By Sri Dharma Mittra, edited by Adam Frei
1.
The secrets to success in yoga are
constant practice, lots of repetition and perfect obedience to the teacher and
the teachings.
2. Do something occasionally to radically shift the mental
state, i.e.: spiritual singing (Kirtan) with enthusiasm or try sneaking up on
someone without a heart condition and scare them.
3. Come to recognize that Asana (posture practice – the 3rd
limb of yoga) is a great tool and help, is part of the overall process of
purification that is yoga and leads to radiant health and wellness when done
regularly, but on its own is not yoga.
4. Hold the breath a little each day, i.e.: do the main
breathing (Alternate-nostril Pranayama) each day.
5. Meditate, but meditate in a way that's productive. Going
into a trance state where you don’t know who or where you are may leave you
feeling some bliss, but will not help you to attain Self Knowledge. Study the
yoga scriptures and bend the thoughts to always trying to discover the how and
why of everything. Then you will indeed make rapid progress in yoga.
6. Remember G-d always and learn to recognize Him in
everything. Be kind to everyone. By placing yourself in others, you develop compassion.
7. Recognize that making your best effort each day is more
important than perfection in the practice.
8. Engage regularly in Karma Yoga. Taking action dedicated to
others and with no expectation of any fruits from said action is a Sadhana or
spiritual discipline that is available to all. Do it because it has to be done
and expect nothing.
9. Study scripture /
follow something outside yourself to ensure that you are on the path, and not
being led astray by the ego.
10.Observe Yama and Niyama – the Ethical Rules and Yogic
Observances – the first and second limbs of classical, Eight-limbed Yoga. If
you don’t know what they are, find out and put them into practice. Without
Yama, there is no yoga.
11. Clean up the “house” (the body) and the diet, or else you
go no-where. Eating flesh or other animal products represents a lack of
compassion. Work on your compassion every day through the choices you make
concerning the manner in which you feed this body since this has a great effect
upon the mind and your spiritual progress also.
12.Be receptive. Discover your tendencies and do lots of what
helps you to make rapid progress, i.e.: the style of yoga and / or the teacher and
techniques best suited to you. Once you find what works for you, do it every
day without fail. Then you will surely achieve radiant success in yoga.
Legendary yoga teacher Sri Dharma Mittra first encountered yoga as a teenager before
meeting his Guru in 1964 and beginning his training in earnest. Sri Dharma
founded one of the early independent schools of yoga in New York City in 1975
and has taught hundreds of thousands the world over in the years since. Sri
Dharma is the model and creator of the “Master Yoga Chart of 908 Postures”, the
author of ASANAS: 608 Yoga Poses, has
released two DVD’s to date – “Maha Sadhana” Levels I and II, and the Yoga
Journal book Yoga was based on his
famous Master Chart. Sri Dharma continues to disseminate the complete
traditional science of yoga through daily classes, workshops and his “Life of aYogi” Teacher Trainings at the Dharma Yoga New York Center and around the
world. For more information on all things Dharma, please visit: http://www.dharmayogacenter.com.
Adam Frei was born in Stamford, Connecticut, grew up in the wilds of West Redding, and is now a New Yorker. After years of mostly solitary Sadhana practice, he found his way to Yogi Sri Dharma Mittra. His entire practice changed during that first Master class, and he must have done something extremely rare and good in a previous incarnation to have finally met the teacher in this lifetime. He is grateful to have taken part in the transformative Dharma Yoga 200 and 500-Hour “Life of a Yogi” Teacher Training intensive immersions. They helped him understand that teaching is just one more component of practice as we all strive to copy the teacher in word, thought and deed. He has been teaching at the New York Center and beyond ever since his first teacher training and, after years of involvement with the Teacher Training programs on the staff side, is now blessed to be the director of these programs.
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