by
Dada VedaprajinanandaYoga is more popular now than it has ever been. Famous entertainers and other celebrities practice it and thousands
or perhaps millions of other people are also doing yoga exercises in one form or another. Yet, despite this widespread popularity,
yoga is still misunderstood. Many people think that yoga is primarily a physical activity, something that they can use to
get their body in shape. While it is true that yoga has a great role to play in the physical realm, yoga is much more than
this.
Yoga is, in its deepest sense, the science of human perfection. It is the means by which a person can attain
his or her fullest development: physical, mental and spiritual.
Human perfection? This is a tall order. It does not
come with just a few stretches of your thighs. While yoga has its external practices and exercises, its true foundation is
proper conduct. Proper conduct means living a life that will put you in harmony with the society around you and with your
own inner self.
When I first began practicing yoga, I told one of my friends about it. He became interested and wanted
to begin. I wasn’t a teacher at that time so I recommended a book. He looked at me and said, with all seriousness, “Where
can I steal it!”
Well, you can’t begin yoga like that because stealing is not a way to get in harmony with
society or with yourself. In yoga disciplined or controlled conduct is known by its Sanskrit term, “samyama” and
this controlled conduct has two parts “Yama” and “Niyama.”
In many yoga books Yama is sometimes
defined as “abstinences,” meaning things that you shouldn’t do. Niyama is sometimes translated as “observances,”
referring to things that you should do. These rough translations are not quite correct.
A better way to understand
Yama is to think of it as a discipline that will help you to find harmony with your external environment. Niyama, on the other
hand, are those practices that will help you to attain internal harmony.
Let’s look briefly at the various parts
of Yama and Niyama. In future articles of this series I will focus in more detail on each aspect of Yama and Niyama.
Yama
has five parts. They are as follows.
1. “Ahimsa” means to refrain from harming others with your thoughts,
words or actions. Consciously we should not do anything that will harm others or block their physical, mental or spiritual
progress. If you want a two or three-word English definition of this Sanskrit word just remember “non injury”
or “non-harming.” But there is more to Ahimsa than just two words. What about self-defense? What about our relations
to other living beings? These are important issues and there are a variety of viewpoints. I will discuss them at length in
the next article in this series.
2. “Sayta” is generally referred to as truthfulness. A better definition
given by Shrii Shrii Anandamurti is “action of mind and right use of words with the spirit of welfare.” Whatever
we think or say should be done with the spirit of helping others. It generally means to tell the truth, but if the exact truth
will create harm to someone, then we have to choose our words carefully. That is why a good two-word definition would be “discriminating
truthfulness.”