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Power of The Om
The crowds at Woodstock they chanted it in hopes the
world would give peace a chance.
Paramahansa Yogananda called it “the vibration
of the Cosmic Motor.”
The great father of yoga, Patanjali, advised
using it to overcome the obstacles and distractions in
life - all those stones in the path of enlightenment.
AUM (or as Westerners like
to spell it: OM) is a vital part of the
science of yoga. It’s a tool, a phenomenon, a mystery.
To many people, aum is just a word chanted in meditation,
or as a closing prayer in yoga practice. However, translator
and Bhagavad Gita scholar Barbara Stoler Miller notes
that “according to the ancient Indian traditions
preserved in the Upanishads, all speech and thought are
derived from one sound aum. It expresses the ultimate
reality.” Aum is considered the all-connecting sound
of the universe - one word interpreted as having three
sounds representing creation, preservation, and destruction.
Yoga teacher B.K.S. Iyengar devotes nearly
two pages in his book, Light on Yoga, to the various meanings
of aum.
“The letter A symbolizes
the conscious or waking state,” Iyengar says,
“the letter U the
dream state,
and the letter M the dreamless
sleep state of the mind and spirit.”
The entire symbol, Iyengar says, stands
for the “realization of man’s divinity within
himself.” Aum became the sacred word hum
of the Tibetans, amin of the Moslems,
and amen of the Egyptians, Greeks, Romans,
and Christians. Amen in Hebrew means “sure, faithful.”
Paramahansa Yogananda writes of the aum
as the “Word” of the Bible, as the Holy Spirit.
In the Christian Bible, Sat-Tat-Aum is spoken of as the
Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. According to Yogananda, all
aspiring yogis seek to commune with aum and understand
it. “Audible utterance of aum produces a sense of
sacredness...however, real understanding of aum is obtained
only by hearing it internally, and then becoming one with
it in all creation.”
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Chanting Aum
Aum is a way of deepening the concentration of the mind,
which leads to realization of the divine. The mantra
aum may be sounded aloud, whispered, or repeated mentally.
The correct pronunciation of aum is
to pronounce it om so it rhymes
with home. In The Yoga Book, author Steven
Sturgess offers a technique for chanting aum. He suggests
beginning meditation by chanting aum aloud for ten minutes,
then chant aum in a whisper for the next ten minutes,
and then mentally chant aum for ten minutes. Finally,
be still and meditate on the spiritual eye (the point
between your eyebrows). Surrender into the vibrations
of aum. “Feel your awareness expanding still further
into the field of pure consciousness, become one with
om,” Sturgess says.
Healing with Aum
The Self-Realization Fellowship, founded by Paramahansa
Yogananda in 1920, offers instructions on its Website
for using the Yogananda's aum healing technique. Yogananda
noted that everything in the universe is composed of
energy and that the apparent differentiation between
solids, liquids, gases, sound, and light is merely a
difference in their vibratory rates. He maintained that
by chanting the aum, the divine vibration, we can increase
the body’s supply of cosmic energy and even direct
it as a healing force to any part of the body, mind,
and soul.
It is said that 12,000 recitations of
aum remove all sins, while 12,000 recitations daily
for a period of one year bring realization of the Absolute
(brahman). If that seems a little overwhelming, simple
try chanting aum in your daily meditation and let the
incredible power of sound and vibration work for you.
Aum will bring your mind to a singular (yet universal)
focus. Or use it during your yoga class. My yoga teacher
always closes the class by leading us in three long
aums. I have come to look forward to those concluding
meditative moments of harmonizing voices - not just
because it signals an end to the torture (as practice
seems on some days) but because it leaves us with a
feeling of oneness.

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