In sutra 1.6, Patanjali lists the
five mind movements: pramana (valid knowledge), viparyaya (misperception),
vikalpa (imagination), nidra (sleep) and smrti (memory). Then in sutra 1.7, he
describes valid knowledge, pratyakshanumanagamah pramanani. It comes from
direct perception, inference or a reliable source. As I’ve been sitting with
this, I’ve gotten a little discouraged—valid knowledge seems hard to come by! I
think our whole yoga practice is aimed at trying to help us see things more the
way they are. In the mean time, reliable sources seem important. And I have to
keep in mind that even if a teacher or text gives me really good information, I
may misinterpret what I think I hear. That’s in addition to the fact that any
human, even one who is evolved and wise, is still subject to their own
misperceptions.
So I guess we just have to think
of increasing our valid knowledge as a process of getting closer and closer to
the truth or clarity. Maybe the one piece of valid knowledge we can have is the
fact that mostly we don’t have it. And we should choose our sources carefully.
Let’s end with a little
story. For years, I mean YEARS, I have
identified myself as kapha. If you are unfamiliar with Ayurveda, the ancient
medical tradition from India, there are three constitutional types and one is
kapha (it’s not even important at the moment what that means). And then in the
last six months since I’ve changed my diet pretty significantly, I’ve been
becoming more aware of my pitta-ness (pitta is another of the three
constitutions). I was talking with Trish Foss (a great Ayurvedic practitioner) a
few weeks ago and she commented on the fact that I seem very pitta, but she had
heard me self-describe as kapha. I told her I’d been noticing that and she sort
of non-chalantly said, “Maybe you’re pitta with a kapha imbalance.” And that
seemed like a little light bulb. I was having some direct experience and then
had information from a reliable source and I think I got closer to the truth.
And now I’m going to hold it lightly—it seems righter than what I thought I
knew before, but I can guess that my understanding will likely change again.
For more info about therapy and yoga with me: www.seattlesomatictherapy.com
For more info about therapy and yoga with me: www.seattlesomatictherapy.com
yep, I used to identify with Kapha as well, but it was really that my kapha was way out of balance and had taken over my life! I am actually completely opposite of what I thought I was, vata. Took me a lot of self-inquiry and shifting through distorted self perception to figure it out.
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