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Looking For fun Indian Events to attend in Melbourne in the month of April 2017! Please read on to find out what’s happening in your local area!
Website: www.indomystic.com.au
Founder of IndoMysitc Ajit is born in India and has been practicing traditional Yoga for past 23 years. His vision is to spread real Yogic lifestyle. A Yogi is not someone who is very fit or can bend their back to their tows. Its about connecting to the real self spirit and nurture it till it becomes capable of Samadhi which is the eternal medtative state.
Its The ultimate goal of Yoga is moksha (liberation), although the exact definition of what form this takes depends on the philosophical or theological system with which it is conjugated.
Workshops —- – professionally guided and varying in style – a range of options offered at various times —-
According to David Gordon White, from the 5th century CE onward, the core principles of “yoga” were more or less in place, and variations of these principles developed in various forms over time:
Yoga, is a meditative means of discovering dysfunctional perception and cognition, as well as overcoming it for release from suffering, inner peace and salvation; illustration of this principle is found in Hindu texts such as the Bhagavad Gita and Yogasutras, in a number of Buddhist Mah?y?na works, as well as Jain texts;
Yoga, as the raising and expansion of consciousness from oneself to being coextensive with everyone and everything; these are discussed in sources such as in Hinduism Vedic literature and its Epic Mah?bh?rata, Jainism Pra?amaratiprakarana, and Buddhist Nikaya texts;
Yoga, as a path to omniscience and enlightened consciousness enabling one to comprehend the impermanent (illusive, delusive) and permanent (true, transcendent) reality; examples are found in Hinduism Nyaya and Vaisesika school texts as well as Buddhism M?dhyamaka texts, but in different ways;
Yoga, as a technique for entering into other bodies, generating multiple bodies, and the attainment of other supernatural accomplishments; these are, states White, described in Tantric literature of Hinduism and Buddhism, as well as the Buddhist S?maññaphalasutta;
White clarifies that the last principle relates to legendary goals of “yogi practice”, different from practical goals of “yoga practice,” as they are viewed in South Asian thought and practice since the beginning of the Common Era, in the various Hindu, Buddhist, and Jain philosophical schools.