Two Kinds of Stillness
Patanjali describes two forms of samadhi in Sutras 1.17-1.18. One is blissful but leaves traces. The other is seedless, pointing toward liberation. Understanding the difference changes how we practice.
Patanjali describes two forms of samadhi in Sutras 1.17-1.18. One is blissful but leaves traces. The other is seedless, pointing toward liberation. Understanding the difference changes how we practice.
A 2020 study used PET/MR brain scans before and after Ashtanga primary series. The finding: immediate changes in glucose metabolism across seven brain regions—including memory, emotion, and body awareness centers.
A 2017 brain imaging study found that female yogis over 60 had thicker prefrontal cortexes than non-practitioners—in the very region that typically thins with age. Eight years of practice. Measurable protection.
The stiffness you feel in winter isn’t just inconvenient—it’s your body’s intelligent response to cold. Understanding this physiology transforms how we approach practice in the colder months.
I didn’t meditate my way out of that immigration hearing. I sat in an uncomfortable chair, felt my damp palms, noticed my racing heart, and stayed anyway. That’s civic practice.
New Harvard research shows gratitude may extend life by 9%. The ancient yogic practice of santosha—contentment—turns out to be more than philosophy.
Research confirms what yogis have known for millennia: external clutter creates internal chaos. The first niyama offers a path to clarity that science is only beginning to understand.
What if the harshest voice in your head isn’t actually yours? Beneath all that noise exists a dimension of your being that has only ever regarded you with unconditional acceptance.
Many teachers and committed practitioners report subtle but powerful somatic effects when practicing bandhas, kumbhaka, and slow deep breathing. Recent imaging work suggests these practices can also change measurable cerebrospinal fluid motion. This summary reviews the relevant physiology, the current evidence, and safety-first guidance for classroom use. Links to Ashtanga Tech resources support follow-up study….
That nagging pinch when your arms lift overhead? It might have nothing to do with your rotator cuff. Looking upstream at breath patterns and thoracic mobility reveals where the real story begins.