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The karmas
bear fruits of pleasure and pain caused by
merit and demerit.
—Sadhana Pada: Sutra 14.
By the practice of the eight limbs of Yoga,
the impurities dwindle away and there dawns
the light of wisdom, leading to discriminative
discernment.
—Sadhana Pada: Sutra 28.
After chapter one describes the different
kinds of thought forms, practices to control
them and the different kinds of samadhis culminating
in the highest experience of nirbija samadhi,
the second chapter follows it up with practical
ways of attaining that state.
In 55 sutras, the Sadhana Pada establishes
the aim of yoga as being the control of the
chitta vrittis (thought processes) to attain
the highest union or 'yoga'. It prescribes
the practice of Karma
and Ashtanga
Yoga as a means of achieving this union.
This Pada identifies ignorance (avidya) and
other obstacles to meditation as a major cause
of our inability to naturally merge with the
Absolute, and to this end it advices the eradication
of all such kleshas by practicing the eight
limbs of yoga and benefiting from their advantages.
It might be relevant here to mention the fact
that Indian philosophy involves more of perception
and understanding as opposed to the Western
'love of knowledge' (philosophy). The Sanskrit
word for philosophy, 'darshan' literally means
'to see' or 'to perceive'. In such a case,
the philosopher takes on the role of a 'spectator'
and having perceived the patterns of the 'spectacle'
before him, prepares to merge with it and
obliterates the subject/object dichotomy between
the 'perceiver' and the 'perception'. And
it is practices such as Kriya Yoga and Ashtanga
Yoga, which forces the yogi or seeker into
action. Thus, far from being a passive 'spectator',
the true philosopher and yogi actually gains
mastery over the Divine Spectacle, which is
our entire existence!
The practice
of these three (dharana, dhyana, and samadhi)
upon one object is called samyama.
By the mastery of samyama comes the light
of knowledge.
Its practice is to be accomplished in stages.
—Vibhuti Pada: Sutras 5-7.
The 56 sutras of the third chapter focus on
the achieved union and its result. The term
'vibhuti' denotes manifestation or residue
and this Pada delineates all the accomplishments,
which come as the result of regular yoga practices.
They are also sometimes called the siddhis,
or powers, which have become matured with
practice. The practices, which have been stressed
in the Vibhuti Pada are the final three limbs
of Ashtanga
Yoga: dharana
(concentration), dhyana
(meditation), and samadhi
(contemplation), the amalgamated practice
of which is known as samyama.
This chapter deals with the subtle states
of awareness and advanced techniques of practicing
samyama. The various kinds of knowledge or
siddhis that might be obtained by practicing
this yogic technique are also described. The
Pada brings home the fact that knowledge is
power and states the techniques of utilizing
such potency for the best possible results.
The discriminative knowledge that simultaneously
comprehends all objects in all conditions
is the intuitive knowledge, which brings liberation.
When the tranquil mind attains purity equal
to that of the Self, there is Absoluteness.
—Vibhuti Pada: Sutras 56-57.
Only the minds
born of meditation are free from karmic impressions.
—Kaivalya Pada: Sutra 7.
Since the desire to live is eternal, impressions
are also beginningless.
The impressions being held together by cause,
effect, basis and support, they disappear
with the disappearance of these four.
—Kaivalya Pada: Sutra 11-12.
Kaivalya, which is the ultimate goal of yoga,
means solitariness or detachment. The 34 sutras
of the fourth chapter deals with impressions
left by our endless cycles of birth and the
rationale behind the necessity of erasing
such impressions.
It portrays the yogi, who has attained kaivalya,
as an entity who has gained independence from
all bondages and achieved the absolute true
consciousness or ritambhara prajna described
in the Samadhi Pada.
…Or, to look from another angle, the power
of pure consciousness settles in its own pure
nature.
—Kaivalya Pada: Sutra 35. |