How Did The Practice of Yoga Develop?
Although the development of yoga basics has been a long process with many influences, the overall path of the discipline can be divided into classical, post-classical and modern periods. The modern period, as it applies to the United States, is the time in which Hatha Yoga gained its primacy and importance. (In the United States the practice is more for exercise than as part of a spiritual quest for enlightenment.)Classical Period
In the second century the first systemic presentation of yoga was made by Patanjali, the father of yoga, in the Yoga Sutras. This organized "eight limbed path" to quiet the mind and merge with the infinite still strongly influences styles of modern yoga today. The eight limbs in English are moral codes, self-purification and study, posture, breath control, sense control, concentration, contemplation, and meditation.Post-Classical Period
In the centuries after Patanjali, yoga masters developed practices for the rejuvenation of the body and the prolongation of life, embracing perfection of the body as the only path to enlightenment, an important step in the origins of yoga as we know it. It was in this period that Tantra Yoga to cleanse the system and break ties to physical existence began to be perfected. In turn these mind-body-spirit connections led to the evolution of Hatha Yoga. This is the form most practiced in the West today. It uses physical exercises, controlled, breathing, relaxation, and meditation to balance the mind and body and to improve physical health.Modern Period
Yoga masters began to travel to the west (all over the world, in fact) in the late 1800s and early 1900s. By the 1920s T. Krishnamacharya demonstrated Hatha Yoga throughout India and opened the first school to teach the practice. Three of his students significantly spread global yoga, in particular B.K.S. Iyengar, T.K.V. Desikachar and Pattabhi Jois.In 1947 Indra Devi opened a yoga study in Hollywood which was the beginning of the spread and popularization of Hatha Yoga in the United States. The practice became wildly popular during the counterculture movement of the 1960s with the so-called "hippies" embracing many aspects of Eastern teaching and philosophy as they sought to distance themselves from the "establishment" and the traditional American values they so actively rejected.
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