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Index
Verse Chapter One: Asana
1 Salutations to Shiva 2 Purpose of hatha yoga 3 State of raja yoga is unknown because of misconception 4 First of the hatha yogis: Matsyendranath and Gorakhnath 5–9 Lineage of mahasiddhas 10 Three types of pain or tapa 11 Sadhana should be kept secret for success 12, 13 Place of practice 14 Practice of sadhana devoid of mental tension, according to guru’s instruction 15 Causes of failure in sadhana 16(i) Causes of success in sadhana (ii & iii) Yama and niyama 17 Asana as the first stage of hatha yoga 18 Asana as described by Vasishtha and Matsyendranath 19 Swastikasana (auspicious pose) 20 Gomukhasana (cow’s face pose) 21 Veerasana (hero’s pose) 22 Koormasana (tortoise pose) 23 Kukkutasana (cockerel pose) 24 Uttankoormasana (stretching tortoise pose) 25 Dhanurasana (bow pose) 26 Matsyendrasana (spinal twist pose) 27 Benefits of matsyendrasana 28 Paschimottanasana (back stretching pose) 29 Benefits of paschimottanasana 30 Mayurasana (peacock pose) 31 Curative effects of mayurasana 32 Shavasana (corpse pose) and its benefits 33, 34 Four major asanas of the eighty-four taught by Shiva; the excellence of siddhasana 35 Siddhasana (adept’s pose) 36 Variation of siddhasana 37 Difference between siddhasana, vajrasana, muktasana and guptasana 38 Siddhasana is the most important asana 39 Siddhasana purifies the nadis 40 Perfection of sadhana takes twelve years 41 Perfection is attainable by siddhasana alone 42 Through siddhasana the bandhas occur spontaneously 43 No asana can rival siddhasana 44–47 Padmasana (lotus pose) 48 Method of awakening the shakti with padmasana 49 Method of liberation with padmasana; explanation of maruta 50–52 Simhasana (lion’s pose) 53, 54 Bhadrasana (gracious pose) 55, 56 Sequence of hatha yoga practice 57 Perfection after one year 58 Mitahara – moderate diet 59, 60 Food which is prohibited to the hatha sadhaka 61 Interactions to be avoided by the hatha yogi 62, 63 Food which is conducive to hatha sadhana 64 Those who can practise hatha yoga 65 Perfection results from practice 66 Neither the garb nor mere talk gives siddhi but only practical application 67 Asana, pranayama, etc., should be practised until perfection or siddhi is achieved
Verse Chapter Two: Shatkarma and Pranayama
1 Being established in asana, pranayama should be practised 2 Interconnection of mind and prana and their steadying through pranayama 3 What is life and death; the five functions of vayu 4 Impurities of the nadis, cleaning the middle channel 5 Purification of the nadis and chakras for retention of prana 6 Sattwic state of mind for pranayama; the three gunas 7–9 Nadi shodhana pranayama (alternate nostril breathing) 10 Alternate nostril breathing purifies the nadis within three months 11 Times and duration of practice 12 Signs of perfected pranayama practice 13 Rubbing the body with perspiration 14 Diet and pranayama 15 Control of prana to prevent destruction of the force 16, 17 Eradication of diseases by proper practice, otherwise, bad results 18 Skilful control of breath leads to siddhi 19, 20 Signs and results of purifying the nadis 21 Shatkarma should precede pranayama if fat and mucus are excessive 22 Shatkarma – six purificatory techniques 23 Shatkarma is secret, bringing wondrous results 24 Dhauti (internal cleansing) 25 Dhauti cures many diseases 26 Basti (yogic enema) 27, 28 Curative effects of basti 29 Neti (nasal cleansing) 30 Benefits of neti 31 Trataka (concentrated gazing) 32 Curative effects of trataka 33 Nauli (abdominal massaging) 34 Benefits of nauli 35 Kapalbhati (frontal brain cleansing) 36 Freedom from the excesses of doshas through shatkarma 37 Some say pranayama alone removes impurities 38 Gaja karani (elephant stomach cleansing) 39 Even Brahma and the gods practise pranayama 40 When kumbhaka and shambhavi are maintained, fear of death diminishes 41 Restraining the breath purifies the nadis and chakras and awakens sushumna 42 Manonmani (mind devoid of thought) 43 Practice of kumbhaka brings perfection 44 Names of the eight kumbhaka practices 45 Practice of bandha with pranayama 46 Maha bandha directs prana into brahma nadi 47 Uniting of prana and apana banishes old age 48, 49 Suryabheda pranayama (vitality stimulating breath) 50 Curative effects of suryabheda pranayama 51, 52 Ujjayi pranayama (psychic breath) 53 Curative effect of ujjayi pranayama 54 Sheetkari pranayama (hissing breath) 55, 56 Benefits of sheetkari pranayama 57, 58 Sheetali pranayama (cooling breath) 59–65 Bhastrika pranayama (bellows breath) 66, 67 Benefits of bhastrika pranayama; piercing of the three granthis 68 Bhramari pranayama (humming bee breath) 69 Moorchha pranayama (swooning breath) 70 Plavini pranayama (gulping breath) 71–74 Pranayama is of three types; kevala kumbhaka 75–77 Perfection of hatha yoga and raja yoga through kevala kumbhaka 78 Signs of perfection in hatha yoga
Chapter Three: Mudra and Bandha
1 Kundalini is the support of yoga practices 2 Guru’s grace and opening of the chakras 3 Sushumna becomes the path of prana and deceives death 4 Names of sushumna 5 Sleeping goddess is awakened by mudra 6, 7 Ten mudras destroy old age 8 Eight major siddhis obtained by mudra 9 Mudras must be kept secret 10–13 Maha mudra (the great attitude) 14 Power of maha mudra 15 Maha mudra practised an equal number of times on alternate sides 16 Nothing is toxic for the practitioner of maha mudra 17 Curative effects of maha mudra 18 Maha mudra must be kept secret 19–22 Maha bandha (great lock) 23 Maha bandha stops leakage from nadis 24 Maha bandha destroys time; unites three nadis in bhrumadhya 25 Necessity of maha vedha mudra for maha mudra and maha bandha 26–28 Maha vedha mudra (great piercing attitude) 29, 30 Benefits of maha vedha mudra 31 Regulations for maha vedha mudra 32–36 Khechari mudra (attitude of dwelling in supreme consciousness) 37 Technique of khechari mudra, the centre of ether 38–40 Benefits of khechari mudra 41 Khechari mudra means mind moving in Brahman 42 Khechari enables control of semen 43 Vajroli mudra controls semen 44 Through khechari the fluid of the moon is drunk and physical death conquered 45 Poison does not affect one who practises khechari 46 Khechari maintains prana in the body 47 Drinking the amaravaruni through khechari 48 Meaning of eating ‘cow’s meat’ in hatha yoga 49 Khechari produces heat, allowing nectar to flow 50 Nectar wards off old age and manifests siddhis 51 Nectar fluid releases kundalini, gives longevity, makes body as soft as a lotus and has effect on vishuddhi 52 Khechari mudra preserves nectar for perfection of body 53 Five nadis convene at the meru 54 Experience of oneness 55–57 Uddiyana bandha (abdominal retraction lock) 58, 59 Benefits of uddiyana bandha 60 Uddiyana bandha leads to mukti 61–63 Moola bandha (perineum/cervix retraction lock) 64 Union of prana and apana, nada and bindu through moola bandha 65 Physical effects of moola bandha 66, 67 Union of prana and apana intensifies heat in the body 68, 69 Kundalini is aroused 70, 71 Jalandhara bandha (throat lock) 72 Nectar does not fall into the fire due to jalandhara bandha 73 Sixteen adharas of vishuddhi are locked 74 Moola, jalandhara, uddiyana bandhas 75 Benefits of the three bandhas 76 The great siddhas practise these bandhas 77 The ambrosia or nectar is consumed 78, 79 Vipareeta karani mudra (reversing attitude) 80, 81 Vipareeta karani mudra, diet and practice 82 Benefits of vipareeta karani mudra 83 Anyone who practises vajroli mudra becomes a recipient of siddhis 84 Two requisites are difficult to obtain for vajroli mudra 85 A man or woman can achieve perfection of vajroli mudra 86 Vajroli mudra with a catheter 87 Bindu (semen) should not fall into the yoni 88 Preservation of the bindu is life 89 Body becomes fragrant through preservation of bindu 90 Semen and mind must be controlled 91 Conserving the bindu and rajas 92–94 Sahajoli mudra (attitude of spontaneous arousing) – combining yoga and bhoga 95 Yoga is attained by virtuous and not selfish people 96, 97 Amaroli mudra (attitude arousing immortality) 98 After vajroli mudra, wiping a mixture of ash and semen on the body 99 A yogini is one who practises vajroli 100 By preserving rajas, bindu and nada unite 101 Union of bindu and rajas bestows siddhis by vajroli 102 A yogini conserving her rajas attains khechari 103 Vajroli brings liberation with bhoga 104 Names of kundalini shakti 105 Kundalini is the key to liberation 106, 107 The sleeping shakti is the means of release from bondage 108 Kundalini is coiled like a snake 109, 110 Kundalini is in the middle of ida and pingala 111 Kundalini when excited, rises up 112 Shakti chalana mudra (attitude of moving the energy) 113 Placement of the kanda 114 Kanda should be squeezed in vajrasana 115 Kundalini is aroused in vajrasana with bhastrika pranayama practice 116 Contractions of the ‘sun’ in manipura 117 Moving kundalini for an hour and a half, she enters and rises into sushumna 118 By practice, prana proceeds through sushumna of its own accord 119 Freedom from disease through moving the kundalini regularly 120 Benefits of moving kundalini regularly 121 Method of perfection in forty days 122 No fear of death if bhastrika pranayama is also practised 123 What other methods purify the nadis? 124 Sushumna is straightened through asana, pranayama, mudra and concentration 125 Shambhavi is the greatest mudra for bestowing perfection 126 There is nothing beautiful without raja yoga 127 Pranayama must be done with a concentrated mind 128 The ten mudras told by Adinath bring perfection 129 One who instructs mudra in the tradition of guru, is Ishwara 130 The ashta siddhi are attained through mudra and through following the guru’s instructions
Chapter Four: Samadhi
1 Salutations to the guru Shiva as nada, bindu and kalaa 2 The process of samadhi 3, 4 Names of the highest state 5 Mind and atma unite like salt in the sea 6 Cessation of prana and mind in samadhi 7 When jivatma unites with paramatma, desires are destroyed 8 Jnana, mukti, sthiti and siddhi come from the guru 9 Guru’s compassion bestows success 10 After kundalini is aroused, prana rests in shoonya (void) 11 Samadhi is natural when kundalini is awakened and karma freed 12 Destruction of karma in sushumna and the void 13 The mastery over time 14 Amaroli, vajroli and sahajoli are attained through equanimity of mind 15 No inner knowledge as long as prana is active and mind uncontrolled 16 Kundalini is to be blocked at brahmarandhra 17 Sushumna consumes time, i.e. day and night, ida and pingala 18 Sushumna, the shambhavi shakti, alone is important of all the 72,000 nadis 19 Kundalini is taken up by samana vayu 20 Manonmani is established when prana flows in sushumna, until then all practices are laborious 21 Prana and mind are restrained through one another 22 Chitta has two causes: vasana and prana 23 Stillness and interdependence of mind and prana 24 Prana and mind are mixed like milk and water 25 When one is eradicated so is the other 26 Mercurial properties of mind 27 Mercurial properties of prana 28 Sattwic state is created by stabilizing mind, prana and bindu 92 Mind rules the senses, prana rules the mind, nada rules the prana 30 Nada is liberation according to some authorities 31 Kevala kumbhaka precedes absorption of mind 32 Finishing off desires results in laya 33 Where the vision is directed and concentrated, laya occurs 34 Characteristics of laya 35 Shambhavi mudra is for the blessed ones and not everyone 36, 37 Shambhavi mudra (eyebrow centre gazing) internalizes pranic flow and mind 38 Shambhavi and khechari both create ecstasy 39 Perfection of shambhavi leads to unmani 40 Confusion created by intellectual knowledge 41 Nasikagra drishti and suspension of ida and pingala 42 ‘Worship’ of the shivalingam 43 Khechari mudra is perfected when sushumna flows 44 Khechari is established when prana is in shoonya 45 Khechari stimulates vyoma chakra 46 Sushumna’s opening should be filled by the tongue; in the moon’s flow is Shiva 47 Raja yoga form of khechari also results in unmani 48 Bhrumadhya is the place of Shiva and realm of turiya 49 Yoga nidra through khechari 50 Unsupported mind is like a pot in space 51, 52 Suspension of breath and stilling of mind 53 When the body is filled with nectar it becomes superior 54 Centring the mind and shakti 55 Centring the atma in Brahma 56 Shoonya within and without 57 Being devoid of thought 58 The world is the fabrication of thought 59 Mind dissolves in samadhi 60 Knower, known and knowing merged 61 Duality dissolves with dissolution of mind 62 Dissolution of mind results in kaivalya 63 There are various methods to attain samadhi 64 Salutations to sushumna, kundalini, amrita, manonmani, shakti, atma 65 Concentration on nada as told by Gorakhnath 66 Nada anusandhana leads to laya 67, 68 Nada anusandhana – exploration of sound 69 Four stages of yogic practice and hearing the nada 70, 71 Arambha avastha (beginning stage) 72, 73 Ghata avastha (vessel stage) 74, 75 Parichaya avastha (stage of increase) 76 Nishpatti avastha (stage of consummation) 77 Raja yoga is the state of Ishwara tattwa 78 Through laya there is pleasure even if there is no liberation 79 Practice of hatha yoga without realization of raja yoga is unfruitful 80 Intellectual brilliance is unnecessary for practice of shambhavi mudra and nada yoga 81 Plenitude of ecstasy through samadhi attained by nada anusandhana 82 By practising yoni mudra, nada is heard and stillness achieved 83 External awareness subsides when listening to nada, within fifteen days the pleasure is felt 84 Prominent nadas heard 85–87 Types of nada perceived 88 Listen only to the deep and more subtle sounds 89 Mind adheres to nada and merges with it 90 Mind ceases to crave sensual experience when absorbed in nada 91 Nada subdues the roaming mind and controls the senses 92 Mind absorbed in nada becomes immobile 93 One who desires yoga should listen to nada 94 Nada is like a net which snares and slays the mind 95 Nada is like a bolt which locks the mind 96 Nada is like sulphur which solidifies the mercurial mind 97 Mind becomes hypnotized like a captivated snake when it hears nada 98 Mind is burnt by nada 99 Mind is attracted to nada, like a deer to music 100 The essence of nada is consciousness, i.e. Vishnu 101 Akasha tattwa exists as long as nada is heard 102 Sound is shakti and dissolves in consciousness 103 Hatha yoga and laya yoga are the means to raja yoga 104 Tattwa is the seed, hatha yoga the soil, desirelessness the water, so unmani, the kalpa vriksha, sprouts forth 105 Concentration on nada burns ‘bad karma’ 106 During unmani the body becomes immobile and not even the nada is heard 107 One who is beyond the three states of mind, freed of thought and appears dead, is liberated 108 In samadhi a yogi is unaffected by time, karma, or any influence 109 In samadhi there is neither sense nor ego perception 110 The liberated one is neither asleep nor awake, neither conscious nor unconscious 111 In samadhi there is no dual experience 112 One who seems asleep but is awake, who is healthy but without breath, is liberated 113 In samadhi a yogi is unaffected by weapons, people, mantra and yantra 114 One who speaks about spiritual knowledge but has not activated sushumna, steadied bindu or achieved spontaneous meditation, utters false words
Appendicies
Appendix A: Sanskrit Text Appendix B: Translation
Glossary Index of Practices Index of Illustrations
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