Dietetic Discipline - Pranayama and Yoga






The proficient in Yoga should abandon articles of food, detrimental to the practice of Yoga. He should give up salt, mustard, sour, hot, pungent and bitter things, asafoetida, worship of fire, women, too much walking, bathing at sunrise, emaciation of the body by fasts, etc.  During the early stages of practice food of milk and ghee is ordained; also food consisting of wheat, green pulse and red rice is said to favour the progress. Then he will be able to retain his breath as long as he likes. 

By thus retaining the breath as long as he likes Kevala Kumbhaka (cessation of breath without inspiration and expiration) is attained.  When Kevala Kumbhaka is attained by one, expiration and inspiration are dispensed with.  There is nothing unattainable in the three worlds for him.  In the commencement of his practice sweat is getting out.  As a frog moves by leaps so the Yogi sitting in Padmasana moves on the earth.  With a further increased practice, he is able to rise from the ground.

While he seated in lotus-posture, levitates.  Then arise in him the power to perform extraordinary feats.  Any pain, small or great, does not affect the Yogi.  Then excretions and sleep are diminished; tears, rheum in the eyes, salivary flow, sweat and bad smell in the mouth, do not arise in him.  With a still further practice, he acquires great strength by which he attains Bhuchara Siddhi which enables him to bring under his control all the creatures that tread on this earth; tigers, Sarabhas, elephants, wild bulls and lions even die by a blow given by the palms of this Yogi.  He becomes as beautiful as the God of Love himself.  By the preservation of the semen a good odour pervades the body of the Yogi. Yogic


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