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Abhedananda, Swami: A
direct disciple of Sri Ramakrishna, who spent many years travelling and
teaching Vedanta and Yoga in America.
Abhyasa: Sustained spiritual practice.
Adi Purusha: The First or Original Purusha.
Adityas: Solar deities, the greatest of which is Vishnu.
Advaita: Non-duality; literally: "not two."
Agni: Vedic god of fire.
Ahankara: Egoism or self-conceit; the self-arrogating principle "I,"
"I" am-ness; self-consciousness.
Ahimsa: Non-injury in thought, word, and deed; non-violence;
harmlessness.
Airavata: The white elephant of Indra that was produced by the churning
of the ocean.
Akasha: Ether.
Akshara: Syllable; imperishable Brahman; that which never perishes or
decays.
Amrita: That which makes one immortal. The nectar of immortality that
emerged from the ocean of milk when the gods churned it.
Anahata: The heart center (chakra); the bell-like sound emanating from
the heart center; "the unstruck (Word)"-usually in reference to Om.
Ananda: Bliss; happiness; joy.
Anandamayi Ma: One of the major spiritual figures in twentieth-century
India, first made known to the West by Paramhansa Yogananda in his
Autobiography of a Yogi.
Ananta: The chief of the Nagas, whose coils encircle the earth and who
symbolizes eternity ("ananta" means "without end"), and upon whom
Vishnu reclines.
Antahkarana: Internal instrument; fourfold mind; mind, intellect, ego
and subconscious mind.
Anuswara: Bindu.
Aparigraha: Non-possessiveness, non-greed, non-selfishness,
non-acquisitiveness
Arani: Sacrificial wood stick for creating fire through friction.
Arya(n): One who is an Arya-literally, "one who strives upward." Both
Arya and Aryan are exclusively psychological terms having nothing
whatsoever to do with birth, race, or nationality. In his teachings
Buddha habitually referred to spiritually qualified people as "the
Aryas." Although in English translations we find the expressions: "The
Four Noble Truths," and "The Noble Eightfold Path," Buddha actually
said: "The Four Aryan Truths," and "The Eightfold Aryan Path."
Asamprajñata samadhi: Highest superconscious state where the
mind and the ego-sense are completely annihilated.
Asana: Posture; seat.
Ashtanga Yoga: The "eight-limbed" Yoga of Patanjali consisting of yama,
niyama, asana, pranayama, pratyahara, dharana, dhyana, and samadhi (see
separate entries for each "limb").
Ashwins: Two Vedic deities, celestial horsemen of the sun, always
together, who herald the dawn and are skilled in healing. They avert
misfortune and sickness and bring treasures.
Asmita: I-ness; the sense of "I am;" "I exist."
Asteya: Non-stealing; honesty; non-misappropriativeness.
Asura: Demon; evil being (a-sura: without the light).
Aswara: Without sound, accent, or tone.
Ashwattha: The pipal (sacred fig) tree, the eternal tree of life whose
roots are in heaven. The "world tree" in the sense of the axis of the
earth and even of the cosmos.
Atma(n): The individual spirit or self.
Atma vichara: Enquiry into the Self.
Atmic: Having to do with the atma-spirit or self.
Aurobindo Ghosh, Sri: One of India's greatest yogis and spiritual
writers, he was at first involved in the Indian freedom movement, but
came to see that yoga was the true path to freedom. His ashram in South
India became one of the major spiritual centers in modern India, and
his voluminous spiritual writings are read and prized throughout the
world.
Avatar: A Divine Incarnation.
Ayurveda: The ancient system of Indian medicine formulated by the sage
Dhanvantari and considered part of the Vedic revelation.
Bhagavad Gita: "The Song of God." The sacred philosophical text often
called "the Hindu Bible," part of the epic Mahabharata by Vyasa; the
most popular sacred text in Hinduism.
Bhagavan: The Lord; the Personal God.
Bhakta: Devotee; votary.
Bhakti: Devotion; love (of God).
Bhakti Yoga: The yoga of attaining union with God through the
prescribed spiritual discipline of the path of devotion.
Bhakti Yogi: One who practices Bhakti Yoga.
Bhaktivedanta (Swami): The founder of the Hari Krishna movement in
America.
Bhava: Subjective state of being (existence); attitude of mind; mental
attitude or feeling; state of realization in the heart or mind.
Bhavanam: Meditation. "Bhavanam is setting the heart on the Lord Who is
designated by Om and brought into the mind by It." (Shankara,
Commentary on the Yoga Sutras)
Bhrigu: An ancient sage, so illustrious that he mediated quarrels among
the gods.
Bija: Seed; source.
Bija Mantra: A "seed" mantra from which realization grows as a tree
from a seed; usually a single-syllable mantra that is called "seed"
because of its small size as a dot or point of sound.
Bindu: Point; dot; seed; source; the point from which the subtle Omkara
arises that is experienced in meditation.
Brahma: The Creator (Prajapati) of the three worlds of men, angels, and
archangels (Bhur, Bhuwah, and Swah); the first of the created beings;
Hiranyagarbha or cosmic intelligence.
Brahma Sutras: A treatise by Vyasa on Vedanta philosophy in the form of
aphorisms. Also called the Vedanta Sutras or Vedanta Darshana.
Brahmacharya: Continence; self-restraint on all levels; discipline.
Brahmajyoti: The Light of God.
Brahmaloka: The world (loka) of God (Brahman); the infinite
consciousness of God.
Brahman: The Absolute Reality; the Truth proclaimed in the Upanishads;
the Supreme Reality that is one and indivisible, infinite, and eternal;
all-pervading, changeless Existence; Existence-knowledge-bliss Absolute
(Satchidananda); Absolute Consciousness; it is not only all-powerful
but all-power itself; not only all-knowing and blissful but
all-knowledge and all-bliss itself.
Brahmana: See Brahmin.
Brahmarandhra: "The hole of Brahman," the subtle (astral) aperture in
the crown of the head. Said to be the gateway to the Absolute (Brahman)
in the thousand-petaled lotus (sahasrara) in the crown of the head.
Liberated beings are said to exit the physical body through this
aperture at death.
Brahmin (Brahmana): A knower of Brahman; a member of the highest Hindu
caste consisting of priests, pandits, philosophers, and religious
leaders.
Brihaspati: The guru-priest and teacher-of the gods.
Buddhi: Intellect; understanding; reason; the thinking mind.
Chakra: Wheel. Plexus; center of psychic energy in the human system,
particularly in the spine or head.
Chaitanya: The consciousness that knows itself and knows others;
absolute consciousness.
Chandra: Presiding deity of the moon or the astral lunar world (loka).
Chidakasha: Brahman in Its aspect as limitless knowledge; unbounded
intelligence. This is a familiar concept of the Upanishads. It is not
meant that the physical ether is consciousness. The Pure Consciousness
(Cit) is like the ether (Akasha), an all-pervading continuum.
Chintana: Thinking; reflecting.
Chitraratha: The chief of the gandharvas.
Chitshakti: Power of consciousness or intelligence.
Chitta: The subtle energy that is the substance of the mind.
Daityas: Demons who constantly war with the gods. Sometimes "races" or
nationalities who acted contrary to dharma and fought against the
"aryas" were also called demons (daityas or asuras).
Dakshinamurti: A name for Lord Shiva as the silent teacher. Vedic
Religion declares that in every cycle of creation God manifests as
Dakshinamurti and becomes the guru of the first human beings-those who
were most spiritually evolved in the previous creation-teaching them
the path to liberation (moksha).
Damaru: A small, handheld drum with two heads that is sounded by
twisting the wrist and causing a ball tied to its middle to
rhythmically strike the heads alternately.
Darshan: Literally "sight" or "seeing." Darshan is the seeing of a holy
being as well as the blessing received by seeing such a one.
Dayananda (Maharishi Swami): A leading reformer within Hinduism in the
nineteenth century and the founder of the Arya Samaj.
Deva: "A shining one," a god-greater or lesser in the evolutionary
hierarchy; a semi-divine or celestial being with great powers, and
therefore a "god." Sometimes called a demi-god.
Dharana: Concentration of mind; fixing the mind upon a single thing or
point.
Dharma: The righteous way of living, as enjoined by the sacred
scriptures and the spiritually illumined; characteristics; virtue.
Dharma shastras: Scriptures which set forth the rules for society and
individuals, including spiritual observances. Manu Smriti is the most
authoritative-and the foundation-of all the dharmashastras of India.
Dhyana: Meditation; contemplation.
Dwesha: Aversion/avoidance for something, implying a dislike for that.
This can be emotional (instinctual) or intellectual.It may range from
simple nonpreference to intense repulsion, antipathy and even hatred.
See Raga.
Ekakshara: A common term for Om meaning "the Single Syllable" or "the
Single Letter."
Gandharva: A demigod-a celestial musician and singer.
Ganga: See Ganges.
Ganges (Ganga): The sacred river-believed to be of divine origin-that
flows from high up in the Himalayas, through the plains of Northern
India, and empties into the Bay of Bengal. Hindus consider that bathing
in the Ganges profoundly purifies both body and mind.
Garuda: A great being who can assume bird form, and therefore
considered the king of birds. Often depicted as an eagle, he is the
vehicle of Vishnu.
Gaudapada: The guru of Shankara's guru, Govindapada.
Gayatri Mantra: A Rig Vedic mantra in the gayatri meter invoking the
solar powers of evolution and enlightenment.
Gayatri Meter: A meter found only in the Rig Veda, consisting of three
lines of eight syllables each. It is considered especially appropriate
for mantric invocation of deities before worship.
Gerua: The brownish orange mud used to dye the clothng of Hindu
monastics; the color produced by dyeing with gerua.
Gita: The Bhagavad Gita.
Guna: Quality, attribute, or characteristic arising from nature
(Prakriti) itself; a mode of energy behavior. As a rule, when "guna" is
used it is in reference to the three qualities of Prakriti, the three
modes of energy behavior that are the basic qualities of nature, and
which determine the inherent characteristics of all created things.
They are: 1) sattwa-purity, light, harmony; 2) rajas-activity, passion;
and 3) tamas-dullness, inertia, and ignorance.
Guru: Teacher; preceptor.
Hansa: Literally "swan," for the swan can separate milk from water, and
the realized soul can perceive the Real behind the unreal and separate
the consciousness of spirit from consciousness of matter. Hansa also
means "I am [aham] He [sa]" in the sense of conscious identity with God.
Hari: Vishnu.
Hiranyagarbha: Cosmic intelligence; the Supreme Lord of the universe;
also called Brahman.
Indra: King of the lesser "gods" (demigods).
Isha: The Lord; Ishwara.
Ishwara: "God" or "Lord" in the sense of the Supreme Power, Ruler,
Master, or Controller of the cosmos. "Ishwara" implies the powers of
omnipotence, omnipresence, and omniscience.
Ishwarapranidhana: Offering of one's life to God (Ishwara).
Japa: Repetition of a mantra.
Jiva: Individual spirit.
Jivanmukta: One who is liberated in this present life.
Jivanmukti: Liberation in this life.
Jivatma(n): Individual spirit.
Jnana: Knowledge; wisdom of the Reality or Brahman, the Absolute.
Kabir: An Indian mystic of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries.
Kaivalya: Transcendental state of Absolute Independence; Moksha;
isolation; final beatitude; emancipation.
Kala: Time measure, as in the time required to recite a mantra. It also
sometimes means levels of creation or manifested beings.
Kalpa: A Day of Brahma-4,320,000,000 years. It alternates with a Night
of Brahma of the same length. In the Day of Brahma creation is manifest
and in the Night of Brahma is it resolved into its causal state.
Kamadhenu: Wishfulfilling cow produced at the churning of the milk
ocean.
Kapila: The great sage who formulated the Sankhya philosophy which is
endorsed by Krishna in the Bhagavad Gita. (See the entry under Sankhya.)
Karma: The law of action and reaction, the metaphysical equivalent of
the principle: "For every action there is an equal and opposite
reaction." "Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap"
(Galatians 6:7). It is karma operating through the law of cause and
effect that binds the jiva or the individual soul to the wheel of birth
and death.
Karttikeya: See Subramanya.
Klesha: Literally, taints or afflictions. The kleshas are: ignorance,
egotism, attractions and repulsions towards objects, and desperate
clinging to physical life from the fear of death. (See Yoga Sutras
2:2-9.)
Kosha: Sheath; bag; scabbard; a sheath enclosing the soul; body. There
are five such concentric sheaths or bodies: the sheaths of bliss,
intellect, mind, life-force and the physical body-the anandamaya,
jnanamaya, manomaya, pranamaya and annamaya bodies respectively.
Krishna: A Divine Incarnation born in India about three thousand years
ago, Whose teachings to His disciple Arjuna on the eve of the Great
India (Mahabharata) War comprise the Bhagavad Gita.
Kubera: The god of wealth.
Kumbhaka: Retention of breath; suspension of breath.
Kumkum: Red-colored powder used for making a ritual mark between the
eyebrows.
Kundalini: The primordial cosmic energy located in the individual; it
is usually thought of as lying coiled up like a serpent at the base of
the spine.
Lahiri Mahasaya: One of the greatest yogis of nineteenth-century India,
written about extensively in Autobiography of a Yogi by Paramhansa
Yogananda.
Laya: Dissolution; merging.
Laya Yoga: Process of absorption of the individual soul into the
Supreme Soul; concentration of the mind with a view to dissolve it;
that kind of yogic meditation where the mind is carried on
progressively from grosser to subtler ideas until it is dissolved in
the Unmanifested or Para Brahman; the yoga sometimes known as
Omkaralayacintana-the merging of the consciousness into Om.
Linga: Mark; gender; sign; symbol.
Loka: World or realm; sphere, level, or plane of existence, whether
physical, astral, or causal.
Mahabharata: The world's longest epic poem (110,00 verses) about the
Mahabharata (Great Indian) War that took place about three thousand
years ago. The Mahabharata also includes the Bhagavad Gita, the most
popular sacred text of Hinduism.
Mahasamadhi: Literally "the great union [samadhi]," this refers to a
realized yogi's conscious departure from the physical body at death.
Mahashakti: The Great Power; the divine creative energy.
Mahat Tattwa: The Great Principle; the first product from Prakriti in
evolution; intellect. The principle of Cosmic Intelligence or Buddhi;
universal Christ Consciousness, the "Son of God," the "Only Begotten of
the Father," "the firstborn of every creature."
Maheshwara: The Great Ishwara; Shiva.
Mahout: Trainer-handler of an elephant.
Manana: Thinking, pondering, reflecting, considering.
Manas: The sensory mind; the perceiving faculty that receives the
messages of the senses.
Mantra: Sacred syllable or word or set of words through the repetition
and reflection of which one attains perfection or realization of the
Self. Literally, "a transforming thought" (manat trayate). A mantra,
then is a sound formula that transforms the consciousness.
Mantric: Having to do with mantra(s)-their sound or their power.
Manu: The ancient lawgiver, whose code, The Laws of Manu (Manu Smriti)
is the foundation of Hindu religious and social conduct.
Marichi: The chief of the Maruts.
Maruts: The presiding deities of winds and storms.
Math: A monastery.
Matra: Letters of the alphabet or their sounds.
Mauna(m): Silence-not speaking.
Maya: The illusive power of Brahman; the veiling and the projecting
power of the universe, the power of Cosmic Illusion..
Mayic: Having to do with Maya.
Meru: The mountain, of supreme height, on which the gods dwell, or the
mountain on which Shiva is ever seated in meditation. Said to be the
center of the world, supporting heaven itself. Obviously a yogic symbol.
Moha: Delusion-in relation to something, usually producing delusive
attachment or infatuation based on a completely false perception and
evaluation of the object.
Moksha: Release; liberation; the term is particularly applied to the
liberation from the bondage of karma and the wheel of birth and death;
Absolute Experience.
Mridanga: A drum used exclusively in devotional music, also known as a
khol.
Mukti: Moksha.
Mulaprakriti: The Root [Basic] Energy from which all things are formed.
The Divine Prakriti or Energy of God.
Mumukshutwa: Intense desire or yearning for liberation (moksha).
Nada: Sound; mystic inner sound; the primal sound or first vibration
from which all creation has emanated; the first manifestation of the
unmanifested Absolute; Omkara or Shabda Brahman. The continuous sound
of Om experienced in bhavanam.
Nadi: A channel in the subtle (astral) body through which subtle prana
(psychic energy) flows; a physical nerve.
Nagas: Astral beings that often interact with human beings, usually
taking the form of snakes. (In Sanskrit naga is the word for snake.)
Nanak (Guru): Founder of the Sikh religion in the fifteenth century.
Narada: A primeval sage to whom some of the verses of the Rig Veda are
attributed.
Narayana: A proper name of God-specifically of Vishnu. The term by
etymology means a Being that supports all things, that is reached by
them and that helps them to do so; also one who pervades all things.
Nataraja: "King of the Dance," a title of Shiva the Cosmic Dancer.The
whole creation is is the dance of Shiva.
Neem Karoli Baba: One of India's most amazing and mysterious spiritual
figures. The life of this great miracle-worker and master spanned from
two to four centuries (at the least), including most of the twentieth
century.
Nidra: Sleep; either dreaming or deep sleep state.
Nirakara: Without form.
Nirguna: Without attributes or qualities (gunas).
Nirguna Brahman: The impersonal, attributeless Absolute beyond all
description or designation.
Nirodha: Restraint; suppression; dissolving.
Nirvana: Liberation; final emancipation; the term is particularly
applied to the liberation from the bondage of karma and the wheel of
birth and death; Absolute Experience. See Moksha.
Nirvikalpa Samadhi: Samadhi in which there is no objective experience
or experience of "qualities" whatsoever, and in which the triad of
knower, knowledge and known does not exist; purely subjective
experience of the formless and qualitiless and unconditioned Absolute.
Nityananda (Avadhuta Paramhansa): A great Master of the nineteenth and
twentieth centuries, and the most renowned Pranava yogi of our times.
His Nitya Sutras contain some of the most profound statements on the
Pranava and Its application by the yogi.
Niyama: Observance; the five Do's of Yoga: 1) shaucha-purity,
cleanliness; 2) santosha-contentment, peacefulness; 3) tapas-austerity,
practical (i.e., result-producing) spiritual discipline; 4)
swadhyaya-self-study, spiritual study; 5) Ishwarapranidhana-offering of
one's life to God
Om: The Pranava or the sacred syllable symbolizing and embodying
Brahman.
Omkara: Om.
Panchabhuta: The Five Elements: ether, air, fire, water, and earth.
Parabrahman: Supreme Brahman.
Paramatma(n): The Supreme Self, God.
Parameshwara: The Supreme Lord.
Paramhansa: Literally: Supreme Swan, a person of the highest spiritual
realization, from the fact that a swan can separate milk from water and
is therefore an apt symbol for one who has discarded the unreal for the
Real, the darkness for the Light, and mortality for the Immortal,
having separated himself fully from all that is not God and joined
himself totally to the Divine, becoming a veritable embodiment of
Divinity manifested in humanity.
Parampurusha: The Supreme Spirit; Supreme Person.
Paranirvana (Pali: Paranibbana): The Supreme, Final Nirvana, when the
perfectly enlightened individual is released from physical embodiment,
never to return to birth in any world, high or low.
Patanjali: The author of the Yoga Sutras.
Pitri: A departed ancestor, a forefather.
Pradhana: Prakriti; causal matter.
Prahlada: A daitya prince who rejected his daitya heritage and became a
devotee of Vishnu. His father, the evil Hiranyakashipu, tortured him
and attempted his life because of his devotion and his speaking to
others of divine matters, yet he remained steadfast.
Prajna: Consciousness; awareness.
Prajapati: Progenitor; the Creator; a title of Brahma the Creator.
Prakriti: Causal matter; the fundamental power (shakti) of God from
which the entire cosmos is formed; the root base of all elements;
undifferentiated matter; the material cause of the world. Also known as
Pradhana.
Prakritilaya: Absorbed or merged in Prakriti; the state of yogis who
have so identified with the cosmic energy that they are trapped in it
as though in a net and cannot separate themselves from it and evolve
onwards until the cosmic dissolution (pralaya) occurs in which the
lower worlds of men, angels, and archangels (bhur, bhuwah and swar
lokas) are dissolved.
Pralaya: Complete merging; dissolution when the cosmos merges into (I)
its unseen immediate cause, viz., the unmanifested cosmic energy, or
(2) the Ultimate Substratum of Absolute Reality.
Prana: Vital energy; life-breath; life-force.
Prana-pratishta: "Installation of life;" a ritual which is done to an
image when it is set on the altar of a temple at its consecration. This
ritual makes the image alive in a subtle-but no less real-sense.
Pranava: A title of Om. It means "Life-ness" or "Life-Giver." It is the
expression or controller of prana-the life force within the individual
being and the cosmos. Since prana also means breath, the Pranava means
the controller of breath or the Breath Word.
Pranayama: Control of the subtle life forces, often by means of special
modes of breathing. Therefore breath control or breathing exercises are
usually mistaken for pranayama.
Prasad(am): Food or any gift that has been first offered in worship or
to a saint; that which is given by a saint; literally: "grace."
Pratyahara: Abstraction or withdrawal of the senses from their objects,
the fifth limb of Patanjali's Ashtanga Yoga.
Puraka: Inhalation.
Purana: Literally "The Ancient." The Puranas are a number of scriptures
attributed to the sage Vyasa that teach spiritual principles and
practices through stories about sacred historical personages which
often include their teachings given in conversations.
Purana Purusha: The Ancient Person; God.
Purusha: "Person" in the sense of a conscious spirit. Both God and the
individual spirits are purushas, but God is the Adi (Original,
Archetypal) Purusha, Parama (Highest) Purusha, and the Purushottama
(Best of the Purushas).
Raga: Attachment/affinity for something, implying a desire for that.
This can be emotional (instinctual) or intellectual. It may range from
simple liking or preference to intense desire and attraction. See
Dwesha.
Rajas: Activity, passion, desire for an object or goal.
Rakshasa: There are two kinds of rakshasas: 1) semidivine, benevolent
beings, or 2) cannibal demons or goblins, enemies of the gods.
Meat-eating human beings are sometimes classed as rakshasas.
Rama: An incarnation of God-the king of ancient Ayodhya in
north-central India. His life is recorded in the ancient epic Ramayana.
Rama Tirtha: One the key spiritual figures in late nineteenth and early
twentieth century India. A former university professor of mathematics
in the Punjab, Swami Rama Tirtha traveled throughout India and even to
Japan and America, preaching the truths of Advaita Vedanta and
vigorously teaching the practice of Pranava Yoga.
Ramakrishna: Sri Ramakrishna lived in India in the second half of the
nineteenth century, and is regarded by all India as a perfectly
enlightened person-and by many as an Incarnation of God.
Ramana Maharshi: A great sage of the twentieth century who lived in
Arunachala in South India. He taught the path of Self-Inquiry (Atma
Vichara) wherein the person simply turns his awareness within asking
"Who am I?" until the self (atma) is revealed.
Ramanuja (Sri): The great Vaishnava teacherof the eleventh century who
formulated the philosophy known as Vashistadvaita Vedanta (Qualified
Non-Dualism).
Ramdas (Swami): One of the best-known and most influential spiritual
figures of twentieth-century India, founder of Anandashram in South
India and author of the spiritual classic In the Vision of God as well
as many other inspirational books.
Rechaka: Exhalation of breath.
Rishi: Sage; seer of the Truth.
Rudra: Shiva.
Rudras: Vedic deities of destruction for renewal.
Rudraksha: "The Eye of Shiva;" a tree seed considered sacred to Shiva
and worn by worshippers of Shiva, Shakti, and Ganeha, and by yogis,
usually in a strand of 108 seeds. Also used as a rosary to count the
number of mantras repeated in japa.
Sad-darshanas: The six orthodox systems of Indian philosophy: Nyaya,
Vaisheshika, Sankhya, Yoga, Mimamsa, and Vedanta.
Sadguru: True guru, or the guru who reveals the Real (Sat-God).
Sadhaka: One who practices spiritual discipline-sadhana-particularly
meditation.
Sadhana: Spiritual practice.
Sadhu: Seeker for truth (sat); and person who is practicing spiritual
disciplines. Usually this term is applied only to monastics.
Sadhyas: A group of celestial beings with exquisitely refined natures
thought to inhabit the ether.
Saguna: With attributes or qualities (gunas).
Sahasrara: The "thousand-petalled lotus" in the brain that corresponds
to the pineal gland in the center of the head. The highest center of
consciousness, the point at which the spirits (atma) and the bodies
(koshas) are integrated and from which they are disengaged.
Sai Baba: See Shirdi Sai Baba.
Sakara: With form.
Samadhi: The state of superconsciousness where Absoluteness is
experienced attended with all-knowledge and joy; Oneness; here the mind
becomes identified with the object of meditation; the meditator and the
meditated, thinker and thought become one in perfect absorption of the
mind. See Samprajñata Samadhi, Asamprajñata
Samadhi, Savikalpa Samadhi, and Nirvikalpa Samadhi.
Samprajñata samadhi: State of superconsciousness, with the
triad of meditator, meditation and the meditated. Savikalpa samadhi.
Samsara: Life through repeated births and deaths; the wheel of birth
and death; the process of earthly life.
Samskara: Impression in the mind produced by previous action or
experience; prenatal tendency. See Vasana.
Sanatana Dharma: "The Eternal Religion," also known as "Arya Dharma,"
"the religion of those who strive upward [Aryas]."
Sandhya: A ritual done at the "junctions" (sandhyas) of the day-dawn,
noon, and sunset-during which the Savitri Gayatri is repeated.
Sankhya: One of the six orthodox systems of Hindu philosophy whose
originator was the sage Kapila, Sankhya is the original Vedic
philosophy, endorsed by Krishna in the Bhagavad Gita. (Gita 2:39;
3:3,5; 18:13,19. Also, the second chapter of the Gita is entitled:
Sankhya Yoga.) The Ramakrishna-Vedanta Wordbook says: "Sankhya
postulates two ultimate realities, Purusha and Prakriti. Declaring that
the cause of suffering is man's identification of Purusha with Prakriti
and its products, Sankhya teaches that liberation and true knowledge
are attained in the supreme consciousness, where such identification
ceases and Purusha is realized as existing independently in its
transcendental nature." Not surprisingly, then, Yoga is based on the
Sankhya philosophy.
Sanskrit: The language of the ancient sages of India and therefore of
the Indian scriptures and yoga treatises.
Santosha: Contentment; peacefulness.
Sannyasa: Renunciation; monastic life.
Sannyasi: A renunciate; a monk.
Sarada Devi ("Holy Mother"): The virgin-wife of Sri Ramakrishna, and a
great teacher in her own right, considered by many to be an incarnation
of the Mother aspect of God.
Satchidananda: Existence-knowledge-bliss Absolute; Brahman.
Satsanga: Literally: "company with Truth." Associaton with godly-minded
persons. The company of saints and devotees.
Satya: Truth; the Real; Brahman, or the Absolute; truthfulness;
honesty.
Sattwa: Light; purity; reality.
Sattwa Guna: Quality of light, purity, harmony, and goodness.
Savikalpa Samadhi: Samadhi in which there is objective experience or
experience of "qualities" and with the triad of knower, knowledge and
known.
Savitri Gayatri: A mantra of the Rig Veda which is recited for
unfoldment of the intellectual powers leading to enlightenment.
Shabda: Sound; word; Vedas: Omkara.
Shabda Brahma: Word-God; Brahman in the Form of Sound; Omkara or the
Veda.
Shakti: Power; energy; force; the Divine Power of becoming; the
apparent dynamic aspect of Eternal Being; the Absolute Power or Cosmic
Energy.
Shankara: Shankaracharya; Adi (the first) Shankaracharya: The great
reformer and re-establisher of Vedic Religion in India around 300 B.C.
He is the unparalleled exponent of Advaita (Non-Dual) Vedanta. He also
reformed the mode of monastic life and founded (or regenerated) the
ancient Swami Order.
Shalagrama: A stone found only in the Mandakini River in the region of
Tibet, considered to be a manifestation of Vishnu and His avataras.
Shaucha: Purity; cleanliness.
Shirdi Sai Baba: Perhaps the most renowned spiritual teacher of the
nineteenth and twentieth centuruies in India. His fame continues to
grow in this century as well.
Shiva: A name of God meaning "One Who is all Bliss and the giver of
happiness to all." Although classically applied to the Absolute
Brahman, Shiva can also refer to God (Ishwara) in His aspect of
Dissolver and Liberator (often mistakenly thought of as "destroyer").
Shraddha: Faith.
Shyama Charan Lahiri: See Lahiri Mahasaya.
Sivananda (Swami): A great twentieth-century Master, founder of the
world-wide Divine Life Society, whose books on spiritual life and
religion are widely circulated in the West as well as in India.
Siddha: A perfected being, an adept, a seer, a perfect yogi.
Siddhi: Perfection; psychic power.
Skanda: See Subramunya.
Smarana: Remembrance (of God).
Smriti: Memory.
Sphatika: Clear quartz crystal.
Sphota: The Sanskrit original of our English word "spot;" manifester;
the idea which bursts or flashes-including the Pranava which burst or
flashes forth from the Absolute and becomes transformed into the
Relative.
Sri Vaishnava: A worshipper of Vishnu according to the philosophical
school of Sri Ramanuja known as Vashistadvaita Vedanta (Qualified
Non-Dualism).
Srimad Bhagavatam: One of the eighteen scriptures known as Puranas
which are attributed to Vyasa.
Sruti: Sacred scripture.
Sthiti: Steadiness; condition or state; existence; being; subsistence;
preservation.
Subramanya: The god of war and son of Shiva and Parvati.
Sushumna: A subtle passage in the midst of the body extending from the
perineum to the crown of the head, the Brahmarandhra, through which
subtle, awakened powers arise to produce higher awareness in the yogi.
Sushupti: The dreamless sleep state.
Sutra: An aphorism with minimum words and maximum sense; a terse
sentence.
Swara: Sound; accent; tone.
Swadhyaya: Introspective self-study or self-analysis leading to
self-understanding.
Swayambhu: Self-existent or self-generated.
Taimni, I. K.: A professor of chemistry in India. He wrote many
excellent books on philosophy and spiritual practice, including The
Science of Yoga, a commentary on the Yoga Sutras. For many years he was
the spiritual head of the Esoteric Section of the Theosphical Society
headquartered in Adyar, Madras (Tamilnadu), and traveled the world
without publicity or notoriety, quietly instructing many sincere
aspirants in the path to supreme consciousness.
Tamas: Dullness, inertia, folly, and ignorance.
Tantra: A manual of or a particular path of sadhana laying great stress
upon japa of a mantra and other esoteric practices relating to the
powers latent in the human complex of physical, astral, and causal
bodies in relation to the cosmic Power usually thought as the Divine
Feminine.
Tantric: Pertaining to Tantra.
Tapas (tapasya): Austerity, practical (i.e., result-producing)
spiritual discipline; spiritual force. Literally it means the
generation of heat or energy, but is always used in a symbolic manner,
referring to spiritual practice and its effect, especially the roasting
of karmic seeds, the burning up of karma.
Taraka: Deliverer.
Taraka Mantra: From the root word tara-that which crosses. The Taraka
Mantra is that which enables its invokers to cross over the ocean of
samsara and attain liberation.
Taraka Nama: The Delivering Name; Om.
Tejas: Radiance; brilliancy (especially spiritual); the element of
fire; Agni; heat.
Tilak: A sacred mark made on the forehead or between the eyebrows
denoting what form of God the person worships.
Tirtha: A sacred place of pilgrimage; a river or body of water in which
it is auspicious and spiritual beneficial to bathe; the water offered
in ritual worship and then sprinkled on or drunk by the devotees.
Trataka: Steady gazing; the process of fixing the gaze on a small dot,
point, yantra, etc.
Turiya: The state of pure consciousness. A Ramakrishna-Vedanta Wordbook
defines it as: "The superconscious; lit., 'the Fourth,' in relation to
the three ordinary states of consciousness-waking, dreaming, and
dreamless sleep-which it transcends."
Turiya-Turiya: The Absolute Consciousness of God, the Consciousness
behind our individualized consciousness (turiya).
Tyaga: Literally: "abandonment." Renunciation-in the Gita, the
relinquishment of the fruit of action.
Tyagi: A renouncer, an ascetic.
Uchchaishravas: The name of Indra's horse (or the horse of the Sun god,
Surya), that was born of the amrita that was churned from the ocean by
the gods. The name means "high-sounding" and refers to the power of
mantra.
Udgitha: The Pranava [Om] when it is sung aloud in Vedic recitation.
Upanishads: Books (of varying lengths) of the philosophical teachings
of the ancient sages of India on the knowledge of Absolute Reality. The
upanishads contain two major themes: (1) the individual self (atman)
and the Supreme Self (Paramatman) are one in essence, and (2) the goal
of life is the realization/manifestation of this unity, the realization
of God (Brahman). There are eleven principal upanishads: Isha, Kena,
Katha, Prashna, Mundaka, Mandukya, Taittiriya, Aitaryeya, Chandogya,
Brihadaranyaka, and Svetashvatara, all of which were commented on by
Shankara, thus setting the seal of authenticity on them.
Ushmapas: A class of ancestors (pitris) which live off subtle
emanations or vapors.
Vachaka: That which is denoted by speech.
Vachya: That which is denoted by speech.
Vaikhari: Sound that is spoken and heard.
Vaikuntha: The celestial abode (loka) of Vishnu and His devotees.
Vairagya: Non-attachment, detachment, dispassion, absence of desire, or
indifference. Indifference towards and disgust for all worldly things
and enjoyments.
Vaishnava: A devotee of Vishnu.
Vak: Speech.
Vakya: Word or statement.
Varuna: A Vedic deity considered the sustainer of the universe and also
the presiding deity of the oceans and water. Often identified with the
conscience.
Vasana: A bundle or aggregate of similar samskaras. Subtle desire; a
tendency created in a person by the doing of an action or by enjoyment;
it induces the person to repeat the action or to seek a repetition of
the enjoyment; the subtle impression in the mind capable of developing
itself into action; it is the cause of birth and experience in general;
the impression of actions that remains unconsciously in the mind.
Vashistadvaita Vedanta: The philosophy of Qualified Non-Dualism
formulated by Sri Ramanuja.
Vasus: Eight Vedic deities characterized by radiance.
Vayu: The Vedic god of the wind.
Vedanta: Literally, "the end of the Vedas;" the Upanishads; the school
of Hindu thought, based primarily on the Upanishads, upholding the
doctrine of either pure non-dualism or conditional non-dualism. The
original text of this school is Vedanta-darshana or the Brahma Sutras
compiled by the sage Vyasa.
Vedanta Sutras: The Brahma Sutras.
Vedas: The oldest scriptures of India, considered the oldest scriptures
of the world, that were revealed in meditation to the Vedic Rishis
(seers).
Vedic: Having to do with the Vedas.
Vichara: Enquiry/investigation into the nature of the Self, Brahman or
Truth; ever-present reflection on the why and wherefore of things;
enquiry into the real meaning of the Mahavakya Tat-twam-asi: Thou art
That; discrimination between the Real and the unreal; enquiry of Self.
Videhamukti: Disembodied salvation; salvation attained by the realised
soul after shaking off the physical sheath as opposed to jivanmukti
which is liberation even while living.
Vidya: Knowledge; both spiritual knowledge and mundane knowledge.
Vidyapith(a): A school.
Virya: Strength; power; energy; courage.
Vishnu: "The all-pervading;" God as the Preserver.
Vishwa-devas: A group of twelve minor Vedic deities.
Viveka: Discrimination between the Real and the unreal, between the
Self and the non-Self, between the permanent and the impermanent; right
intuitive discrimination; ever-present discrimination between the
transient and the permanent.
Vivekananda (Swami): The chief disciple of Sri Ramakrishna, who brought
the message of Vedanta to the West at the end of the nineteenth
century.
Vritti: Thought-wave; mental modification; mental whirlpool; a ripple
in the chitta.
Vyasa: One of the greatest sages of India, commentator on the Yoga
Sutras, author of the Mahabharata (which includes the Bhagavad Gita),
the Brahma Sutras, and the codifier of the Vedas.
Word-Brahman: Om; Shabda Brahman.
Yajna: Sacrifice; offering; sacrificial ceremony; a ritual sacrifice;
usually the fire sacrifice known as agnihotra or havan.
Yaksha: There are two kinds of yakshas: 1) semidivine beings whose king
is Kubera, the lord of wealth, or 2) a kind of ghost, goblin, or demon.
Yama (1): Restraint; the five Don'ts of Yoga: 1) ahimsa-non-violence,
non-injury, harmlessness; 2) satya-truthfulness, honesty; 3)
asteya-non-stealing, honesty, non-misappropriativeness; 4)
brahmacharya-continence; 5) aparigraha-non-possessiveness, non-greed,
non-selfishness, non-acquisitiveness
Yama (2): The Lord of Death, controller of who dies and what happens to
them after death.
Yoga: Literally, "union." Union with the Supreme Being, or any practice
that makes for such union. Meditation that unites the individual spirit
with God, the Supreme Spirit. The name of the philosophy expounded by
the sage Patanjali, teaching the process of union of the individual
with the Universal Soul.
Yoga Nidra: A state of half-contemplation and half-sleep; light yogic
sleep when the individual retains slight awareness; state between sleep
and wakefulness.
Yoga Sutras: The oldest known writing on the subject of yoga, written
by the sage Patanjali, a yogi of ancient India, and considered the most
authoritative text on yoga. Also known as Yoga Darshana, it is the
basis of the Yoga Philosophy which is based on the philosophical system
known as Sankhya.
Yoga Vashista: A classical treatise on Yoga, containing the
instructions of the Rishi Vashista to Lord Rama on meditation and
spiritual life.
Yogi: One who practises Yoga; one who strives earnestly for union with
God; an aspirant going through any course of spiritual discipline.
Yogic: Having to do with Yoga.
Yogiraj: "King of Yogis," a title often given to an advanced yogi,
especially a teacher of yogi.
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