|
Iyengar Certified

Only the world's most knowledgeable, rigorously-trained teachers earn the
Iyengar Yoga Certification Mark.
| | Saturday, May 3. 2008 7 PM Saturday Night
Noble Film Group at SY&MC
VAJRA SKY OVER TIBET
Spring 2008The most frequent
questions I get from students involve meditation. What is meditation? Am I doing
meditation when I do this or that? What are the techniques? What's the
difference between the types of meditation?
This topic is immense and one could spend an entire lifetime studying it. But
I'd like to at least clear up the difference between concentration and
meditation and samadhi.
Concentration is the fixing of the consciousness on one particular thing (dharana).
This is what we do in class when the pose is broken down into parts and we are
told to watch one part only or to do one thing and see what happens with the
other. Our mind is being taught to focus and concentrate. The object of focus
can be in the body or outside of the body. Either way the mind is being trained.
When the mind has good concentration, meditation (dhyana) can then be done.
Meditation is the maintaining of an uninterrupted flow of attention.
Psychological and chronological time come to a standstill as the mind observes
its own behavior. By maintaining the same intensity of awareness, the awareness
moves from one point of attentiveness to no point of attentiveness. The
attentive mind dissolves into an all-awareness.
Later, meditation turns into Samadhi which is when the subject and object become
one. This is the innermost quest, to the soul itself.
Because the first steps for the meditation student is to train the body and the
intellect to prepare for one-pointed mindfulness it is important to select a
good, qualified teacher of yoga who can stress the importance of discipline in
concentration and focus. Our teachers here at Syoga are excellent for this
preparation.
Next, the student should choose a qualified and clear- speaking meditation
teacher who can lead the meditation experience by using the body's rested energy
and the intellect's focused power for the sake of uniting with the subtle,
spiritual body in meditation. Proper meditation practices are those that
have been taught by masters and transmitted thru the generations to us today.
Our Sangha group on Saturday nights and Sunday mornings is excellent in leading
this meditation.
Spring is here! Now is the time for us to bring
forth our ideas and projects and creative beings that we've attentively
maintained and nourished all winter. May we all grow and prosper!
Namasté,

Suzy
| |
|