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InfoPlace Home > Yoga Articles > Read Yoga Articles > Yoga Sutras > Patanjali Yoga Sutras
Patanjali Yoga Sutras


TASTY SAPTADHA PRANTA-BHUMIN PRAJNA (II 27)

Tasya = His (Purusa's); Saptadha = sevenfold; Pranta-bhumih = a definite stage; Prajna = the cognitive consciousness.

In his case the highest stage of Enlightenment is reached by seven stages.

Many a time a question arises in the mind of Sadhakas (practitioners of Yoga) whether one arrives at the Ultimate (Kaivalya) suddenly or gradually. There is no conflict in the two schools of thought. It can be both sudden as well as gradual depending upon how we look at it.

A labor goes on hitting a piece of rock to break it and at twentieth stroke it breaks. This does not mean that only twentieth stroke, suddenly, broke the rock. Even first hit was responsible to weaken the stone. We go on heating the water. It warms up to 20 degrees, 30 degrees till it turns into vapor at 100 degree centigrade. It may look, all of a sudden water evaporated, if we don't take in account the continuous heat from degree onwards and see only the vapor. Till boiling point arrives, the process, invisible to our eyes, goes on silently.

Similarly as we go on doing Sadhanas (spiritual practices) changes take place within, even without our knowledge sometimes, and then there is a feeling of sudden expansion. This Sutra here says that a Yogi reaches the state of Enlightenment gradually through seven states of consciousness. These states are also named in Yoga Vasistha as Sapta Bhumikas.


This article appears in the Yoga Magazine, Yoga Sudha April, 1992 edition. This article has been published courtesy www.yogasudha.com



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