Audiohealing Posted March 19, 2011 I first saw this video a couple of years ago and it peaked my interest. It has since been pulled off of youtube but I managed to find a link. What is this????? http://vodpod.com/watch/617947-tibetan-yoga Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Kronos Posted March 19, 2011 It's gTummo. You bring in red, white drops and the winds at the point of the navel chakra into the central channel. then you increase the fire until it moves up and melts the drop in your hearth chakra. this increases the fire much more. it's dangerous and high-level practise. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
sifusufi Posted March 19, 2011 I first saw this video a couple of years ago and it peaked my interest. It has since been pulled off of youtube but I managed to find a link. What is this????? http://vodpod.com/wa...47-tibetan-yoga My now wife and I purchased this DVD from a Tibetan store in Evanston Illinois in Spring 07' when we were still dating, along with one on the rivers of Indonesia. Most of what I see are exponents of Kundalini yoga, and Wei Dan (external) Qigong. His hang time rivals Michael Jordan though. Some of his torso dynamics remind me of Hindustani singing Check out 01:57! And what are these guys doing at 01:12??? Stumbled on this looking for one of my favorite Tabla players Ustad Tari Khan I believe this yoga will produce more energy and insight than someone functioning in the mainstream could handle. This is just my belief having been through rough rides riding the waves. Aside: After practicing Kundalini yoga with my now wife we made an immediate decision to get married within two weeks of our first Ana and Brett session together. Peace and stability Robert 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
bamboo Posted March 19, 2011 (edited) I first saw this video a couple of years ago and it peaked my interest. It has since been pulled off of youtube but I managed to find a link. What is this????? http://vodpod.com/watch/617947-tibetan-yoga Audio it's an exercise in the tibetan vajrayana tradition called Trul khor. It hasn't been pulled from youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KG6w036k8u4 But it's not advisable to try and learn this from anyone but a qualified master. Don't try and follow along with the video, you'll cause yourself problems. Edited March 19, 2011 by bamboo Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Ulises Posted March 19, 2011 (edited) From personal experience and research. I feel that this alchemical mystery cannot be encapsulated in any frame (including the "esoteric schools") I'm reading Sovatsky's "Words from the Soul" and I think he gets to the marrow: this process is much more mysterious and spontaneous than any "technique": a "post-genital puberty" and beyond... That is called [yogic] action of the body in which reason takes no part and which does not originate as an idea springing up in the mind. To speak simply, yogis perform actions [asanas, “postures”] with their bodies [spontaneously], like the movements of [babies]. (Jnaneshvar, 1987, p. 102) *RECOVERING THE DIONYSIAN-ENDOGENOUS YOGA* *Thus the shamanic or dionysian yoga and its bond with mystical phenomenology maintained in the living moment through oral transmission in the hoary past (and still, with all manner of attendant difficulties), arose and then fell into ever more secularized, scriptural fundamentalisms.* *The sequence of dionysian yoga’s ‘fall’ /from /dionysian-soteriological t,t,t,t,* *time and in-the-moment narrative utterances into the apollonian mundane time and its formalized narratives and histories of events is as follows:* * * *1. the spirit-in-time revealed as a superlative, private bodily experience (ecstasy or enstasy),* *2. emergent publicly as presemantic ecstatic-catalytic utterances and dancing-swaying movements, [spontaneous kriyas, charisms, speaking in tongues, trance states], then* *3. languaged orally as sheer descriptions of the experience, then* *4. memorized and scriptured into an orthodox text or externalized liturgical commemoration (yoga and meditation as teachings; the movements classicalized as ritual forms),* */5. its lessons fableized for charm (the ancient myths), then* *6. in search of a genteel purity, its sparkling and sensual phenomenology put into disembodied descriptions of ‘heaven realms’ or sheer ‘higher states of consciousnesses,’ and* *7. as texts and practices exported into the West, formulized for mass pedagogical ease (the contemporary yoga books and aerobics-like classes, stress-reduction courses, and other holistic applications or new-age appropriations),* *8. made abstract or ‘symbolic’ of something else, or ‘primitivized’ by scholars for learned discourse (the transpersonalist’s synthesizing schemas),^4 and, at all junctures,* *9. suppressed or championed by religio-political forces; eroded by sectarian rivalries and scandals; desiccated as the legalistic, purely academic word, or scorned as mere superstition.* * * *Thus the yogic textual metaphors that paint accurate pictures of various phases of the inner experience of certain neuroendocrinal maturations of, for example, ‘fluids raining down from the heavens’ and ‘sacrifices made into further sacrifices,’ referring to the transmutation of subtle melatonin-like pineal secretions as they /appear (to the rishika, ’the one who sees the described referent actually happening’) with the eyes closed in ecstatic witness to their flickering precipitations as cast ever higher [‘sacrificed and further sacrificed’] into the ever-spiraling-higher center of the cathedral-domed craniumís ’Krishna-dark space’ -- were transposed to the externalized space of the firmament and, ironically, buried within the homologous brahmanic sacrificial rituals (or myths) which were meant to be subservient pointers to the inner hormonal developmental experiences. The ‘higher and higher heavens’ became abstractions, instead of aesthetic descriptions of how it floatingly actually feels when the cerebral puberty unfolds meditative glimpses of the infinity of love-space-time.* *Via further translations into the modern pragmatic-scientific vernacular, instead of an inner awe of wonder and delight, we now speak of ‘spiritual practices,’ ’visualization techniques,’ yogic ‘states of consciousness’ and quasi-Newtonian ‘spiritual energies.’ Instead of a well-mapped but dynamic, esoteric phenomenology of marvelous fluttering, whorling, meditative experiences of cerebral-hormonal flowing juices or externalized teachings; the (soma) /and brilliant sunlight (savitri, a Vedic term for kundalini illuminating the mind and for which Elizarenkova counts more than fifteen verbs denoting its brilliance in the Rig Veda) we have the dry brahmanic (Indian or Western) abstractions or translations depicting only exoteric spritual libations, transrational evolutionary schemas, tantric visualization practices, and theonyms for sun worship. The Burning Bush, whether Western or Eastern, as aptly describing the overwhelming, experienced glow of kundalini in the cerebrum, is lost in its own metaphor. But sometimes not, as Allama Prabhu, the tenth-century dionysian bhakti yogi sang:* *Looking for your light[of hope],* *I went out [into meditation]:* *it was like a sudden dawn [of eternal ttt]* *of a million million suns,* *a ganglion of lightnings [the cerebral puberty] * *for my wonder [soteriological awe]* *O Lord of Caves [hearted flesh bodies],* *if you are light,* *there can be no metaphor [narrative equivalent].* * **(Ramanujan, 1973 p. 168)* *Words from the Soul* *by Stuart Sovatksy , Ph.D.* http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_7642/is_200901/ai_n39234948/ http://www.sfms.org/AM/Template.cfm?Section=Home&CONTENTID=2333&SECTION=Article_Archives&TEMPLATE=%2FCM%2FHTMLDisplay.cfm Edited March 19, 2011 by Ulises Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Machin Shin Posted March 19, 2011 What is this????? Later on in the video there is a woman named Amber. I built a stupa with her at Diamond Mountain University in Bowie Arizona. The stupa has a few relics from the masters that gave permission to make this film. One of them is a rock from a cave that Padmasambhava meditated in. This yoga was useful for working with large groups of monks with in a monastery. The moves are useful for clearing out the channels of those that frequently meditate. It's a monastic tool and not really applicable to an common yoga practice. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Birch Posted March 20, 2011 (edited) Excellent points Ulises. Retroengineering experience seems to be a goal of many yogas. Irony being that no effective distinction between a willed experience and an unwilled one. Except our idea of control and containment? Edited March 20, 2011 by -K- 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Mal Posted March 20, 2011 "The filming of this demanding practice was permitted with great reluctance" - Cue loud crack of real life thunder and we don't get thunderstorms that often here Share this post Link to post Share on other sites