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Cultivate Your Connections

Bring classical yoga's lessons off the mat and meditation cushion and into your relationships.

By Judith Lasater

Centuries ago a legendary Indian sage, scholar, grammarian, and yogi named Patanjali wrote his seminal Yoga Sutra to clarify and preserve the ancient oral teachings of yoga. His book describes the workings of the human mind and prescribes a path for achieving a life free from suffering.

Perhaps because Patanjali's Sutra focuses on attaining the personal freedom that comes with self-awareness, we sometimes forget that his teachings have deep relevance for those of us struggling with the mystery of human relationships. Learning to live with others begins with learning to live with ourselves, and the Yoga Sutra provides many tools for both of these tasks.

The connection between Patanjali's teachings and improving our relationships may not be apparent at first glance. The concept of relinquishing the ego is the thread that weaves the two together. When we act and react from our individual ego, without the benefit of proper perspective and compassion, we are certainly not practicing yoga—and we are also potentially harming those around us. Patanjali's Sutra gives us tools for improving our relationships by stripping away the illusions that shield us from connection with our true Self, with others, and with life itself.

Among the most valuable of these tools are the niyamas, the second "limb" of Patanjali's eight-limbed yoga system. In Sanskrit, "niyama" means "observance," and these practices extend the ethical guidelines provided in the first limb, the yamas. (For a discussion of the yamas, see "Beginning the Journey" in the November/December 1998 issue of Yoga Journal). While "yama" is usually translated as "restraint," and the yamas outline actions and attitudes we ought to avoid, the niyamas describe actions and attitudes that we should cultivate to overcome the illusion of separation and the suffering it causes. The five niyamas are: purity (saucha); contentment (santosa); austerity (tapas); self-study (svadhyaya); and devotion to the Lord (isvara pranidhana).

Saucha (Purity)

When I first began studying the Yoga Sutra, I balked at this first niyama because it sounded so judgmental. The newly formed yoga groups I associated with tended to interpret the teachings of Patanjali in very rigid ways. Some foods, thoughts, activities, and people were impure—and my task was simply to avoid them.

To me, this concept of purity implied that the world was a profane place that threatened to contaminate me unless I followed a strict set of moral rules. No one told me that the intentions in my heart mattered; no one suggested that rather than rules, saucha represents a commonsense, practical insight: If you embrace impurity in thought, word, or deed, you will eventually suffer.

As time went by, saucha began to take on another dimension for me. Rather than seeing it as a measure of my action or of its outcome, I now see saucha as a reminder to constantly examine the intention behind my actions. I have been inspired by the philosopher and author Viktor Frankl, who said he found meaning in his life when he helped others find meaning in their lives.

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Reader Comments

Armonia

Hello Bobbie! I think this person is very selfish. However, we can't not judge him. I also think that he needs lots of touching(in a loving way, of course). I got the feeling that when growin up, he was the 'center of atention', and somehow he feels....that 'he is the one that needs to be served'.

Why 'touching' him? well, regardless the fact that 'he was the main atention once in his life', the lack of real love remains there.....! I do feel...sorry for him! I do feel...that all he wants is to be loved.

What to do in order to help him? Show him 'facts of life', in a very inteligent way!! for example, live him 'alone'(meaning: don't call...do nothing), he has to 'notice' this and he will react.

The reason why he has been....'alone' is because of his attitude. The more he gets into 'himself' the more help he needs. He is just being...defensive.

I will advice you, that when doing...Yoga, in LOCTUS Asana, after activating all of your chakras, once you get into 'your third eye'(between your eyebrows), see how this 'energy/light' moves...out. Then, bring it down to your 'heart chakra', move it out...in a very gentle, loving way, then......'''just see him''' receiving this love from you.

Give this a try! there is nothing...to lose but, who to know? it will 'touch' him! believe me.

Love and Light to you, Namaste! Armonia/psychic

Bobbie C.

This article arrived just in time for me to apply it to something going on in my TODAY. I have a 6 mo. relationship with a man who says he is who he is and cannot change himself. I like the connection I have with him when it is engaged via interaction verbally or physically with me. But then there is nothing once again - no calls, no e-mails or notes, no cards, no invitations to be with him. He likes to wait for others to initiate contact with him instead of the other way around.

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