Category Archives: Svaroopa Yoga

Miracles for My Dad

By Evy (Kalyani) Zavolas

Interviewed by Agnes (Aikya) Hetherington

I began teaching Svaroopa® yoga in 2000 and begged my family to try my classes. For years their response was always,“No thanks.” 

Twelve years ago, my dad developed severe neck pain, probably from his work as a mechanic. It was so bad he had to close his business for a month. A doctor examined him and said, “Come back tomorrow for a shot of pain relief.”

I happened to drop by that evening and saw how much he was suffering. With no arguments, I put him into Slow Motion Dive, Stage 1. After a few minutes he came out saying, “Oh, the pain is gone, it must be a miracle!” An hour later he told my mom to “call the doctor and cancel that appointment!”

The neck pain never came back, but Dad continued to have lower grade pain. Three herniated discs left him unable to stand or walk for too long. He could “live with it” by sitting down every 10–15 minutes. A doctor told him he would eventually need surgery. 

A few months ago, it worsened after a long trip overseas. Again, I begged him to try yoga, but he had forgotten the miracle 12 years before. For 6 years, he had done physical therapy, had 15–20 epidurals, and ended up taking steroids. The side effects were terrible, especially the inability to sleep. He was waiting to see a surgeon with the results of an MRI.

Finally, in desperation he agreed to try a yoga class. He felt better immediately. The next day he told me “the pain is 90% gone,” and asked for another class. He still went to see the surgeon, who told Dad, “You don’t need surgery, just keep doing what you’re doing.” 

Now he comes to classes once or twice a month and has given up the steroids. Twelve years ago, he thought the miracle was a coincidence, but now he believes. This stuff works!

Embodied Consciousness

By Gurudevi Nirmalananda

Primordial Consciousness takes on a body – yours.

Primordial Consciousness takes on all bodies –even rocks, mountains, trees and rivers, and the many objects. Consciousness is being the whole universe and all it comprises – including you.

Why? Out of the bliss of pure Beingness, Consciousness is overflowing in exuberant creativity. Each thing that Consciousness becomes is a blossoming forth, with the whole contained in it.

The purpose of yoga is to empower your discovery that the whole of Consciousness is hidden within you. Thus you will live in the continuing knowing of Consciousness being you. Consciousness, which we call Shiva, is being your quirks and peculiarities as well as your talents, skills and loving heart.

From Shiva’s perspective, it’s like light shining through a crystal hanging in the window. The ray of light becomes many colored lights dancing around the room. Shiva is the one light. You are one of the different colored lights. You think you are merely small, a dot of light among many, with each being less than the whole. Yet, when you look into the dancing dot of light, you see that it is made of light. Fully, wholly and completely made of light…

But when you haven’t yet attained your own Beingness, it all looks starkly different. As an individual, a contracted form of Consciousness, you don’t experience the fullness of your inherent bliss and Divinity all the time, at least not yet. You don’t know you are made of light. Your dance includes sorrow as well as joy. Your internal GPS has lost…

Unfold Your Personal Story

By Marlene (Matrikaa) Gast, Yogaratna

This “calendar journal” comprises 366 curated sutras from Gurudevi’s teachings. That’s one for each day of the leap year.  

They have been gleaned from her 30 years of teaching articles.  Each day, you get a sacred reminder of who you are as a yogi. 

From Day One of 2024, you get encouragement to create a yogic life based in your Divine Essence.  Day by day, get guidance on how to let yoga propel you to Self-Realization.  

A sutra crowns the top of each four-by-seven blank page. Each invites you to plan your day and/or journal about it.  Within this book of succinct teachings, you are writing your own 2024 memoir.  

Unfold your personal story of being the Divine Essence that has created you.  Your book within this book will reflect your experience of the mystical truth of your life.  Simultaneously Divine and practical, you will see how you are a unique form of the eternal, infinite formless.

Sukhasana: A Sweet Pose for Body, Mind and More

By Nirooshitha Sethuram, Yogaratna

The sweetness of sitting is found in Sukhasana, one of my favorite poses. The name says it all. Sukha in Sanskrit means happiness, pleasant, ease, joy or bliss.

Sukhasana gives me all these experiences, and more, especially when well aligned with an upright spine. Then I settle into myself.  I find the balance point in my torso and use the natural support of my spinal column. 

I also use props to make myself comfortable.  Rolled blankets under my knees keep my thighs level, front to back. When I am well aligned with props, my head stays where it belongs, and my sit bones are leveled.  Then this relaxing, gentle pose helps ease any low back and knee pain. 

My whole spine lengthens from my tailbone all the way into my ribcage and neck.  I feel my hips opening. This spinal release unravels tension in my knees and ankles as well.

Then I can sit in Sukhasana for a longer time.   I simply abide in my own Self, settling into stillness, outside and inside.  I often sit in Sukhasana when I am listening to my Guru’s discourses and other teachings. I meditate in Sukhasana all the time.  The simplicity of this pose makes it easy for me to teach, meditate and pray.

Most of all, this pose soothes and calms my mind and grounds me inside.  It provides the physical support that allows me to experience a sense of inner peace and calmness while remaining completely present.  It fills me fully and brings contentment.  

Sitting in Sukhasana invites my mind to come inside, sit and stay. It also gives me the pillar of support while practicing Ujjayi Pranayama. I can accustom myself to the inner energies that are balancing and flowing up my spine.  My mind is quieted and my awareness turns easily inward.

This is all possible by the blessings of our Guru, Swami Nirmalananda Saraswati, whom we lovingly call GurudeviJi. I am forever grateful to my Guru and the practices she has blessed us with, so gracefully. 

Gurudevi’s New Year’s Retreat

Give yourself a New Year’s gift — a fresh start ― online as well as on-site!  Gurudevi Nirmalananda explains,

I love the new year. It holds such promise, like the seed of that will grow, flower and fruit. It’s a time to celebrate life and the turning of a cycle. It’s time to plan how to make the most of the coming year. Let’s do it together!

This retreat includes yoga poses, chanting, meditation, teaching talks and more. Gurudevi leads you through deep inner experiences that transform your sense of self. Discover your eternal expansiveness. Be propelled into your highest potential for the year ahead and beyond.

I’m astonished at the impact of Gurudev’s 2023 New Year’s Retreat on my life. … Guru’s Grace propelled me into action.  My energy and zest for life returned. … It was the Grace flowing from Gurudevi during the New Year’s Retreat that made it possible. — Agnes H.

Yogic Discipline

By Gurudevi Nirmalananda 

In yoga, discipline is not the same as “spare the rod and spoil the child” — punishment and enforcement.

Yogic discipline is the means by which you are uplifted and transformed. It is how you can get the highest and the best from your yoga practice.

Continued application of your own effort, on a regular basis, is what makes you successful at anything in your life: yoga, art, business, relationships, etc.

The best athletes and musicians must practice daily, yet they do not consider it an onerous duty. Top musicians love to do the scales! True discipline is doing regularly what makes you feel best. Regularity is the key, and it is what ultimately makes it easy. Consider who creates this regularity? Your job may require you to keep certain hours. This then determines when you eat, get up, go to bed, and have free time.

A newly self-employed or retired person often has difficulty organizing these things, because they are used to an externally imposed discipline. Yet, even enforced discipline can yield great benefits. A woman in her ‘60s told me she hated her mother for sending her to piano lessons and making her practice every day. Now the piano is one of the greatest joys in her life. In yoga class you experience…

Excerpt from Yoga in Every Moment, Gurudevi’s first book (page 4)

2024 – Your Yoga Year

Make your life spiritual, brimming with joy and peace. Such a life knows neither pain nor agitation.

I received this promise from my Guru and extend it on to you. Use my new book to help you live from the inner infinity of your own Divinity.

Each day offers you a modern-day sutra.  All are short quotes from my writings and discourses.

Living Mysticism 2024 Calendar Journal — it is small enough to fit in your purse, yet substantial enough to hold your whole year for you.

▼ As a calendar, these pages can help you organize your days.

▼ You can fill the pages with mantras or prayers, invoking Divine blessings with each one.

▼ Or use the daily sutra as a jumping off point, to contemplate the teaching more deeply.

▼ As a journal, you have space to write or draw about your meditations or your life – or both.

When you weave these teachings and practices through your life, your meaning and purpose are easily fulfilled. Your eyes shine with light and your heart overflows, giving you clarity, understanding and generosity. What a way to live! 

Clarity & Strength for Healing

By Amanda (Purna) Schmidt

Interviewed by Marlene (Matrikaa) Gast, Yogaratna

Last June, I moved from NC to PA, near the Ashram’s Downingtown Yoga & Meditation Center. I have easy access to Svaroopa® Yoga Therapy as well as a new Functional Medicine practitioner.

Fortunately, she ordered lab tests that clearly diagnosed conditions I’ve had for two years or more: long COVID-19, chronic inflammatory response syndrome and adrenal fatigue.

I’ve undertaken her prescribed lifestyle changes: regular meal times, a diet to support stable insulin levels and nutritional supplements. More tests may indicate additional treatment.

To complement the medical approach, I’m now on board with yoga therapy as well. Yoga sees a depleted prana (life force) as the source of fatigue and illness. Filling one’s reservoir of prana alleviates fatigue and promotes healing. So, three months ago, I began an Overlap Healing series of Embodyment® sessions at DYMC.

By employing a combination of additional Svaroopa® yoga tools, I’m noticing a gradual reduction in symptoms. I have more energy, a better outlook and greater mental resilience.

I do the home practices prescribed by my Svaroopa® Yoga Therapist: lots of Ujjayi and long rests in Shavasana. My total Ujjayi time is an hour daily. For Shavasana, I immerse myself in 30 minutes of Guided Awareness on Gurudevi’s “Experience Shavasana” CD. Then I soak in silent Shavasana for another 15 minutes.

With a replenished pranic reservoir, I feel stronger. My yoga therapist let me know a certain level of prana is needed for meditation. I’ve now built up enough for a daily half-hour meditation.

Some days the physical symptoms of my condition are still prominent. Yet my outlook is less fearful. On those days, I accept that my physical body is doing what it’s doing. But that doesn’t mean I won’t get through these times. I can manage symptoms more effectively. I am headed into healing.

My miracle is having found Svaroopa® yoga. These practices and therapies are propelling my healing journey forward.

Trikonasana: A Pose Worth “Getting”

By Lissa (Yogyananda) Fountain, Yogaratna

My favorite go-to standing pose is Trikonasana, Triangle Pose. It brings the openings of a spinal sequence into a dynamic verticality. 

First, Tadasana, then into Trikonasana. Once “I’m in,” I feel steady, secure and joyful. While leaning my heels into the floor, I’m grounded and expansive at the same time. 

Trikonasana gives me stamina and inner strength. It’s a feeling that I can rise above it all, while fully participating in every moment. When I’m finished, my legs and hips swing in perfect coordination as I cruise along. 

I like that a triangle is the strongest engineering construction. In Trikonasana, I can feel my body counterbalancing its weight.  I sculpt a series of modest triangles through the space around me. My legs and arm provide a base of support. Then my bottom hip slides under my top hip.  Gurudevi says it takes a good 10 years to really get this pose. Well, I’m in my 27th Svaroopa® yoga year, so I’m going for it!

Sometimes, if I’m feeling tight, I’ll use a chair and block under my supporting arm. My spine gets even more of a lift this way: creating more space for my vertebrae. But the free standing Trikonasana I can do anytime, anywhere. I’ll do it in my kitchen for a cooking break. Or on the beach while gazing at the sky. Such freedom!

Once I’m balanced, I slowly turn my head to look at my hand. In that moment, the bliss of my own Beingness arises through my spine. My head and heart are connected. It feels like I’m flying, while being grounded and settled in my bones.  Trikonasana: a pose worth ”getting”!

What a Difference!

By Agnes (Aikyaa) Hetherington

I’m astonished at the impact of Gurudevi’s 2023 New Year’s Retreat on my life.  

I was almost too ill to participate. A severe coughing spasm with pneumonia had caused a hard fall onto my back. Extreme pain and difficulty breathing left me lying on the couch watching the retreat online. 

I felt more like an observer than a participant. Yet reading my journal notes, I clearly see the seeds of change were sown. 

The illness was no coincidence. In the “old year,” I had suddenly lost two very dear loved ones and faced other challenges. The future looked vague and blurry at best. I dreaded the thought of making a New Year’s resolution.

Spending those pivotal retreat days with Gurudevi ignited a profound inner shift. After the closing meditation on New Year’s Day, I wrote two words: “Resolution! Tapas!”  Tapas means doing the hard stuff.

I chose “Gumption” as my word ― a beacon of light ― for the year ahead.

While my illness dragged on, I sought help from wonderful Ashram programs. A six-class Therapeutic Yoga series eased the tightness and pain in my back. Then I took a series of ten Vichara sessions, which helped with my mind. 

As I journaled, I often reminded myself about Gumption, especially when feeling overwhelmed. Guru’s Grace propelled me into action.

Within a few months I was teaching Svaroopa® yoga again after a seven-year hiatus. I also increased my community seva, lovingly performing mundane tasks at our local Hospice. My energy and zest for life returned. 

I know I didn’t accomplish these changes by myself. It was the Grace flowing from Gurudevi during the New Year’s Retreat that made it possible. I am so grateful.