Patanjali Yoga Sutra 3.39 - Knowledge Of Levitation | Yoga Teacher Training | Anvita Dixit

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  • Опубліковано 28 сер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 6

  • @robyn8842
    @robyn8842 4 місяці тому

    i love yhe word by word translations!!

  • @AbhiGupta-hv3mb
    @AbhiGupta-hv3mb 2 роки тому

    Can you please share your knowledge and text of the book on telegram as a pdf book on your telegram channel after each video on UA-cam.

  • @dharmayogaashram979
    @dharmayogaashram979 2 роки тому

    With your wonderful Sanskrit knowledge why do you capitulate to today's non Hindu phony yoga?

    • @johnfrey1
      @johnfrey1 2 роки тому

      I am a long time practitioner of the sutures. I do not speak Hindu. What do you mean by non-Hindu phony yoga? I spoke with Anvita for 90 minutes two weeks ago. I was highly impressed with her observations and depth of knowledge. I certainly did not sense any thing that was phony. I definitely intend on having monthly sessions with her. She would not intentionally present anything that was knowingly phony.
      I look forward to your clarification of your comment. Namaste

  • @shrutireddy3464
    @shrutireddy3464 Рік тому

    Can't watch the video beyond 4 minutes. It's full of mistakes in pronunciation and Sanskrit is highly stressed on pronunciation as the change in pronounciation changes the entire meaning. At a higher level, even change in intonation changes the meaning but it is beyond the scope of this video.
    It's not udaan but uḍaana .. The ending vowel being a short 'a' sound, like the first vowel 'a' in 'ago'...
    And the d sound is a retroflex sound.
    The Cerebral or Retroflex consonants are produced by curling the tongue to touch the roof of the mouth. These are ṭ, ṭh, ḍ, ḍh, and the nasal, ṇ.
    The above 5 sounds are present in Sanskrit and all South Indian languages. They are also present in hindi and also represented correctly on the screen in Devanagari lipi, but you have consistently pronounced it wrong throughout your explanation. It's surprising because no Indian, from children to grownups and from uneducated to educated, ever pronounces that sound wrong and yet you have pronounced it entirely incorrectly.
    Also, it's sooṭra, not soochra.
    You seem to have a high hindi influence and hence unable to speak Sanskrit correctly and misinterpreting the meanings based on hindi which itself is a non Indian language, based on Persian. It has adopted the Devanagari lipi just to assimilate into the Indian culture but in its true essence, hindi, urdu, persian etc languages are similar and don't have any Indian roots and hence no connection with Sanskrit.
    You need to unlearn hindi to start being able to pronounce and interpret Sanskrit words correctly. Try learning any South Indian language and that will give you a correct foundation on how to pronounce Sanskrit words correctly.