Checking your Asana with Yoga

Checking your Asana with Yoga

Asana (Seat) is checked through practices of yoga. Yogic methods include the easy sukhasana (Posture), which is often called the tailor seat in Westerner terms. To start one will sit on the floor and lift the buttocks. It is recommended that you sit on a comfortable cushion when practicing easy posture. First, you want to sit on the cushion with your legs stretched out. Continue with placing your hands on the ground directly near the hips. The palms should be down and your fingers should point to the front. Now, work the kinks out of your legs by shaking them up and down.

In position, cross your legs making sure that they are crossed at the ankles. Place the leg (Left) on top and the other leg beneath you. Continue pressing your palms on the ground. Slide your right foot and left foot in the direction of the opposite knee. Place the palms down and bend your elbows. Make sure that your head is aligned, or upright. You want to exchange legs daily, i.e. cross one leg, and then the other leg the following day.

At the time you start the easy posture make sure you feel comfortable and that the body is steady. The point of yoga is to find balance. Beginners can benefit from the easy posture. We recommend that you practice the steps daily until you feel comfortable to move toward advanced steps of yogic. 

Advanced yogic methods lead one to mudras, which the practices effectively keep one’s life power (energy) potted inside the body. Energy in yogic terms is known as prana. The concept behind advanced yogic methods is to achieve one’s highest mental concentration, as well as the highest span of vitality. The notion behind yogin terms is to promote happiness, as well as good health.

In yogic terms, Sthira (Steady) is the point of achieving comfort ability, ease, and a pleasant result. Sukha is the point of comfort.

Yogic methods include Laya, Dhyana, Jiiana, Karma, etc. Laya is the process of gaining control over mentality, which Hatha is the steps one takes before attempting Laya. According to yogin understanding, one must first gain control over vitality, the body, and breathing before one can move toward controlling the mind.

Dhyana helps one to depend on meditation. The ultimate course is complete control of the mind. Dhyana is critical in all methods of yogic practices. Dhyana is a practice of yoga however, that can stand by single-handedly.

Jiiana helps one to depend on his/her Divine Knowledge. The term means to join through insight. In summary, one must reach self-realization to achieve insight. The insight discovered will instigate the knowledge to see one’s existence.

Karma is another form of yogic methods that guide one to action. The notion behind Karma is to emancipate one self.

The process directs one to “right action” and joins sections of yogic practices so that one reaches Divinity. In summary, Karma yoga teaches one to let go of superstitions, and to see that what is supernatural cannot hurt you. In short, supernatural beings or things can only hurt one if that one allows.

After Karma, one must learn Kundalini. Kundalini directs one toward the power of psychic nerve forces. Once Yogini or Yogi reaches this state, thus he begins to relate to the human mind. Karma takes one outside of methodical thinking and into the spheres knowledge. According to yogin knowledge, Karma helps one to feel their senses to supernatural powers and claim, believe, or use perceptions that take them to a non-physical and/or supernatural power, yet the Yogi or Yogini must realize that these sources are unreal.