By Amala Lynn Cattafi, SVA Board President
“True generosity opens your heart and quiets your mind,” wrote Swamiji in our November 1998 contemplation. Practicing generosity “invites yoga into your relationships with money, with time and with other people.”
Our many donors in our Fall Fundraiser prove this to be true. You manifest this again and again, when you support our Svaroopa® Sciences and Swamiji with such loving generosity. I am filled with such gratitude for your gifts.
Today I saw an ad saying, “Reinvent Giving.” The ad’s intent is that you purchase an extravagant holiday gift. It promoted a personal payoff, essentially “buying” the love and gratitude of others. However, the ad moved me to contemplate how yoga is reinventing giving for us yogis. Yoga purifies your generosity, making it a selfless offering, born of an open heart, needing nothing in return. This is when giving or serving propels you into your Self. Consider what happened for you when you made your donation — did you experience quiet mind, expansive heart, and perhaps deep joy? Did it propel you into your Self? Then you’ve found the yoga in the giving.
Swamiji recently shared that She has lived a Grace-filled life. This does not mean that life was always easy. She has had, as we all have had, many trials, hardships and pain. Yet even in the midst of the “worst” that life can offer, Grace is there. You can see it when you look more closely.
There is so much to be grateful for, isn’t there? You can be grateful for your yoga, your teacher, the loving support of your fellow yogis, and for the amazing promise of yoga — that you will know your own Divinity. Look, and you will see Grace in places you were not aware of before.
Thank you so very much for supporting the financial needs of the Ashram and Swamiji. If you would like to add a last minute year-end donation to our campaign, please click here.
I wish you a Merry Christmas and Happy Hanukkah. I wish you a Grace-filled New Year.
Om Svaroopa Svasvabhava Namo Namah



By Bindu Shortt
1 cup of split mung dahl
By Prakash Falbaum, SVA Board Member
The Svaroopa® yoga practices, given to us by Swami Nirmalananda, are the Grace-filled fuel powering this transformation. As I continue my daily Ujjayi, meditation, asana and seva, my heart sheds layers of bindings. As it continues to expand, I see all people differently. I don’t have to like the way they act. Yet I see that everyone at their core is Shiva — Pure Consciousness, Divine Essence. It continues to amaze me. It all interweaves. Whenever I am immersed in a program with Swamiji and hear her teachings, something transformative happens within. With this internal shift, I comprehend more and more that all external behavior as well as family, community and world events are just the play of Consciousness.
I also give financially. What I give each month is less than what I used to spend on coffee at Starbucks. A lot of the time I don’t think about it. But, at the first of the month when it’s deducted from my account, I get an email. I think, “There goes a donation to Swami!” It makes me smile. I know I’ve done something worthwhile, and it is an expression of the gratitude and generosity I feel towards all things flowing from Swamiji and the Ashram. Please join me in giving back to this Source.
By Priya Kenney
In my daily yoga therapy sessions, all I had to do was lie down and allow my body to sink into the blankets. I gratefully complied. It was like my body fell open, tensions simply dissolving. I felt incredibly cared for, supported and safe. I experienced the yoga therapists acting as Love Incarnate. They had neither attachment nor need for us to respond a certain way.
One of my favorite poses has always been Supported Fish. I was very happy when my therapist put me in that pose. On the third day, she probably only adjusted my arms by a small amount, but it seemed like she moved them a good three feet. Exposure!
By Gayatri Hess
One of my co-workers recently experienced a loss. On her third day returning to work, she looked at me and said, “You have no idea how crazy I am inside. I have been downloading meditation apps. I need to do something to help me the way your meditation helps you.” I offered her a CD with Swamiji’s Guided Awareness in Shavasana and with Ujjayi breathing. My co-worker took it home and began practicing it nightly. On the third night, she said she slept the entire night. She has a fresh smile and perk in her step. That is Grace and Gratitude.
When I offer my time, talent or treasure, I experience my Self. I graciously give financial support monthly to Swamiji and Lokananda. I look forward to the annual fundraisers and save in anticipation of giving more. That is Gratitude and Grace.
By Amanda Bailey
I am so grateful for Foundations and how all of the Svaroopa® yoga poses lead me deeper into myself. They give me the awareness of the ever-present connection, love and peace. Yet Ujjayi Pranayama has been the foundation of my practices since I learned it in my first Svaroopa® yoga class. On days when I don’t do a full yoga practice, I still do Ujjayi Pranayama, because I have an embodied knowledge of its effect. It keeps my head above water in the whirl and swirl of life. Deepest gratitude to Swamiji, my Foundations Trainers (Bhakta and Kamala), and to all of my fellow yogis in Foundations.
By Karuna Beaver, SVA Board Member
Gratitude to the Master is an important part of yoga, and thus part of our svaroopavidya practices. “This is how I feel about my Baba,” explained Swami in a satsang audio a few years ago. “I had only seven years with him. He stripped me down and left me bare, and I am so grateful to him. I had the great fortune to bow in front of my Baba for those years. I always felt ennobled, not humbled. He always said, ‘You are Me — you are the One.’”
In this glorious season of thankfulness and giving, I encourage you to let down your guard. Open up to the gifts your yogic practices give you. Open your heart to the “more” that you are. I hope you will also give thanks to the One. And if this takes the form of a heartfelt donation to the yogic organization that makes this possible for you, I would be eternally grateful.
By Aanandi Ross
How ironic that “stopping” to practice Ujjayi Pranayama will give you more “time.” You might think if you stop to breathe for 20 minutes that you’ll lose the time to get 4 or 5 things done on your list. Or maybe you believe you’ll be in more of a frenzy to make up for lost time. However, when spending time with timelessness, you feel a shift in perception. You might even conclude that some of the things you thought were so important on your list are not. Priorities change. Life flows in surprising and delightful ways.
Over twenty years ago was the first time I heard that if you’re always thinking about the future, you’re not in the present moment. Still, I often hear people say, “Wow, I can’t believe that September (or summer, or vacation or some other experience) is almost over!” Yoga gives you a shift of perspective, “Wow, this season (of late summer) is so rich and full. The breeze is warm (or cool); the colors of harvest are so magnificent (or transforming); this day is glorious, just as it is.”
By Matrika Gast, SVA Board Member
Gratitude & Grace are present in my daily life, thanks to Swami Nirmalananda, our Svaroopa® Vidya Ashram, our Teacher Trainers, our Svaroopa® Sciences practices — and you, my fellow Svaroopis. There is so much to be grateful for.
By Rama (Ruth) Brooke, SVA Board Member
Gratitude and Grace move you. They overwhelm in a wonderful way. They open your heart, not only to others, but to a deeper perspective. They make you able to see what you have, truly an ever-expanding inner abundance. And that creates generosity.