top of page

What is Yoga?

  • Dec 4, 2024
  • 2 min read

Inseparability of Phenomena


"Yoga" is a Sanskrit word that means “fundamental and inseparable togetherness” (“union” as a translation does not adequately suffice). Sometimes, incorrect interpretations of yogic teachings might lead students to think that Yoga is something "to do" or some kind of state of being "to achieve." But based on the above definition, nothing that exists does so outside of “Yoga.” In other words, everything and everyone is already in "Yoga" and always has been. That might seem lofty, but the common sense of it is that when we think of a team, a business, or a family, we understand that what defines each group is “fundamental and inseparable togetherness”.


Neither team, nor business, nor family have the possibility of existing without the individual factors that comprise their existence. A child is born from parents who were also children born from parents. The relationship-bond is factual. A teammate is only designated as such by the existence of other teammates. The relationship-bond is factual. A business only exists because there are clients whom that business serves. The relationship-bond is factual.


Mutual Benefit, Mutual Harm


Why should "Yoga" matter to us? We understand inherently and through our own experiences that the health of a team, business, or family depends on whether or not the individuals that comprise a team, business, or family recognize and honor the fact of “fundamental and inseparable togetherness”.


By extension therefore, “fundamental and inseparable togetherness” implies that every action of mind and body has a profound impact, for better or worse, on our families, friends, businesses, and communities. Simply stated, both our health of mind and body and our sense of meaning and purpose depend on whether or not we perceive or remember “fundamental and inseparable togetherness”.


"Doing" Yoga


While we might grasp these concepts intellectually at first, it doesn't mean we are actually experiencing the "fundamental and inseparable togetherness" we share with everyone and everything we meet. Instead, we may often carry around mistaken perceptions of isolation, feeling that we don't belong, or that certain experiences "aren't good enough" for us. These are simply habits of body and mind that we have developed over time, but we can re-program ourselves through practice. Authentic practice moves us systematically away from perceived isolation and toward perceived connection and mutual responsibility.​


Traditionally, the words “Yogini / Yogi” are reserved only for practitioners who experience all at once the “fundamental and inseparable togetherness” of all times, spaces, identities, and phenomena directly and viscerally in mind and body.


At first, aspiring Yogis and Yoginis may find it easy to conceptualize "practice" in terms of "asana," or physical postures, but there are also "mind yogas." The same way we can move our bodies into a posture called "downward dog" or "child's pose," we can move our minds into certain shapes. We recognize that it's possible to develop strength and flexibility in the body through physical resistance. Similarly, mental exercises test the limits of the mind, cultivating concentration and critical thinking skills.

Comments


Maitreya.png

Homage to Maitreya

Why do I mistake us myself,

When your entire summit’s inside me,

Engineering miracles all around?

Just like your identity belongs,

Inherent within the bliss,

The love of all time and light,

Once we hung out and you killed me,

Saying, “Rock this triangle and throne!”

With explosions of gold old as I Am,

While humbling me around eternity,

Throughout all awe with you, as you,

I was still at home together everywhere,

But being here and there already,

Who moves, has, or plays with friends,

Or helps them know this happy marriage?

As one, who for fun’s sake to kiss?

For one thing, finally takes its time,

So leave forever peace to all the rest,

There’s nothing more forgotten or found,

Cause invitations extend here and wide,

Tickets to ride the light that’s always on.

The Meaning of Maitreya

one

Foundations exist in order to house that which is alive. That is, we do not live in foundations but upon them. Similarly, we are not born into our fullness by leveling ground and setting concrete endlessly. The game must be played, and the conception of oneself as a mere practitioner does simply limit the beauty and magnificence indwelling in each. Champions are not made in practice but in contest, and the brave who will decide to act out and embody the transcendent will reap the benefits of doing so and attain. Vigor is the hallmark of heroes, but those averse to intensity remain underdeveloped on account of misidentifying who it is that actually suffers when looking out into the world. It is not others whom we aim to uplift or protect but parts of ourselves.

two

None can say and stand in truth, “This is mine alone.” Everything we are – everything we can aspire to or feel we possess – has as its basis and cause the preexistence or contribution of something or someone else. Our bodies are not our own, they belong to the earth and are fed and watered by the efforts of others. Our minds are not our own, they belong to the sky and are fed and watered by the thoughts of others. We eat and think only what is available to eat and think. And in choosing, we empower and proliferate all the lives whose values have been similar. In this way, companies and brands and messages and lifestyles gain in prominence, lose potency, or fade into obscurity. We become what we actively support or passively allow and fail to rectify.

three

Each decision we make has as its motive force the desire to be most alive. We want to do what feels best, and what feels best is to give what is true. Health, clarity, and inspiration are gifts from the wise. This statement is validated by our own experience of having been recipients of such, for everything is made brighter by their entrance into our lives. The byproducts of wisdom are neither arbitrary nor relative, but tangible and universally desirable. In other words, we want to be wise. But in prioritizing comfort, we forfeit our reasons to unfold and unleash our own heroic essence, for the most inspiring action is that most intimate with pain, and who neither wishes nor is able to perform the task cannot simultaneously be called by that name.

"I slept and dreamt that life was joy.
I awoke and saw that life was service.
I acted and behold, service was joy."

—RABINDRANATH TAGORE

Contact
Follow
Read More

©2021-2025 EVERCENTER.

bottom of page