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Yoga Quotes

Quotes tagged as "yoga" Showing 301-330 of 1,410
Patañjali
“La raison d'être du monde est d'être source d'expériences multiples et d'ainsi nous mener ultimement à la libération.”
ʲٲñᲹ, Yoga Sutras
tags: yoga

“Studies of modern yoga have tended to elide the passage from Vivekananda's Բ-free manifestos of yoga in the mid-1890s to the well known posture-oriented forms that began to emerge in the 1920s. The two main studies in this area to date, by De Michelis (2004) and Alter (2004a), have focused on both these moments in the history of transnational yoga, but they have not offered a good explanation of why Բ was initially excluded and the ways in which it was eventually reclaimed.”
Mark Singleton, Yoga Body: The Origins of Modern Posture Practice
tags: yoga

“Quasi-religious forms of physical culture swept Europe during the nineteenth century and found their way to India, where they informed and infiltrated popular new interpretations of nationalist Hinduism. Experiments to define the particular nature of Indian physical culture led to the reinvention of Բ as the timeless expression of Hindu exercise. Western physical culture-oriented Բ practices, developed in India, subsequently found their way (back) to the West, where they became identified and merged with forms of "esoteric gymnastics," which had grown popular in Europe and America from the mid-nineteenth century (independent of any contact with yoga traditions). Posture-based yoga as we know it today is the result of a dialogical exchange between para-religious, modern body culture techniques developed in the West and the various discourses of "modern" Hindu yoga that emerged from the time of Vivekananda onward. Although it routinely appeals to the tradition of Indian yoga, contemporary posture-based yoga cannot really be considered a direct successor of this tradition.”
Mark Singleton, Yoga Body: The Origins of Modern Posture Practice
tags: yoga

“The yogin had always been an agent of ritual pollution for caste Hindus . . . This status is a key factor in the exclusion of the yogin from the Indian yoga renaissance.”
Mark Singleton, Yoga Body: The Origins of Modern Posture Practice
tags: yoga

“The Բs of yoga were commonly, indeed routinely, compared with gymnastics in [early popular yoga] manuals. These interpretations of postural yoga were significantly divergent from those given by "classical" yoga texts, such as those translated by Vasu. Indeed, the whole somatic and philosophical framework of this new English-language yoga appeared to have been replaced by a modern discourse of health and fitness. An examination of the eighteenth- to early twentieth-century European gymnastics manuals in the British Library and Cambridge University Library showed without much doubt that anglophone yoga authors had grafted elements of modern physical culture onto yoga orthopraxy and seemingly excised those parts that were difficult to reconcile with the emerging health and fitness discourse.”
Mark Singleton, Yoga Body: The Origins of Modern Posture Practice
tags: yoga

“I have sought to avoid a methodological approach that negatively contrasts "modern yoga" against presumably more authentic, older forms of yoga. Of course, this is an appealing way to structure a study of modern yogas because it provides a ready-made framework for comparison and contrast: we hold up aspects of "modern yoga" against the template of "classical" forms and determine to what extent they converge with or diverge from the latter. For example, we might easily and convincingly demonstrate the discontinuities of logic, method, and soteriology between modern, international "hatha" yoga and the "classical" texts from which it claims to derive, such as ᲹṻDzī辱, ҳṇḍṁh, and Śṃh. Implicit in this approach, however, is the sense that such divergences are errors and that modern yoga is flawed precisely to the extent that it departs from the perceived tradition.”
Mark Singleton, Yoga Body: The Origins of Modern Posture Practice
tags: yoga

“A more valid and helpful way of thinking beyond such unproductive positions might be to consider the term yoga as it refers to modern postural practice as a homonym, and not a synonym, of the "yoga" associated with the philosophical system of ʲٲñᲹ, or the "yoga" that forms an integral component of the Śaiva Tantras, or the "yoga" of the Bhagavad Gītā, and so on. In other words, although the word "yoga" as it is used popularly today is identical in spelling and pronunciation in each of these instances, it has quite different meanings and origins. It is, in short, a homonym, and it should therefore not be assumed that it refers to the same body of beliefs and practices as these other, homonymous terms.”
Mark Singleton, Yoga Body: The Origins of Modern Posture Practice
tags: yoga

“In the 1960s, the rise of "flower power" brought yoga to the attention of a generation of young Americans and Europeans. The wholesale embrace of Indian metaphysics and yoga by many countercultural icons (such as The Beatles' spiritual romance with the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi) reinforced the position of yoga in the popular psyche and inspired many to join the "hippy trail" to India in pursuit of alternative philosophies and lifestyles. Increased media attention brought yoga closer to the mainstream, and printed primers and television series throughout the 1960s and 1970s, such as Richard Hittleman's Yoga for Health (first broadcast in 1961), encouraged many to take up posture-based yoga in the comfort of their own homes.”
Mark Singleton, Yoga Body: The Origins of Modern Posture Practice
tags: yoga

“The 1970s and 1980s were a period of consolidation for yoga in the West with the establishment and expansion of a significant number of dedicated schools and institutes. The period also saw a further, and enduring, rapprochement of yoga with the burgeoning New Age movement, which in many ways represents a new manifestation of yoga's century-old association with currents of esotericism. By the mid-1990s posture-based yoga had become thoroughly acculturated in many urban centers in the West. The 1990s "boom" turned yoga into an important commercial enterprise, with increasing levels of merchandising and commodification.”
Mark Singleton, Yoga Body: The Origins of Modern Posture Practice
tags: yoga

“It is clear that the majority of popular Բ-based forms of transnational yoga today are profoundly influenced by the postural revivals that are the topic of this book. In some cases, such as the Ashtanga Vinyasa system—and its "Power Yoga" spin-offs—a direct line can be traced from modern urban health clubs and yoga studios to educational gymnastics institutions in India during the early twentieth century (the subject of chapter 9). The lucrative Bikram Yoga system, similarly, can be traced directly to the physical culture syntheses developed during the 1930s by the bodybuilder B.C. Ghosh (chapter 6).”
Mark Singleton, Yoga Body: The Origins of Modern Posture Practice
tags: yoga

“In sum, the Indian tradition shows no evidence for the kind of posture-based practices that dominate transnational anglophone yoga today. We should except from this assertion, of course, seated postures such as padmԲ and 岹Բ, which have played an enormously important practical and symbolic role throughout the history of yoga. And today, largely thanks to modern advertising, cross-legged yoga postures such as these have become powerful and universally recognized signifiers of relaxation, self-control, self-cultivation, a balanced lifestyle, good health, fitness, and spiritual urban cool.”
Mark Singleton, Yoga Body: The Origins of Modern Posture Practice
tags: yoga

“The practice of Բs within transnational anglophone yogas is not the outcome of a direct and unbroken lineage of yoga. While it is going too far to say that modern postural yoga has no relationship to Բ practice within the Indian tradition, this relationship is one of radical innovation and experimentation. It is the result of adaptation to new discourses of the body that resulted from India's encounter with modernity.”
Mark Singleton, Yoga Body: The Origins of Modern Posture Practice
tags: yoga

“The new, English-language yogas devised by Vivekananda and others emerged in a climate of opinion that was highly suspicious of the yogin, especially the practitioner of yoga. Yogins were more likely to be identified by their critics (both Indian and European) with black magic, perverse sexuality, and alimentary impurity than with "yoga" in any conventional sense (see White 1996: 8). Scholars of the period tended to admire what they saw as the rational, philosophical, and contemplative aspects of yoga while condemning the obnoxious behavior and queer ascetic practices of the yogins themselves. This situation resulted in the exclusion of yoga from the initial stages of the popular yoga revival.”
Mark Singleton, Yoga Body: The Origins of Modern Posture Practice
tags: yoga

Yogi (or "jogi" /"ioghee") was the usual shorthand designation for practitioners of the Nāth and Kānphaṭa orders (Lorenzen 1978: 68), but the term acquired a far broader significance in colonial India. European visitors commonly had difficulty distinguishing between the various categories of mendicant orders, and would commonly conflate the (Hindu) yogin and the (Mohammedan) fakir. From the seventeenth century onward, indeed, European travelers to India rarely made much of a
"methodological or functional distinction" between them (Siegel 1991: 149). For these visitors, "yogi" tended to signify the social group of itinerant renouncers known for their disreputable (and sometimes violent) behavior, mendicancy, and outlandish austerities.”
Mark Singleton, Yoga Body: The Origins of Modern Posture Practice
tags: yoga

“The phenomenon of international posture-based yoga would not have occurred without the rapid expansion of print technology and the cheap, ready availability of photography.”
Mark Singleton, Yoga Body: The Origins of Modern Posture Practice

“If new Բ forms began to gain popularity in the mid-1920s, it was as a result of the representation of Indian bodies in the kind of mass-produced primers and journals that flourished alongside comparable physical culture material. One perhaps rather obvious point to be made here is that modern postural yoga required visual representation in a way that more "mental" forms of modern yoga did not. To take but one example: Vivekananda's Raja Yoga, which openly shuns Բs, does not lose much from a complete absence of visual images—the message is fairly effectively (if not always cogently) conveyed through the written word. On the other hand, Kuvalayananda's Բs of 1931 would be a far duller, more difficult to follow book were the motions and postures it details not supported with clear, visual, photographic references.”
Mark Singleton, Yoga Body: The Origins of Modern Posture Practice
tags: yoga

Patañjali
“La vie est incertaine, les changements engendrent de la peur et les impressions latentes sont sources de nombreuses douleurs.”
ʲٲñᲹ, Yoga Sutras
tags: yoga

“According to Indian tradition, fundamental truth cannot be attained through daily, busy life, but only by the concentrated mind. The concentration of mind is variously called yoga, , or Բ. Yoga (etymologically the same as the English yoke) means "attaching the mind to one object," "concentrating the mind on one thing." means "putting together (the mind which always tends to disperse)." The Hindu yoga school probably started before the common era, but its most important scripture, the ۴Dz-ūٰ, was composed by Patañjali around the fifth century C.E. Many new yogic sects subsequently developed. One of them, Haṭhayoga (, "force, pertinacity") which developed after the twelfth century C.E., specializes in bodily training, in the belief that the body's function and the spirit's function are inseparable.”
Akira Sadakata, Buddhist Cosmology: Philosophy and Origins
tags: yoga

“Every inhale is a welcomed greeting and every exhale a farewell, a gentle inward hug for my organs”
Leo Lourdes, A World of Yoga: 700 Asanas for Mindfulness and Well-Being

“The sun made me see it. The moon made me do it.”
Leo Lourdes, A World of Yoga: 700 Asanas for Mindfulness and Well-Being

“The soil feels our longing to love and loves us back. The acceptance of eternal rest as a seed. The gentle haunting lull of our spirits call.”
Leo Lourdes, A World of Yoga: 700 Asanas for Mindfulness and Well-Being

“Beyond the hollows of history, we continue to remain present with Nature. Sharing the same divine fate.”
Leo Lourdes, A World of Yoga: 700 Asanas for Mindfulness and Well-Being

“Unwind today. Find some part of the mind to release, some tension in the body to undo like a knot.”
Leo Lourdes, A World of Yoga: 700 Asanas for Mindfulness and Well-Being

“To know the depths of your own heart is the greatest love affair you will ever have.”
Leo Lourdes, A World of Yoga: 700 Asanas for Mindfulness and Well-Being

“Navigate toward what you want rather than fixating on the past.”
Leo Lourdes, A World of Yoga: 700 Asanas for Mindfulness and Well-Being

Damon Young
“Yoga: once an exotic rite for mystics, now a suburban hobby in church halls and gymnasiums. Stretches, belly breaths and chants. Ancient (and awkward) poses with odd animal names, enjoyed by Lycra-clad mothers and post-matcha tea hipsters alike.”
Damon Young, How to Think More About Exercise

“Brahma Yoga honors that we are all one sharing this unique moment called life”
Leo Lourdes, A World of Yoga: 700 Asanas for Mindfulness and Well-Being

“I strengthen my indestructibility as I find things that I appreciate in myself”
Leo Lourdes, A World of Yoga: 700 Asanas for Mindfulness and Well-Being

“Preparation teaches me that we bend so we do not break, and that gravity is a field, not a force. I am vibration”
Leo Lourdes, A World of Yoga: 700 Asanas for Mindfulness and Well-Being