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Kino's Yogi Assignment Blog

Ashtanga Yoga Guru – K. Pattabhi Jois: 1915 – 2009 – In Memoriam

A Guru is a person whose very presence imparts truth and awakening in the disciple. When I traveled to Mysore for the first time at the age of 22 I asked K. Pattabhi Jois where I could find the illusive state of inner peace that all yoga practice seeks to instill. Known as KPJ to his students, he said “You take it practice many years, then Shantih is coming… no problem” and my heart opened to the grace of his teaching. It is my great fortune to consider this amazing man my teacher and I attribute the depth of my personal practice and teaching to the light that KPJ ‘s fire ignited within me.

K. Pattabhi Jois taught Ashtanga yoga for more than 65 years before passing on May 18, 2009. It was the depth and power of KPJ i himself that inspired his students to have faith in themselves and in Ashtanga yoga. The miracle of Jois’s life and legacy far exceeds his physical presence and is perhaps the very definition of the word Guru. It is the strength of Jois’ very being that made the difference in his teaching and his spirit will live in yoga forever. Speaking in his endearingly broken English, KPJ communicated a transcendental knowledge of yoga despite his lack of full linguistic fluency. It is not what he said but the space that he held that carried forth the ineffable and made realization possible in every student lucky enough to practice under his guidance. While KPJ may have left this Earth he lives in the pulse of Ashtanga yoga in every student and teacher around the world.

Each day of Jois’ life marked a relentless devotion to the Ashtanga yoga lineage which he carried with absolute integrity. A humble man born before both world wars, KPJ ‘s lifelong dedication to yoga transformed the lives of countless people around the world. Born in a small village called Kowshika in Southern India on Guru Purnima day, the first full moon of July in 1915 designated as a national holiday in India to honor all Gurus, his life embodied the tradition of the sacred teacher-student relationship. First Jois was a devoted student after discovering yoga at the age of 12 when he saw the man who would become his teacher, Krishnamacharya, give a yoga demonstration at his school. Studying daily for two years he devoted himself to yoga at an early age and ultimately moved to Mysore to continue his education in yoga and Sanskrit Studies. There he flourished as a scholar and yoga teacher. And it was only after Jois taught the Maharaja of Mysore, Krishna Rajendra Wodeyar, that the Yoga Department of the Sanskrit College of Mysore began on March 1, 1937 with the approval and blessing of Krishnamacharya. After 37 years of professorship he earned the tital of Vidwan (professor emeritus of Sanskrit Studies).

Each day of Jois’ life marked a relentless devotion to the Ashtanga yoga lineage which he carried with absolute integrity. A humble man born before both world wars, KPJ ‘s lifelong dedication to yoga transformed the lives of countless people around the world. Born in a small village called Kowshika in Southern India on Guru Purnima day, the first full moon of July in 1915 designated as a national holiday in India to honor all Gurus, his life embodied the tradition of the sacred teacher-student relationship. First Jois was a devoted student after discovering yoga at the age of 12 when he saw the man who would become his teacher, Krishnamacharya, give a yoga demonstration at his school. Studying daily for two years he devoted himself to yoga at an early age and ultimately moved to Mysore to continue his education in yoga and Sanskrit Studies. There he flourished as a scholar and yoga teacher. And it was only after Jois taught the Maharaja of Mysore, Krishna Rajendra Wodeyar, that the Yoga Department of the Sanskrit College of Mysore began on March 1, 1937 with the approval and blessing of Krishnamacharya. After 37 years of professorship he earned the tital of Vidwan (professor emeritus of Sanskrit Studies).

Always joyful to see a new student, KPJ carried the torch of Ashtanga yoga while it grew over the last 34 years from a few disinterested students into a flowering, international community of dedicated, passionate practitioners. He lived to see Ashtanga yoga reach more than 30 different countries, transform thousands (if not millions) of yoga practitioners and sprout centers all around the world. The full fruition of his life’s work became manifest within his lifetime.

Ashtanga yoga is now one of the most powerful, popular and proven methods of yoga available today. This dynamic flowing series of postures traces its lineage to an ancient sage named Vamana Rishi in the Yoga Korunta. Combining breathe and movement in Vinyasa, Ashtanga yoga purifies the body through the stimulation of internal heat (agni). Used together with the Tristana method specifically taught by Jois, Ashtanga practitioners concentrate their minds by focusing on three things: breathe (ujjayi pranayama), posture (asana) and gaze (dristhi). With more than 65 years of diligent, soulful teaching KPJ maintained the Ashtanga yoga method in its pure form. All authorized and certified Ashtanga yoga teachers must study at the K. Pattabhi Jois Ashtanga Yoga Institute in Mysore, India and learn the method directly from Sharath Rangaswamy, Jois’s grandson and the current master of the Ashtanga yoga lineage, and Saraswathi Rangaswamy (Jois’ daughter). In order to maintain the ancient tradition of Guru Parampara (an unbroken succession of direct teacher to student transmission), Ashtanga yoga demands that you delve deeply within yourself and experience first hand the transformative power of yoga just as Jois himself did before you begin teaching.

KPJ used to say, “Ashtanga yoga is for all people, old people, young people, fat people, skinny people, only not lazy people.” That is because Ashtanga yoga is challenging; it asks tightness to bend, softness to be strong and pushes the limits of the mind and the body beyond popular medical notions of safety, possibility and comfort. In doing so practitioners literally expand their consciousness. While containing six series of postures, most practitioners spend their entire lives working on the first or Primary Series of Ashtanga yoga because its level of strength and flexibility is already quite challenging. Sharath Rangaswamy is the only person on Earth who practices the magical Sixth Series of Asthanga yoga and he is the only person truly qualified to carry on the full teaching of Ashtanga yoga. Yet the Primary Series is a complete practice that burns through accumulated toxins within the body and heightens the level of health. Without regular cleansing the body collects toxins from the environment, food and even emotional states that if left unattended can sometimes lead to disease and discomfort later in life. Yet health and comfort can easily return to the body regular, disciplined yoga practice. While it is no magic pill able to cure all ailments, Jois’ long, healthy life is a testament to the true power of Ashtanga yoga. Yoga is as strong as you make it and takes you as deep as you are willing to go.

We have the practice of Ashtanga yoga today because of K. Pattabhi Jois’s unwavering dedication to sharing his wisdom every student willing to put in the hard work of daily discipline. There is no greater way we can honor KPJ ‘s life than to get on our mats and practice every day. He gave us the gift of Ashtanga yoga and now it is our responsibility to venerate his memory with our own commitment to yoga. If there is one thing I know for sure, it is that KPJ wants us all to take “practice, practice, practice…. then all is coming.”

by Kino MacGregor
Copyright 2009 Kino MacGregor | All rights reserved