Yoga Mythology: 64 Asanas and Their Stories
By Devdutt Pattanaik and Matthew Rulli
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About this ebook
Deepen Your Yoga Experience with the Origin Stories of 64 Common Asanas
Explore the stories from Hindu, Buddhist, and Jain mythology that nurtured the idea of yoga and shaped the development of its most iconic asanas. Learn how svana-asana (dog pose) is connected to Shiva, bhujanga-asana (cobra pose) was inspired by shape-shifting beings who live below the earth, and much more.
Many practitioners are unaware of yoga's underlying philosophy, symbols, and rituals because modern teachers often emphasize the physical over the mental and spiritual components. Yoga Mythology brings this overlooked wisdom to light by recounting the lore behind more than sixty asanas, drawing attention to an Indic worldview based on the concepts of eternity, rebirth, liberation, and empathy. With hundreds of photos and playful illustrations, this book makes it easy and enjoyable to connect with yogic principles and expand the mental and spiritual aspects of your practice.
Devdutt Pattanaik
Devdutt Pattanaik writes, illustrates and lectures on the relevance of mythology in modern times. He has, since 1996, written over thirty books and 700 columns on how stories, symbols and rituals construct the subjective truth (myths) of ancient and modern cultures around the world. His books include 7 Secrets of Hindu Calendar Art (Westland), Myth=Mithya: A Handbook of Hindu Mythology (Penguin), Jaya: An Illustrated Retelling of the Mahabharata (Penguin), Sita: An Illustrated Retelling of the Ramayana (Penguin), Olympus: An Indian Retelling of the Greek Myths (Penguin), Business Sutra: A Very Indian Approach to Management (Aleph), My Gita (Rupa) and Devlok with Devdutt Pattanaik (Penguin). To know more, visit devdutt.com.
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Yoga Mythology - Devdutt Pattanaik
About the Authors
Devdutt Pattanaik, renowned mythologist from India, author of over fifty books and over 1,000 columns on the subject, and a TED speaker, has written and illustrated this book. He has structured it in a way that makes the subject accessible to an international audience.
Matthew Rulli, former Marine and an experienced registered yoga teacher (E-RYT 500) from the US, who has been studying Sanskrit and Eastern philosophy for over a decade, felt the need for such a book among yoga enthusiasts and initiated this project by contacting Devdutt Pattanaik in 2017. Over the next two years, he listed asanas and served as the model, photographer, and commentator for the sixty-four postures finally selected for this book.
title pageLlewellyn Publications
Woodbury, Minnesota
Copyright Information
Yoga Mythology: 64 Asanas and Their Stories © 2022 by Devdutt Pattanaik with Matthew Rulli.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any matter whatsoever, including Internet usage, without written permission from Llewellyn Publications, except in the form of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
As the purchaser of this e-book, you are granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on screen. The text may not be otherwise reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, or recorded on any other storage device in any form or by any means.
Any unauthorized usage of the text without express written permission of the publisher is a violation of the author’s copyright and is illegal and punishable by law.
First e-book edition © 2022
E-book ISBN: 9780738771687
First published in hardback in India by HarperCollins Publishers in 2019
A-75, Sector 57, Noida, Uttar Pradesh 201301, India
www.harpercollins.co.in
Cover design by Kevin R. Brown
Interior illustrations by Devdutt Pattanaik
Interior photos by Matthew Rulli
Typeset by Special Effects Graphics Design Co., Mumbai
Llewellyn Publications is an imprint of Llewellyn Worldwide Ltd.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data (Pending)
ISBN: 978-0-7387-7064-2
Llewellyn Publications does not participate in, endorse, or have any authority or responsibility concerning private business arrangements between our authors and the public.
Any Internet references contained in this work are current at publication time, but the publisher cannot guarantee that a specific reference will continue or be maintained. Please refer to the publisher’s website for links to current author websites.
Llewellyn Publications
Llewellyn Worldwide Ltd.
2143 Wooddale Drive
Woodbury, MN 55125
www.llewellyn.com
Manufactured in the United States of America
To the many generations of students and teachers of yoga,
especially those who have helped me experience yoga in this life:
from the simplicity of the Yoga Institute (Yogendra school)
to the precision of the Iyengar school.
—Devdutt Pattanaik
Contents
Acknowledgments by Matthew Rulli
Authors’ Note
Introduction: Yoga’s Narrative Canvas
Devi
Surya Namaskar
Ardha Chandra-asana
Purvottana-asana
Paschimottana-asana
Vriksha-asana
Padma-asana
Baka-asana
Krauncha-asana
Kakka-asana
Kukkuta-asana
Gomukha-asana
Vrischika-asana
Manjara-asana
Makara-asana
Bhujanga-asana
Bheka-asana
Dhanura-asana
Pasha-asana
Brahma
Omkar-asana
Hamsa-asana
Marichi-asana
Vasishtha-asana
Durvasa-asana
Ruchika-asana
Vishwamitra-asana
Galava-asana
Ashtavakra-asana
Kaundinya-asana
Kashyapa-asana
Vajra-asana
Shiva
Parvata-asana
Siddha-asana
Bhairava-asana
Svana-asana
Virabhadra-asana
Nataraja-asana
Shava-asana
Skanda-asana
Shanmukhi Mudra-asana
Mayura-asana
Gaja-asana
Matsyendra-asana
Goraksha-asana
Danda-asana
Vishnu
Ananta-asana
Garuda-asana
Mala-asana
Chakra-asana
Bala-asana
Matsya-asana
Nava-asana
Kurma-asana
Varaha-asana
Simha-asana
Ganda Bherunda-asana
Trivikrama-asana
Bhadra-asana
Setu Bandha-asana
Hanuman-asana
Tola-asana
Hala-asana
Bhuja Pida-asana
Vatayana-asana
Pinda-asana
Conclusion: Metaphors of the Yogini
Glossary
Acknowledgments
By Matthew Rulli
Iwould like to dedicate my contribution to this book to my teachers: Dave, whose love of stories like these ignited my own fascination for yoga mythology, and Cheryl, whose friendship, guidance, and wisdom have been some of the greatest influences on my life.
And to my son, Bradley, for teaching me that I could truly love and care for someone more than myself, and for being the sweetest, most compassionate person that I have ever known—I adore you.
My sincerest gratitude to Devdutt. When I first considered the idea of writing a book on yoga mythology, I knew that, even after years of research, I would never be able to produce a work worthy of the subject matter, especially after reading books like Devdutt’s Jaya, Indian Mythology, and the Seven Secrets series. When I sent him an email, I didn’t even expect a response, and I certainly didn’t expect an invitation to work together on the project. It has been a tremendous privilege and honor, not only to be involved in the making of the book, but also to share a creative space with such an inspiring and brilliant mind.
I would also like to thank my mother and the rest of my family for their boundless love and support. Leo, for the friendship and for introducing me to yoga in the first place. My teachers, Carlyn, Marivic, Julie, and John, for their dedication to sharing their knowledge and preserving the yoga tradition. The gurus, Patanjali, Shri T. Krishnamacharya, Srivatsa Ramaswami, Pattabhi, and Sharath Jois, B. K. S. Iyengar, and all those who helped to carry the gift of yoga through the ages.
And finally, my thanks to you, the reader, for without your interest and support, this book would not be possible. I hope it inspires in you as much fascination and appreciation for the indescribable depth and richness that this mythology gives to the practice of yoga as it has for me.
—Matthew Rulli
Authors’ Note
This is not a book on the practice of yoga.
This is about the mythology that nurtured the idea of yoga.
We live in times when the Buddha has become a spa icon, and the pursuit of health has been reduced to losing weight and developing a six-pack to indulge vanity. People see health as a secular activity, divorced from religion or spirituality, which are either disdainfully dismissed or expressed with unnecessary aggression. Few acknowledge the psychological and social role played by faith, or the relationship between the physical, the psychological, and the social. It has become difficult to speak of yoga without plunging into acrimonious debates on whether it is simply a fitness regime or if there is anything spiritual (mystical or occult), religious (Hindu or Buddhist or Jain), or cultural (Indian) about it.
Radical Hindus, including those who do not live in India anymore, tend to be territorial about yoga and insist on looking at it as puritanical (a colonial hangover) and devotional, ignoring the role of sensuous yoginis and the importance of magical powers associated with yogis in folklore. They fear yoga is being culturally appropriated by the West, in response to which many Western academicians have sought to strip yoga of its roots, arguing that modern yoga owes more to European colonizers and American entrepreneurship and less to Indian sages or Hindu customs and beliefs.
To avoid controversy, therefore, and to ensure that the benefit of yoga reaches a wide audience, many yoga teachers dissociate yoga from its heritage and make it more about health than about wisdom—more about the body and less about the mind, and even less about the spirit. As a result, few who practice yoga around the world are aware of the underlying yoga philosophy, and even fewer are aware of yoga mythology: stories, symbols, and rituals that shaped the worldview in which yoga was nurtured for over 3,000 years. This book hopes to fill this knowledge gap in a manner and tone that is playful rather than pedantic; it presents a truth, not the truth.
Many find the use of the word Indian problematic, insisting instead on geographical phrases like South Asia or specific religious qualifications like Hindu or Buddhist or Jain. This is the malaise of academicians in the humanities who seek to compete with the precision of the pure sciences. This book uses the word Indic loosely to refer to ideas that primarily originated and were nurtured in the Indian subcontinent (South Asia) and which, even today, dominate both cultural and religious expression in the region.
This is not a manual for asanas, though we have put forth some thoughts on the postures. The postures listed in this book may be given a different name by a different yoga school. We have included a few variations to demonstrate this. Indic culture shuns standardization. Every guru customizes their knowledge based on their own capacity and experience, and that of their students. Everything has hundreds of variations and improvisations, with a broad common theme aligning the seemingly misaligned. So please read Yoga Mythology keeping in mind that:
Within infinite myths lies an eternal truth
Who sees it all?
Varuna has but a thousand eyes
Indra, a hundred
You and I, only two
[contents]
Introduction
Yoga’s Narrative Canvas
Under the Pole Star, atop Mount Kailas, that mountain of stone covered with snow, the sun of curiosity blazed bright, causing the ice to melt and rivers of wisdom to flow. Shakti kept asking questions until Shiva broke his silence and revealed how the layers of the body may connect with the layers of the world and become a single fabric, unknotted, uncrumpled, joyful. The serpent around Shiva’s neck overheard this conversation that caused him to sprout many heads and hands; he eventually acquired human form and became known as Patanjali and shared this knowledge with the world. This same knowledge was overheard and transmitted by a fish, who became a man called Matsyendra. This same knowledge was carried south by Agastya, who also took with him the mountains and rivers from the north, as well his beautiful wife, the rishika and yogini known as Lopamudra. Saraswati gave this knowledge to Brahma and it was overheard by a goose, who transformed from Hamsa to Param-hamsa when it shared the knowledge with the Saptarishis, the seven sages of the celestial sphere, who then shared it with devas as well as Asuras. Vishnu shared it with Lakshmi on the ocean of milk. As a fish, he also shared it with Manu, the leader of men. Sita gave this same knowledge to Ram, when he sat on this throne and it was overheard and transmitted by Hanuman. Radha gave it to Krishna, enabling him to let go of Madhuvan and move to Mathura and fulfill his destiny. Krishna, in turn, gave it on the battleground to Arjuna, enabling him to fight without anger in Kurukshetra. The hermit Dattatreya discovered this knowledge everywhere: in rocks and rivers, in trees and animals, in the behaviour of men and of women. So did the Jinas. So did the Buddhas. This knowledge is known as yoga. And these stories, yoga mythology.
Yoga secrets revealed
Patanjali
Before we delve deeper into yoga mythology, let us first understand what yoga is, and what mythology is.
What Is Yoga?
Kolam
Every day in the morning, women in traditional India use rice flour to create patterns known as kolam or rangoli on the floor just outside their house. Dots are joined with lines, reminding us how connecting stars to create constellations helps us understand the sky. Likewise, connecting data creates information, connecting parts creates the whole, and joining the limited helps us explore the limitless. This household ritual is a metaphor for yoga.
The simplest meaning of yoga (often pronounced joga
by many Indians) is alignment. This alignment can be between two
parts of the body, two objects, or two concepts. In Indian astrology, or jyotisha-shastra, for example, when stars and planets are aligned in a particular way to create a beneficial pattern, the word yoga or joga is used to describe it. The same word is used in social contexts for the coming together of seemingly unaligned things to bring about success. A person who aligns things that are seemingly unaligned in order to get things done is deemed jugadu (or jogadu in Odia, a language from east India), which means a resourceful person, though the word is sometimes used pejoratively for a fixer. The yogi (or jogi) and the yogini (or jogini) were those who aligned seemingly misaligned forces to get things done. That is what made a yogi yogya, or worthy.
Depending on the context, yoga has come to have different meanings: alignment of the mind with the body, or of breath and mind, or of mind and breath and body, or simply between different body parts. It could be harmony between the front and back, the left and right sides, or the upper and lower parts of the body. Some might say it is a connection of the individual with society; others, the connection between two human beings, whether husband and wife, parent and child, teacher and student, or friends. In a religious context, one would say it is the connection between the devotee and the deity.
Various terms are now used to describe how this connection is achieved. For example, karma yoga deals with connecting through action, where our individual activity is aligned to a larger social goal; bhakti yoga deals with connecting through emotions, with a person or a personal deity; gyan yoga is more intellectual; hatha yoga is more physical; tantra yoga favors rituals and symbols.
* * *
Patanjali, author of the Yoga Sutra, organized various yogic techniques in a systematic way. His eight-fold (ashtanga) yoga, also known as the royal (raja) yoga, reveals a very traditional Indian understanding of the human body as a series of concentric containers, with the social container (karana sharira) outside the physical (sthula sharira), and the psychological (sukshma sharira) inside the physical. Within the psychological container resides the immortal soul (atma) that animates us.It is called the resident (dehi) of the body (deha), and is an extension of the boundless container that contains the cosmos (param-atma).
Inner connections
Many use words like astral body for the karana sharira. But this manifests as the social body, which is based on all things we attract to ourselves naturally because of reactions to past actions (karma) or all things we bring into our lives through our present actions (also karma). In Indian mythology, karma is believed to shape the circumstances of our life, both voluntary and involuntary. Also, in Buddhism, the atma is not an eternal entity but a creation of our psychological body. Atma is referred to as jiva in Jainism.
The sequence of eight (ashta) limbs (anga) in the Yoga Sutra becomes a journey from the outside to the inside. So, there is Yama, Niyama, Asana, Pranayama, Pratyahara, Dharana, Dhyana, and Samadhi.
External connections
Yama deals with social aspects of life, our relationships with others. Niyama is more individualistic, having to do with our relationship with our self. Asanas are the postures that are the most popular visible form of yoga (popular as they can be photographed and are rather dramatic to look at) and deal with our body. Pranayama deals with breath. Pratyahara deals with our sense organs, through which we connect with the outside world, enabling us to make the journey from the outer world to the inner world. Dharana is about awareness and perspective, letting our thoughts come and go without trying to control them. Dhyana is about focus where, very consciously and actively, we get our mind to concentrate on a single object, thing, or idea, like chanting. From Dhyana came words like zen in Japan, where yoga spread via Buddhism. Samadhi is the process of connecting with the ultimate.
But what is the ultimate? For some it means going back to the primal source, the atma within (jiva-atma), which is eternally tranquil (ananda), unfettered by hunger and fear, and inhabiting the body. For others, it is looping back and reconnecting with the atma without: God (param-atma), nature (prakriti), culture (sanskriti).
The word samadhi is also used for the tomb of saints, because saints are believed to have connected with the divine. They don’t die; they simply slip out of their body as a sword slips out of a scabbard. Their body is thus pure, untouched by death. Their tombs then become the focal point where you see the connection between the human and the divine worlds.
Yogi seated on a bed of nails
Samadhi makes yoga rather mystical. But for many, yoga has an occult side too. The practice of yoga bestows upon the yogi magical powers known as siddhi, which enable him to change his shape and size, fly in the air, walk on water, grant children to the childless, and defeat demons and witches. Many an Indian folktale speaks of yogis who are at once mystical and deal with the occult. They can voluntarily leave their body, as if it’s a shell, travel around the world and to astral realms, and return at will. Siddhi is linked to semen power, retaining it and reversing its flow up the spine until it sprouts in the brain, an act described in Tantric texts as the uncoiling of the serpent Kundalini and the opening of lotus wheels, or chakras.
* * *
Yogic postures have been traced to 4,000-year-old clay seals from the Harappan period, which depict a man seated in the throne position (Bhadra-asana). The word yoga, however, comes from Vedic scriptures composed over 3,000 years ago. Initially, yoga referred to connecting the cart to the horse or the ox. Rishis, or seers, who preferred to live on the edge of society and contemplated on the nature of reality, made yoga a metaphor for spiritual practices.
Proto-Shiva on
Harappan seal
Around 2,500 years ago, with the rise of monastic orders (shramana in Sanskrit) such as Buddhism and Jainism, the meaning of yoga became more metaphorical as it began to refer to various techniques that enabled monks to break free from the hunger and fear that entraps humans in the wheel of rebirth (samsara). The practice granted oblivion (nirvana) to Buddhists, liberation (moksha) to Hindus, omniscience (kaivalya) to Jains, and supernatural powers (siddhi) to Tantrics of all faiths.
Yoke of a bullock cart
When the Puranic stories of Shiva and Shakti were being composed around 2,000 years ago, the Bhagavad Gita, a dialogue found in the epic Mahabharata, spoke of yoga in devotional and mystical terms. This was later elaborated by Vedanta scholars as involving the union of the individual soul (jiva-atma) with the cosmic soul (param-atma), an idea that is now being popularized by Indian gurus in the West.
The self (jiva, atma)
The most popular definition of yoga—chitta vritti nirodha, or unknotting the knots of the mind—was codified about 1,500 years ago. It is attributed to Patanjali, whom some see as a historical figure, and others see as a mythological figure, as yoga is seen as timeless wisdom, not bound to history or geography. By this time, yoga was linked to tapasya, the practice of churning mental fire (tapa) by hermits. It was also linked to Tantra, occult practices that enabled hermits to control the workings of the cosmos and change the destiny of people. Yoga became not just about wisdom, but also about power.
Yogini
Nath yogis such as Gorakh-nath who lived around 1,000 years ago gave greater emphasis to the physical and the occult side of yoga (siddhi). This was the time when Tantric literature became popular and we find more and more stories of yoginis, who are both enchanting and fearsome. Circular temples with no roofs were built for them, enabling them to fly in and out with ease. Yogis sought to control yoginis, who in turn sought to seduce and domesticate them.
Mainstream yoga, as we know it today, was formalized around the late nineteenth century when Indians, ruled by the British, were increasingly exposed to popular European fitness regimes based on gymnastics. Yoga came to be associated more with physical health than mental health. In the West, religious orders viewed it with suspicion as an Eastern religious practice,
forcing yoga teachers to play down its spiritual, mystical, occult, and religious angles.
Yogi
Over the centuries, despite various historical changes, a worldview has persisted, first expressed in Vedic hymns, then in Buddhist, Jain, Vedantic, and Tantric philosophies, and finally in Puranic, Agamic, and Jataka stories. Using fantastic landscape, plots, and characters, this worldview is presented where time and space are without beginning, without end, and always changing, where death is followed by rebirth endlessly. It separates the mind from matter, spirit from substance, the subtle from the gross, the formless from the form, the self from the other, the limitless from the limited. It speaks of how the mind becomes knotted because of anxiety and fear caused in life, because life frightens us by making demands of us. We have to find food in order to survive, to nourish ourselves; we have to protect ourselves from danger; we are constantly in a state of freeze, fight, or flight. We are seeking things and avoiding things. Yoga is a process by which the knots are untied, enabling us to align ourselves with the true nature of the world, not what we imagine it to be. With this insight, we can break free from hunger and fear, and eventually the cycle of rebirths. We can mystically unite with the cosmos or develop occult powers that help us solve human problems.
What Is Mythology?
A fact is everybody’s truth, based on measurable evidence. Fiction is nobody’s truth, based on fantasy. Myth is somebody’s truth, and establishes a culture’s worldview.
The words myth and mythology are controversial only if one sticks to their nineteenth-century definitions, where myth is a synonym of fiction and fantasy. This simplistic binary world has long since collapsed. In the twenty-first century, our understanding of the world is far more nuanced. It must be kept in mind that the