The Yoga Sutras is a book written by an ancient yoga scholar,
Patanjali, (200 AD) which outlines much of the philosophy of the
practice of yoga. A major principle in the Yoga Sutras is the principle
of Avidya, or misapprehension. In Sanskrit, the word Vidya means to
see clearly. Avidya is the opposite of clear seeing. Unfortunately our
human experience is rife with Avidya, this unclear seeing. I believe
that one of our major lessons in this earthly existence is to learn to
recognize our Avidya and enlighten ourselves by simply learning to see
clearly.
Seeing clearly precedes good judgment. The world exists. Things
just are. We all translate what is and color it with judgment: good,
bad, right, wrong. Often, our judgment of the world, our
misapprehension, prevents us from seeing what is and makes us see only
what we believe about what is.
An old story goes like this: Once, a man was walking through the jungle at night and was very afraid of being eaten by a tiger. He heard something coming toward him and knew that it was a tiger so he pulled out his knife. When the animal stepped out onto the path in front of him, he immediately stabbed it and it fell dead. Only after he killed it did he realize that he had killed his best friend. His Avidya prevented him from seeing what truly was and caused death and suffering.
An old story goes like this: Once, a man was walking through the jungle at night and was very afraid of being eaten by a tiger. He heard something coming toward him and knew that it was a tiger so he pulled out his knife. When the animal stepped out onto the path in front of him, he immediately stabbed it and it fell dead. Only after he killed it did he realize that he had killed his best friend. His Avidya prevented him from seeing what truly was and caused death and suffering.
With the practice of yoga we can learn to place a little space
between occurrence and judgment. With this space we reduce our Avidya
by practicing seeing things as they are and not how we judge them. The
principle of reducing our Avidya is not about being emotionless and
dispassionate, but rather learning to stop our judgment for a moment
and attempt to see things as they are before making a mindful next
step.
A simple but effective way of practicing Vidya, clear seeing, is
by doing a simple form of meditation which I learned from my teachers
and which I call the There Is Practice. You can do this anywhere and
while doing anything but one way to do it is by simply sitting
comfortably with a cushion on the floor (a chair or couch works nice,
too), close your eyes and acknowledge all the things you are currently
experiencing with the phrase There Is. "There is the sound of traffic.
There is apprehension. There is a 20-pound cat sitting in my lap and
licking my big toe." Anything you sense, feel, think, do, point to it
with the phrase, "There Is. . ." Try to erase the personal pronoun "I,
Me, or My" from what you perceive. This tends to change our
apprehension of what is as something that is only in relationship to
ourselves. The There Is practice is about seeing things just how they
are without our own personal judgment getting in the way. It allows
permission for the world to be the way it is and not just the way I
think it should be. I like to set a timer and practice until the timer
rings. Start with10 minutes and increase the time as you like.
I invite you to practice Vidya this week by coming to yoga and also
practicing the There Is practice. With more accurate perception, we
will be less reactive and more mindful in our decisions. With practices
like yoga and the There Is practice we reduce our Avidya and begin to
see the world and what really is.
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