Yogachara: The Purity of Direct Experience

Yogachara, The Purity of Direct Experience, by Dr. Lee Embrey, is a modern interpretation of an ancient yogic method long since neglected, yet particularly relevant today. Focused on the ultimate goal of yoga—realization in the divine bliss of Love-Light-Consciousness—this book reinterprets the meaning and practice of the four main types of yoga: Raja (yoga through mind control), Hatha (yoga through bodily postures), Jnana (using thought to transcend thought), and Bhakti (rites, rituals, scriptural recitations, worship and devotional exercises). Taken together, these four are called the school of Yogachara. All four types need to be developed together to produce harmony within the personality. To that end, the author integrates them with Jungian personality-typology: Raja Yoga links to the Intuitive Type; Jnana Yoga, to the Thinking Type; Bhakti Yoga, to the Feeling Type; and Hatha Yoga, to the Sensation Type.

Yogachara introduces a wider, deeper menu of ways of thinking than you ordinarily may be familiar with: Associative, Focused, Conceptual and Pre-Conceptual, Cognitive, Reflective, Concrete vs. Symbolic, Contemplative, Creative Thinking and Thinking in “O,” and Spirit Thought (the “Great Thoughts,” big ideas of an epoch).        

Experiential as well as discursive, this book offers readers specific, evocative meditations and exercises to experience all four levels comprising Yogachara, addressing: relaxation; breath; extroverted and introverted visions of the universe; opening the heart; sound; connecting with Oneness; light; giving love to your partner; projecting love and gratitude to the world; the yoga of sleep; intuition; and hatha yoga poses).

By combining the best elements of yogic spirituality into a harmonious, easy-to-follow everyday practice, the author seeks to bring this action of revitalization and redefinition to the reader in the form of Yogachara as a “new” yogic system of spiritual practice. And in the end, the book leads us closer to where we most want to be: “Becoming Real.”

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Yogachara: The Purity of Direct Experience

Yogachara, The Purity of Direct Experience, by Dr. Lee Embrey, is a modern interpretation of an ancient yogic method long since neglected, yet particularly relevant today. Focused on the ultimate goal of yoga—realization in the divine bliss of Love-Light-Consciousness—this book reinterprets the meaning and practice of the four main types of yoga: Raja (yoga through mind control), Hatha (yoga through bodily postures), Jnana (using thought to transcend thought), and Bhakti (rites, rituals, scriptural recitations, worship and devotional exercises). Taken together, these four are called the school of Yogachara. All four types need to be developed together to produce harmony within the personality. To that end, the author integrates them with Jungian personality-typology: Raja Yoga links to the Intuitive Type; Jnana Yoga, to the Thinking Type; Bhakti Yoga, to the Feeling Type; and Hatha Yoga, to the Sensation Type.

Yogachara introduces a wider, deeper menu of ways of thinking than you ordinarily may be familiar with: Associative, Focused, Conceptual and Pre-Conceptual, Cognitive, Reflective, Concrete vs. Symbolic, Contemplative, Creative Thinking and Thinking in “O,” and Spirit Thought (the “Great Thoughts,” big ideas of an epoch).        

Experiential as well as discursive, this book offers readers specific, evocative meditations and exercises to experience all four levels comprising Yogachara, addressing: relaxation; breath; extroverted and introverted visions of the universe; opening the heart; sound; connecting with Oneness; light; giving love to your partner; projecting love and gratitude to the world; the yoga of sleep; intuition; and hatha yoga poses).

By combining the best elements of yogic spirituality into a harmonious, easy-to-follow everyday practice, the author seeks to bring this action of revitalization and redefinition to the reader in the form of Yogachara as a “new” yogic system of spiritual practice. And in the end, the book leads us closer to where we most want to be: “Becoming Real.”

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Yogachara: The Purity of Direct Experience

Yogachara: The Purity of Direct Experience

by S3RL
Yogachara: The Purity of Direct Experience

Yogachara: The Purity of Direct Experience

by S3RL

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Overview

Yogachara, The Purity of Direct Experience, by Dr. Lee Embrey, is a modern interpretation of an ancient yogic method long since neglected, yet particularly relevant today. Focused on the ultimate goal of yoga—realization in the divine bliss of Love-Light-Consciousness—this book reinterprets the meaning and practice of the four main types of yoga: Raja (yoga through mind control), Hatha (yoga through bodily postures), Jnana (using thought to transcend thought), and Bhakti (rites, rituals, scriptural recitations, worship and devotional exercises). Taken together, these four are called the school of Yogachara. All four types need to be developed together to produce harmony within the personality. To that end, the author integrates them with Jungian personality-typology: Raja Yoga links to the Intuitive Type; Jnana Yoga, to the Thinking Type; Bhakti Yoga, to the Feeling Type; and Hatha Yoga, to the Sensation Type.

Yogachara introduces a wider, deeper menu of ways of thinking than you ordinarily may be familiar with: Associative, Focused, Conceptual and Pre-Conceptual, Cognitive, Reflective, Concrete vs. Symbolic, Contemplative, Creative Thinking and Thinking in “O,” and Spirit Thought (the “Great Thoughts,” big ideas of an epoch).        

Experiential as well as discursive, this book offers readers specific, evocative meditations and exercises to experience all four levels comprising Yogachara, addressing: relaxation; breath; extroverted and introverted visions of the universe; opening the heart; sound; connecting with Oneness; light; giving love to your partner; projecting love and gratitude to the world; the yoga of sleep; intuition; and hatha yoga poses).

By combining the best elements of yogic spirituality into a harmonious, easy-to-follow everyday practice, the author seeks to bring this action of revitalization and redefinition to the reader in the form of Yogachara as a “new” yogic system of spiritual practice. And in the end, the book leads us closer to where we most want to be: “Becoming Real.”


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780998187945
Publisher: leArtsinc.
Publication date: 04/10/2017
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 136
File size: 5 MB

Table of Contents

Yogachara: The Purity of Direct Experience

Contents

Preface. 1

 

Introduction.. 5

 

Chapter One: Types of Yoga. 13

Archetypal Consciousness. 29

 

Chapter Two: Reconciling the Opposites. 41

Yin and Yang. 45

 

Chapter Three: Raja Yoga. 49

Meditations. 58

1. Basic Preparation.. 58

2. Meditation on Breath.. 59

3. One Breath, Three Breaths. 61

4. Extroverted View of 7 Dimensions. 62

5. Introverted View of 7 Dimensions. 68

6. White Drop Exercise. 77

7. The Human Heart.. 79

8. Feeling Your Spiritual Presence. 80

9. Meditation on Light. 80

10. Giving Love to Your Partner. 82

11. Projecting Love, Gratitude. 83

The Yoga of Sleep 84

The Intuitive Power of Raja Yoga. 87

 

Chapter Four: Devotion, Bhakti Yoga. 95

Open Heartedness. 106

Merging with the Object.. 107

 

Chapter Five: Yogachara Poses/Hatha Yoga. 111

1. Total Health.. 116

2. The Basic Pose. 118

3. Standing Pose. 119

4. Head Roll 120

5. Complete Head Roll 121

6. Shoulder Raise. 123

7. Face Wrinkle. 124

8. Muscle Tension.. 125

9. Inside Out. 126

10. Sitting Pose.. 127

11. Let the Spirit Move You.. 128

 

Chapter Six: Jnana Yoga. 133

The Grid.. 150

Oedipal Triangulation.. 154

Types of Thinking. 160

Associative Thinking. 160

Focused Thinking. 161

Conceptual Thinking. 165

Cognitive Thinking. 167

Pre-Conceptual Thinking. 167

Reflective Thinking. 170

Concrete vs. Symbolic Thinking. 172

Contemplative Thinking. 173

Creative Thinking, Thinking in “O”. 174

The Progression.. 188

Becoming Real 193

 

About the Author. 197

 

 

 

 

Figures

1. Four Psychological Types, Four Yogic Styles. 20

2. Thinking in Spiritual Potentials. 149

 

 

 

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