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Meditation
& Yoga
Yoga, in general, is a
spiritual practice or discipline that helps the individual unify his/her
body, mind, and heart.
Yoga is a direct experience of the vast interrelatedness of all life and
of all things. You will feel at peace at the end of a yoga class because
there is a natural realignment of your body which leads to a natural
realignment of your perception of life and of who you are.
You will need to develop discipline and there is hard work involved
especially when you first begin.
Yoga is much more that postural alignment and breathing.
If you stay with yoga long enough, you may discover a "spiritual
awakening" (for lack of a better phrase.) You will find out that who you
are, is not just your body, and not just the conversations in your mind.

Through steady practice, you
will manifest less self-importance, less material attachment, more
capacity for joy, less judgmentalness, and more tolerance toward others.
Yoga is about transformation, not hamstrings, but along the way we have
to take care of them. This is not dogma, but a direct experience. Yoga
will open your eyes to things you have not experienced before. It will
take you beyond the mundane survival level and into a whole new
appreciation of life.
Genuine yoga will change your life, your habits, your body, your health,
your mind, your breathing patterns, your attitudes, your outlook. Yoga
is about learning from direct experience. You will develop wisdom of how
your body works most efficiently. You will learn how your conscious and
unconsious mind can either support or harm you, and then later, a deeper
wisodm naturally gets revealed. The benefits of Yoga will come to those
who practice.
There are many types of Yoga. That which comes to mind first is Hatha
Yoga an element of Raja yoga, yoga that deals mainly with physical
postures and breathing. Karma Yoga emphasizes spiritual practice to help
the individual unify body, mind, and heart through certain practices in
one’s daily life and work. Bhakti Yoga, a devotional form, generally
encompasses chanting, reading of scriptures and worship practices. In
general, Yoga is any practice that can turn the practitioner inward to
find and experience an individual’s spiritual essence, to realize or
awaken to his/her spiritual nature. Another type of yoga is jnana yoga.
Each posture, or asana, is held for a period of time and synchronised
with the breath. Generally, a yoga session begins with gentle asanas and
works up to the more vigorous or challenging postures.
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