Reverend Jaganath Carrera has shared the joy and wisdom of the Yoga Sutras with thousands of students for over three decades. A long-time disciple of Sri Swami Satchidananda, he has taught all facets of Yoga at universities, prisons, Yoga centers, and interfaith programs. He established the Integral Yoga Ministry and is a spiritual advisor and visiting lecturer on Hinduism for the One Spirit Seminary in New York City. He is a former chief administrator of Satchidananda Ashram--Yogaville and founded the Integral Yoga Institute of New Brunswick, NJ, where he was director for fourteen years. He served as Dean of Academics at the Eastern School of Acupuncture and is a member of its Govern ing Board. A senior member of the Integral Yoga Teachers Council, he co-developed the highly regarded Integral Yoga Meditation and Raja Yoga Teacher Training Certification programs.
I required this book for a 200 hour yoga teacher training; I teach yoga philosophy. What I found, is that though the book is a wealth of information and offers deep insight on the sutras, it is not necessarily a book for first time readers of the sutras. My students "got through" it but were left perplexed often. I actually would recommend this book more for a 300 hour training as further study into the depths of the sutras. The book as a whole, however, is very well done. The commentary is fitting and understandable. For those who have read the sutras and want a deeper immersion - this book is for you. I believe newcomers to the writings of Patanjali would be better suited with a different version.
Breezed through and going through again slowly in class.
Its an interesting version of the yoga sutras. There is no Sanskrit so you don't see the actual words that are being translated. You only get the translated parts. The verses that are translated are sometimes differently translated than other more traditional yoga sutra translations.
It's good to have different translations because it may speak more to what you need or a different light can help you understand something more fully. Even something that you thought you understood before, this may help you understand it deeper.
Each passage has an explanation along with the translation that's pretty good.
If you've read the Sutras and want to read another translation that may give you a deeper or wider understanding, I absolutely recommend this book.
--------------- Its an excellent study book. I'm going through it slowly in conjunction with 2 other yoga sutra books making study notes.
Reading this as my selection for yoga teacher training. It's written like a hand-book or reference piece, so a little dry. But its easy to digest and im sure will come in handy for years to come.
I took a course this summer offered by the University of Minnesota's Earl E. Bakken Center for Spirituality https://csh.umn.edu/ The title of the course was"Yoga: Ethics, Spirituality, and Healing" and here is a description: "This course will introduce students to ethics, spirituality, and healing from the perspective of Yoga, an ancient Indian discipline. Students will examine the claim that systematic Yoga practice leads to optimal health. Using critical thinking, students will evaluate philosophical knowledge, scientific evidence, and practical application, and propose research-based programs for integrating Yoga into personal and professional life."
I found "Inside the Yoga Sutras" powerful, approachable, and very human. It presented each of the Sutras from Patanjali using straightforward language and provided context using day-to-day examples for application - often with humor.
I highly, highly recommend this text.
Here are just a few quotes from the book.
"Everything beings in the mind. If you want to see clearly, you need clear vision." Sri Swami Satchidananda (A great way to start the book for it addresses the bottom line goal of yoga which is "The restraint of the modifications of the mind-stuff" (Sutra 1.2).
“We need to live fully in the moment and to develop attentive focus on whatever task is at hand.”
“The practices presented in the Yoga Sutras fall into the following categories: The physical practices of asana and pranayama Meditation (dharana, dhyana, samadhi) Devotion to God or self-surrender (Ishwara Pranidhana) Understanding and accepting suffering as a help for purification (tapas) Discriminative discernment (viveka) Study (svadhyaya).”
“Once you realize that something cannot be attained, then forget it. It’s not for you, at least at this point in time.”
“Suffering is not caused by forces outside of us but by a faulty and limited perception of life and of who we are. Our basic misperception gives rise to endless cravings for sense satisfaction. Since everything in the universe is constantly changing, nothing in Nature is capable of bringing lasting fulfillment.”
“Things in Nature are neutral. It is our approach that determines whether sense objects are experienced as sources of pain or pleasure.”
“To maintain a clear, balanced mind; to perceive things as they are, without bias; and to act without prejudging, constitute the core of nonattachment.”
"Virtues can be developed through study and contemplation or, as this sutra suggests, through recognizing their presence in others. In other words, we should cultivate the habit of celebrating virtues wherever we recognize them. The more we rejoice in them, the sooner they will be ours."
"The mind is a mirror in which we perceive ourselves."
(I just mean I'm going to read this again and again forever, until I find a better translation/interpretation. This is the first I've read, and intensely. Seems pretty good.)
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Started a couple of months ago and read a bit every evening. Initially it was daunting but by the end I was looking forward to it. Will be revisiting it regularly. Succinct, clear, unbelievably logical but astonishing. Would recommend it to anyone practicing yoga.
Good but dense, so I tended to take it in small doses over a longer period of time. Definitely worth reading and coming back to another day, but frankly it can be a bit of slog going through it. The commentary often felt longer than the actual Yoga Sutras and in fact it probably is.
Sometimes I think it is parallel to the notion of explaining a joke. Explaining a joke renders the joke not funny and kind of misses the point. In parallel, long commentaries on shorter spiritual writings often lose the spiritual essence of the original piece.
I felt Carrera explained the sutras very well - and most of the time I was able to relate or find meaning. He wove in parables to help the reader relate to deeper concepts, and to show how yoga philosophy can be lived. This is definitely a book that is meant to be read multiple time, even if it's just one sutra at random. Though, I would love to read another interpretation, to get a different perspective.