What are Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras?
You may have heard the name in yoga class, in Sanskrit chants, or seen a statue of Patanjali with a hood of snakes and all sorts of exotic paraphernalia. Patanjali is credited with compiling the Yoga Sutras, an early handbook of classical yoga philosophy, and still our most thorough exposition of what classical yoga is.
Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras contain 196 Sutras, divided between four chapters, called Padas. The sutras discuss the aims and practice of yoga, the development of “yogic powers” and finally, liberation, enlightenment, or freedom.. The Yoga Sutras warn you of the pitfalls on your spiritual journey and offer the means to overcome them. In Vedic texts, it is common to encapsulate the whole teaching early in the discourse. Patanjali does this in the first few sutras, giving you the essence of what’s to come:
“Yoga is the progressive settling of the mind into silence”, also translated as “Yoga is the cessation of movements in the consciousness”.
When the mind is settled, we are established in our own essential state, which is unbounded consciousness, also translated as when the mind becomes still, then the seer dwells in his own true splendour. Our essential nature is usually overshadowed by the activity of the mind, also translated as at other times, the seer identifies with the fluctuating consciousness.
This means: Your spiritual practice should be to look within. Your true Self lies hidden in the silence between your thoughts, beyond all limitations. However, the doubts, chaos, and confusion of your thoughts cause you to forget who you really are.
- Samadhi Pada: The Chapter on Contemplation
The first chapter of Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras begins with the sutra or thread: “Now begins the exposition of the Art of Yoga”. The word now has been much debated, and is said to imply that teaching has come before. It implies: “Having learned the basics, you are now ready to dive into the art of yoga”.
This first chapter gives a definition of yoga, as the stopping of the movement of Chitta, or consciousness, as explained above. It then breaks down the movements of consciousness, and gives the tools to still the consciousness: Practice and Detachment. Patanjali then informs us that practice and detachment develop different types of Samadhi, and gives us the types of effort which must go into the practice. Patanjali speaks of the nature of God, and how he is represented by the mantra Om, which he calls the Pranava mantra, or primeval mantra.
- Sadhana Pada: The Chapter on Practice
The second chapter of is the most practical chapter. It outlines in a practical way how to attain Samadhi or freedom. It gives a breakdown of Kriya yoga, the yoga of action. Kriya Yoga has three portions, Tapas or burning seal, Svadhyaya or self-study, and Isvara Pranidhana, or surrender to a higher power (some say god).
Patanjali then outlines the obstacles to achieving success in practice, and give advice on how to overcome these obstacles. He outlines seeded and seedless Samadhi, and tells us that eventually through practice, Sattva or luminosity occurs, and a new life begins for the Sadhaka (the practitioner).
The causes of your suffering (the Kleshas) are the following:
- Avidya: Ignorance, or forgetting who you really are
- Asmita: Living from the ego
- Raga: Attachment, or clinging to pleasure
- Dvesha: Repulsion, or avoiding pain
- Abhinivesha: Fearing death
All of these are resolved through meditation when you remember your essential nature of unbounded consciousness.
Patanjali also discusses essence of Prakruti (Nature), and breaks it into three Gunas. Rajas (motion), Tamas (inertia) and Satva (luminosity).
Sadhana Pada discusses the seer and the seen, and how Avidya (lack of awareness) creates a false identification of the seer with the seen. It instructs us that we Kaivalya (emancipation) occurs when a ceaseless flow of right knowledge is held, braking the link between the seer and the seen. Patanjali then outlines seven states of Chitta (consciousness).
Sadhana Pada gives us a further breakdown of Kriya Yoga into the famous 8 limbs of yoga, or Astanga Yoga. When I took up yoga firstly I was told that the 8 limbs were like 8 rungs on a ladder, to be climbed one at a time. However they are described as limbs not rungs in Sanskrit, so think of yoga as being like an octopus or spider, where all all limbs are developed at once. When I took up Iyengar Yoga the guidance was that all of the limbs are in each moment, in each pose. So shall we look at these limbs?
The 8 Limbs of Yoga
The Yoga Sutras contain a set of observances and practices to guide your spiritual journey. These are known as the 8 Limbs of Yoga.
1. Yama: Correct behaviour toward others
- Nonviolence
- Truthfulness
- Not stealing
- Not wasting energy
- Abstaining from greed
2. Niyama: The principles by which you should live your own life
- Purity
- Contentment
- Spiritual observances
- Study
- Devotion
3. Asana: Postures to prepare the body to be a fountain of consciousness
4. Pranayama: Expanding the life force through breathing exercises
5. Pratyahara: Turning the senses inward to explore the inner world, sense withdrawal
6. Dharana: Effortless focused attention; training the mind to meditate
7. Dhyana: A continuous flow of consciousness, meditation perfected
8. Samadhi: Union with the body, the mind, the breath, the soul some say, the divine others say. A state of blissful presence
The first four limbs or Angas prepare the body for the next three, which take you to the doorway of the eighth, Samadhi or blissful presence.
Dharana, Dhyana, and Samadhi practiced together is known as Sanyama. Patanjali says that reaching Samadhi and practicing Samadhi gives you yogic powers (Siddhis). More on that soon!
Levels of Samadhi
Even Samadhi has several levels:
Savikalpa Samadhi
You move beyond the physical world until you are only aware of bliss. Only the I-ness remains.
Nirvikalpa Samadhi: You become one with the Soul—no mind—only infinite peace and bliss.
Sahaja Samadhi: The constant experience of Nirvikalpa along with daily activity.
Dharma Megha Samadhi: The highest Samadhi, the state of Unclouded Truth. All desires, even the desire to know God, have dissolved. All that affects the mind, the causes of suffering, and the bondage of action disappear. You eventually reach the state where Pure Unbounded Consciousness remains forever established in its own Absolute nature.
- Vibhuti Pada, The Chapter on Yogic Powers:
This is the chapter of results of practice, or of Siddhis, “magical powers”!
Please do remember this was written 2,000 years ago…
The third chapter of Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras initially takes off where the second chapter leaves off. We open with Dharana or concentration, Dhyana or meditation, and Samadhi. which is bliss or enlightenment. These are the 6th, 7th & 8th limb of Astanga Yoga, which Patanjali says constitutes integration or Samyama, and they are classed as internal, compared to the previous five limbs. However even these internal limbs appear as external compared to seedless Samadhi. Seeded and seedless Samadhi, what is that? Well seeded Samadhi is bliss with ties to the mundane world. Seedless Samadhi is when you are no longer tethered to karma and the world around you. Patanjali says that the consciousness can be transformed through the restraint of rising impressions, which will lead to tranquillity, or the rise of one pointed attention in the Citta or consciousness. When we master one pointed attention, we move to no pointed attention, and finally to focusing on the soul, and we become one with it.
Having explained how consciousness is transformed and perfected through Samyama, he then tells us about some of the powers which yogis attain through dedicated practice. Here are some of the powers or accomplishments which Patanjali says may manifest:
– Knowledge of past and future
– Knowledge of the languages of all beings
– Knowledge of all previous lives
– The ability to read the minds of others
– The ability to become invisible
– The ability to become invisible to all of the sense organs
– He will be able to see the future fruition of his actions and be able to tell the time of his death.
– Through moral and emotion strength the yogi will have friendliness toward all.
– The strength and endurance of an elephant.
– Knowledge of the stars and constellations.
– Knowledge of the course of destiny.
– Knowledge of the disposition of the human body, and mastery of his own body down to cellular level.
– Hunger and thirst shall be overcome.
– The ability to become as steady and immobile as a tortoise.
– The ability to see perfected beings.
– Knowledge of all knowledge.
– Knowledge of the contents and tendencies of pure consciousness.
– The ability to differentiate between the intelligence and the soul, between the unreal and the real.
– The ability to experience the five senses through unlimited space.
– The ability to enter another’s body at will.
– The ability to levitate, walk over water and through thorns without injury.
– Control of the element of fire.
– Control of the element of air, and with it the ability to hear all things everywhere. Control of the element of ether, and with it the ability to become light as cotton fibre. The ability to remove consciousness from the body, and be anywhere in space.
– The ability to become lord of all of the elements.
– The ability to shrink to the size of an atom, or expand to great size.
– Mastery of all of the senses.
– The yogis’s speed of body, senses and mind match that of the soul.
– Supreme knowledge of all that exists and manifests.
Wow, that is a list! According to Patanjali, these accomplishments can distract the yogi, and drag him back into the realm of the Gunas and the mundane. Patanjali says they should be shunned, or at best treated as acknowledgements that the yogi is on the right path, but not embraced.Then, when the intelligence has been purified and clarified to the level of the purity and clarity of the soul, the yogi attains perfection in yoga.
- Kaivalya Pada, The Chapter on Liberation:
The fourth and final chapter of Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras outlines the path of renunciation of worldly objects and desires. Immediately, in Sutra 1, Patanjali outlines five ways that mystical powers can be obtained: birth, use of herbs, mantra, self-discipline, and Samadhi. Pride and/or negligence may effect yogis who attain accomplishments through the first three ways. This will not happen to yogis who gain their powers through self-discipline or Samadhi, they will instead become shining, fully liberated souls. In sutra 2 Patanjali mentions how evolution can happen by birth. Sometimes the reward for sadhana (practice) may not flower in the current lifetime, but may mature in a subsequent lifetime.
Patanjali then outlines how soul or atman is single and pure, and is the spiritual heart. However it becomes self-conscious, and like the trunk of a tree splits from one trunk into many branches, first of consciousness, then of ego, intelligence and mind. This gives rise to fluctuations and afflictions, and this is where we all find ourselves. Through strong sadhana, the yogi begins to discriminate between the trunk and the branches or shoots, bringing the citta (consciousness) back to its single pure state. The tool to achieve this is Dhyana or deep meditation.
After that Patanjali gives an exposition of the law of Karma. This is a discussion for another day, so I will not take on the minefield which is Karma!Patanjali then outlines how though the perception of an object may change due to fluctuations in the consciousness, its essential nature remains unchanging. He shows us that two people may see the same object differently, due to differences in the development of each person’s consciousness, and the interplay of the 3 gunas in relation to their consciousness. Through diligent practice the yogi will realise that the perciever is not the real perciever, but an instrument of the seer.The yogi will then start to see objects as true without the fluctuations of the gunas. This leads to a merging of the mind with the seer, and Atma Jnana occurs, wisdom of the soul. Patanjali then explains how consciousness wants to join with the seer. Consciousness cannot be self aware, it cannot illuminate itself. Eventually consciousness is absorbed by the seer.Ultimately, through the sadhana which Patanjali outlines, our limited and self-limiting identity falls away. And then we are left with the seer, abiding in its true timeless and transcendent essence.
And that ends our discussion of Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras!
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