Yoga Study Guide
Study Guide
📖 Core Concepts
Yoga: Sanskrit yuj = “to yoke, join, attach”; means joining the senses or mind to achieve stillness.
Primary Goal: Attain moksha (liberation from samsāra).
Eight‑Limb Path (Ashtanga Yoga): Yama → Niyama → Āsana → Prāṇāyāma → Pratyāhāra → Dhāraṇā → Dhyāna → Samādhi.
Major Paths:
Karma yoga – selfless action.
Bhakti yoga – devotion.
Jñāna yoga – knowledge/insight.
Rāja yoga – meditation & mental control (classical yoga).
Hatha yoga – postures & breath work.
Core Principles: Ethical restraint (Yama), personal observance (Niyama), stable posture, breath regulation, sense withdrawal, concentration, meditation, and ultimate absorption.
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📌 Must Remember
Definition (Patanjali): Yoga = citta‑vṛtti “stilling of mental fluctuations.”
Yama: Ahimsa, Satya, Asteya, Brahmacharya, Aparigraha.
Niyama: Śauca, Santosha, Tapas, Svādhyāya, Īśvara‑praṇidhāna.
First technical use of “yoga” appears in the middle Upanishads.
Classical vs. Modern: Traditional → liberation; modern → health, flexibility, stress relief.
Key Texts: Yoga Sutras (Patanjali), Bhagavad Gītā (three yogas), Upanishads (Shvetashvatara, Katha, Taittiriya), Hatha Yoga Pradīpikā, Shiva Saṃhita, Gheranda Saṃhita.
Historical Milestones:
Pre‑Vedic breath control (Rigveda).
5th–6th c. BCE Śramaṇa ascetic contributions.
9th–11th c. CE emergence of Hatha yoga.
1893 Vivekananda’s West introduction.
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🔄 Key Processes
Eight‑Limb Practice Sequence
Observe Yama (ethical restraints).
Adopt Niyama (personal observances).
Sit in a stable Āsana (e.g., Padmasana).
Perform Prāṇāyāma – controlled breathing (e.g., Nadi Shodhana).
Practice Pratyāhāra – withdraw senses (e.g., focusing inward).
Cultivate Dhāraṇā – fix attention on a single object.
Transition to Dhyāna – uninterrupted meditation on that object.
Reach Samādhi – merge consciousness with the object → liberation.
Karma Yoga Action Cycle
Intention → Selfless action → Detachment from results → Purification of mind.
Bhakti Yoga Devotion Flow
Mantra chanting → Visualization of deity → Emotional surrender → Īśvara‑praṇidhāna.
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🔍 Key Comparisons
Traditional Yoga vs. Modern Western Yoga
Goal: liberation (moksha) vs. fitness & stress relief.
Emphasis: meditation & ethical living vs. asanas & breath for health.
Rāja Yoga vs. Hatha Yoga
Focus: mental control & meditation (Rāja) vs. physical postures & breath (Hatha).
Karma Yoga vs. Jñāna Yoga
Method: selfless action vs. intellectual inquiry and scriptural study.
Sāṃkhya vs. Yoga
Metaphysics: dualism of prakṛti & puruṣa (Sāṃkhya) → adopted by Yoga to isolate puruṣa through practice.
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⚠️ Common Misunderstandings
“Yoga = only yoga poses” – the outline stresses meditation, ethical conduct, and liberation as core.
“Hatha yoga is a modern invention” – it originated between 9th–11th c. CE in Tantra, predating modern postural yoga.
“All yoga schools share the same ultimate aim” – while many aim at moksha, modern postural yoga often targets health benefits.
“Yama and Niyama are optional” – they are the foundational first two limbs; skipping them undermines the whole path.
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🧠 Mental Models / Intuition
Yoking Metaphor: Imagine the mind as a horse; yuj (yoke) connects rider (awareness) to the horse, allowing gentle steering rather than chaotic gallop.
Layered Onion: Each limb peels back a layer of identification—starting with external behavior (Yama) down to pure consciousness (Samādhi).
Two‑Reality Lens: View experience through prakṛti (material) and puruṣa (pure consciousness); yoga’s job is to recognize the observer (puruṣa) separate from the observed (prakṛti).
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🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases
Āsana Definition: In classical texts, āsana specifically means a stable seated posture for meditation—not the wide variety of standing poses seen today.
Brahmacharya: Traditional interpretation is celibacy; many modern schools adapt it to mean fidelity or appropriate sexual energy management.
Kundalini Activation: Emphasized in Tantric and Laya traditions; not a required component of the eight‑limb path.
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📍 When to Use Which
Choose Rāja Yoga when the exam asks about meditation, mental control, or the eight‑limb theory.
Select Hatha Yoga for questions on postures, breath work, or physical purification techniques.
Apply Karma, Bhakti, or Jñāna Yoga when the focus is on ethical action, devotion, or philosophical inquiry as described in the Bhagavad Gītā.
Refer to Tantric Yoga for items involving chakras, mantras, deity visualizations, or sexual techniques.
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👀 Patterns to Recognize
“Yama → Niyama → … → Samādhi” sequence appears in any description of the classical eight‑limb path.
“Liberation (moksha) ↔ detachment from senses” signals a traditional yoga goal.
Citation of early Upanishads → question about pre‑classical origins.
Mention of Vivekananda, Krishnamacharya, or modern postural styles → modern development context.
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🗂️ Exam Traps
Distractor: “Yoga was invented in the 20th century.” – Wrong; roots trace back to Vedic and Upanishadic periods.
Trap: Equating Hatha yoga solely with asanas; the outline notes its inclusion of breath, purification, and its tantric roots.
Misleading choice: “Yama includes meditation.” – Yama are ethical restraints, not meditation (that’s Dhāraṇā/Dhyāna).
Near‑miss: “Karma yoga leads directly to samādhi.” – Karma yoga purifies action; samādhi is reached through the full eight‑limb progression, especially dhyāna.
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