Today, when we are spending more time at our homes with families or alone, the question comes “what do I do the whole day?” and “how do I spend my time constructively?”
This time of lockdown is a golden opportunity for us to reflect on how we live, what we want in life and how we can improve ourselves and our lifestyles now and for the future. It is a chance to adopt a spiritual yogic lifestyle and create a good structure for the day. This can be achieved by living our normal daily routines with a focus on:
Swami Sivananda Saraswati says: Now is the perfect time to sow a thought, reap an action, sow an action, reap a habit, sow a habit, reap a character, sow a character and reap a destiny.
In order to achieve the above one needs to develop the idea of sanyam. Sanyam literally means restraint, but it also indicates a process by which all dimensions of the human personality and lifestyle are balanced and beautified. A yogic lifestyle is based on sanyam, along with a continued effort to improve and do better.
It will be a time of positive change for all of us if we apply ourselves. If we can acknowledge and accept our faults, and see our positive and supportive contributions to the problems we face. We as individuals can change our lifestyles to live more simply, more harmoniously with ourselves, our family and friends and our home - Planet Earth.
A comprehensive yogic lifestyle sadhana is being presented here designed for this time of restricted movement from and even within the house. You are free to incorporate one, two or more components of this lifestyle sadhana to your daily routine. Select the components that you can easily follow and are inclined towards, adjust them with other daily commitments. Balance your family, social, professional, personal and spiritual yogic aspirations. Remember an opportunity like this is rare, so make the most of the day to improve and tweak your lifestyle. Connect to yoga and live yoga from moment to moment.
Please remember that this is NOT an anti-Corona yoga routine. The aim of this sadhana is to improve and enhance the physical, mental and pranic health of the individual and develop an immunity to ward off all future debilitating situations.
Please practise the yoga lifestyle sadhana safely according to your level of health, fitness and experience. Maintain awareness of physical movement and breath to ensure that you do not strain or overexert.
Apply the following yamas and niyamas of yoga in your life and routine gradually and as convenient.
Shaucha and Swasthya |
Focus on personal, house and environmental hygiene. Keep all areas clean and prepare individual sets containing towels, soaps, toothbrush, tooth paste, shaving sets and other necessary items for the bathroom. At home do not encourage common use of soaps and towels and pastes, creams etc. and similarly sets of cups, plates, spoons, forks, glasses etc.. should be kept separate for each member of the household. Focus on regularizing your practice of yoga asanas, pranayamas, exercises, meditation etc to attain good health, immunity, vitality, relaxation and total wellbeing. |
Santosha and Aparigraha |
Contentment and Minimum needs Observe yourself and try to remain content and peaceful in all situations and times. Cultivate the habit to live happily with minimum comfortable requirements and needs. Don’t be greedy, insecure and uncertain - for today’s restrictions are tomorrow's freedom. |
Kshama and Namaskara |
Forgiveness and Humility Manage pressure, irritation and uncontrolled outbursts of emotions by forgiveness. Forgiveness helps in keeping a cool and clear decisive mind. Develop humility in speech, interaction and behaviour. Humility is an antidote for many situations related to ego, arrogance and anger. See Yoga Chakra II in satyamyogaprasad.net |
Danti and Indriya Nigraha |
Guiding the behaviour of the mind and the senses. Whenever an idea, thought or desire for anything crops up in your mind, ask yourself: Do I want it? Do I need it? And separate the fanciful desire from the actual need. See Yoga Chakra IV in satyamyogaprasad.net |
Manahprasad |
Gift of Happiness Be happy and make others happy. If you depend on external circumstances to make you happy, you will always swing from happiness to unhappiness. You have to tap into positivity that comes from within. See Yoga Chakra II in satyamyogaprasad.net |
Niranjan challenge |
Extend and live the moments of joy, happiness, harmony, humility and cooperation from few minutes to one full day and night - to 24 hours. See Yoga Chakra II in satyamyogaprasad.net |
Three mantra sadhana |
i) Mahamrityunjaya Mantra x 11 rounds; ii) Gayatri Mantra x 11 rounds; iii) 32 names of Durga x 3 rounds |
You can find the recordings of the mantras in the Early Morning Chantings in the Audio, Chants and Music section at satyamyogaprasad.net; see also the booklet, The Three Mantra Sadhana, in Water the Roots at satyamyogaprasad.net | |
Shatkarmas | Neti every third day Kunjal once a week Laghoo shankaprakashalana once a month |
Drink 1 glass of water in the morning upon waking with a twist of lemon, then shower.
Daily chantings, (words and recordings can be found on satyamyogaprasad.net or satyamyogaprasad app in stores.) |
Ganesh Atharvashirsha 1-4 x Hanuman Chalisa 1 x Guru stotram |
Words and recordings can be found on satyamyogaprasad.net or satyamyogaprasad app in stores. | |
Asana capsule- to strengthen immunity, release tensions, awaken the vital forces (asana and pranayama practices can be found in the book Asana, Pranayama, Mudra, Bandha by Swami Satyananda Saraswati on satyamyogaprasad.net or satyamyogaprasad app in stores.) |
Pawanmuktasana part 1 Pawanmuktasana part 2 Pawanmuktasana part 3 Tadasana Tiryak Tadasana Kati Chakrasana Surya Namaskara Shavasana whenever required Note: Beginners should only practise #1, 2, and 3. |
Asana and Pranayama practices can be found in the book Asana, Pranayama, Mudra, Bandha by Swami Satyananda Saraswati on satyamyogaprasad.net or satyamyogaprasad app in stores. | |
Pranayama capsule |
Kapalbhati 10 rounds Bhramari 15 rounds Nadi Shodhana 1:1:1:1, 15 rounds Deep yogic breathing 10 minutes |
Learn how to cook and eat home cooked meals safely and minimally. A yogic diet is a simple natural diet.
Develop a hobby such as music, painting, writing, crafts and creative innovations. There is creative power within us all, you have to discover and utilize them properly. Now is that time. Read a book that inspires you and increases your inner knowledge bank.
Share your evening meal together. Do not share cutlery and plates. Start your dinner with mantras or prayers of gratitude for the food you are lucky to have by chanting the following mantras:
Om Brahmaparnam, Brahma Havir,
Brahmagnau brahmanahutam,
Brahmaiva tenaghantavyam,
Brahmakarmasamadhina.
ॐ ब्रह्मार्पणं ब्रह्म हवि: ब्रह्माग्नौ ब्रह्मणा हुतम् ।
ब्रह्मैव तेन गन्तव्यं ब्रह्मकर्मसमाधिना ।।
After dinner clear away the meal and clean the kitchen together.
Sri Swamiji says that music has great power. Through mantras and music the vibrations around us and within us can change and elevate our mood. Music can help us to become more positive and creative. Swami Sivananda would put music to all his teachings to uplift, inspire and help us remember his words and wisdom. There are many recordings of different mantras available, use them throughout the day. Play and listen to the Annapoorna stotram and other mantras, chants, kirtans, bhajans, stotrams, classical music, folk and traditional music as you prepare and cook dinner and/or even at other times of the day to create a positive and contented ambience in your place. Sing and play kirtans, stotrams and songs with family or alone.
The Mahamritunjaya mantra is a very powerful mantra for protection, strength and healing. It should be chanted 108 times or one mala every evening. Try to maintain this as a regular daily sadhana. If there is only one sadhana you can maintain during this time, let it be the japa of Mahamritunjaya mantra.
You can find recording of the mantra in the Early Morning Chantings in the Audio, Chants and Music section at satyamyogaprasad.net
For those experienced practitioners who know the process of havan and have the training, havan kund, havan samagri and space required for havan should perform the Mahamritunjaya mantra havan every Saturday evening in the home as per the tradition of Ganga Darshan Vishwa Yoga Peeth, Munger. This havan has the power to purify the internal and external environment. All ingredients used should be pure and natural and the system as per the training given at Ganga Darshan Vishwa Yoga Peeth. The ash from the fire can be used in the garden.
If you do not have the training in how to perform a havan, simply chant the mantra 108 times.
You can perform your own personal mantra as per the number of rounds suggested at the time of initiation or use one of the meditation recordings every evening as daily meditations. (Mantra japa can be done at other times also, as time permits).
Meditation can be practised anytime during the day, however as a routine it is often easiest to perform meditation when the family have gone to bed and the house is peaceful and quiet. Meditation before sleep leads to a deeper and more relaxed sleep.
If you do not know how to practise Yoga nidra, you will find original beginners, intermediate and advanced Yoga Nidra recordings by Swami Satyananda Saraswati and basic yoga nidras in over 25 languages of the world on the satyamyogaprasad.net and apps at google play store and ios app store.
See also the booklet, Yoga Nidra, in Water the Roots at satyamyogaprasad.net
Ajapa Japa is an ancient and simple meditation practice involving the awareness of breath, mantra and prana in the psychic pathways of the body. It is a powerful meditation for calming and stilling a turbulent mind and helps to access deeper creative and peaceful aspects of ourselves. Ajapa Japa balances and clears the mind and the pranas to discover our true potential. At this time when the mind is full of fears and anxieties, Ajapa Japa is a soothing balm to calm the mind.
You can find recordings of the practice in the Audio, Practice, Meditation section of satyamyogaprasad.net
Through this pratyahara practice one becomes aware of inner thoughts and thought processes. We become the observer, the witness or the drashta of the mind.
Witnessing is the ability to take a step back and observe thoughts, reactions and conditionings. Through antar mouna meditation you see yourself clearly and can improve or change your limiting, restrictive, tamasic mental conditionings and direct the mental energy towards more efficient and productive applications. In these stressful and anxiety-filled days, managing the mind and its responses is a valuable aspect of your life. Your life is what you live in your mind. This practice will help reduce the useless anxious thoughts and bring in more constructive and positive thoughts. It is all within your power, all you need to do is take time to be aware, observe and let go of those conditions that restrict you from becoming creative, innovative and happy.
You can find recordings of the practice in the Audio, Practice, Meditation section of satyamyogaprasad.net
Samiksha or Review of the Day should be done in bed before going to sleep. In this practice reflect over the day like a movie in rewind from the time you woke up in the morning to the time you go to sleep. It is a review to see how you have lived your day: the actions, reactions, behaviour, interactions, prominent thoughts and habits. While reviewing the day you will come across problems or difficulties with people or situations. Through this meditation you observe those situations and analyze how you may have dealt with them in a better manner, what could have been a better way, and if it happens again how you could go about to bring more balance and harmony into your life.
This practice is a process of observing, adjusting and ultimately changing your behaviour.
See the booklet, Review of the Day, in Water the Roots at satyamyogaprasad.net
Whenever possible take the time to write on a sheet of
paper no. 1 - what you perceive and know to be your STRENGTHS;
paper no. 2 - what you perceive to be your shortcoming and WEAKNESSES;
paper no. 3 - what you perceive to be your desires and AMBITIONS for yourself,
your family, your life; and
paper no. 4 - what you perceive and know to be the NEEDS for yourself and your
family.
Look at, analyze and edit the list daily by being truthful to yourself and gradually an inner picture of yourself will emerge. Now pick up a strength and develop it even more for some time; pick up a weakness and work to convert it into its opposite, positive strength; look at an ambition and realistically, objectively, analyze the ambition to know its nature, is it fantasy and imagination, desired but not achievable or achievable; look at your needs and the opportunities or procedures to achieve your needs.
See the booklet, The SWAN Principle, in Water the Roots at satyamyogaprasad.net
Swami Satyananda Saraswati envisioned that yoga would emerge as the culture of tomorrow and guide the course of world events. As our society continues to face unprecedented and unexpected challenge after challenge, one can now see how prophetic his words are. Yoga provides every individual with the tools required to live healthy, constructive, positive and contented lives. Through yoga one learns how to contribute to society in a positive way by focusing on ourselves and our own lifestyles. We must improve ourselves, only then will a positive change be seen in our society. Every little improvement and every small change one makes does make a difference. Every attempt one makes to live yoga moment to moment will be felt by all, even the Earth. Infections can spread quickly but so can positivity and smiles. The sadhana provided for you here is a beginning and a thorough way in which to establish yourself in yogic awareness for all times to come. Invest this time to try and live yoga moment to moment, you will be rewarded for life. Smile and spread some happiness and joy around. Yoga is the greatest gift to humanity; it is as relevant now as it was thousands of years ago.
Hari Om Tat Sat.