The Complate Yoga Sytem
I am sure everyone experiences yoga
and meditation in their own individual way. It is exciting to
discover and explore the potential of the exercises. The
fundamental effects, however, are pretty much the same for all -
body and mind find their own natural balance.
When I have been very busy going
full speed ahead all day and then find it difficult to unwind in
the evening, meditation calms me. But if I am tired and uninspired
and cannot get started on anything, then meditation gives me
renewed energy.
A woman with very high blood
pressure participated on a yoga and meditation course we held in
Germany a few years ago. She had tried all kinds of therapies, but
nothing helped. So she turned to yoga. She had a blood pressure
device with her and we took her blood pressure on various
occasions during the course.
After the deep-relaxation Yoga
Nidra, followed by the meditation The Source of Energy,
which is, amongst other things, based on a special breathing
technique, her blood pressure became almost normal. Another woman
on the course proved to have low blood pressure and when we
measured her, we saw to our great surprise that it had actually
risen following the same exercises!
An explanation for this could be that these techniques make us
relax and help us let go of the thoughts, impressions and states
which are otherwise seated in our muscles and organs and which
influence the nervous system - this process normalizes the blood
pressure.
When something is worrying us, we
may feel as if we are enclosed in a bubble. When the problem has
been resolved, or the cause of the anxiety has been removed, then
everything feels different. Suddenly we can make contact with the
people around us again and appreciate the small daily events.
One day two young men came to the
school. They wanted to know what yoga was. "Do you have to
believe in anything?" they asked. "No," I
replied, "yoga is like football. It is something you do.
It isn't something you believe in."
Maybe you get a broader perspective
on a variety of things or maybe new values, but yoga is not
something to ascribe to; insight grows by itself. |