Heart Hatha Yoga and Tantra
Heart Hatha Yoga and Tantra
Heart Hatha Yoga and Tantra
In the Classical as well as the Preclassic Periods the body had been roundly reviled as an enemy of the spirit,
a source of spiritual confusion and defilement. A good example of this attitude comes from a passage in
the Maitrayaniya-Upanishad:
In sharp contrast to this, with the Postclassical Period came the realization that the human body is unique
and indispensable to the spiritual quest. The Kularnava Tantra responds:
Without the body, how can the [highest] human goal be realized? Therefore, having acquired
a bodily abode, one should perform meritorious (punya) actions. (1.18)
Among the 840,000 types of embodied beings, the knowledge of Reality cannot be acquired
except through a human body. (1.14)
Another Tantrika named Bhogar, a seventeenth century adept, wrote the following:
Notice that these sages did not dismiss the pitfalls of desire, nor did they deny the weaknesses and inescapable
foulness of the fleshy and emission-prone body. Rather they emphasized the more important positive value
of the body as the means of realization. The sages of Hatha Yoga went so far as to hold forth the possibility
of transforming even transubstantiating the body into one which they called adamantine (vajra) and
divine (daiva), a body that was not made of frail flesh and bone, but of immortal Light.
These masters honored the embodied state, but in their own experience did not think of the body as merely
the mortal physical organism through which they lived and spoke for a time. Their experience of the body
like their experience of the Self was much greater. Just as through yoga the individual spirit transcends
the limited sense of self to recognize its true nature as the Self, this realization also transforms the body, since
the body is nothing other than the expression of Spirit. As he experiences it, the realized Masters body is
The Yoga Tradition by Georg Feuerstein, p. 382
ibid., p. 382
10 ibid., p. 384
DOUG KELLER 2007
THE HEART OF THE YOGI 109
really the Body of All, and so he is free to assume any form at all, and to influence the processes of nature
according to his will as easily as he moves his own body.
Because they saw no radical dichotomy between Self and Body, their understanding of the body was as
organic as their view of Spirit. We are all within this one divine reality, this divine body not as separate,
divided, dismembered and discrete beings (as in the original legend of Prajapati), but as organic members
or interpenetrating cells of a single cosmic body more deeply interfused with Spirit. The universe, which
is nothing but the Lord, is not a fragmented and disjointed collection of objects, but a genuine uni-verse,
a One that is Many, a single network of life or body in which each member participates in the life of the
Whole.
With this view came an expanded and very profoundly effective view of healing that matured into the sci-
ence of Ayurveda. The sages known as the Naths were famous healers, attuned to curing the whole person
in their approach to disease. They understood that an illness cannot be cured as a separate entity, it must
be treated in a larger framework, as part of a complete being. Part of the revolution specific to the Natha
Masters was the appreciation of how profoundly our physical well being depends on our spiritual health
both as individuals and as a community and a World. Thus we find a greater stress on the kula or com-
munity in the quest for enlightenment, rather than on realization as a solitary quest, a departure from
community and company.
The Tantric Masters who pursued the ideal of the adamantine body, or transfigured body of Light, came to
be known as the Siddhas the accomplished or perfected Masters. They flourished between the eighth
and twelfth centuries, and played a pivotal role in synthesizing the teachings of Hinduism, Buddhism and
Jainism. The Siddhas figure as prominently in the Tibetan Buddhism of the Far East as in the Hindu
schools of India, and so the movement spanned cultures and religious beliefs.
As we noted earlier, the tantric practices of hatha yoga do go further back than these texts; there are minor
references to hatha yoga in the ancient Upanishads and Puranas, as well as references to the practices in
tantric texts that predate those Upanishads. However, the systematic form of hatha yoga began to emerge
in India some time in the 6th century A.D.
The similarities between Patanjalis eightfold path or ashtanga yoga and the Buddhists teachings have long
been noted, and it is entirely reasonable to think that Patanjali was deeply influenced by the Buddhists.
Indian thought during the period of Classical Yoga as a whole was very much in dialogue with and response
to the Buddhists. Particularly the analytical slant that Samkhya Yoga took on so strongly in the Classical
Period is widely recognized as a response to the intellectual challenge posed by Buddhist dialectics.
Patanjali was a contemporary of Buddha and its fair to say that his system of yoga was influenced by the
Buddhist philosophy of yama and niyama. Patanjalis contention is that you have to first perfect yama and
niyama, otherwise asana and pranayama may fail to lead us to samadhi, the goal of yoga as he saw it. This
is entirely in keeping with Buddhist thought, which saw the path to spirituality as beginning necessarily
with high ethical ideals.
In short, a system that begins with ideals of spiritual perfection sets up a duality from the start, because
these ideals set forth a goal that divides us against ourselves. For instance, there are yoga teachers who,
on this model, argue that you cannot consistently or genuinely practice yoga or be a yogi without being
nonviolent, which they interpret to mean that one must be a vegetarian.13 For many who practice yoga,
this presents a conflict from the start that leads them either to seek a compromise that they can live with,
or ignore the point with a sense of guilt.
Overall, yoga is often full of people trying to be spiritual and the trying indicates a dualism and conflict
that one may never quite overcome. As long as we are trying to be spiritual, we are painfully aware that we
are not spiritual the goal is always just beyond our reach. This is not to suggest that we just give up on
morality because it is just too hard; rather, the very dualistic nature of a philosophy that begins with strict
and often unreachable moral ideals can only lead to disharmony and inner conflicts of conscience rather
than wholeness.
The Tantrikas, on the other hand, would rather we begin with the understanding that we are inherently
spiritual, and we have but to fully unfold the Spirit that we are; there are no pre-requisites for being what
we already are. In this way they began from a more nondualistic standpoint in setting aside ideal precepts
that define precisely what we are not, and instead beginning with purification at its most fundamental, in
order to allow what we are to shine forth.
In the Hatha Yoga Pradipika the first thing we see is that Swatmarama does not worry about selfcontrol
and selfdiscipline in the form of yama and niyama. He orders the approach to practice very differently,
beginning by saying that you should first purify the whole body the stomach, intestines, nervous system
and other systems. Thus, shatkarma comes first, i.e. neti, dhauti, basti, kapalbhati, trataka and nauli with
the recognition that the use of these practices is relative to ones physical condition. Not everyone is equally
impure physically, and so not everyone has to start with the cleansing practices of swallowing a cloth and
so on. For many, the practice of the asanas is enough.
After shatkarma comes asana and pranayama. Again, the point is eminently practical: selfcontrol and
selfdiscipline start with the body, largely because that is much easier. To remain steady in an asana or in
a pranayama practice is a great selfdiscipline, and we can imagine Swatmarama wondering aloud why we
would start our yoga by fighting with the mind first the most difficult of battles, and largely misguided,
since it only leads to antagonism and animosity towards oneself.
So the masters of hatha yoga began with the discipline of the body, and explained what they meant by
the body. Far beyond just the physical body of muscle and bone, the subtle elements (tattwas) the energy
channels (nadis) are to be purified through the practices of asana and pranayama, so that the behavior of
the prana or vital force, the entire nervous system and the organic or chemical balance in the body could be
properly maintained and harmonized. After this there followed the practices of mudra that made it possible
to deepen meditation through inducing pratyahara, which leads into dharana, dhyana and samadhi.