Yoga Nidra Meditation: The Sleep of the Sages
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About this ebook
• Details the simple postures of Yoga Nidra, breathing exercises and guided meditations, and tips for maintaining awareness in the liminal state that precedes sleep
• Explains how Yoga Nidra allows you to explore different states of consciousness and any blockages in the emotional, mental, and energy bodies
• Includes four complete sessions as well as pointers for creating your own sessions
Known as the “yoga of conscious sleep,” Yoga Nidra is an ancient Indian practice that allows you to consciously explore the states of wakefulness, dream, and deep sleep as well as your own psyche by combining deep relaxation with attentive awareness. Stemming from Hindu, Buddhist, and Tantric philosophies, the practice--which could be called the “sleep of the sages”--centers on techniques for putting the mind and body to sleep while keeping your consciousness alert. Through Yoga Nidra you can directly observe and understand specific physiological, emotional, and mental processes within yourself as well as experience moments of great inner tranquility, joy, and well-being.
Providing a step-by-step guide to Yoga Nidra, Pierre Bonnasse offers a full range of practices focused on the time of awakening and that of going to sleep, yet adaptable to any time of day or night. He details the simple postures of Yoga Nidra and includes preparatory techniques that work with breath and guided meditations to help you become an attuned observer of your inner world. Offering tips for withdrawing the senses and maintaining awareness in the liminal state that precedes sleep, the author explores how all practices in this discipline begin with a phase of relaxation and observation of breathing, followed by immersion into a very subtle awareness of the physical, energy, and mental bodies. He explains how Yoga Nidra sessions allow you to discover “that which is held on to,” making it is easier to let go and become free from all states and processes. A session can explore different states of consciousness as well as your senses, desires, and fears. The higher states of more advanced sessions focus on the energy body and its components: the chakras, nadis, and pranavayu, the vital breath and autonomic functions of the body.
Including four complete sessions as well as pointers for creating your own, Bonnasse shows how Yoga Nidra offers positive, stabilizing, and therapeutic effects for the body, emotions, and thoughts. It is the ideal practice for getting rid of stress, anxiety, and the fear of death the source of all other fears. Connecting Indian and Western philosophical ideas, the author shows how sleep can be an opportunity to practice a form of yoga that changes not only our nights but every minute of our days.
Pierre Bonnasse
Pierre Bonnasse, also known as Chitragupta, has studied under the guidance of different spiritual masters for more than 20 years. The author of more than 20 books, he cofounded the Rishi Yoga Shala School, offering yoga training programs in India and in France. He lives in both France and Rishikesh, India.
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Yoga Nidra Meditation - Pierre Bonnasse
Yoga Nidra
MEDITATION
"Pierre Bonnasse’s Yoga Nidra Meditation is no glib self-help book about using modern yoga nidra—the practice of visualizing images, having awareness of breath, and remaining immobile while in a lucid, sleep-like state—for getting rid of stress and anxiety. It is, instead, an in-depth, wise, and elegantly written presentation of the philosophy and practice of modern yoga nidra as nothing less than a means of attaining a ‘taste of Being’ of Brahman. In this, the book itself is a kind of meditation—the kind that one may read at bedtime in order to facilitate slipping into sleep."
ELLIOTT GOLDBERG, AUTHOR OF THE PATH OF MODERN YOGA: THE HISTORY OF AN EMBODIED SPIRITUAL PRACTICE
"Yoga Nidra Meditation: The Sleep of the Sages is as much about waking up as it is about sleeping. Bonnasse shows us how to wake up from the sleepy dreams that dull our consciousness and keep our natural enlightened state concealed. He tells us that to go beyond the body into our awakened state, first we have to go into the body, awakening its sensations and breath. The awakened state of the body then becomes the river that takes us beyond our limited sense of self. This is an important message, beautifully expressed, and the author offers powerful, yet simple, instructions on entering the state of yoga nidra for ourselves."
WILL JOHNSON, AUTHOR OF BREATHING THROUGH THE WHOLE BODY AND EYES WIDE OPEN
Contents
Cover Image
Title Page
Epigraph
Preface. Yoga Nidra: A Journey into the States of Matter, Consciousness, and the Joy of Being
Introduction. Indian Philosophy and the Limbs and Paths of Yoga
PERSPECTIVES ON INDIAN PHILOSOPHY
THE LIMBS AND PATHS OF YOGA
Part I: The Philosophy of Yoga Nidra
The Origins of Yoga Nidra
States of Consciousness
Who Am I?
The Sheaths of the Being
Awareness, Energy, Elements, and States of Matter
Qualities of Sleep
An Approach to Indian Psychology
The Manifestation of Phenomena
The Energy System in Yoga
The Phenomenal World and Constructions of the Mind
The Unconscious Mind
Fears, Desires, and Suffering
Sleep and Death
Part II: The Practice of Yoga Nidra
Yoga Nidra as a Practice: An Introduction
The Limbs of Yoga According to the Nidra Tradition
POSES
BREATHING
GESTURES AND LOCKS
WITHDRAWAL OF THE SENSES AND CONCENTRATION
MEDITATION AND DEEP CONTEMPLATION
Preparatory Exercises
Exercises for Falling Asleep
Exercises for the Night
Exercises for Waking Up
Yoga of Dreams—Svapna Yoga
Protocol for Yoga Nidra
ORGANIZING AND CREATING PRACTICE SESSIONS FOR ONESELF OR FOR OTHERS
PREPARATION (PRASTUTI)
DEEP RELAXATION (SHITHILIKARANA)
THE FORCE OF INTENTION (SANKALPA)
ROTATION OF CONSCIOUSNESS (CHETANA SANCHARANA)
THE COUNTDOWN
WORKING WITH THEMES
VISUALIZATIONS
MERGING WITH THE HEART
RESOLVE (SANKALPA) AND FINAL PHASE (SAMAPTI)
The Art of Living in Total Awareness
ELECTRICITY DOES NOT DIE WHEN THE BULB IS BROKEN
Fields of Application for Yoga Nidra
The Ultimate Surrender
Part III: Putting Yoga Nidra into Practice
SESSION 1
SESSION 2
SESSION 3
SESSION 4
115 Practices to Inspire and Create Your Sessions
Appendix. The Taste of Yogic Sleep
: An Interview with Pierre Bonnasse
Footnotes
Endnotes
Suggested Readings
About the Author
About Inner Traditions • Bear & Company
Books of Related Interest
Copyright & Permissions
Index
PREFACE
Yoga Nidra
A Journey into the States of Matter, Consciousness, and the Joy of Being
Yoga nidra is an ancestral practice that comes from grand Indian traditions and philosophies grounded in Hinduism, Buddhism, and Tantrism. This unique form of yoga seeks to combine deep relaxation with attentive awareness in order to consciously explore the states of wakefulness, dream, and deep sleep. Moreover, it offers ways of putting the mind and the body to sleep while keeping the awareness alert. This highly comprehensive approach has inspired the discipline of Sophrology*1 and allows one to experience moments of great inner tranquility, joy, and well-being; one can directly observe particular physiological, emotional, and mental processes within oneself and understand them in a better way. By knowing that which is held on to, it is easier to let go of it and recognize the essential space of one’s being, free from all states and processes. This practice combines very simple gestures and postures with light and subtle breathing exercises, as well as concentration and meditation, thereby allowing the alert observation of sensations, a welcoming of the phenomena that appear, and a return to the present moment, in order to taste the luminous and blissful presence to oneself and to the world, by day or by night.
During his research, Caycedo was guided by various traditions and currents, both Eastern and Western. Among the most influential for Sophrology were hypnosis and phenomenology, as well as yoga and Buddhism, mainly Zen Buddhism.
Practicing yoga nidra does not require any particular physical condition or quality, like strength, stamina, or flexibility. Simple poses (sitting, standing, and lying down) are used; they are adaptable to every individual and bring deep relaxation, as well as high quality attention and tranquility.
Through its positive, stabilizing, and pacifying effect on the body, emotions, and thoughts, yoga nidra is also a therapeutic technique that has considerably influenced modern relaxation techniques. Its practice reinforces joy, good spirits, and the immune system, thus preventing diseases, especially psychosomatic ones. It is the ideal practice for getting rid of stress, anxiety, and the fear of death, which yoga nidra considers to be at the source of all other fears.
By connecting Indian and Western philosophical ideas, and by drawing on the teachings of important spiritual masters, we will see how sleep can be an opportunity to practice a form of yoga that is absolutely delicious and that changes not only our nights, but also every minute of our days.
This book about the sleep of the sages takes us on a journey to the unknown and the mysterious, to the luminous presence of the unconscious mind, full of discoveries, encounters, and tastes; the art of taking a nap, a creative approach for lazing around, and another way of looking at life . . .
INTRODUCTION
Indian Philosophy and the Limbs and Paths of Yoga
Truth is one, but sages call it by various names.
RIG VEDA, 1:164–6
PERSPECTIVES ON INDIAN PHILOSOPHY
In India, sages believe that all paths everywhere in the world lead to the same mystery that humanity has never stopped looking for, whether we know it or not. The term Hinduism, coined by the British to label something that they did not understand, has no meaning; it tries to put the rites, practices, and philosophical schools of thought of this ancient land into one single basket that cannot contain them all. The term Sanatana Dharma is more suited, as it designates not only the myriad gods, goddesses, and practices, but also and above all the Eternal Philosophy, not as a theoretical discourse or an intellectual discipline, but as life support or a law of life itself, what really is, whether on an uncreated or a phenomenal level. This has nothing to do with an opinion. The term dharma, impossible to translate into our modern languages, refers to the objective law that reigns over the whole universe whether we know it or not. The concepts of social laws and moral and religious rules come much later, and are only a pale expression of it. This Eternal Philosophy is celebrated for the first time in the Vedas—ancient texts said to be revealed or heard. These texts, composed by the visionary sages of ancient India, divide knowledge or science into four parts. The Rig Veda, the knowledge of verses,
is the most ancient (1500 BCE). It contains formulas (mantra) and hymns and explains the Absolute. The Absolute is called Brahman. It is omnipresent, impersonal, and without form. The Sama Veda contains the knowledge of the hymns, or melodies. The Yajur Veda talks about the knowledge of sacrificial formulas. The Atharva Veda, the knowledge of Atharvan, is composed of incantations, chants, and prayers. These are followed by the interpretations and comments in the Brahmanas, esoteric texts called the Aranyakas, and the auxiliary disciplines associated with the study of the Vedas: phonetics, rituals, grammar, etymology, meter, and astronomy/astrology. But the essence of this revelation is crystallized in the famous philosophical manuals called the Upanishads (which literally means to sit at the master’s feet
), which are a finale to the Vedic canon, thus marking the accomplishment and the end of knowledge (Vedanta). They can be summarized in the four great sayings
(mahavakya), related to each of the four Vedas, to be memorized and meditated on. The first statement defines the truth: Consciousness is Brahman.
*2 The second saying teaches us that the nature of our identity is ONE with Absolute Reality: Thou art That.
The third seems to be the statement of direct experience: This Self (or Atman) is Brahman.
Finally, the fourth, like a song of gratitude, realization, and liberation: I am Brahman.
Among the Vedic lords, let us mention Indra, the god of war, who is powerful; Mitra, the friend; and Varuna, the sky. These three are the custodians of order. Agni, the fire, and Rudra, the roarer, he who makes you cry shares many features with the famous god of the yogis, Shiva, the Auspicious One, mentioned in the later scriptures, as well as Vishnu, the omnipresent, he who pervades. And there are many others: sun gods, goddesses, demons, and other geniuses that mythology enthusiasts are sure to look up in the corresponding texts.
This Eternal Philosophy is also celebrated in the remembered texts (smriti) that constitute the entire foundation of the Indian tradition. These epics are among the most accessible texts, and are thus far more popular than the heard texts (shruti) known to priests, scholars, and a few spiritual seekers. The epics, while responding and referring to the authoritative revealed texts, speak to a large number of people through the story and mythology of gods and goddesses, imbued with a sense of profound philosophy. They include legendary and famous sagas like the Mahabharata (a subset of which, the Bhagavad Gita, is considered to be a part of the revealed knowledge) and the Ramayana. In these stories, the One, the impersonal Brahman of the revealed texts, takes multiple forms, usually more human and thus more familiar to the people, who in turn can easily identify with the manifestation (avatar) of Vishnu, such as Krishna or Rama or their companions. These texts also include mythological and religious collections that discuss the creation of the universe, the secondary creations, the ancestry of gods and sages, the creation of the human race and of the first humans, and the history of dynasties in a traditional manner. Most of them were written between the years 400 and 1200 BCE. There are also tantric textbooks, as well as books of law that mention moral precepts, codes of conduct, laws, legal treaties, penal codes, fixed by grand legislators such as Manu, who tries to reconcile the Vedic spirit with the current era. But dharma is not a dogma, and these texts were not necessarily followed, nor even considered popular enough by the British, who tried to impose a framework onto a reality that could not be limited to one particular setting.
For understanding this Eternal Philosophy or Eternal Truth, which cannot be seized by the intellect, the Indian tradition offers several points of view (darshana) accepted by the Vedic authority. The nyaya, literally meaning original nature,
is the school of logic, founded by the ancient logician and philosopher Akshapada Gautama. It studies the means of knowledge, based on logical analysis and reasoning, by developing, for example, linguistic semantics. The vaisheshika, meaning particular, specific,
is a systematic school that classifies concepts; this philosophical and discriminative doctrine goes back to the first century, and it is traditionally credited to Kanada and his Vaishesika Sutra, composed of ten books. It allows for perceiving the characteristic differences between things. Its major ideas are of an ontological and systematic nature; the concepts are classified into six categories: substance, quality, activity, generic and discriminative substrata, and inherence. The samkhya, the measurable,
is the school of progressive discrimination of substances, credited to Kapila, whom some consider to be a manifestation of Vishnu. This point of view enunciates universal structures or the macrocosmos, and postulates a supreme principal, classifying elements into several categories. Yoga, which literally means to harness
(yuj), is the exercise of spiritual communion, the means and the goal, the union with the highest Consciousness. Codified by Patanjali in his Yoga Sutras, the king of yoga
(raja yoga) describes man’s inner universe from the theist perspective of the samkhya. This is an integral practice, a means of inner investigation to know the Self, traditionally divided into eight limbs or stages (ashtanga, which we explore in the next chapter). The mimamsa is about hermeneutics, the exegesis of the Vedic ritual, other rituals, and ceremonies. The Mimamsa Sutra, exposing this doctrine, came after the fourth century, but is credited to Jaimini, who is also the author of an essay on domestic rituals. Finally, the Vedanta, literally meaning the end of knowledge,
designates the culmination of Indian philosophy in nonduality
(advaita). This school is credited to Vyasa. It is the philosophy exposed in the Upanishads, made famous and developed by Adi Shankaracharya (788–820 CE), the benevolent master
who lived in Varanasi, where he taught this direct philosophy. He is credited with numerous writings; he founded four monasteries, was the source of several schools of thought, and had an important influence and authority on this teaching of nonduality, popularized by grand sages such as Ramana Maharshi, Nisargadatta Maharaj, and Swami Chinmayananda. This path invites one to recognize the Self through three distinct forms of yoga, respectively involving the body, the emotions, and the mind: karma yoga, the path of action; bhakti yoga, the path of devotion; jnana yoga, the path of self-inquiry. The essence of these three classical forms of yoga is naturally involved with other forms of practice, and in the end all the paths come together in the space of direct experience.
THE LIMBS AND PATHS OF YOGA
In his famous Yoga Sutras, Patanjali enunciates eight limbs or stages of raja yoga that lead to the realization of the highest Consciousness. The first limb (yama) invites us to observe and cultivate five qualities, directly linked with our relation with others: benevolence or nonviolence, truthfulness, nonstealing, celibacy, and nonpossessiveness. Inextricably linked with the latter, the second limb (niyama) directly refers to our relation with ourselves, and consists in the cultivation of purity, moderation, or contentment; the strength acquired by asceticism; the knowledge acquired by the reading of sacred texts; and the faith acquired by meditation. Some may see this as a simple code of conduct, but the tantric schools prefer to set it aside for diverse reasons. That being said, these observances are of invaluable aid in cultivating the tranquility that is necessary for the practice of yoga. They are also, from another point of view, the fruits of serious asceticism. The third limb concerns postures (asana), the way of staying
and the mastery of the body in general. The fourth limb encourages the control of breath (pranayama) by observing it attentively, as well as the practice of codified breathing exercises. These first four limbs are essentially related to the outer aspect of the discipline; the other four limbs will directly immerse us in the very core of inwardness. The fifth limb calls for the withdrawal of the senses (pratyahara), allowing the attention to