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		<title>The Chittaprasadana Technique</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 21 Mar 2024 06:08:38 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[Here’s What I Really Learned About the Yogic Essence of The Chittaprasadana Technique?  “Yogah chitta vritti nirodha.” This is the second aphorism from the first chapter of the Patanjali Yoga Sutras, compiled by Sage Patanjali, who is known as the “Father of Yoga.” It’s a centuries-old Sanskrit verse that simply means one thing: yoga is&#8230;]]></description>
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<h2 style="font-size: 18px;"><strong>Here’s What I Really Learned About the Yogic Essence of The Chittaprasadana Technique?</strong></h2>



<p> <strong><em>“<a href="https://satyamshakti.com/creating-a-yogic-path-with-badhak-and-sadhak-tattvas/">Yogah chitta vritti nirodha</a>.”</em></strong></p>



<p>This is the second aphorism from the first chapter of the Patanjali Yoga Sutras, compiled by Sage Patanjali, who is known as the “Father of Yoga.” It’s a centuries-old Sanskrit verse that simply means one thing: yoga is the cessation of the modifications of the mind.</p>



<p>If you look at the statement, you will realize that yoga goes beyond the physical body to touch the unfathomable depths of the human mind. The human body undoubtedly is a crucial aspect of yoga, but modern culture completely obliterates the mind. According to Sage Patanjali’s definition of yoga, it has become clear that the ancient science of yoga was very much concerned about understanding the nature of the mind and its connection with the body.</p>



<p>So, we ought to know that we are full of the mind stuff (<em>chitta</em>), the unceasing thought waves (<em>vrittis</em>) that keep us immersed in a lost world. We are unable to cease them due to various factors, leaving us all mind-full instead of mindful. I have been there and done that.</p>



<p>Yoga, in modern culture, has lost its authentic reputation to become a physical exercise that improves the flexibility of the body, making it more tender and supple. For someone who is a seasoned practitioner of yoga (I wish to be one someday), this present-day reality can pierce the heart. It’s sad but true. It’s a bitter pill that we are forced to swallow.</p>



<p>I wish to confess that there was a time in my life a decade ago when I found myself a part of that culture. I was trying to mimic yoga instructors who took to social media to paint a picture of yoga that somehow contributed to the prevailing misconception. What I had then was not just stupidity but also a closed heart and mind to understand the divinity of the ancient science of yoga.</p>



<p>I found myself utterly frustrated—almost clinically depressed—up until I learned the trick. I was suffering immensely not because of anything else but because of the nature of my own mind. Hopelessness engulfed me. But the day I learned the gameplay of my mind was the day when I took the first step towards yoga.</p>



<p>So, yoga as I see it starts first with the mind—akin to what Buddhist mindfulness and meditation teachings. There are five functions of the mind that shape our reality. These are right knowledge, false knowledge, imagination, sleep, and memory. These are the five modifications that the human mind creates during a person’s lifetime.</p>



<h3 style="font-size:20px;"><strong>What’s the chittaprasanda technique all about?</strong></h3>



<p> You may have gotten a fair idea of what <em>chitta</em> is and how yoga is all about getting control over it through the witness consciousness. However, Sage Patanjali laid down a valuable technique that can help in making the mind a better place for the witness consciousness to reside in—the chittaprasadana technique. While we can never really cease the mind in today’s survival-driven world, we can try out best to implement a solution that gives us some strength.</p>



<p>In simple terms, the chittaprasadana technique is all about attaining purity and stability of the mind. While <em>chitta</em> is the mind stuff, <em>prasadana</em> refers to the purification process. Samadhi (the last limb of Patanjali’s eight-fold path to yoga) is certainly the ultimate goal of a yogic, but I have come to realize that that goal is a far-fetched idea if the mind is unstable, unpleasant, and uncontrollable. A mind that is full of jealousy, aversion, and attachments often fails the yogi and makes liberation close to impossible. The chittaprasadana technique, as I view it, is about removing the impurities that hinder the spiritual path. Let’s take you through them here:</p>



<p>·         Attachments</p>



<p>·         Jealousy</p>



<p>·         Violence</p>



<p>·         Criticism</p>



<p>·         Aversion</p>



<p>·         Vindictiveness</p>



<p>A mind that is polluted by these impure thoughts and feelings cannot be on the path of yoga. A pure existence is possible only when these impurities are eradicated. The thirty-third aphorism from Sage Patanjali’s yoga sutras says the following:</p>



<p><strong><em>Maitree-karuna-muditopekshanan Sukha-duhkha-punyapunyavishayanan Bhavanatash Chitta-prasadanam</em></strong></p>



<p>This verse emphasizes cultivating qualities such as friendliness, compassion, joy, equanimity, and maintaining a clear and tranquil mind regardless of the pleasant or unpleasant experiences encountered in life. It suggests that by developing these qualities, one can attain mental peace and contentment.</p>



<p>To really be able to fully implement the chittaprasadana technique of Sage Patanjali, you will have to know the four categories of people who you may come across in this lifetime:</p>



<p>1.      Happy people</p>



<p>2.      Unhappy people</p>



<p>3.      Virtuous people</p>



<p>4.      Vicious people</p>



<p>The technique of Chittaprasadana is about equipping oneself with an understanding of these four categories of people and adopting a formula to interact with them healthily. Here it goes:</p>



<p>1.      Develop friendliness (<em>maitri</em>) towards people who are happy.</p>



<p>2.      Develop compassion (<em>karuna</em>) towards people who are unhappy or are suffering.</p>



<p>3.      Develop joy (<em>mudita</em>) towards virtues or virtuous people.</p>



<p>4.      Develop indifference (<em>upekhsa</em>) towards people who are negative or vicious.</p>



<p><strong>Friendliness (<em>maitri</em>)</strong></p>



<p>Friendliness is a vital quality that a sadhaka or yoga practitioner should develop. Before I got into the philosophical aspects of yoga, I was filled with unhappiness because at some level I was befriending people who were unhappy. Honestly speaking, there was also a degree of jealousy permeating my interactions with people. It’s a natural tendency of unhappy people to be jealous of people who are happier than them. I was no different from such people.</p>



<p>Then, when I learned about the friendliness aspect of the chittaprasadana technique, I realized this negative quality that I needed to overcome. I learned that developing an attitude of happiness towards happy people paved the way for inner happiness. Jealousy and aversion are impurities that were polluting my interactions and contributing greatly towards my inner suffering. This profound realization changed my inner landscape to an enormous extent.</p>



<p><strong>Compassion (<em>karuna</em>)</strong></p>



<p>The second quality that a sadhaka should develop is compassion. In our modern society, people who are suffering are often looked down upon. They turn a blind eye to anyone who is in pain—physically or mentally—and choose to ignore them. It’s true that not everyone can take such people out of their misery. But what I learned is that I can at least be compassionate towards them and possibly extend a helping hand that can reduce their sorrow, even though momentarily.</p>



<p>I realized that being compassionate is not about the sadhaka going out of his way to look for people who are suffering and to remove their sorrows. It’s acceptable but not necessary to do so. Compassion is about knowing that everyone on this planet has some wound that they are trying to heal from, whether their process is evident or not. It’s about opening their senses to the immediate world around them and act with an open heart towards all people. When the sadhaka’s mind recognizes the collective suffering, he takes the first step towards purifying the mind of all aversions and hatred.</p>



<p><strong>Joy (<em>mudita</em>)</strong></p>



<p>A bitter truth is that an impure mind is averse to virtues. Such a person treats a virtuous person as a foreign entity because their mind cannot look beyond the confines of their rigid thought process. Over the years, I have come across many such people who look down upon people who are on the path of righteousness, downplaying the virtues they are trying to humbly embody.</p>



<p> When I found myself inclined towards spirituality, I found sheer joy in doing virtuous work. Although it didn’t come naturally to me initially, I recognized the value of virtues in creating a fulfilling life. Any aversion that was running in the background of my mind slowly melted away and I realized the importance of having a joyful disposition towards everyone around me.</p>



<p><strong>Indifference (<em>upeksha</em>)</strong></p>



<p>Lastly, the chittaprasadana technique equipped me with a sense of detachment. My life’s experiences made me a witness to a lot of injustice, the residue of which is still alive in me to a great extent. But a profound truth struck me along my journey: this world is a beautiful system of both positives and negatives. It’s wrong of anyone, including me, to expect that I will be surrounded by only plus signs. There will also be encounters with negative people, or those who are filled with vice.</p>



<p>A sadhaka should learn the art of creating a boundary, a distance from people who are engaged in sinful acts. He should neither support nor avert such acts. He should assume a detached position from which he is a witness of such people and walk a righteous path. It’s important to understand that it’s not possible to change everything in this world. Only one’s own thoughts and acts are within one’s control. Forging a boundary of detachment towards sin surprisingly equips one with the ability to infuse positivity into their own life and that of others.</p>



<p><strong>Closing lines</strong></p>



<p> As we come to the end of this discussion, I would like to emphasize that the chittaprasadana technique is a continuum. It’s a lifelong journey to purify the mind. You will have to habituate yourself to interacting with the aforementioned four categories of people with a pure mind. By performing these means of purifying the mind, you can be focused on your yogic path and achieve an unwavering state of mental steadiness, which will lead you to samadhi or liberation.</p>
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		<title>Creating A Yogic Path With Badhak and Sadhak Tattvas</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 18 Mar 2024 11:41:22 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[A journey of non-physical nature through the physical Yoga, as most people view it, is not a physical exercise. It’s not akin to a gym workout, although you work with your physical body. The journey of yoga is about a sacred union with the divine by getting control over the physical and mental landscapes of&#8230;]]></description>
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<h2 style="font-size: 22px;"><strong>A journey of non-physical nature through the physical</strong></h2>

<p>Yoga, as most people view it, is not a physical exercise. It’s not akin to a gym workout, although you work with your physical body. The journey of yoga is about a sacred union with the divine by getting control over the physical and mental landscapes of existence. It’s about finding the ethereal, cosmic essence of the physical reality, including the physical body, by releasing mental imprints or <em>samskaras</em> that limit our perception of all of existence.</p>

<p>Much of the knowledge of the ancient science of yoga comes from texts penned down by sages who have experientially gained it. Sage Patanjali’s <a href="https://satyamshakti.com/the-chittaprasadana-technique/">Yoga</a> Sutras lay down an eight-fold path to the attaining the union that we call yoga. His definition of yoga is simple: yoga is the cessations of the modifications of the mind. The first four limbs of Patanjali’s eightfold path, called <em>bahirangas (limbs pertaining to the external world)</em>, include asanas (physical postures) and pranayama (breath control).</p>

<p>However, in 15<sup>th</sup> century BCE, there came another yogic sage, Swami Swatmaram, who came up with a more concise, although related, version of a yoga text—Hatha Pradapika. While most aspects of Hatha Pradapika overlap with the yoga sutras of Sage Patanjali—both outlaying a pathway to liberation (moksha)—the former advocates the attainment of oneness by focusing on kundalini awakening. Even Swatmaram’s four-fold (<em>chaturanga</em>) approach to yoga includes asanas and pranayama. But he prescribes the middle path to realize the transcendental nature of existence.</p>

<p>However, both <a href="https://satyamshakti.com/why-india-doesnt-have-psychologists-anymore/">Patanjali</a> and Swatmaram emphasized the existence of something beyond the limitations of the physical world. Both sages were of the belief that the ultimate nature of yoga is non-physical, although the physical body becomes a channel through which the soul can unite with the divine. It’s a journey that is directed more inward than outward. It demands a conscious approach on the part of the practitioner, requiring him or her to release what no longer serves their ultimate purpose of life.</p>

<p>This is where a clear understanding of Sadhak and badhak tattvas becomes crucial for yogic practitioners. Let’s talk about both of these terms in detail in this blog.</p>

<p><strong>Knowing what is holding you back and what is propelling you forward</strong></p>

<p> While embarking on a<a href="https://satyamshakti.com/an-honest-take-on-the-guru-shishya-parampara/"> spiritual journey like yoga,</a> a human first encounters physical and mental patterns that make him a human. As humans, we all have favourable as well as unfavourable ways of life. We are a collection of both. If individuation is the goal of a person’s yogic life, he has to accept all parts of him—the parts that are helping him go forward on the path of yoga and the parts that are holding him back. These two parts are called sadhak and badhak tattvas respectively.</p>

<p>Simply put, sadhak tattvas are factors that facilitate a person’s yogic journey, while badhak tattvas are the ones that obstruct the path. A person on the path of yoga is a perpetual seeker, a lifelong learning, who is willing to face both factors inside and outside of him and doing the needful. Both Sage Patanjali’s Ashtanga yoga and Swami Swatmaram’s Hatha yoga emphasize the understanding of these factors by the seeker.</p>

<h3 style="font-size: 22px;"><strong>Badhak tattvas</strong></h3>

<p> Let’s first look at some verses from Patanjali Yoga Sutras and Hatha Pradapika before we talk more about badhak and sadhak tattvas:</p>

<p><strong><em>1.</em></strong>      <strong><em>&#8220;</em></strong><strong><em>दुःखदौर्मनस्याङ्गमेजयत्वश्वासप्रश्वासाः</em></strong> <strong><em>विक्षेपसहभुवः॥</em></strong> (Chapter 1, Sutra 31 from Patanjali&#8217;s Yoga Sutras)</p>

<p><strong><em> Translation: &#8220;The mind becomes distracted by difficulties such as disease, dullness, doubt, negligence, laziness, cravings, misperceptions, and failure to attain a state of concentration.&#8221;</em></strong></p>

<p><strong><em> </em></strong>2.                 <strong><em>अत्याहारः</em></strong> <strong><em>प्रयासश्च</em></strong><strong><em>, </em></strong><strong><em>प्रजल्पो</em></strong> <strong><em>नियमाग्रहः।</em></strong> <strong><em>जिसङ्गश्च</em></strong> <strong><em>लौल्यञ्च</em></strong> <strong><em>षड्भियोगो</em></strong> <strong><em>वििश्यनि॥</em></strong> (Chapter 1, verse 15 of Swatmaram’s Hatha Pradapika)</p>

<p><strong><em> Translation: &#8220;Excessive eating, excessive effort, excessive talking, overbearing adherence to rules, keeping bad company, and greed for sense objects—these six are the enemies of concentration.&#8221;</em></strong></p>

<p> Both verses mentioned above talk about the badhak tattvas or the impediments that hold the seeker back from going ahead on the path of yoga. Below is the quick overview of the nine causes of failure of yoga, as elucidated by Sage Patanjali:</p>

<p>1.      <strong>State of disease (Vyadhi):</strong> Physical ailments, when experienced by the practitioner, can become a major impediment for them. Most of these diseases can be inevitable due to physiological and biological changes.</p>

<p>2.      <strong>Dullness (Styan): </strong>Styan is defined by akarmanyata, which is the unwillingness to attain a defined goal due to sleepiness and drowsiness, although the practitioner is keen and strong enough to do so.</p>

<p>3.      <strong>Doubt (Samshaya):</strong> Yoga fails with lack of trust. A practitioner in doubt will question the words of Guru and will question the intention of his sadhana. He questions the path he is on, meaning he is in samshaya or doubt. Such an attitude can be detrimental to the path of yoga.</p>

<p>4.      <strong>Procrastination (Pramada):</strong> Pushing one’s yogic practice to a later time is an obstacle. Procrastination can be a viewed as a lack of enthusiasm to pursue the yogic path and there can be many reasons for the same—laziness or emotional dysregulation.</p>

<p>5.      <strong>Laziness (Aalasya):</strong> Yoga can become unsuccessful when there is a heaviness in the mind or body. Overeating and overthinking can be a cause of this, making one lazy and unmotivated to practice yoga.</p>

<p>6.      <strong>Materialism and sensual gratification (Avirati):</strong> Yoga demands a level of vairagya or detachment from worldly desires. If the practitioner is driven by materialistic desires and sensual pleasures, then he fails to walk on the path of yoga.</p>

<p>7.      <strong>Erroneous perception (Bhranti Darshana): </strong>False knowledge or ignorance can be viewed as the modifications of the mind that should cease to attain a state of yoga. Viparyaya leads to bhranti darshana, which gives a wrong perception of the world. Such deluded perception can impede the practitioner from becoming a true yogi.</p>

<p>8.      <strong>Inability to achieve a finer state (Alabdhbhumikatva): </strong>A seeker has to accept the fact that there will come many distractions along his way. An inability to look at these distractions for what they are and succumbing to them will impede his progress. As such, reaching the finer states that are characteristic of yoga becomes difficult for him.</p>

<p>9.      <strong>Instability (Anavasthitatva</strong>): Even if the seeker attains the finer state, he may be unstable in his mind owing to the prevalence of doubts or other obstacles. This instability can be a major cause of failure of yoga.</p>

<p>Sage Patanjali also gave a list of upavikshepa, which are additional symptoms that can be badhak tattvas or obstacles on the path of yoga. They are unhappiness (dukkha), mental depression (daur manasya), instability of the body (angamejayatva) and erratic breathing (shvas-prashvas). The presence of these symptoms can be an indication that there are obstacles on the path of the seeker.</p>

<p>While Sage Patanjali lays down nine causes of failure, Swami Swatmaram lays down six. The badhak tattvas according to the Hatha Pradapika are as follows:</p>

<p>1.      <strong>Overeating (Atyahara):</strong> While Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras talk about dullness, laziness and procrastination, Hatha Pradapika talks about the reason for the same being the habit of overeating. Eating beyond one’s appetite can be a badhak tattva for the practitioner—a habit that is better forfeited as soon as possible.</p>

<p>2.      <strong>Exertion (Prayasa):</strong> Everyone has a limit—physical and mental—that should not be exceeded. Going beyond one’s natural limits would lead to exertion, which can impede the spiritual growth of the practitioner.</p>

<p>3.      <strong>Prajalpa (Talkativeness):</strong> There’s a reason why silence is given so much importance in the spiritual realm. Exceeding the limit in speech distracts the mind from the inner world to the outer world, which can act as an obstacle for the practitioner desirous of experiencing the divine oneness.</p>

<p>4.      <strong>Adhering to rules (Niyamagraha):</strong> Yoga seeks to liberate, even from traditional rules that bog the practitioner down instead of uplifting him. The practitioner should have a degree of flexibility and adaptability to detach from certain rules and regulations that have outgrown the times. If not, then there will be hindrance on the path of yoga.</p>

<p>5.      <strong>Excessive socialization (janasangha):</strong> Being too much in the company of people can be looked at as a badhak tattva because doing so can arouse a multitude of feelings in the practitioner. It can be anger, love, hate, lust, ego, and other emotions—all of which can disturb the person’s yogic practice.</p>

<p>6.      <strong>Fickle-mindedness (Laulya):</strong>  Inconsistency or lack of commitment can be a major cause of failure for a Hatha yogi. Having a capricious mind makes it difficult for the practitioner to stay focused on his yogic path and will ultimately deter him from attaining his spiritual goals.</p>

<p><strong>Sadhak Tattvas</strong></p>

<p>Now that we know the major impediments that may come on the path of a yogi, let’s talk about solutions—the Sadhak tattvas. Here’s what Chapter 1, verse 16 of Swatmaram’s Hatha Pradapika says about sadhak tattvas:</p>

<p><strong><em>उत्साहात्‌</em></strong> <strong><em>साहसाद्‌</em></strong> <strong><em>धैर्यात्‌</em></strong> <strong><em>तत्वज्ञानाच्च</em></strong> <strong><em>निश्चयात्‌।</em></strong></p>

<p><strong><em>जनसंगपरित्यागात्‌</em></strong> <strong><em>षडभियोंगः</em></strong> <strong><em>प्रसिद्दयति</em></strong><strong><em>: ||</em></strong></p>

<p><strong><em>Translation:  &#8220;Steady wisdom, perseverance in the yoga of the senses, courage in the yoga of understanding, and unwavering determination in the yoga of knowing the Self—renouncing attachment to worldly associations, these are the six attributes of accomplishment.&#8221;</em></strong></p>

<p>Swami Swatmaram laid down the following facilitators of a yogi’s path:</p>

<p>1.      <strong>Enthusiasm (Utsah): </strong>A practitioner who has a positive attitude towards yoga and is full of zeal to walk the path is sure to gain the benefits of their practice. As such, enthusiasm can be a great impetus for the practitioner.</p>

<p>2.      <strong>Courage (Sahas):</strong> Yoga brings out what is repressed inside. The practitioner who has the courage to face the visions and realizations that arise can become a true yogi.</p>

<p>3.      <strong>Perseverance (Dhairya):</strong> Making yoga a regular practice no matter what happens can help the practitioner persevere through the challenges that come on his path.</p>

<p>4.      <strong>Discriminative knowledge (Tattvajnana): </strong>For a yogi, his sadhana is his goal. As such, anything he does that is conducive to the attainment of this goal is surely a sadhak tattva.</p>

<p>5.      <strong>Determination (Nischaya):</strong> A determined person can be a great yogi. Besides perseverance, a yogi should have the determination to continue his practice under all circumstances.</p>

<p>6.      <strong>Aloofness from company (janasangha parityaga):</strong> If janasangha can be detrimental to a person’s yogic path, limiting one’s social interactions can be a great solution. Limiting excessive socialization keeps negative influences at bay. However, it’s important not to consider any human being as inferior to them.</p>

<p>By being aware of one’s badhak tattvas and embracing the sadhak tattvas can make a huge difference in the life of anyone walking the yogic path. It’s important to remember that it may take a while to completely overcome the factors that are holding the practitioner back. But yoga is more about the journey than the destination. With unwavering patience and practice, one can definitely attain the goal of yoga—liberation.</p>
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