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Home » Yoga In Rajasthan
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| Yoga In Rajasthan |
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| Yoga is a way of life. It is predoninantly concerned with maintaining a state of equanimity at all costs. All yoga schools of thought emplasize the importance of the mind remaining calm, because as the saying goes, only when the water is still can you see through it. |
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| Kaivalya Pada Yoga |
| This page is part of the Sivananda Yoga Vedanta Center Web site. Karma Yoga is one of the four paths of Yoga. In this page are the key components that determine that any action will qualify as being Karma Yoga. |
| Read more About Kaivalya Pada Yoga |
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| Ashtanga Yoga |
| Yoga is your Health Club on a Sticky Mat, a complete lifestyle comprising a proper diet, positive mental outlook, a series of stress reducing physical postures linked to correct natural breathing, and meditative focus. |
| Read more About Ashtanga Yoga |
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| Dharana Yoga |
| The last three limbs of Ashtanga Yoga are the three essential stages of meditation. Dharana involves developing and extending our powers of concentration. This consists of various ways of directing and controlling our attention and mind-fixing skills, such as concentrating on the chakras or turning inwards. |
| Read more About Dharana Yoga |
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| Hatha Yoga |
| Hatha yoga (Sanskrit haṭha yoga), also known as Hatha vidya, is a particular system of Yoga introduced by Yogi Swatmarama, a sage of 15th century India, and compiler of the Hatha Yoga Pradipika. |
| Read more About Hatha Yoga |
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| Jnana Yoga |
| This is the most difficult path, requiring tremendous strength of will and intellect. Taking the philosophy of Vedanta the Jnana Yogi uses his mind to inquire into its own nature. |
| Read more About Jnana Yoga |
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| Mantra Yoga |
| Mantra Yoga refers to the repetition of mantras (words or sounds) during various yoga meditation techniques. This ritualistic chanting helps bind the mind to a single thought until it attains the state of samadhi. |
| Read more About Mantra Yoga |
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| Karma Yoga |
| It was believed that the practice of Karma Yoga, accompanied by the observance of certain rituals, would lead to liberation from the cycle of birth and death. In the Bhagavad Gita, lord Krishna further extended the semantics of the term karma to mean detached action, that is, subjugation of the individual will to Divine purpose. |
| Read more About Karma Yoga |
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| Japa Yoga |
| The benefits of Mantra-writing or Likhita Japa cannot be adequately described. Besides bringing about purity of heart and concentration of mind, mantra-writing gives you control of Asana, control of Indriyas, particularly the sight and the tongue, and fills you with the power of endurance. |
| Read more About Japa Yoga |
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| Raja Yoga |
| Raja means royal or kingly. Raja yoga meditation is generally based on directing one’s life force to bring the mind and emotions so into balance that the attention may be easily focused on the object of meditation, or the Lord directly. |
| Read more About Raja Yoga |
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| Laya Yoga |
Laya Yoga is one facet of the Art of Yoga. It is regarded as the highest form of yoga. It is the pinnacle, the zenith of one’s quest for inner peace and dialogue with one’s soul and tuning with universal energy. |
| Read more About Laya Yoga |
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| Nada Yoga |
| Nada Yoga means union (yoga) with the Self, the nadam, that primordial energy which is the source of all that is. In the rigveda, the oldest text of the 4,000 year old vedic scriptures of India, sound is called nada brahma (sound of the creator god brahma). |
| Read more About Nada Yoga |
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