Interpretation
of Ashtanga Yoga Mantra, by John Berlinsky
Ashtanga
practice is traditionally begun with the recitation of the mantra. What
we call the Ashtanga Mantra is really two shlokas from different sources.
The first is a verse from the "Yoga Taravalli" by Sri Shankaracharya
and the second verse is from a longer prayer to Patanjali.
The
Ashtanga mantra has been translated a number of times with various interpretations
of the individual words. Instead of looking at the mantra as a literal
translation of the Sanskrit, I see the mantra as an invocation and living
part of our yoga practice.
Many
times we routinely recite the mantra before practice without really feeling
a connection to it. Regarding the mantra as an invocation sets the tone
and the intention of our practice. This provides a guide to experience
our asana practice in a larger philosophical context - a context directly
related to the Patanjali Yoga Sutras and the eight limbs of Ashtanga Yoga.
Click here for John's full interpretation.
I
see the mantra as metaphorical in the way it guides us in our own practice.
The first line, "I pray to the lotus feet of the supreme guru"
is not necessarily a command to pray to the feet of an individual that
we think of as our guru, but is a metaphor for the practice itself. By
thinking of the practice as the guru, we offer ourselves to it and look
to it for guidance. The first line is an invocation to surrender to our
practice. The word surrender, however, can be interpreted it two very
different ways. Taken in the western context, surrender is a term of weakness
and giving up. In the context of hatha yoga philosophy, surrender is a
quality that comes from fearlessness, trust and confidence - a quality
of strength. These qualities are made clear in the Bhagavad Gita. In surrendering
to our yoga practice, we offer ourselves to the practice itself, trusting
that it will lead us in a beneficial direction.
The
remainder of the first verse of the mantra defines what the practice itself
can do when we think of the practice as the "supreme guru."
The second line contains two words that, to me, capture the essence of
yoga practice - sukha bodhe. Sukha is usually translated as happiness.
Bodhe comes from the Sanskrit root "bd" pronounced bood, as
in "to know". Buddha is probably the most widely known word
from this root which means "one who knows or has knowledge."
Together, the words Sukhava bodhe describe a true goal of yoga practice:
the knowledge of happiness. In the context of the mantra, the supreme
guru reveals the sukhava bodhe of our own self, or svatma.
The
third line of the mantra uses a metaphor for ashtanga practice. The jangalikayamane
is one who is able to cure or heal. The words "nih sreyase"
mean "without comparison" or "beyond better." In other
words, the curative possibility of practice itself is without equal. It
is beyond comparison with any other thing.
The
last line of this first verse, like the second line, tells what the supreme
guru may do. This line also includes two words that capture the essence
of yoga practice. Moha means delusion and S(h)antyai means pacification.
This last word is related to the word shanti, or peace. Mohasantyai can
be thought of as the pacification, or peaceful resolution of delusion.
This relates to the two previous words Samsara Halahala the poison of
samsara or conditioned existence. Our samaras hold us in conditioned patterns
of limitation. These are limitations that we experience in our practice,
in our emotional and spiritual lives and in our egos. Often we are unconscious
of these patterns which create negative, or poisonous, delusion. To think
of yoga practice as a vehicle for the pacification of this delusion is
a powerful idea that calls for devotion, willingness and surrender within
ourselves.
This
first verse of the mantra guides us toward the potential offerings of
our practice. The mantra doesn't encourage regarding practice or the "perfection"
of asanas themselves as goals. Practice is not about achievement or acquisition.
Thinking back to the idea of surrender, the mantra offers a possibility
of what practice may bring us if we approach it with reverence, trust
and humility. The second shloka of the mantra is an homage to Patanjali.
The Patanjali Yoga Sutras, a root text of hatha yoga philosophy, are a
guide to yoga as a spiritual practice and an examination of our own true
self and nature. The Patanjali Sutras can be seen as the "supreme
guru" of the first verse of the mantra. The sutras clearly define
the ideas embodied in the first verse and greatly expand upon them. By
bowing, or offering pranamans to Patanjali, we symbolically acknowledge
yoga practice as a spiritual practice which offers "sukhava bodhe"
or, the true knowledge of happiness.
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