Sanskrit | Yoga Sūtras | Lists
(these are a work in progress)
Yoga Sūtras
- 1.01 Now, the teachings of yoga.
- 1.02 Yoga is the stilling of the fluctuations of the mind.
- 1.03 Then the seer can abide in its own true nature.
- 1.06 These five kinds of thought are right knowledge, wrong knowledge, imagination, sleep, and memory.
- 1.07 Right knowledge consists of sense perception, logic, and reliable experts.
- 1.08 Wrong knowledge has no objective basis
- 1.09 Imagination comes from words devoid of substance
- 1.10 Deep sleep is a mental activity based on the absence of content.
- 1.12 Fluctuations of the mind are stilled by means of practice and non-attachment
- 1.13 Practice is the sustained effort to rest in stillness.
- 1.15 Dispassion is the mastery of one who no longer craves for pleasures — whether experienced directly or heard about.
- 1.16 The highest dispassion arises with the clear seeing of the Self, when even the pull of nature’s qualities no longer captivates.
- 1.20 For others, realization is preceded by faith, effort, mindfulness, absorption, and wisdom.
- 1.21 Success in yoga comes quickly to those who apply themselves wholeheartedly
- 1.22 The time necessary for success further depends on whether the practice is mild, medium, or intense
- 1.23 Or, [samādhi arises] through wholehearted surrender to the inner teacher
- 1.30 Disturbances that distract the mind and block the path include sickness, mental laziness, doubt, carelessness, physical laziness, craving, confusion, lack of progress, and lack of consistency
- 1.31 Suffering, discouragement, physical restlessness, and disturbed breath accompany these distractions.
- 1.32 The obstacles are overcome by steady practice on a single principle.
- 1.33 By cultivating an attitude of friendliness toward those who are happy, compassion toward those who are suffering, sympathetic joy toward those who are virtuous, and equanimity toward those who are non-virtuous, the mind becomes clear and serene
- 1.37 Or by focusing the mind on thoughts free from attachment.
- 1.38 Or, the mind becomes steady by resting in insight from dreams or deep sleep.
- 2.01 Yoga in action consists of self-discipline, study, and surrender
- 2.03 The afflictions are ignorance, ego, attachment, aversion, and clinging to life
- 2.05 Ignorance is the perception that the self, which is joyful, pure, and eternal, is the nonself, which is painful, impure, and temporary.
- 2.06 Egotism is to misunderstand the seer to be the power of seeing.
- 2.15 To a person who sees clearly, all experiences, whether pleasant or unpleasant, carry the seed of suffering, because they are impermanent, driven by craving, shaped by habit, and bound to change.
- 2.16 The suffering not yet arisen can be avoided.
- 2.17 The false identification of the seer and that which is seen is the cause of suffering to be avoided.
- 2.18 The phenomenal world consists of material elements and senses characterized by their illumination, activity, and inertia. This world can serve the goals of sensual experience or spiritual liberation.
- 2.20 The seer is merely the power of seeing. It appears to take on the changing contents of the mind. In reality, it is unchangeable.
- 2.24 The cause of this identification is ignorance.
- 2.25 With the removal of ignorance, our true nature is revealed. This is the absolute freedom of the seer.
- 2.26 The skillful means for removing ignorance is discriminative discernment.
- 2.28 The practice of the limbs of yoga leads to the destruction of impurities and discriminative discernment.
- 2.31 These ethical commitments constitute the Great Vow of yoga: universal, timeless, and unconditional, applicable to everyone in every place at every time regardless of role or situation.
- 2.33 When troubled by harmful thoughts, cultivate their opposites.
- 2.34 Negative thoughts are violence, etc. They may be created directly, indirectly, or approved; they may be triggered by greed, hatred, or delusion; and they may be slight, moderate, or extreme in intensity. One must become an opponent to such influences by cultivating the opposite.
- 2.35 In the presence of someone who is deeply committed to nonviolence, hostility recedes.
- 2.46 The posture should be steady and comfortable
- 3.01 Concentration is the fixing of the mind in one place.
- 3.13 In this way, the transformations of qualities, features, and states in elements and senses are understood.
- 3.23 By directing discipline toward loving-kindness and so on, one gains strengths
- 3.32 By focusing attention on the light at the crown of the head, one perceives realized beings.
- 3.44 By integrated concentration on the form, essence, subtlety, interrelation, and purpose of the elements, mastery over them arises.
- 4.10 The saṁskāras are without beginning, because the desire for life is eternal
- 4.21 If the mind were perceived by another mind, then there would be an infinite regress of one intelligence being known by another intelligence. This would cause confusion of memory.
- 4.22 Although it is unchanging, consciousness becomes aware of its own intelligence by means of pervading the forms assumed by the intelligence.