| yoga |
"To yoke or unite," connoting the process of yoking or fusing individual consciousness and awareness with superconscious awareness-- the natural mind state of soul and God. This yoking process ultimately leads to a realization of identity, that our innermost consciousness and Absoluteness is and always has been that of God. Yoga is the third of the four successive stages (margas) of purification and enlightenment in Saiva Siddhanta--chariya, kriya, yoga and jnana. ...
Ãâó: www.himalayanacademy.com/resources/books/virtue/SV...
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| yoga |
( Sanskrit word meaning
Ãâó: www.storytellingmonk.org/ref/glossaries/y.htm
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| yoga |
(lit., union) The spiritual practices and disciplines that lead a seeker to evenness of mind, to the severing of the union with pain, and through detachment, to skill in action. Ultimately, the path of yoga leads to the constant experience of the Self.
Ãâó: www.siddhayoga.org.in/glossary.html
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| yoga |
(Skt.): Literally "union". In Buddhism, a method for becoming one with the natural state.
Ãâó: www.bodhipath-west.org/glossary.htm
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| yoga |
Meaning union with the divine, yoga is a philosophy and discipline applied to the development of mind, body, and spirit. There are many disciplines of yoga emphasizing different aspects or combination of mind body spirit. Through practices of holding a variety of body positions or asanas, and the centering of the mind and breath in a meditative way, the practitioner increases body awareness, posture, flexibility of body and mind and calmness of spirit.
Ãâó: www.footnotesforhealth.com/definitions.html
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