Yoga In Everyday Life: The Sutras For Daily Living


According to many faiths, including Hinduism, Buddhism, Christianity and Islam, the universe began, from pure silence, with a single sound. For some faiths, this sound was the name of God but for others, including Hinduism, this sound was "Om". This sacred vibration that heralded the source of all life and creation was followed by a cacophony of noise and excitement. Within the noise though, there is still that underlying sacred sound and ultimately, silence.

The art of yoga is to quieten the cacophony that exists both around us and within us. As a 500-hour yoga teacher, I have studied the Yoga Sutra according to Patanjali, as have most - if not all - teachers. Common belief has it that these short verses, ultimately a guide to enlightenment, were compiled in around 350 CE.
Yogas-citta-vrtti-nirodhah translates as "Yoga is the restriction of the fluctuations of consciousness".

More than ever, the noise around and within us is driven by a 24-hour news cycle, constant connectivity to traditional and social media, and an overwhelming number of societal dramas and problems that can weigh on our collective and individual conscience. In the face of relentless news of climate change, natural disasters, drought, floods, poverty and injustice, we can become exhausted and feel powerless to make a difference. This is not true, though. Through individual actions, we throw a pebble into the universal waters that ripples across the surface. We inspire and motivate the people around us who then motivate a wider group, until there is broader awareness and action.

I refer to yoga as a practice, and in a sense the act of attending a yoga class to practice the asanas (poses) is a practice for how to live as an individual, but also how to live in the world. As with any practice, yoga requires dedicated practice (abhyasa) though this is tempered with an ability to commit without expecting or judging the results (vairagya).

Patanjali gave guidelines as to how to live as a conscientious and dedicated individual, but ultimately to recognise we exist within a collective consciousness. There is no true divide between any of us and any other living thing in the universe. He advised "satkara", a true belief in what you're doing, along with "adara", finding enjoyment in what you're doing.
To this end, your yoga class and your yoga practice requires adherence to the ancient yoga sutras in that you must be dedicated, regardless of the expectations and results, and that you must believe in the value of what you're doing, while also finding enjoyment in it.

Even though, superficially, yoga can appear to be just another offering at your local gym or a set of gymnastic exercises in overheated rooms filled with enthusiastic Lycra-clad acrobats, it is not purely a movement class. The poses, the sequences they are practiced in, and the intention in making each shape with our bodies and discovering how it feels in our body and mind as we do so has ancient roots. As we transition from a crow into a goddess, from a downward facing dog into a triangle then a half-moon, we discover the ease of moving in and out of different entities without losing our ability to self-observe, or to feel grounded. This is the essence of compassion. Not pity at all, but the ability to see and experience life through the eyes, or shoes, of others.

Patanjali teaches "asevita", or the commitment to approaching life with a sense of service. How can our everyday actions contribute to being of service to the people we come into contact with, the people we know and love, the work that we do, the land that we live on, the creatures on that land?

These questions are timeless. To be of service is not to sacrifice ourselves at all. Without our optimal health, contentment and safety, we are not able to be of service to others. To this end, the physical yoga practice is a commitment to being strong, agile, balanced and physically well enough to care for ourselves and to be of service to our fullest ability.
 The teachings of yoga, which boil down to every living creature and thing being connected and from one source, are not religious nor culturally unique. They don’t invite some people and exclude others. Whoever we are, wherever we are, we can practice yoga via some means - it may be through selfless service to others, daily mantras and chants, physical poses or purely mindful breathing exercises (pranayama).

From that silence came a sacred sound, followed by a cacophony. Through yoga, we seek to connect back to the sacred sound. This is through compassion, dedicated practice, being of service and gratitude for the opportunity to contribute to this cacophonous, wonderful, endlessly curious world that we live in. Through individual practice, we connect to an ancient practice that unites all living beings. Om, Waheguru*.

*Waheguru translates as “teacher” or “remover of darkness”. In yoga, the use of the word typically means, “The teacher in me acknowledges the teacher in you”



Bringing Yoga To Life


Bringing Yoga to Life: The Everyday Practice of Enlightened Living
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

There are many books on yoga, but not many really delve into what it means to study and engage in yoga practice beyond the mat. What makes yoga different to simply doing stretches or gymnastics at the local recreation centre?
In Bringing Yoga To Life, Donna has an easily relatable and no-nonsense style of writing and teaching. She can illuminate very complex ideas and concepts through stories, both personal recollections from her classes and retreats, and also from yogic texts like the Bhagavad Gita.
Essentially, though this concept is easily articulated, it is the very heart of yoga and cannot truly be appreciated and integrated into our practice and our daily living until we are open to learning. Yoga is the unity of not only our own body and mind, but a unity with the world. It is, as Donna tries to examine and explain, finding our self in every thing (leaf, animal, air) and every person and also, knowing that we are in everything around us also. Donna describes this idea as being like a matrix of energy, or a silence, that exists behind all the noise of daily living and our own mental chatter. It is our connection to the universe that hums along eternally. This is also the concept of Om, often chanted before and after class. The unity of our bodily selves with our infinite selves and with everyone and everything around us.
If I’ve lost you already, then this book may not be for you yet. If you have just done your first class, or your fifty-thousandth class, this book will confront and challenge your ideas about yoga and about your life. I know I have spent nights awake and stopped at the traffic lights considering everything from my approach as a teacher to whether I’m breathing fully and what my intentions genuinely are for every choice I make. As yogis, we aren’t going to do everything perfectly. Donna recognises the obsessive and ritualistic approach of a well-known yoga instructor in her book and his rigid adhesion to his own practice is so determined, he leaves the class he is conducting to go and do his personal practice alone.
What this also illustrates, inadvertently, is that yoga is a diverse school and there are many approaches. Donna’s most enlightening chapter, for me, was about seeking the teachers who resonate for us and recognising the traits that we most seek, require and benefit from in our teachers are what we really need to absorb into our approach to ourselves.
For me, I seek teachers who are frank, no-nonsense, challenging but also with a deep joy for living, movement, sharing and able to challenge my ideas and movement so that I push further than is comfortable, but doing so with a compassionate and attentive instructor overseeing.
I seek teachers who are passionate about what they know and always open and curious to learning and seeing what they know in a new light. I seek teachers who are exceptional students. I see this in myself as a deeply curious person.
Using anecdotes, spiritual texts, poetry, stories passed down from family and friends, Donna has not written a step-by-step guide for dummies on the spiritual life by any means. This is, however, not also a prescriptive text but one that like all great teachings, invites us to question what we think we are certain about and then to indulge new ideas and practices in our daily life and to also appreciate that our approach to life and to yoga will change with circumstances, age and experience.
My only niggles are very few really. I also think that with time and consideration, and more practice, I may change my mind on finding them niggles at all. Towards the end of the book, one chapter makes a few references to what particular age groups, from the 20s to the 30s “normally do”. As a yoga instructor and a writer, I meet many people of all cultures, ages, gender identity and what I have learned, is that there is no “normal”. In yoga particularly, instructors are a wild and diverse group of spiritual seekers of all ages and physical abilities. To define age groups and what they should or should not be doing is an exercise in narrowing down what a life ought to look like. This is perhaps just my sensitive interpretation though!
Donna is candid to a very controlled and short extent, in revealing family trouble that lead to an eating disorder in her twenties, exacerbated by dance training where her teacher made derogatory remarks about her less-than-bony physique. This is a common experience for many who studied dance or gymnastics as children and teens and found their bodies became battlegrounds for control and aesthetic worth. I know I have had my battles and it is enormously comforting to me to also know there are many well-known and honest international yoga teachers who speak about overcoming these lethal disorders to find a love and appreciation for their bodies through yoga. This may sound simplistic, and it is not through doing tree pose and having some amazing moment of enlightenment that acceptance and appreciation is nurtured in the body.
It is, as Donna reveals in Bringing Yoga To Life, through questioning, studying, and also accepting the mystery of life and having faith. This doesn’t mean worshipping God or Buddha or identifying with a religion. This means accepting the enormous joy and rarity of actually being here at all, of all the endlessly possible genetic and energetic combinations of a human being, you are here. This means accepting that we are not alone – we exist as part of the universe, and it exists in us. I am still considering what I read in Donna’s book. Hourly, daily, weekly. It has inspired me to seek more reading and to approach my classes with a greater curiosity and desire to inspire that same curiosity and joy in yoga as a spiritual practice in which asanas are an element but not the end goal.
Originally published in 2005, this is a book that has not aged nor can I imagine it will ever be redundant. For curious yogis and those who seek to embrace yoga on, off and beyond the mat and the routines of daily life. I had the great fortune to read this book via SocialBookCo.

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