Your reason for wanting to practise yoga or
your reason for currently practising yoga is
not important. The important thing is that
you have overcome previous prejudices and
postponements to try yoga for yourself. You
have overcome the biggest obstacle.
Perhaps you are doing yoga to develop a
healthy body or a beautiful body. There is
nothing wrong with this motive and the
practices of yoga will help you to attain this. All
we say to you is: "Be aware of your mind. Do
you feel more peaceful? Have you developed
greater concentration?" If so, then through
personal experience you will know that yoga
practices have a beneficial influence on the
mind as well as the body.
Perhaps you have some illness or body
ailment which you want to eliminate and have
come to yoga as a last resort. Whether it is
physical or mental, it does not matter, for
yoga can help you. If it is mental peace you
want or improved concentration or willpower,
then definitely yoga can help, as the veiy essence
of yoga is tied up with these faculties.
Many peopl e have unsatisfactory relationships
with wife or husband, friends or
colleagues. The practice of yoga will help to
put your relationship on a sure, positive basis.
Remember, a relationship improves in depth
of understanding according to the level of
self-awareness. Yoga aims at enabling you to
know yourself and to see your foibles and
nature in others. In this way, understanding
arises and through this your personal relationships
will improve.
Perhaps you have heard that yoga can
improve or rectify sexual relationships. Yes,
this is true and is a perfectly good reason for
starting yoga, especially since inadequate
sexual relations are often the cause of much
unhappiness and frustration. A body that is
perfectly healthy and efficient and a mind that
is tuned to a high point of sensitivity and
calmness, as they are through yoga practices,
increase one's ability to enjoy sexual union or
remove the obstacles that at present make it
impossible.
Maybe you have religious beliefs, but without
any spiritual experience. Or maybe you have
no religious beliefs and you seek spiritual
experience. Or perhaps you have no belief in
the existence of spiritual experience, but have
come to yoga merely to see what it is all about.
It does not matter - you have come. That is
the main thing.
What we are trying to say is that whatever
your situation in life, whatever you believe or
do not believe, whatever you want from life,
yoga will help you because it changes your
whole being and hence your relationship with
and attitude to life itself.
The ultimate point of yoga and this book,
however, is to expand your consciousness, to
open your eyes to the vast number of things
around you, of which at present you are
unaware. It was Shakespeare who said: "There
are more things in heaven and earth . . . than
are dreamt of in your philosophy." We must
keep our minds open to new possibilities. It is
yoga that shows us a way.
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