses, and aiding him to
concentrate his thoughts entirely upon the Supreme. Thus Yoga means anything that man may
do to purify his lower nature, to restrain his senses, to direct his mind towards God, to
come into a deep interior level of worship of the Divine and finally to realise his
eternal oneness with the Divine Consciousness.
The application of yoga is universal. It may be applied within the religious framework.
Yet it clearly transcends religion. It is supra-religious, far beyond any dogma or
doctrine. The extent and duration of its applicability is commensurate with the whole of
humanity for all time. I shall attempt to show you the significance that Yoga holds for
everyone in this great and eventful twentieth century.
First and foremost, Yoga is not mere acrobatics. Some people suppose that Yoga is
primarily concerned with the manipulation of the body into various queer positions,
standing on the head, for instance, or twisting about the spine, or assuming any of the
numerous odd poses which are demonstrated in the text-books on Yoga. These techniques are
correctly employed in one distinct type of Yoga practice, but they do not form an integral
part of the most essential type. Physical posture serve at best as an auxiliary, or a
minor form of Yoga.
Secondly, Yoga is not the performance of magical feats. I mention this especially
because among the many misconceptions that abound about Yoga, this one is due to certain
pretensions which have been made by fake Yoginspseudo-Yogins. Anything that is good
is all too easily corrupted by perverted people. At all times in the history of the world
this has happened. Behind the deliberate mystification of things pertaining to Yoga there
lies a selfish motive. Unfortunately, the distortion of this true science is the
consequence. It will not be out of place, therefore, for me to tell you frankly and
clearly that not all that has been put across as Yoga is really Yoga. Yoga is certainly
not magic, nor is it the performance of any extraordinary or unusual mystical feat.
Neither is Yoga 'Fakirism', the impression that is obtained by many tourists and
travellers, especially by news-people who, with a strong preference for the sensational
and the fantastic, have managed to create the fantastic idea that Yoga is some form of
self-torturelying on a bed of nails, burying oneself underground, chewing or
swallowing pieces of glass, drinking acid, swallowing nails or piercing oneself with pins
and needles. This has nothing to do with Yoga, and real Yogins have nothing to do with all
this.
Neither is Yoga any weird ceremonial or peculiar rite. It is not hedonism. It is not
paganism. It is not palmistry. It is not prophesying. It is not astrology. It is not
thought-reading, nor is it the dispensing of charms to ward off evil spirits or
'possessions'. None of these is Yoga. If people call themselves Yogins and then explain
their Yoga by exhibiting any of these unusual feats, then they are misusing the term Yoga.
Yoga is not auto-hypnotism or self-hypnosis. It is not doing of incantations or by the
monotonous performance of gestures. Yoga is not experiences like those obtained by taking
lysergic acid or mescalin or peyote (of Mexican origin) or divine mushrooms. These
experiences are not Yoga, nor are they products of Yoga.
Neither is Yoga a religious cult. Certain Eastern concepts do lie behind it. This is
true. But these concepts do not have anything to do with the evolution of the science
Proper. Yoga is comprised of highly evolved and practical techniques which may be applied
by persons of any race, nation, caste, creed, church or sect. As philosophical definitions
were being formed and as religious concepts of the Hindus were being formulated, the
science of Yoga was evolved. Certain metaphysical concepts are peculiarly Hindu and
Eastern, but Yoga which is separable from its philosophical and metaphysical background,
is a science of universal and practical value. Yoga is essentially a spiritual matter
concerning spiritual methods. It is an intensely practical approach towards the
realisation of the supreme Reality, the very Centre of all lifeGod. And it is the
heritage of all humanity.
Worshipful Gurudev Sri Swami Sivanandaji Maharaj used to tell a beautiful parable
regarding the importance and truth about Yoga: There was a big tree in a jungle. On the
top of a branch there was a very big honey-comb. But the ascent to the top of the tree was
difficult. One had to cut steps on the trunk of the tree and ascend; but that demanded
great patience and intelligent work.
A slender creeper entwined that tree and reached up to a great part of the height. It
appeared to be strong, though it perilously dangled in the air.
A greedy man, desirous of possessing honey, without much effort, began to ascend the
tree with the sole help of the creeper. He was too lazy to cut steps on the trunk of the
tree and thought that the creeper was strong enough to take him to the top. When he was a
few feet above the ground, a violent wind broke the creeper and the man fell down and
fractured his limbs.
Similar is the case with those who try to ascend the tree of Yoga (Divinity), in order
to drink the honey of Moksha, with the help of the creeper of Kamya Karmas (actions with
selfish motives and desires) through short-cut paths. The path of Yoga lies along the
trunk of the tree of Divinity. You have to improvise steps on it, with some effort, which
is Sadhana (spiritual practices). You have to ascend step by step, starting with Yama,
Niyama, Asana, Pranayama, Pratyahara, Dharana, Dhyana and then reach the pinnacle of
Samadhi. There is no short-cut to this. You cannot evade this responsibility. If, on the
other hand, you climb with the help of Kamya-Karmas,though they, too, appear to be
strong,they will not take you to the heights of Yoga. When the wind of selfish
desires, greed for the things of this world and the pleasures of heaven, blows, this
creeper of Karma will break and you will have a terrible fall.
O man! Selfish works will not lead you to the Goal of Yoga. Only unselfish works will
help you. Sadhana means something much sterner. You have to ascend the top through the
hard way. But once you reach the top, you will drink the nectar of Immortality and Eternal
Bliss.
There are various systems of Yoga which I shall now briefly describe. The first is the
intellectual system in which man employs his human faculties in a supreme exercise: the
realisation of the Truth. This is known as Jnana Yoga or the Yoga of Intellect. One
listens to the expositions of the nature of God, acquires an understanding of the Reality,
then by reflecting upon it again and again, ultimately, one penetrates into it through the
power of reason in the depths of meditation.
The second system is known as Bhakti Yoga or the Yoga of Devotion or Love. This is a
very sweet path, one which is peculiarly suited and easily adapted to the emotional
temperament. One grows into close relationship with the Supreme Being by constantly
thinking about Him, praying to Him, worshipping Him, feeling Him close, so close that one
naturally walks with Him, talks with Him, lives, moves and has one's being in Him. A link
is set up whereby pure love is directed to God. In this exercise, the human being becomes
totally integrated.
In the third system, all phases of life's activities are dedicated to God. On an
unselfish basis, man's duties are thus integrated. This is known as Karma Yoga or the Yoga
of selfless service. The prime and crucial act in this system is the shedding of the ego.
When the personal ego is completely abnegated, all creatures upon earth are clearly
apprehended as visible manifestations of God, as moving temples in which the Divine is
enshrined. The service of others then becomes natural and easy, and every act is performed
not as a secular act, but as an act of worship. Engaged in the transmutation of dynamism
into divine realisation, one may do his worship everywhere. The teacher in the school, the
doctor in the hospital, the farmer in the field, the businessman in the stock-exchange,
everyone engaged in professional activity, can transmute his dynamism into pure devotion
by adopting a humble and worshipful inner attitude.
In the fourth system, man is employed in a very special process in which all thought is
made to merge in God. One becomes more and more aware of God as the Centre of being. This
is a very beautiful path also. It is known as Raja Yoga or the Yoga of Concentration and
Meditation. Thought is movement of the mind-stuff. Movement of the mind-stuff is produced
by motion of the vital-life, force within called Prana and by movement of the body. Thus,
thought, Prana and the body are all interconnected. Total subdual and control of the body
may be brought about by keeping it in a fixed and steady posture. Subdual and control of
the inner psychic energy may be obtained by practising techniques of breath-control. And
ultimately, all the scattered rays of the mind may be withdrawn from the multifarious
universe and made to concentrate solely upon the one idea of God. In this culminating
process, man is raised above the level of the mind, taken into a state of
superconsciousness in which the experience of oneness with God is realised, and he is
released forever from the bondage to the body and from death itself. There are many
heartening signs that this Yoga is being considered by many seekers in the West to be the
most suitable method for the solution of the perplexing problems of their civilisation.