आत्मन एष प्राणो जायते

Atmana Esha Prano Jayate

The Breath Is Born from the Self

December 1, 2017

Dear seekers,

December has begun! The final month of the year is a time of celebration, and a time that shimmers with all the joyful good wishes we send to one another.

Have you seen Season’s Greetings from Gurumayi on the Siddha Yoga path website? Isn’t it mesmerizing? Each time I receive Gurumayi’s Season’s Greetings, I experience her grace flowing through the images—and I feel grateful to be a part of this global family of seekers, bathed in the compassion of a living Master.

This month, we look forward to A Sweet Surprise Satsang 2018, when, on January 1, Gurumayi gives her Message for the coming year. For me, receiving Gurumayi’s Message on the first day of the year is like crossing a threshold and entering a new and exciting chapter of my sadhana, full of new discoveries and transformation. Details will be posted very soon of how you can participate in this satsang at a location near you or online, here on the Siddha Yoga path website.

And we still have one month left of 2017, so we can give ourselves fully, throughout each of the final weeks and days and hours of this year, to our continued study and practice of Gurumayi’s Message for 2017:

Breathe in deeply the fragrance of the Heart.
Revel in the light of the Supreme Self.
Breathe out gently the benevolent power of the Heart.

Throughout the year, I’ve striven to put into practice Gurumayi’s wish that we make her Message our own. I made it a habit to repeat the words of the Message to myself a number of times throughout the day, and to enter meditation each morning guided by it. I have also turned to the website daily to support my study, and each day I have found profound teachings that have expanded and illuminated my understanding. As a result, I notice that my mind is drawn to the breath more and more often, even in the midst of my daily activities. Most of all, the study of Gurumayi’s Message has prepared me to embrace one of the greatest events of my life with a heightened awareness of its beauty and significance.

Very recently I was blessed to witness the birth of my first child. I will never forget the profound gratitude that washed over me as I heard his first cries and listened as the air entered his lungs for the first time, inaugurating his journey into this world. Today, as I hold him fast asleep in my arms, I feel the movements of his tiny torso peacefully inhaling and exhaling, and I have a clear sense of the breath as the luminous substance that life is made of.

This experience is vivid in my mind as I prepare to explore the last of the eleven teachings Gurumayi gave us to support our study and practice of her Message for 2017.

Gurumayi’s teaching is:

The sound of your breath is music to your soul.

The precious, sacred sound of my son’s breath helps me to become aware of the beauty and sacredness that exist in the sound of my own breath.

Sometimes I experience my breath as a quiet, gentle whisper. Other times, when I don’t perceive a physical sound, I can tune into the subtle music of the breath by watching its incoming and outgoing rhythm.

I have also discovered that when I shift my perspective and listen to my breath as music, I have a new appreciation for my breath. Sometimes I imagine this sound as the breath’s lullaby for the mind, calming it into blissful silence. Sometimes I hear it as the soothing song of a gentle breeze rustling through trees.

As I pay careful attention to the sound of my own breath, to its rhythm, to its pure music, my mind becomes quieter, and I am drawn inwards. In that quiet space within, I can recognize the blissful source of the out-breath and in-breath—and know this source as my own innermost Self.

This truth is beautifully expressed in the Brihadaranyakopanishad, which says:

devanagari
devanagari
 He who breathes through your breath is your Self.1

To touch and know the source of our breath is to experience its divine origin.

motif

One of the ways Gurumayi teaches us about the power of the breath is by guiding our engagement with Siddha Yoga music.

A friend who offered seva for many years in the Siddha Yoga Music Department in Shree Muktananda Ashram recently shared an experience she had in a music rehearsal with Gurumayi. As the ensemble was doing vocal warm-ups, Gurumayi noticed that some of the vocalists were trying too hard, and as they became physically tense, their voices were not fully resonant.

So, Gurumayi asked one of the vocalists to lie down on the floor in a comfortable and relaxed position. Then she had him continue to do the same vocal warm-ups. As he released the tension in his body, his breath softened and became totally easeful. The sound of his voice became richer, fuller, and sweeter.

“Ahh… so much more relaxed!” Gurumayi said with a smile.

This vocalist was the only one doing the exercise, yet the whole ensemble followed Gurumayi’s instructions while standing, opening space in the body for the breath to flow freely. My friend said the sound coming out of the ensemble was vibrant, sweet, and effortless—they were connected with the place that their breath and their melodious voices come from: the divine Self.

When I heard this story, I thought of my own experience as a professional singer. It is my highest aspiration, as I sing, to let the Self express itself melodiously through my voice. This can only happen when my awareness rests on the natural flow of my breathing and I feel centered and connected to the source of the breath. The voice that emerges in those moments resonates with the delight and radiance of my deepest Self. It is music from the soul, for the soul.

motif

This year we have all made so many discoveries about the breath: it is the life-giving process that supports our existence and the invisible road on which we travel inward to our own Self. As we sing, or chant, or speak, our voices are carried on our breath out into the world, and when we are silent, the breath constantly plays its music for our soul’s delight.

Moreover, the music of the breath never stops playing as long as we live. We can listen to it at any moment during the day—while turning on the computer, commuting to work, washing the dishes, preparing for a joyful holiday season.

What a beautiful gift.

I wish you a harmonious month of December, and happy, vibrant holidays.

With warm regards,

Pedro Sá Moraes
Siddha Yoga Meditation Teacher

1Brihandaranyakopanishad 3.4.1.
Title from Prashnopanishad, 3.3; English rendering © 2017 SYDA Foundation®.

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    While practicing the teaching of the month—The sound of your breath is music to your soul.—I experienced an aspect of the significance of the breath, for me, that I hadn’t been fully aware of: the breath is a vehicle to the Self!
     
    I had been focusing on the connection between the breath and the mind—on seeing the breath as a calming influence and a means of returning the mind to the repetition of the mantra. It was so wonderful to follow the sound of my breath to the space of inner bliss—and to remember that this is an experience of the Self.

    New York, USA

    I’ve recently decided to focus more on listening to my breath and reflecting on the Self instead of spending so much time listening to news and music. I started adding mantra japa to the flow of my breath, and I also contemplate Gurumayi’s Message for 2017 while breathing consciously. In this way, throughout my day, I can refocus my attention on the inner Self and find inspiration, love, and joy. As a result, I feel happier and more fulfilled.

    Thank you, Gurumayi, for giving me the key to everlasting joy.

    a Siddha Yogi from New York, USA

    On reading about the birth of the author’s baby, I experienced a deep sense of gratitude for my mother for protecting me within her womb and bringing me into this world to experience prana-shakti, the power of my breath. One way in which I experience prana-shakti is through offering music seva.

    When I do this, I have experienced that whenever I was totally relaxed inside, I felt that my whole being was resonating, as the breath moved freely within.

    Dombivli, India

    I could feel my own breath slow and become fuller as I read the December letter. I was aware of my whole being settling into my heart as I read about the author and his newborn baby. And I resonated with the many ways the author shared about how he has been making Gurumayi’s Message his own.  

    While offering music seva in Gurudev Siddha Peeth, I found that chanting taught me how to breathe more deeply and freely. And, like the vocalist whom Gurumayi taught to relax, I found that when I relaxed into the breath, the sound I made while chanting was more beautiful and more connected to my whole body and my heart. This is a practice I have now carried into my daily life.
     
    I am grateful for this beautiful description of this month’s teaching from Gurumayi’s Message. This December I will be focusing on how my breath is the soundtrack of my life.

    Colorado, USA

    Today I had a kind of therapy that involves breathing pure oxygen. To try to bring in the oxygen more deeply, I did three mantra repetitions on the in-breath and three on the out-breath. After thirty minutes of this, I stopped counting and decided to read instead. 
     
    Afterwards, the technician told me that I took in oxygen more efficiently when I was reading. She said I looked more relaxed and that made my breathing more efficient. She said, “Don’t try so hard!”
     
    After reading the letter for December, and particularly Gurumayi’s instruction to the musicians to relax, I understood the breath much better. I don’t have to make it happen—it is the gift of the Self. For me, trusting my own breath means trusting my own Self. I realized that my ego had been congratulating itself on each breath’s depth and length, while the prana was simply doing its work!
     
    I laughed out loud and thanked my beloved Guru for being the instrument of my understanding yet again.

    Beccles, United Kingdom

    This inspiring letter has given me further insight into, and appreciation for, the breath.
     
    As I finished reading the letter, I realized that this blessed year’s drawing  to an end is like the exhalation of a breath, and the arrival of the new year will be like the inhalation of a new breath. And what is like the space between the breaths? The wonderful anticipation of receiving Gurumayi’s Message for 2018!  
     
    Throughout the year I’ve been repeating Gurumayi’s Message for 2017 three times before my morning meditation, as well as throughout the day. With each part of the breath—the inhalation, the space between the breaths, and the exhalation—I repeated one line of Gurumayi’s Message.
     
    Through this practice, I came to realize how every part of my breath is equally vital and essential. Whenever I bring my awareness to this blessed continuity, I am inevitably filled with profound peace. This practice, and now this letter, have brought an even greater awareness that the Guru—the Self—is my very breath.

    New York, USA

    Thank you for this wonderful introduction to the month of December. I was immediately drawn to a space of sweetness and gentleness where I felt intimately connected to my breath. I felt so much love when hearing about the author’s experience with his newborn baby.

    Vancouver, Canada

    Reading this letter touched my heart deeply and gave me a clear understanding of how, in Gurumayi’s words, “The sound of your breath is music to your soul.”

    Reflecting on the quote from the Brihadaranyakopanishad—“He who breathes through your breath is your Self.”gave me such a warm and affectionate feeling towards my own breath. When I realized it is not my breath, but the Supreme Self who is breathing within this body, I felt I could understand that “I am That.”
     
    This awareness fills me with love.
     

    New Delhi, India

    This morning, as I woke up, I wanted to think of a happy moment, and the memory of the instant I saw my daughter for the first time arose in my mind. Then, I opened the Siddha Yoga path website and read this beautiful, illuminating letter—including the story of the birth of the author’s son!
     
    I was amazed and grateful to realize that Gurumayi guides us from within and without with such synchronicity.
     
    Thank you, my beloved Guru, for your endless guidance.
     

    Rome, Italy

    Thank you for this beautiful introduction to the month of December! These words fill me with love and music.
     
    I’m so grateful to read about the sweetness of the author’s newborn baby’s breath. This reminded me of the ever-new source of my own breath and the gentle space that opens when I listen to it.
     

    New York, USA