Sankhya, sovereignty and the sense of touch

In our investigation of the Sankhya philosophy and asana we begin with a study of the senses.   On the map, the senses are on the bottom row, left side โ€“ classified under sattva.  (see image below) For now we will consider sattva as awareness.  Senses are intimately connected to the quality of awareness.  Classically,  yoga is a discipline through which we access and become aware of our inner wisdom through practices by which we are trained to withdraw our senses from the external world.  As we turn them inward – our connection to the sacred and the infinite resources of wisdom and awareness are revealed.  The magnificence of asana is that it is a physical practice which results in a state of transcendent experience and understanding beyond the physical. Working consciously with our senses facilitates opening to greater levels of awareness and allows us to realize those more illumined states of awareness in the physical world.

When we practice, keeping measured attention on the breath will develop the objectivity we need to interpret the information we take in through our senses.

We can think of the information that we take in from our senses as data and the understanding and interpretation of that data is done by the mind.  Sankhya philosophy identifies different aspects of mind.  Weโ€™ll get to that later.  I just point this out because itโ€™s just like looking at a spreadsheet,   The numbers donโ€™t mean anything.  The meaning comes from analysis and the purpose with which you observe and work with  them. The more we can step back into an objective, non-interpretative relationship with our sense data the more we will understand about yoga.  For example, pain can be dangerous, healing, warning, or a clue for a potential adjustment. We need to be in a non-interpretive state to discern the meaning of the pain.

The following five senses organs are enumerated in the sankhya philosophy: 

The eye, the ear,  the tongue, the nose and the skin.

The disciplines of focus and austerity in the yoga practice are designed so that, just as we might learn to articulate the movement of a limb, we might also manage those sense organs.  As our practice evolves into greater levels of subtlety, we become masters of how a given piece of sensory data is interpreted.

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Today Iโ€™d like to consider touch.  Touch is a very physical sense and the physical body is the asana yogiโ€™s primary vehicle.  The fundamental  and first level of awakening awareness of touch in the yoga practice comes through the feet on the ground.  Consider the following progression: 

  1. Tadasana: mountain posture โ€“ the feet are both on the groundย  steady and even โ€“ the weight dispersed through the pads of the toes the ball and the heel. Both feet work together as one foot.
  2. Vrksasana โ€“ tree posture โ€“ we shift the weight to one foot, and connect the sole of the other foot to the inner leg.ย  The weight of the body is evenly dispersed through the standing foot
  3. Virabhadrasana 2 โ€“ warrior II -we begin to master weight distribution between two feet with the same sense of dispersion between the toe, ball and heel pads.ย 
  4. Adho Mukha Vrksanana โ€“ handstand โ€“ all the weight on two hands (look ma โ€“ no feet!)
  5. Adho Mukha Svanasana โ€“ Both hands and both feet on the earth and separated and new possibilities emerge in terms of weight distribution and articulation of the hands and feet against the earth.ย 

Some things we might note:

  • The touch of the body against the earth
  • The touch of two parts of the body against one another
  • The touch sensation of distribution of weight.
  • The touch sensation of activation of muscles and pressure.
  • Add to this the qualities that might be included in the experience of touch:
    • pain
    • pleasure
    • revulsion
    • hot or cold
    • heavy or light

Through attention and awareness the sense of touch becomes proprioception and kinesthetics โ€“ where our awareness of the inner landscape awakens and knowing our purpose in time and space. 

Take it further –   what is revealed is how the body works โ€“ including the internal organs.  Through attention to the more overt layers of sensation – awareness of the subtle developes and we awaken into clairsentience.  โ€œI have a feelingโ€.  Itโ€™s like a gut instinct but much subtler and tuned to a different frequency.  Consider laying your hands on someone โ€“ a gesture of friendship or love or passion โ€“ all different frequencies or โ€œvibesโ€.  Touch also has a relationship with the heart โ€“ this โ€œI have a feelingโ€ is a dimension of the emotional heart but also the spiritual heart. 

For the asana yogi, the heart is the seat of the nadam, the inner guru, sound vibration, the sound of vibration of Om.  Yes.  Vibration.  Detected by touch. 

When we practice asana we open doors to expanded understandings ofโ€ฆ.well, everything.  So as we pay attention to touch in practice โ€“ it opens the question of โ€œpainโ€ in yoga practice.  Many opposing views of how to relate to pain in yoga are espoused in the yoga community.  But through awareness we develop discernment about the sensations in our body – like pain.  This awareness is related to our personal sovereignty.

Consider a way  of relating to ourselves and the world which relies totally on external sources for interpretation (the doctor, the internet, our mother, the person one mat over from us in class).  This way of relating which denies our capacity to interact observe and interpret the signals of our own body.

Consider a way of relating  where the sensation itself governs us.  For example โ€œOops I feel something โ€“ Iโ€™m not going there into that forward bend, back bend, – Iโ€™m going to avoid sensation completelyโ€.  The healing potential of the posture is never even approached.  We give our power of choice away to the sensation.

Consider a different way of relating, different than the ways described above.  Consider becoming aware of a sensation, observing, breathing, noticing the quality, and then noticing the quality change as we gently shift the body part a millimeter, or stretch a little deeper.   Then we come to know:

 โ€œOh โ€“ this pain indicates I need  the attention of the doctorโ€, or  

โ€œOh, this pain indicates I need to go deeper in the practiceโ€, or

โ€œOh, this pain indicates I need to be gentle in practiceโ€, or

โ€œOh, this pain indicates Iโ€™ve been slumping at my desk.โ€

Through careful observation of sensation we reclaim our power of CHOICE.  No small thing.  Moving into this state of sovereignty by activating awareness and choice –  we no longer make the pain all powerful by ignoring, fighting or delegating it.  We hold the possibility in our hands and through attention we discern the next best step towards wholeness, healing and yoga.

I always try to create a post and a newsletter to be released simultaneously. They aren’t for marketing purposes. This is just a way to share what I learned in my years of teaching. In the coming releases I anticipate that the information in both will really be useful. You can sign up below. You will not receive anything other than these materials. The newsletters are also available on the NatalieteachesYoga facebook page and on Tumbler.

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An image of the chart of the sankhya philosophy with senses illuminated.


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