Yoga and Lao Tse

ThanatoCC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons 
A stone sculpture of Laozi [Lao Tse],
 located north of 
Quanzhou at the foot of Mount Qingan

When the River Learns to Breathe: Yoga and Lao Tse in Quiet Agreement

At dawn, a yogi sits on the earth, spine rising like a young tree. The breath enters, leaves, enters again. 

Not commanded—invited. Somewhere far away in time and geography, an old man rides a water buffalo toward the western mountains. 

He does not hurry. The road bends, and he bends with it. Between them stretches centuries, languages, and cultures, yet the silence around them feels the same.

This is where Yoga and the teachings of Lao Tse meet—not in doctrine, but in lived stillness.

The Breath and the Way

The yogi closes her eyes and feels the breath brush the back of her throat, cool on the inhale, warm on the release. She does not chase it. She follows. In the Tao Te Ching, Lao Tse speaks of the Tao as something that cannot be grasped, only moved with—like water flowing downhill. Breath in Yoga and Tao in Taoism behave alike: both retreat when seized and return when allowed.

In pranayama, the breath becomes a teacher. It lengthens when the body softens, shortens when effort intrudes. Lao Tse’s Tao behaves the same way—present when one stops interfering, absent when forced into names and rules. Neither system urges control. Both invite intimacy with a rhythm already underway.

Here, Yoga and Lao Tse whisper the same lesson: life is not improved by domination but by attunement.

Om, a symbol in Hinduism
The Unicode Consortium, Public domain,
via Wikimedia Commons

Effortless Action on the Mat and in the World

In a Yoga posture, strain announces itself immediately. Jaw tightens. Breath fractures. 

The pose collapses under ambition. The practitioner adjusts—not by pushing harder, but by releasing what doesn’t belong. Suddenly the posture stands on its own, as if the body remembers something ancient.

This moment mirrors wu wei, Lao Tse’s teaching of effortless action. 

The sage does not act against the current of life; he steps into it. Just as the yogi discovers that the posture completes itself when excess effort dissolves, Lao Tse shows that the world organizes itself when ego steps aside.

Neither Yoga nor Taoism celebrates passivity. The yogi still stands. The sage still walks. But action flows from alignment rather than force. The body knows this before the mind does.

Emptiness as a Living Presence

After practice, the mat lies empty. Yet something lingers—a clarity, a softness, a quiet joy without cause. Lao Tse smiles at this emptiness. He writes that a bowl is useful not because of its clay, but because of the space it holds.

In Yoga philosophy, shunyata—emptiness—is not absence but openness. In meditation, thoughts thin like morning fog. What remains is not nothingness but spacious awareness, able to hold everything without strain.

Lao Tse’s emptiness breathes in the same way. The Tao is described as hollow, inexhaustible, endlessly giving because it does not cling. Yoga and Taoism both invite practitioners to become like this space: present, ungrasping, quietly powerful.

The Body as a Doorway to the Infinite

A yogi balances on one foot, arms lifted, eyes steady. The body wobbles, corrects, steadies again. Balance is not frozen—it is continuous listening. Muscles respond to gravity moment by moment, not by plan.

Lao Tse watches a tree bend in the wind and remain standing while rigid branches snap. Softness survives. Yielding endures. Yoga asana teaches the same truth through flesh and bone: sensitivity outlasts rigidity.

Both traditions trust the body as a source of wisdom. Yoga listens inward through sensation. Taoism listens outward through nature. The lesson converges: intelligence is already woven into form. One must only stop arguing with it.

Non-Attachment and the Vanishing Self

At the end of meditation, the yogi notices how the sense of “I” has thinned. Thoughts still arise, but they pass like birds across an open sky. Lao Tse speaks of the sage who does not cling to identity, who lets praise and blame pass without lodging.

In Yoga, this is vairagya—non-attachment. Not rejection of the world, but freedom within it. The yogi still loves, works, feels—but no longer needs to defend a fixed self.

Lao Tse echoes this with gentle irony: the one who knows does not speak much; the one who speaks much does not know. Identity loosens. What remains is responsiveness, not self-importance.

Nature as the Original Scripture

The yogi practices outdoors. Wind cools the skin. Birds interrupt meditation without apology. No offense is taken. In Taoism, mountains and rivers are not metaphors—they are teachers. Lao Tse learns from water, valleys, uncarved wood.

Yoga’s earliest teachings were not written in studios but under trees, beside rivers, within forests. Nature was not scenery; it was scripture. Both traditions see the natural world not as something to conquer, but as something to consult.

Stillness is not manufactured. It is remembered.

Liberation Without Escape

Neither Yoga nor Lao Tse promises escape from life. The yogi returns to the world after practice—emails, traffic, grief, laughter. The Taoist sage governs villages, raises children, grows old.

Liberation in both traditions is quiet. It looks like washing dishes without resentment. Like walking without rushing. Like breathing without anxiety.

Freedom is not elsewhere. It is in how one stands, breathes, and yields to what is.

Where the Teachings Meet

The yogi rises from the mat. The old sage disappears into the mountains. Neither leaves behind commandments. They leave traces—footprints in dust, a hush in the air.

Yoga and the teachings of Lao Tse converge in lived experience rather than theory. They agree that life flows best when unobstructed, that softness is strength, that emptiness gives form its power, and that wisdom emerges when striving relaxes.

No debate is necessary. The breath knows. The river knows. And when one listens closely enough, they speak the same language.

Kundalini and the Seven Chakras

Kundalini and Chakras
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Awakening the Serpent Power: Kundalini and the Seven Chakras

In the realm of spiritual evolution, few concepts are as profound or transformative as Kundalini

Often depicted as a coiled serpent resting at the base of the spine, this divine energy represents the untapped potential within every human being.

Understanding the journey of Kundalini through the seven chakras is more than an academic exercise—it is a roadmap to higher consciousness, emotional balance, and physical vitality.

What is Kundalini? A Philosophical Overview

Derived from the Sanskrit word kundal (meaning "coiled"), Kundalini is the Shakti—the divine feminine creative power—within us. In Shaiva Tantra, it is taught that while this energy remains dormant, it maintains our everyday consciousness and physical existence. However, when "awakened" through yoga, meditation, or breathwork, it ascends the spinal column, piercing through various energy centers known as chakras.

The Journey Through the Seven Chakras

Each chakra acts as a gateway. As Kundalini rises, it purifies these centers, unlocking specific spiritual and psychological strengths.

Yoga at Home Image by ChatGPT
1. Muladhara: The Root Chakra
  • Location: Base of the spine

  • Color: Red

  • Element: Earth

The Muladhara is the foundation. 

As the seat of dormant Kundalini, it governs our most basic needs: survival, security, and stability. 

When this chakra is balanced, you feel grounded and safe in the world.

2. Svadhishthana: The Sacral Chakra
  • Location: Below the navel

  • Color: Orange

  • Element: Water

This center is the hub of creativity, sexuality, and emotions. When Kundalini reaches the Svadhishthana, it transforms raw survival instincts into the desire for connection and the joy of creation.

3. Manipura: The Solar Plexus Chakra

  • Location: Above the navel

  • Color: Yellow

  • Element: Fire

The Manipura is your "power center." It governs your self-esteem, willpower, and inner strength. An awakened Manipura allows you to manifest your intentions and take decisive action in your life.

4. Anahata: The Heart Chakra

  • Location: Center of the chest

  • Color: Green

  • Element: Air

The Anahata serves as the bridge between the physical and spiritual realms. It is the seat of unconditional love, compassion, and healing. As Kundalini opens the heart, your sense of "self" begins to expand to include others.

5. Vishuddha: The Throat Chakra

  • Location: Throat

  • Color: Blue

  • Element: Ether (Space)

This is the center of communication and truth. The Vishuddha allows you to speak your authentic truth and express your inner self clearly. It is where your internal wisdom finds its external voice.

6. Ajna: The Third Eye Chakra

  • Location: Between the eyebrows

  • Color: Indigo

  • Element: Light

The Ajna chakra is the seat of intuition and perception beyond the physical senses. When Kundalini reaches this point, the "veil of duality" begins to lift, granting clarity of mind and deep spiritual insight.

7. Sahasrara: The Crown Chakra
  • Location: Top of the head

  • Color: Violet/White

  • Element: Beyond elements

The final destination. When Kundalini merges with the Sahasrara, the individual soul (Atman) experiences union with the Universal Consciousness (Brahman). This is the state of Samadhi, or enlightenment—the ultimate goal of the spiritual seeker.

Why Understanding the Chakras Matters

ChakraCore FocusSpiritual Benefit
RootStabilityFearlessness
SacralPleasureEmotional Intelligence
Solar PlexusWillpowerSelf-Confidence
HeartLoveEmpathy & Peace
ThroatExpressionAuthenticity
Third EyeIntuitionWisdom
CrownLiberationUniversal Oneness

The Importance of Safe Awakening

Awakening Kundalini is a powerful process that should ideally be approached with patience and, if possible, the guidance of an experienced teacher. Because this energy is so potent, it can be overwhelming if the chakras are blocked or if the body is not prepared.

Yoga: Journey into Obesity Management

Sailors practice yoga poses on deck of aircraft carrier
U.S. Naval Forces Central Command/U.S.
Fifth Fleet
CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

The Breath Between the Pounds: A Narrative Journey into Obesity Management and Yoga 

The fluorescent hum of the clinic office felt like a spotlight on the chart. 

"Body Mass Index: 34.2," the black ink glared back. Beside it, the numbers for fasting glucose and triglycerides sat like a row of red warning lights on a dashboard. 

For years, the approach to these numbers has been a mechanical one: calories in, calories out—a simple math problem applied to a complex human soul.

But managing obesity and metabolic health is rarely about math. It is about the chemistry of stress, the architecture of habit, and the silent signals sent between the gut and the brain. It is here, in the intersection of biology and mindfulness, where the ancient practice of yoga moves from a stretching routine to a metabolic intervention.

The Silent Fire: Understanding Metabolic Syndrome

To understand how yoga heals, one must first see the "silent fire" of systemic inflammation. When adipose tissue (body fat) expands beyond its capacity, it doesn't just sit there. It becomes an active endocrine organ, pumping out cytokines—pro-inflammatory signals that gum up the works of insulin receptors.

Imagine your cells as a busy restaurant. Insulin is the waiter trying to deliver glucose (the food) to the tables. In a state of metabolic dysfunction, the "noise" of inflammation is so loud the waiters can’t hear the orders. The glucose stays in the hallway—the bloodstream—clogging the exits and damaging the walls. This is insulin resistance, the precursor to Type 2 Diabetes and the cornerstone of obesity.

The Cortisol Connection: Why "Trying Harder" Sometimes Fails

Many embark on a journey of grueling, high-impact workouts to "blast" the fat away. While movement is essential, the "grind" mentality often spikes cortisol, the body’s primary stress hormone.

When cortisol remains high, the body receives a prehistoric signal: "Danger is coming. Hoard the fuel." The result? Stubborn visceral fat—the kind that wraps around the liver and heart.

This is where the "showing" of yoga begins. Watch a practitioner move through a slow Vinyasa or hold a Savasana. They aren't just lying on a rubber mat; they are manually overriding their sympathetic nervous system. Through deep, diaphragmatic breathing, they stimulate the vagus nerve, sending a physical telegram to the brain that says, "We are safe." When the brain believes it is safe, cortisol drops. When cortisol drops, the body finally stops hoarding.

Image by ChatGPT

More Than a Stretch: The Yoga-Metabolic Link

Yoga manages obesity through a three-pronged internal revolution:

1. The Endocrine Reset

Twisting postures, like Ardha Matsyendrasana (Half Lord of the Fishes), aren't just for flexibility. As the torso wrings out, it creates a "squeeze and soak" effect on the abdominal organs. 

This temporary compression followed by a rush of fresh, oxygenated blood helps stimulate the pancreas and liver, improving their efficiency in processing sugars and toxins.

2. The Muscle-Metabolism Engine

While yoga may look serene, holding a "Warrior II" pose for sixty seconds creates an isometric fire in the quadriceps and glutes. Muscle is metabolically expensive tissue. By building lean muscle mass through bodyweight resistance, a yoga practitioner increases their Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR). They are burning more energy even while they sleep.

3. The Mindfulness of Satiety

Perhaps the most potent "SEO" for the soul is Mindful Awareness. Yoga teaches a practitioner to distinguish between "stomach hunger" (a physical need) and "heart hunger" (an emotional void).

A Day in the Life: From Friction to Flow

Consider the difference in a day. Before yoga, a stressful meeting leads to a hand in a bag of chips—a mindless reflex to numb the cortisol spike. After three months of practice, the same stressor arises. Instead of the reflex, the practitioner feels the tightening in their chest. They take one "Ujjayi" breath. The "gap" between the stimulus and the response widens.

The choice to eat a nutrient-dense meal isn't a "dietary restriction" anymore; it’s an act of self-care. This shift from external discipline to internal desire is the secret sauce of long-term weight maintenance.

Integrating Yoga into a Clinical Strategy

For those managing obesity, yoga should not replace medical consultation but rather act as the "connective tissue" of the treatment plan.

FeatureImpact on Metabolic Health
Pranayama (Breathing)Lowers oxidative stress and blood pressure.
Asana (Postures)Increases glucose uptake by skeletal muscles.
Dhyana (Meditation)Reduces emotional eating and improves sleep quality.

By lowering systemic inflammation, yoga makes the body more "sensitive" to its own signals. It’s like cleaning the windows of a house; suddenly, the light (insulin) can get in, and the internal environment brightens.

The Path Forward

Managing your metabolic health is not a sprint toward a lower number on a scale; it is a slow walk back to yourself. It is about realizing that your body is not an enemy to be conquered, but a garden to be tended. When you step onto the mat, you aren't just burning calories. You are recalibrating your hormones, soothing your nervous system, and rewriting the story of your health, one breath at a time.

Yoga Teaching of Swami Vivekananda

Swami Vivekananda {{PD-US}}
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Yoga Teaching of Swami Vivekananda: A Comprehensive Study

Swami Vivekananda stands as one of India’s greatest spiritual leaders and philosophers, whose teachings on yoga transformed global understanding of Indian spirituality. 

He presented yoga not merely as a physical discipline, but as a complete science of life and consciousness

Through his clear interpretations of ancient Vedantic wisdom, Vivekananda showed how yoga could help individuals achieve self-realization, inner harmony, and universal brotherhood. 

His teachings remain deeply relevant in the modern world, where people seek balance amid material and psychological stress.

Swami Vivekananda: Life and Spiritual Mission

Born in 1863 as Narendranath Datta, Swami Vivekananda was a brilliant student with a questioning mind. His spiritual journey began under the guidance of his guru, Sri Ramakrishna Paramahamsa, who emphasized direct experience of God over ritualistic practices. After his guru’s passing, Vivekananda dedicated his life to spreading spiritual wisdom and uplifting humanity.

His historic address at the Parliament of the World’s Religions in Chicago in 1893 introduced Indian philosophy, yoga, and Vedanta to the Western world. Through this platform, he emphasized unity among religions and the universality of spiritual truth, earning worldwide admiration.

Swami Vivekananda
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Meaning of Yoga in Vivekananda’s Teachings

For Swami Vivekananda, yoga was not limited to bodily exercises or breathing techniques. He defined yoga as a method of disciplining the mind and awakening inner consciousness. The word “yoga” means union—the union of the individual soul with the universal reality. 

According to Vivekananda, every human being possesses infinite potential, and yoga is the means to manifest this hidden divinity.

He viewed yoga as a practical and scientific path, emphasizing experience over belief. 

Yoga, in his philosophy, helps individuals transcend ignorance, control mental fluctuations, and realize their true nature beyond the body and mind.

Swami Vivekananda
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The Four Yogas Explained by Swami Vivekananda

One of Swami Vivekananda’s most significant contributions to yoga philosophy is his systematic explanation of the four paths of yoga, each suited to different human temperaments. 

Though distinct, all paths ultimately lead to the same goal—self-realization.

1. Karma Yoga – The Path of Selfless Action

Karma Yoga is the yoga of action performed without attachment to results. Vivekananda taught that work becomes worship when done selflessly and without ego. According to him, every individual must work, but bondage arises when one works for personal gain.

Through Karma Yoga, one learns to perform duties with dedication while renouncing the fruits of action. This path purifies the heart, reduces selfishness, and fosters compassion. Vivekananda emphasized service to humanity as the highest form of worship, a principle that became central to his social and spiritual mission.

2. Bhakti Yoga – The Path of Devotion

Bhakti Yoga focuses on love, devotion, and surrender to the Divine. Vivekananda described devotion as a powerful force that transforms the human heart and dissolves egoism. Unlike ritual-centered worship, Bhakti Yoga emphasizes inner sincerity and emotional purity.

This path includes prayer, chanting, meditation on God, and cultivating virtues such as humility, faith, and compassion. Bhakti Yoga is particularly suitable for those with an emotional temperament, as it channels feelings toward spiritual growth and inner peace.

3. Jnana Yoga – The Path of Knowledge

Jnana Yoga is the intellectual and philosophical path of self-inquiry. Rooted in Advaita Vedanta, this yoga seeks to remove ignorance by discerning between the real and the unreal. Vivekananda taught that ignorance is the cause of human suffering, and knowledge is the key to liberation.

Through study, reflection, meditation, and reasoning, practitioners of Jnana Yoga realize that the individual self and universal reality are one. This path requires sharp intellect, discipline, and detachment from worldly illusions.

4. Raja Yoga – The Path of Mental Discipline

Raja Yoga is considered the “royal path” because it directly addresses control of the mind. Vivekananda presented Raja Yoga as a systematic approach based on ethical discipline, concentration, and meditation. He emphasized mastery over thoughts, emotions, and desires as essential for spiritual progress.

Raja Yoga includes practices such as meditation, breath regulation, and concentration techniques. According to Vivekananda, a controlled mind becomes a powerful instrument for self-realization and inner freedom.

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Core Principles of Vivekananda’s Yoga Philosophy

Swami Vivekananda’s yoga teachings are founded on timeless principles that make them universally applicable:

Yoga Is Practical and Experiential

He rejected blind faith and dogma, urging individuals to test spiritual truths through personal experience.

Unity of All Yogic Paths

Though he described four yogas, Vivekananda emphasized that all paths lead to the same ultimate truth and can be practiced together.

Divinity of the Human Soul

Vivekananda firmly believed that every soul is inherently divine, and yoga is the process of uncovering this divinity.

Relevance of Vivekananda’s Yoga in the Modern World

In today’s fast-paced and stressful lifestyle, yoga is often reduced to physical fitness. Swami Vivekananda’s teachings remind us that yoga is a complete system for mental, moral, and spiritual development. His emphasis on self-discipline, service, and inner awareness offers solutions to modern problems such as anxiety, materialism, and loss of purpose.

His holistic vision of yoga integrates physical health with ethical living, mental clarity, and spiritual awakening—making it deeply relevant for contemporary society.

Conclusion

Swami Vivekananda’s yoga teachings represent a timeless synthesis of ancient wisdom and practical spirituality. By presenting yoga as a scientific, inclusive, and transformative path, he made it accessible to people of all cultures and beliefs. His vision of yoga—encompassing action, devotion, knowledge, and meditation—guides individuals toward self-realization and universal harmony.

In an age searching for meaning and balance, the yoga philosophy of Swami Vivekananda continues to illuminate the path toward inner peace, strength, and spiritual freedom.