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The Branches of Yoga from Yoga Journal's Yoga Basics

Whether you are devotional or intellectual in nature, yoga has a path for you.

By Mara Carrico

Tantra Yoga

Probably the most misunderstood or misinterpreted of all the yogas, tantra, the sixth branch, is the pathway of ritual, which includes consecrated sexuality. The key word here is "consecrated," which means to make sacred, to set apart as something holy or hallowed. In tantric practice we experience the Divine in everything we do. A reverential attitude is therefore cultivated, encouraging a ritualistic approach to life. It is amusing to note that, although tantra has become associated exclusively with sexual ritual, most tantric schools actually recommend a celibate lifestyle. In essence, tantra is the most esoteric of the six major branches. It will appeal to those yogis who enjoy ceremony and relate to the feminine principle of the cosmos, which yogis call shakti. If you see—and are deeply moved by—the significance behind celebration and ritual (holidays, birthdays, anniversaries, and other rites of passage), tantra yoga may be for you. Many tantric yogis find magic in all types of ceremony, whether it be a Japanese tea ceremony, the consecration of the Eucharist in a Catholic mass, or the consummation of a relationship.

Combining the Paths

You may already be involved in one or more of these branches. For example, you may already be a hatha yogi or yogini practicing the postures with a teacher or by yourself. If you are a hospice volunteer for AIDS patients, or a participant in a Big Brother/Big Sister program, you are actively practicing karma yoga. Perhaps reading this book will spark an in-depth study of yoga philosophy, setting you on the path of jnana yoga. Remember you need not be limited to one expression—you may practice hatha yoga, taking care of your physical body, while simultaneously cultivating the lifestyle of a bhakti yogi, expressing your compassion for everyone you meet. Trust that whichever avenue of yogic expression draws your interest, it will probably be the right yoga path for you.


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Reader Comments

Abhijit

Tantra yoga is not a path, and it does not focus on sex (that is a western misconception); it is a subset of yoga or style that raises the consciousness by opening creativity. There are four paths of yoga, Jhana (which actually means to obtain true wisdom of self, and that is why it's hard to master), Karma (yoga of selfless service), Bhakti (devotional), and Raja (as written down by Patanjali). Hatha Yoga is a branch of Raja, developed in the 14th or 15th century when the yoga pradipika was written by Swami Swatarama. Hatha yoga is not solely about asanas; it includes pranyama, mudras, mantras, etc. so that the practitioner can attain samadhi (conscious awakening) by awakening the kundalini (subtle engergy). So, Hatha yoga is a whole system; it just not taught that way in a lot of places in the U.S. About Kundalini: There is the term "kundalini", and there is Kundalini yoga. The term,"kundalini" is the subtle energy that runs (generally speaking) along the spine; many forms of yoga can be practiced to awaken the kundalini for self-realization. Kundalini yoga is a style of yoga or sub-set from the Raja path and Hatha yoga branch. Kundalini yoga classes usually have kriyas (yoga poses, breath, mantras, mudras) done in specific ways to safely awaken the true nature of self or self-realization. Kundalini yoga is beautiful, but it's important to only go to a properly trained (certified) Kundalini instructor. Teachers of other traditions should not be teaching kundalini yoga (some teachers add bits and pieces of kundalini yoga to their classes - this is not good). No, I am not a kundalini teacher; I am certified in another style, but I am a kundalini student.............. Also, it's not "Self-consciousness...that is something else.... Namaste..........

laya

Hatha Yoga originally is not a branch itself but it was a part of Raja Yoga. Modern day yogis (including me) making it seem like it is the "very yoga". But nobody in the history of the world has attained Self-consciousness or the real "union" just by practising asanas, as far as I know. So it is not a whole system or branch.

Christel

I did not see an explanantion of Hatha Yoga among these.

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