Pages

Oct 15, 2012

A letter from Sri.K. Pattabhi Jois to Yoga Journal, Nov. 1995

"I was disappointed to find that so many novice students have taken Ashtanga yoga and have turned it into a circus for their own fame and profit (Power Yoga, Jan/Feb 1995). The title 'Power Yoga' itself degrades the depth, purpose and method of the yoga system that I received from my guru, Sri. T. Krishnamacharya. Power is the property of God. It is not something to be collected for one's ego. Partial yoga methods out of line with their internal purpose can build up the 'six enemies' (desire, anger, greed, illusion, infatuation and envy) around the heart. The full ashtanga system practiced with devotion leads to freedom within one's heart. The Yoga Sutra II.28 confirms this 'Yogaanganusthanat asuddiksaye jnanadiptih avivekakhyateh', which means 'practicing all the aspects of yoga destroys the impurities so that the light of knowledge and discrimination shines'. It is unfortunate that students who have not yet matured in their own practice have changed the method and have cut out the essence of an ancient lineage to accommodate their own limitations.
The Ashtanga yoga system should never be confused with 'power yoga' or any whimsical creation which goes against the tradition of the many types of yoga shastras (scriptures). It would be a shame to lose the precious jewel of liberation in the mud of ignorant body building."


-K. Pattabhi Jois, Ashtanga Yoga Research Institute, Mysore, South India

1 comment:

  1. Well-stated and well in line with Iyengar's take.
    Yoga as practiced in USA without the rest of the Patanjali ashtanga risks being a physical endeavor; some will receive the gift of transformation, but most will miss out on the true depth of disciplined practice. I read long ago that there is a risk to the physical practice: that yoga will turn into hamstring stretches. It must be practiced for its own sake, not to accomplish a personal goal; that is selflessness.

    Remember also that this was published long before YJ took on its present incarnation as a commercial vehicle. I doubt it would make it in now.

    ReplyDelete