The Foundation of Ancient Longevity Yoga
Every human heart comes preprogrammed with a certain amount of beats, or so the modern research is telling us. Once those billions of heartbeats have sounded their sound and done their work, the time of that particular heart is done. Slowing the heart rate then becomes a prime strategy for giving us more years for our beats, and the yogis of India understood this fact. One of the first scientific demonstrations made by accomplished yogis Swami Rama and Swami Yogananda when they first came to the West was their ability to intentionally slow the heart rate.
The breath is the key to slowing the heart rate. The more effectively our breathing oxygenates venous blood, the less work the heart has to do. So the yogis developed more effective ways of breathing, they reduced the amount of toxins that were allowed to enter the bloodstream and practiced a host of techniques, from meditation to yoga postures, practices that harmonized the peripheral nervous system and slowed heart rate. The greatest of the yogis could stop their breathing for extended periods of time.
The Best Results Are Attained When There is Intensive Practice in all Three Phases of the Process.
Phase One
The first phase is called Purification and it pertains to the blood. The law is simple in this matter. When the blood is pure and free of toxins the heart rate slows because there is less oxygenating work to do. The cells of the body are constantly nourished with pure blood, inflammation is reduced, and all that heart work slows down. Therefore, right and pure diet, eating foods that are free of toxicity, maintains blood purity, which is the rock upon which all the practices of longevity yoga are based.
Phase Two
The second phase is called Rebalancing and it pertains to the nervous system. The peripheral nervous system is autonomic; it keeps working without any voluntary commands. It is, however, directly effected by both external and internal stimuli as well as the toxic load in the blood. Adept practitioners of longevity yoga, therefore liked to practice their rebalancing breathing techniques in quiet and solitary places, to reduce all those stimulations that turn the balanced hum of the autonomic nervous system into a stressful discordant pulse. Once blood purity is established then the breath becomes the main instrument for longevity yogis to play.
The key to longevity breathing then is long, slow, deep, feeling inhalations that not only consume large quantities of oxygen but they draw in a great quality of Qi. Accomplished longevity yogis do not just breath in air, they breath in the universal Qi upon which all life depends. This is accomplished with deep feeling breathing. The Qi is contacted, drawn in, and conducted through the application of deep feeling and breathing. Exhalation and inhalation are almost equalized with a slight preference given to the inhalation. Always take in a bit more than you give out with the breath.
Phase Three
The third phase is called Rejuvenation and it pertains to the endocrine system which is ultimately the secret spring of rejuvenation. All that energy wasted and thrown away in a stressed out nervous system, relaxes down, harmonizes, and pushes back into the endocrine system. All that pure blood flows into the glands as well. The body’s regenerative chemistry starts to flow as the machinery works less.
The yogis of Kashmir all had their powerful endocrine tonics . Ingesting the pure nutrition of nature, the very molecules upon which the body thrives ensures that the endocrine system is supplied with all of the necessary precursors that it requires to do its magical work. Ashwaganda, Shilajit, Triphala are just some of the many herbs and combination of herbs that longevity yogis have used to prime the Fountain of Youth.
Source: The Tao of Rejuvenation
You can learn more about practices we teach which contain all of the elements in Longevity Yoga and more on this website at the home page
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