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Transcript of Visual Stepping
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Visual Stepping Stones to the Absolute
Yoga Through the Visual Mind
A practical manual &
summary of practices
by Tao Semko
2nd Edition
.
www.UmaaTantra.comFirst Edition ©2005, Umaa Tantra, Inc.
2nd Edition ©2007, Umaa Tantra, Inc.
All Rights Reserved
published by Smashan Press,
Las Vegas, Nevada, USA
www.SmashanPress.com
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Homage! May this manual lead to increase of compassion and wisdom, and to
transcendence of sectarianism and dogma, and may all beings realize Non-Duality!
Thank you to all our spiritual teachers, for all of your teachings:
Thank you toDr. Glenn Morris,
H.H. The 14th Dalai Lama,
H.E. Khempo Yurmed Tinley Rinpoche,
Santiago Dobles,Dinu Roman,
Sifu Francis Fong,
Guru Cliff Stewart,
Ajarn Surachai Sirisute,
Dr. Robert Svoboda,
Dr. David Frawley,
Raven Cohen,the Dakinis, the Wisdom teachers, and givers of life,
and the many masters who have taught us quiet lessons, great and small.
Thank you to all who have provided us with spiritual and material sustenance, who
have given us the opportunity to study, to practice, and to live this life.
Thank you to each of our students, for always striving in your own spiritual efforts,
and for always providing us with new occasions to learn.
To our parents, family, and friends, for giving us this life with which to live, prosper,
and practice, thank you!
Thank you to all who will read these words, who will practice, and who will strive to
achieve an understanding which transcends sectarianism and dogma.
We offer thanks for all of these blessings, back to their profound Origin. Thank you
from our hearts!
Tao Semko of www.UmaaTantra.com,
author of Visual Stepping Stones to the Absolute.
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This manual consists of three parts.
Part One is a set of eye exercises to strengthen and relax the
eye muscles, and help to relieve eye strain.
Part Two includes the esoteric instructions on yogic gazing
(trataka, the relaxed, fixed, unblinking stare) and the yoga
(shambavi mudra) that may be obtained by perfecting this
technique, withdrawing inward, and relaxing into a centered,
one-pointed, contemplative state,
Part Three consists of the various advanced visual yogic
techniques of breath and movement of awareness that may be
attempted and perfected once the eye exercises, gazing, and one-
pointed contemplation become second nature.
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A Note Before Beginning:
All the techniques in this manual are explained in plain English, however
some philosophical and technical explanations of advanced esotericpractices use the original Sanskrit terminology.
Novices will have no trouble using the basic and intermediate
techniques. No external reference works are needed.
However, the advanced techniques in Part Three presuppose some
knowledge of esoteric anatomy and meditative concepts. We provide a
thorough overview of esoteric anatomy (chakras, nadis, etc..) and
meditative states in Secrets the Gurus will Never Show You, by SantiagoDobles, available at www.UmaaTantra.com for those who need an
overview.
A note on definitions: The following stipulation is offered for scholars of Eastern
Philosophy: Most terminology used in this manual uses definitions from the non-dual
Hindu tantric and agamic traditions, rather than the Buddhist or Jain Tantras. The
term “Samadhi,” in particular, is used with the non-dual Hindu tantric denotation,
rather than the Buddhist one.
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Part One – The Eye Exercises:Sit up straight, facing forwards, stretching the crown of your head
upwards and keeping your chin back. For the exercises below, do not
move your head, ever… only your eyes. Work, stretch, and strengthenyour eye muscles, and help to release tension and lactic acid from the eye
muscles.
One: Focusing Near and Far:
Inhale slowly, deeply, and gently, while looking as far out towards the
horizon as possible, Exhale slowly, deeply, and gently, and look as close
in to the brow center as possible. Repeat 9, 18, or 21 times. Very good
for computer eyestrain.
Two: Shen (spirit/ upper dantien) breathing:
Breathe in through the brow center, exhale through the center of the
crown (the anterior fontanelle of the skull).
Inhale in through the crown and gently out through the bony bump at the
back of the skull (opposite the brow center).
Inhale in through that bony bump, exhale out through the anterior
fontanelle (crown center).
Inhale in through the crown center and out through the brow center.
Repeat 3 or 9 times.
Three: Circles:
Sweep your eyes in the widest possible circles, clockwise 9 times, then
counterclockwise nine times. To help you focus, stretch out your right
arm all the way to the right, make a fist with your thumb outstretched,
like a hitchhiking or giving a “thumbs up.” Look at your thumb with
your eyes only, while keeping the face pointing forwards. Moving
exclusively from your shoulder, sweep your arm in a big, slooow “Pete
Townsend” windmill circle while following the thumb with your eyes.
Your face and head remain stationary. Rotate the arm and eyes nine times
clockwise. Then switch hand/arm and go nine times counterclockwise
with the left arm, following the thumb with the eyes. Be aware of the
parts of the circle that are hard for your eye muscles to control. Work on
these areas to improve the Brain- muscle connections.
Why the thumb? The thumb is linked via meridians with the chakras of
the head and neck.
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Four: Clock-face back and forth:
With your head aimed forward and holding still, sweep your eyes
upwards to 12:00 o’clock on an enormous imagined clock face, and then
down to 6:00 o’clock, up and down, 9 times slowly.Repeat with 3:00 and 9:00, back and forth 9 times slowly, then
1:00 and 7:00,
2:00 and 8:00,
10:00 and 4:00,
and 11:00 and 5:00
Sloowly, paying attention to any areas that are difficult. Remember to
stretch those eye muscles, but don’t hurt yourself (because your face will
freeze like that!)(I’m kidding – but do remember, stretch, don’t strain).
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Part Two – Practical Esoteric Instructions for Visual Yoga
One: Trataka – fixed, relaxed gazing, without blinking.
Trataka is the traditional method of both concentrating and relaxing themind – achieving one-pointedness, control of the subtle winds ( pranas) of
the body, and relaxation and tranquility of the mind through visual focus
and relaxation.
Body posture:
Sit comfortably, relaxed, but with the spine erect, chin drawn in. Think
of your tailbone stretching down towards the ground and your crown
stretching up towards the sky. To release your psoas muscles so your
back doesn’t get tight and sore from sitting, sit with your butt elevated 3to 4 inches above your knees.
If you sit on the floor, use a cushion, foam block, rolled yoga mat or the
like to elevate your butt.
If you sit on a chair, bench, stool, the edge of the bed, etc, try to sit on the
edge, with your genitals hanging in free space, and your knees lower than
your butt. (again, use a book or cushion to elevate your butt if necessary.
Your back should be free, not leaning against anything,
Release your jaw muscles so there is space between your teeth. This is
important, as it allows excess energy, bloodflow, etc, to leave your head,
and keeps you relaxed during concentration.
Make sure the top of your head is level and not leaning forward or back.
Pull the upper jaw gently inward (not downward) towards the back of
your neck. The upper jaw remains parallel to the floor or ground.
Focusing point:
Ideally, focus on a point or unwavering candle flame exactly one arm
length in front of your eyes, at pupil (eye) level. You may draw a dot on
the wall, use a small circular Avery sticker, or use a candle on a table. If
using a candle, trim the wick so the flame is no more than 1/2 inch (1.25
cm) and do not attempt trataka if the flame is flickering in drafts – it will
be counterproductive.
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On using other focal lengths for your point:
You may do trataka on a point on the horizon, or a far-off point, but it is
best to start simply, with a point one arm-length away. Why one arm
length? Sacred geometry… Your brain has a very special relationship
with this distance… It’s the limit of your physical interactions with yourenvironment– without the use of tools… The limit of your human
proportions, the distance of your “personal space,” within which you
allow only family and loved ones, and it relates to the proportions of the
rest of your body by the Golden mean….
Other notes before beginning trataka:
Trataka cannot be done properly with contact lenses in your eyes, and for
some people it can be difficult while wearing glasses. I recommend youdo the technique first thing in the morning, after doing a few warm-ups,
deep breathing, or limbering exercises – and before you put your glasses
or contacts on. Just set up a space in front of the wall near your bed. If
you are combining trataka with any internal muscle contractions
(bandhas), it is recommended that you touch the tip of your tongue gently
to the roof of your mouth to connect the front and back subtle channels of
the body and prevent discomfort or kundalini syndrome. Keep the jaw
loose and relaxed in any case.
Set a timer if you have one… start with 5 minutes your first three days,
and then work up to 10, 15, and finally 20. Do not exceed 20 without
first getting “checked” out by a yoga master. (Why? Because long
periods of trataka develop tremendous mental power, but if you hold any
stress in the muscles of the face, head, and back while you do the
exercise, you can over-stimulate your kidneys and adrenals, and run too
much hot energy (translated as high blood pressure in the brain) through
the head. Ask a friend, spouse, or family member to watch you and show
you (by touching you) where you are tense (shoulders, forehead, jaw,
bugging out the eyes, etc…)– so you can relax more…
Trataka – the technique.
Once seated properly, look forward straight at the point, relax your eyes
and eyelids, but don’t blink. Soften your eyes, but hold your pupils
firmly on the point. You are learning to suspend a part of your normal
viewing process. Normally, your eyes make constant, tiny “flitting”
motions around their central focus in order to add additional information
about the periphery of the environment. You are learning to consciously
suspend this tendency. Breathe slowly and deeply, and relax your jaw,your shoulders, your neck, your forehead, your eyelids, and your eyes.
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Don’t arch your back… keep your spine stacked and relaxed vertically.
If you find your mind wandering, mentally count the seconds of your
inhalation, the pause, exhalation, and pause. Try to lengthen the duration
of each part of the breath, especially exhalation. Try doing a 6, 3, 6, 3
ratio (inhale for a count of 6, pause for 3, exhale for 6, pause for 3, inhalefor 6, etc…). Breathe deeply, gently, and slowly with your abdomen, and
relax.
If you do trataka properly, preventing yourself from blinking, your eyes
will water, your nose will run, and your mouth will secrete saliva. This is
good. Let it happen, and don’t break your concentration by wiping
yourself, blowing your nose, or if possible, swallowing (Tibetan yogis
even allow themselves to drool doing this exercise) until you finish your
session. Recent studies show that the tear ducts accumulate specialproteins, which cause depression (inhibit seratonin) if not “cried out”…
Fascinating stuff. A “good cry” really is good for you…
Ajna chakra (third eye/ mental) clarity is strongly linked to clear sinuses!
(for instance, when you have a cold, your mind feels foggy and
unfocused). Trataka activates and balances pituitary and pineal activity,
while removing toxins from the sinuses & tear ducts
When you simply must blink, or when you finish your session (either
your timer goes off or you need a break), slowly close the eyes while
keeping the eyeball still, still pointing at the focus point even though the
eyes are still. Focus on the afterimage, if there is one. Open your eyes
when ready, and continue.
Always finish by dissolving your practice into empty awareness,
without conceptual thoughts or judgments. You can mentally review
later, after you’ve massaged yourself, gotten up, etc. When you finish
your session, close your eyes and relax with your eyes still immobile,
dissolving yourself and your vision gently into emptiness, whileremaining fully aware, Spend a few minutes this way, and then slowly
and gently come back. Inhale your arms slowly up the sides, and exhale
them down the center in front of you, either palms down as in Qi Gong,
or in a palms-together prayer gesture. You. As your hands come down
the center, relax and dissolve your awareness into the ground beneath
you, rooting and grounding yourself through your tailbone and pelvic
floor, deeply into the ground. Massage your body gently, from the crown
of your head to your toes…
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When practiced well and practiced regularly, trataka alone is enough to
achieve pratyahara (sensory withdrawal), dharana (meditative
concentration), dhyana (meditation), and Samadhi (meditative absorption,
which is yoga, or union), but there is more…
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Two: Shambavi Mudra
Shambu is another name for Shiva, the Original Yogi. The primordial
form of Shambu is neither male nor female, form nor formless.
Shambavi is the power, femine aspect, or shakti, of Shambu… A Mudra
is a Gesture or Seal. Shambavi Mudra has many versions, but they all
have the following in common: Non-dual awareness. When shambavi
mudra is accomplished and held, the yogi does not mentally (using
conceptual, “thinking” thoughts) differentiate between “I” and “Thou”.
In Shambhavi Mudra, there is no conceptual separation between the
subject of meditation (the yogi), the object of meditation (the candle
flame, dot on the wall, flower, statue, madala, crucifix or other holy
symbol, deity, saint, teacher, etc that is being meditated upon), or even
the act of meditating. For the yogi in Shambavi Mudra, there is no
conceptual difference between meditator and meditation, microcosm and
macrocosm, mind and body, consciousness and energy… Everything
simply “is.”
Shambavi mudra is accomplished by doing trataka on an object or body
part (tip of the nose, space between the eyebrows, etc) or on the empty
space between an object and the yogi (or on the empty sky, or the empty
abyss of a deep well, etc), and then gradually withdrawing theconsciousness or awareness (chitta in Sanskrit) as well as the energy
( prana) associated with looking, into the yogi’s center channel
(sushumna nadi) while maintaining the same gaze.
Alternately, meditating with the eyes closed, the yogi stares blankly at the
darkness and accomplishes pratyahara (sense withdrawal) by keeping the
body’s prana tranquilly in the center subtle channel (sushumna nadi). In
Chinese, Tibetan, and Japanese traditions, the awareness is usually
withdrawn to one of the three dan’tiens (upper dan’tien, at the center of the brain, known as ajna chakra in Sanskrit; middle dan’tien, behind the
base of the breastbone in the center channel; and lower dan’tien, in the
lower abdomen and pelvis). In the post-medieval Hindu Tantric
traditions, there are more points, within the center channel and elsewhere,
where the consciousness and energy may rest during Shambhavi Mudra..
Some correspond to major chakras, some to marma points (Vedic
acupressure points), and some to secret energetic structures.
The various Tantras and Agamas (traditional tantric manuals andscriptures) enumerate these internal points of awareness differently, but
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all the points “work”… For maintaining bodily health, most of the time, I
would recommend bring the prana down to the hara/ lower dan’tien (the
space at the center of the lower torso , behind the point that lies four
finger widths below the navel). For improved mental faculties, the prana
can be kept for shorter intervals at the upper dan’tien (ajna chakra, thepoint at the center of the skull, straight back from the brow center). For
awareness of one’s Self Nature (Hindu Term) or Nature of Mind
(Buddhist term), the awareness may be left in the middle dan’tien, or hrit
padma, which is the space above the solar plexus but below the heart
center, behind the xiphoid process, back towards the spine… Attention
fixed here must be loose, relaxed, and spacious, so that the chest remains
without energetic congestion or physical pressure.
Three: Skygazing
Skygazing is the practice of Shambavi Mudra using the emptiness of
the sky (akasha) as the resting point for the relaxed, focused,
unblinking gaze.
Skygazing is very useful for increasing awareness of the subtle tattva
(subtle element) of space (called akasha). Skygazing can lead to
Skywalking (the most secret meaning of the hatha yoga technique called
Kechari Mudra) in which consciousness itself is suspended in space (both
the inner space within sushumna nadi, the center shannel, and the akasha
or space within the posterior pharyngeal/sinus region)… Skygazing
using high clouds as the object of trataka will result in an increase in
awareness of the subtle element of Air…
Trataka using solid objects can lead to an increase in perceptual
steadiness (the subtle element of earth), while trataka on an image of
tranquil water leads to a tranquil flexibility and expansiveness of
perception (water), and trataka on a steady flame leads to an increase in
awareness of subtle light (fire) within the subtle body…
Within the structure of mandalas and yantras (defined in Part Three,
below) are geometric symbols that have the same elemental (tattvic)
effects or impressions on the yogi’s consciousness. Squares give
steadiness, curves yield water effects, triangles yield the transformative
power of fire and the perception of light and dark, petals, circles and
pericarps yield awareness of expansiveness and freedom of air and the
vastness of all-permeating space and void….
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Part Three: The Esoteric Visual Yogas
A definition before beginning:
Yantras and Mandalas are Esoteric Geometric, Alphabetic, or
Mathematical Symbols drawn using proportions of SacredGeometry, that generate (entrain) particular, specific brain waves in
the mind of one who meditates upon them. Familiar examples in the
west are the Christian Cross, the Star of David, and the Muslim Crescent
Moon and Star….
Hindu Yantra YogaHindu Yantra Yoga is a visual yoga. It differs from Tibetan Yantra
Yoga, which is a form of physical, hatha yoga, in which the human body
is shaped via contortion into esoteric symbols, or yantras. Hindu YantraYoga involves doing trataka on specific symbols, each of which translates
to a particular theta wave in the brain. The yantra (geometrical visual
tool) and its associated mantra (auditory tool) each will produce that same
theta wave, or in some cases, even a gamma wave, if used properly and
with adequate practice. An experienced user of more than one mantra
can make his or her brain “jump” from one discreet theta wave to another
by switching mantra/ yantra “on the fly”. Once the resonance pattern of a
given yantra is set/ burned into the mind, it becomes very easy to recall,
with or without the help of a physical yantra diagram.The mental imprint can then be used to trigger the specific meditative
state indicated by that yantra (or mantra). Once the yogi has practiced
enough to mentally recall the yantra and the state with ease, he/she then
learns to dissolve the mental imprint and the meditative state back into
the void, or to simply remain aware that the mental imprint and
meditative state is born of void, dwells within void, and resolves back
into void. This is another version of Shambavi Mudra, discussed above.
Other specific yantra yogas exist. All are dependent upon the ability to
do basic trataka successfully, remaining relaxed, aware, and focused, for
periods over twenty minutes.,. These yogas, which follow, should not be
attempted prematurely.
The human body itself is the most important yantra or mandala in tantric
yogas. To understand this concept further, please read the Esoteric
Anatomy section of Secrets the Gurus will Never Show You, by Santiago
Dobles, also available on www.UmaaTantra.com.
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Many of the following techniques combine the use of an external yantra
image with the yantra provided by the human body (the human body is
the most important yantra in tantric practice), or with the many smaller
yantras within the human body. Examples of these smaller yantras are
the female triangle formed by the shoulders and pubis, the male triangleformed by the lines connecting hips and sternum, the square/ diamond
shape formed by the muscles of the pelvic floor, the oval of the head,
etc…
Some of the Many Permutations of Yantra Yoga which may be tried
after you become competent with Trataka:
Yantra Yoga Combined with Japa.
Entraining one’s consciousness through repetition of mantra (out loud ormentally) is called Japa, or Mantra Yoga. The culmination of Japa is
Ajapa Japa, when the internal (true) mantra, or inner sound (nada),
repeats itself without any effort from the practitioner, and the practitioner
is able to merge in Samadhi (absorption) with the true essence of the
mantra.
The practice of Japa may be combined with Yantra Yoga: Here the yogi
gazes at an external yantra (standard trataka) while chanting (out loud or
internally) the specific mantra associated with that diagram. When theeyes, voice, or mind become exhausted, the eyes are closed, the after-
image is held in the awareness, and then dissolved into the infinite void.
The meditation on emptiness is held without forcing it, and then the yogi
slowly comes out of meditation, maintaining awareness of the center
channel.
A note on Mantras: Mantra may be a short, powerful “seed” sound,
called a bija mantra, like the famous sound “OM,” or a longer
combination of bija mantras designed for a more complicated meditative,
religious, or shamanic purpose… Because bija mantras require less
coaching on effective pronunciation and intonation, they are frequently
taught first. OM (pronounced AUM, with the “M” nasalized and
sustained to reverberate at the back of the base of the skull) is the
universal mantra. To begin understanding it, OM requires only respectful
non-conceptual awareness, and slow, lingering pronunciation with
patient, pausing repetition. Many other mantras may require much more
initiation in their use for any real benefit to be obtained… Used
improperly, some can cause harm to the user…
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Yantra Yoga Combined with NyasaNyasa means “placing” or “touching”. It can refer to the practice of
touching (with the fingertips) various places on the body (one’s own, or
that of another), while mentally placing the consciousness, a mantra, a
yantra, a mandala, and/ or the awareness of the breath at that location. Itcan also refer to the movement of ones awareness from space to space in
the body, while mentally placing the consciousness, a mantra, a yantra, a
mandala, and/ or the awareness of the breath at each location, without
physically touching the locations.
Nyasa is done for the following reasons:
Awareness and Sensitization: connecting the mind with all of the spaces
that make up the physical body, and with all of the subtle parts of thebody. On a physiological level, the practice prompts the creation and
reinforcement of Neural Networks and Endocrine Receptor Sites.
Sanctification: nyasa “places” holy words, images, or awareness of
divinity within the body. For those who view themselves as profane, it is
an act of transformation. For those who already view their bodies as
divine in nature, it is merely a constant reinforcement and reminder.
Sacred Geometry: Just like the shapes and forms of mandalas andyantras, the pattern of placement (nyasa) on the human body may be used
to “point out” the mandalas of sacred geometry that exist within the
physical and subtle bodies. The entire body itself is the greatest
microcosmic mandala.
Protection or Healing: Protective mantras, anointments, poultices, or
images may be applied to the various Marmas (107 main acupressure
points) of the human body to physically or spiritually strengthen the
constitution before attempting a rigorous practice, or before combat…
You can learn more about Nyasa at www.UmaaTantra.com…
Yantra yoga combined with Nyasa may be done several ways.
With material:
In some traditional practices, a physical yantra is drawn in sand, or
sandalwood paste, or engraved on wood or metal, and then touched to the
body at the various locations. Usually, the yantra’s accompanyingmantra is uttered with each placement.
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On the Physical Body:
Or, the mandala or yantra may be drawn directly onto the body at the
various locations.
Visualization:
Or, once trataka has been practiced enough with a yantra, it can be
mentally recreated and mentally placed (through visualization and
kinesthetic awareness) at each location.
Vizualization and the Breath:
Or, (also through visualization and kinesthetic awareness), the yantra or
mandala may be breathed from the physical diagram through thechannels of the body, or into various subtle centers of the body. Think of
an early Warner Brothers cartoon, where a cartoon character’s ghost
image moves from its body after the character is hit by an anvil. As you
slowly and deeply inhale, see and feel the ghost image of the yantra move
from the physical yantra, through space, and into your subtle body. Then
exhale it back to the physical diagram. Repeat…
Vizualization and the Breath with Crown or Hrid Activation:
Or, one may mentally or physically place the image above one’s crown
and mentally breath it down to ones roots, or to muladhara chakra (the
base center), or down to hridaya (the heart region), or to hrit (the heart of
the soul), or just to ajna chakra, where it may be held in tranquility, and
then dissolved into voidness…
Yantra Yoga Used in Laya Yoga Laya yoga is the yoga of resonance. The yogi purifies, sanctifies, and
becomes aware of his/her subtle body as a microcosmic replica of the
great macrocosmic forces and consciousness present in Manifestation and
in the Primordial Void. Simple geometric mandalas are used to represent
the tattvas (the subtle elements of earth, water, fire, air, space…) and are
mentally placed at the locations of the corresponding chakras in the body.
Alternately, images of deities may be mentally placed (nyasa) within the
subtle body. Each deity represents an anthropomorphized universal
principle of form, energy, or emptiness in the cosmos. Mantra is used
internally to establish bodily resonance with Universal Principles. The
foundation principles of Laya Yoga are presented in several chapters of
Secrets the Gurus will Never Show You, along with the geometricsymbols that correspond to the various tattvas…
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Yantra Yoga Combined with Swara Yoga
Swara yoga is the yoga of subtle breath. In hinduism it is described
chiefly in the Siva Swarodaya. It is different from pranayama in that pranayama (“subtle breath control”) uses physical breath control to affect
the flow of subtle energy, aiming either at establishing one-pointedness
by moving the body’s prana into sushumna nadi (the center channel) or at
ayurvedic balancing of the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous
system for overall bodily and mentall healh.
Swara yoga instead focuses on awareness of the current swara (how
energy or subtle prana is flowing in the manifested universe: contraction,
expansion, or momentary stasis.. i.e., whether ida nadi, pingala nadi, orsushumna nadi is currently dominant in the microcosm, and therefore the
macrocosm, and which subtle tattva/element is dominant in that current
flow: earth, water, fire, air, or ether.
Put in more biological terms – is the right nostril dominant, or the left, or
are both channeling breath equally? Knowing that, what is the length (in
fingerwidths) and shape of the turbulent flow of breath emitted in each
exhalation…, These states and shapes move in fixed cycles of change,
and have very specific implications for the current mental andphysiological state of humans in a given time zone, under particular
astrological conditions…
Yantra yoga is combined with swara by undertaking yogic practices in
harmony with the flow of swara, and by performing the yogas with the
yogi’s remaining aware of the flow of swara. Swara yoga is a complex
subject and its many implications are beyond the scope of this manual.
Yantra Yoga with Sanskrit Characters:
The devanagri script of Sanskrit is itself a series of yantras. Each letter
has a particular resonance, and when contemplated alone or combined
into written mantra, Sanskrit letters have a powerful effect on the brain.
They are used for trataka just as other yantras are, and for a geometrical
yantra to be fully empowered, Sanskrit mantras written in devanagri
script are usually incorporated into the image….
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Yantra Yoga with ArchitectureTemples in India are built following the Vedic architectural science of
vaastu shastra in the form of yantras! Shiva temples if viewed from the
sky, appear as the yantra of Shiva Nataraj. Yogini Temples often contain
the female triangle in their floorplan. Frequently, smaller mandalas andyantras are formed by structural elements. Viewed from afar or from
within, these temples and their adornments become objects of visual yoga
to those who know how to gaze while withdrawing the senses…
Yantra Yoga within Posture and Dance.The body itself is made into various yantras in both tantric hatha yoga,
tandava, and other sacred dance. Contemplation of these bodily forms,
and their mental recreation, can lead very powerfully to union once
trataka and shambavi mudra have been accomplished. The various eroticstatues in the yogini temples of south India are also sacred geometrical
yantras, to be used in tranquil contemplation.
In both Hinduism and Cabbalism, the intersecting male and female
triangles that form the Star of David were originally formed by the
intersection of the male and female form in tantric union using the
recumbent “x” posture. (See the Secrets of Tantra Seminar DVD’s or
Gold Bonus DVD 4 of the Tantric Inner Circle, both at
www.UmaaTantra.com). The points of the star are created by the headsand feet of the two human figures. This, like sacred dance, works both
for the humans taking the geometric forms, and for those observing them
in visual yoga…
Tibetan Yantra Yoga is a hatha yoga built out of sacred forms…
Visual Yoga in other traditions:
Sufism uses visual contemplation of and union with sacred architecture,sacred calligraphy, and sacred geometry as a form of yantra yoga.
Other forms of Islam also use this, but to a lesser extent.
Christian Mysticism (in Catholic, Orthodox, Gnostic Christianity, and in
Protestantism) uses yantra in
1) contemplation of the cross itself, in all of its permutations.
2) the stations of the cross
3) genuflection (a Christian form of nyasa)
4) sacred architecture (cruciform gothic cathedrals, and womblike
Romanesque churches)
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5) contemplation of the Word itself
Cabblic Judaism uses yantra in the form of the Hebrew Alephbet , The
Star of David, the Sephiroth, and more… The sacred alephbet is used in
cabbalism much the same contemplative manner as the sacred devanagriscript is used in tantra.
Taoism and Zen / Chan Buddhism use Calligraphy (both creation and
contemplation of calligraphy) as a way to achieve balance and resonance
with the macrocosm…
Tibetan Vajrayana Buddhism and Japanese Mikkyo Buddhism both use
mandala creation and contemplation in ways derived from the Hindu
yantra yogas and Vedic fire ceremonies…
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A Reminder
Mystic diagrams have no yogic purpose unless the yogi/yogini can
adequately accomplish concentration (dharana), meditation/
contemplation (dhyana) and one-pointed non-dual awareness (samadhi)through trataka on a simple point! Master Trataka first, and all things
will follow…. The goal of yoga practices is always Realization of
Oneness, and subsequently the strengthening of that Realization. Don’t
dabble in mysticism. Don’t aspire to paranormal abilities… neither will
bring you succor…
Immerse yourself instead in Union and realize the non-dual nature of Self
– as both form and void… the union of light and dark, of bliss and
emptiness, for your own benefit, and that of all sentient beings. Try toglimpse the union that already exists. Don’t waste your time in egoistic
philosophical arguments. Practice instead. Remain in non-dual
awareness instead. See the bliss and emptiness in all things, and in
yourself. Words, by their very nature, will always be at odds with other
words. Philosophies cannot encapsulate truth. Truth is Ineffable.
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More Information on yoga, tantra, qi gong, and meditation is
available at www.UmaaTantra.com.
Support for the techniques described in this manual is available
via email at [email protected].
You may send specific questions on the techniques and on your practical experiences
as a result of the techniques. We reserve the right to reprint your questions and our
answers, but we will honor your timely request for anonymity in reprints.
We have an excellent reading list posted on the website if you wish to broaden your
understanding of Eastern philosophy and meditative traditions, as well as links to
many other great websites. However, please remember that practical experience and
observation is always more beneficial than armchair postulation!