The Moral and Ethical Codes of Yoga
What is my Sphere of influence in the World? How do my yoga practices affect anyone else?
In Teacher Training we always talk about the Yamas and Niyamas; yoga’s moral and ethical codes. Doing asana without the underlying philosophy is just exercise. Yoga is more than that.
The Yamas are restraints for proper conduct; giving us tips on how to interact with each other. The Yamas are:
Ahimsa or non-violence, Satya or truthfulness, Asteya or non-stealing, Brahmacarya or sexual restraint and Aparigraha or non-hoarding.
Inevitably when we talk about these restraints students always remark that while they might be practicing these rules that there is evidence of the opposite of these behaviors out in the world. The Yoga Sutras speak directly to that. The Yoga Sutra on ahimsa says explicitly:
Ahimsaa-pratishthaayaam tat-samnidhau vaira-tyaagah. Patanjali Y.S. 2.35All others will cease to feel hostility in the presence of one who is firmly established in ahimsa.
The only non-violence or truthfulness that we can be responsible for is our own. We have no control over others. But our actions can have a ripple effect.
Sharon Salzberg, a Buddhist meditation teacher, wrote a recent blog post for ON BEING on just this topic called “Your Three Feet of Influence”. This article shows how our practices ripple out into the world creating our Sphere of Influence.