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Below is a collection of Yoga articles and information that has been selected and compliled over my journey in yoga. I believe that they will benefits you greatly in your own journey, namaste! Laurence Milner

mantra

About Mantra

March 13, 20235 min read

MANTRA YOGA: JAPA AND AJAPA-JAPA

Mantra yoga is A key to stabilizing the mind

Many students of meditation and spiritual life complain of a noisy mind, out of control senses, and emotional challenges. One of the most significant, single suggestions of the ancient sages is the use of mantra japa, or sacred word to focus the mind. No amount of intellectualizing will convince you of this. It must be practiced for the benefits to be experienced. 
    Constant remembrance of mantra in Mantra yogaRegardless of what mantra you use, one of the most important principles is the practice of constant remembrance. By cultivating such a steady awareness many benefits come:

  • One who practices mantra japa in this way will find that the challenges and stressors of daily life are not nearly as disturbing.

  • The mantra gives a place of refuge, an oasis in which the mind can rest.

  • It is not escape, denial, or repression, but a tranquil companion.

  • The objects of the senses begin to lose their control over actions.

  • The incoming streams of negative thoughts, emotions, and desires from the unconscious mind attenuate, or become weaker.
    The mantra japa gradually becomes a best friend of the mind.
    Mantra japa leads one in the direction of deeper meditations, and subtler spiritual experiences. 

            Japa and Ajapa-Japa - Meditation technique

    Japa means repeating or remembering the mantra, and Ajapa-Japa means constant awareness. The letter A in front of the word Japa means without. Thus, Ajapa-Japa is the practice of Japa without the mental effort normally needed to repeat the mantra. In other words, it has begun to come naturally, turning into a constant awareness. The practice of constant remembrance evolves in stages:

  • At first, you intentionally repeat the syllables of the mantra internally, as if you are talking to yourself in your mind. You allow the inner sound to come at whatever speed feels comfortable to the mind. Sometimes it is very slow, as if the mind were wading through a vat of honey. At other times it is very fast, as if flying through the sky without restraint.

  • With practice, the mantra japa is repeated automatically, like a song that you have heard many times, which just comes on its own. (Some practitioners consider this automatic repeating to be the meaning of Ajapa-Japa, though there is a subtler meaning, as described below.)

  • Gradually, you merely remember the mantra with attention drawn to it. It is more like noticing what is already happening, rather than causing it to happen. It is somewhat like the attention stance of listening rather than speaking, though you might not literally hear the sound.

  • In time, the feeling of the mantra is there, even when the sound or remembering of the syllables is not there. For example, sometimes people will say, "OM, Shanti, Shanti, Shanti," where the word Shanti means peace or tranquility. During the remembering of the word there may be two things--the word and the feeling of peace or tranquility. When the syllables fade away, the feeling may still be there; this is remembrance of the feeling of the mantra.

  • As the practice evolves, there comes a pervasive awareness of the mantra, subtler than both the syllables and any surface level meaning or definition. This constant awareness is the meaning of Ajapa-Japa of the mantra.

        Choice of mantras for meditation
There are many mantras, words, or compact prayers that can be used for Japa and Ajapa-Japa. Virtually all of the meditation traditions, spiritual lineages, and religions have mantra in one form or another.


Some words have specific meaning, while others are seed syllables having only feeling, not literal, word-for-word definitions.
Some have religious significance, while others are completely non-sectarian.
Some have very subtle effects on energy, while others are more like positive affirmations given to train the conscious mind.
Whatever mantra, word, or syllables are used, useful benefits will come from the practice of Japa and Ajapa-Japa. 


There are some popular mantras like AUM, SOHAM, HAM SAH, and you can choose to work with them freely, as there are some mantras highly specialized, which meaning and purpose  as well as modus operandum ,you can find only if received through initiation form a yoga master/teacher, who realized into himself the power of that mantra (a Mantrika),  being able to transmit it to you in the moment of initiation ( shaktipat).

  • NOTE 1 : Whatever mantra you choose, know that you can have spiritual results only after repeating the mantra daily, for months, and years, not less than 100.000 repetitions. That is a serious work for a real seeker, and not only 108 times as heard from some guides. 108 its a Ritual fit number, and never a number fit for Liberation and Enlightenment. Serious seekers remember that!

  • NOTE 2 : Japa and Ajapa Mantra meditation are the first stages in working with a mantra, highly beneficially for mind as said. However the purpose is to attain higher states of mind, being able to be absorbed in deep meditation through sound/mantra. The next and last stage in working with a mantra is thus Laya Yoga ( the stage where.you hear the subtle sound of the mantra (the sound found beyond silence) and becoming one with it, you are absorbed into its field of energy, your consciousness becoming ONE with the mantra of choice and one with the deity. What happens in that moment and after that, well, you will need to see it yourself. But only the very curious and committed yogis will work diligently and find out..There is no place for weak willed in the superior planes of spiritual world. This Is the Truth!  



mantra
blog author image

Laurence Milner

LAURENCE has studied Hatha yoga,Vinyasa , Yin Yoga , Yin Yang Yoga , Mantra and Yantra Yoga (Raja), Tantra, Kundalini, Tibetan Yoga and Tibetan Vajrayana Buddhism, being a Master Yoga teacher and an inspiring spiritual guide

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TANTRA YOGA

mantra

About Mantra

March 13, 20235 min read

MANTRA YOGA: JAPA AND AJAPA-JAPA

Mantra yoga is A key to stabilizing the mind

Many students of meditation and spiritual life complain of a noisy mind, out of control senses, and emotional challenges. One of the most significant, single suggestions of the ancient sages is the use of mantra japa, or sacred word to focus the mind. No amount of intellectualizing will convince you of this. It must be practiced for the benefits to be experienced. 
    Constant remembrance of mantra in Mantra yogaRegardless of what mantra you use, one of the most important principles is the practice of constant remembrance. By cultivating such a steady awareness many benefits come:

  • One who practices mantra japa in this way will find that the challenges and stressors of daily life are not nearly as disturbing.

  • The mantra gives a place of refuge, an oasis in which the mind can rest.

  • It is not escape, denial, or repression, but a tranquil companion.

  • The objects of the senses begin to lose their control over actions.

  • The incoming streams of negative thoughts, emotions, and desires from the unconscious mind attenuate, or become weaker.
    The mantra japa gradually becomes a best friend of the mind.
    Mantra japa leads one in the direction of deeper meditations, and subtler spiritual experiences. 

            Japa and Ajapa-Japa - Meditation technique

    Japa means repeating or remembering the mantra, and Ajapa-Japa means constant awareness. The letter A in front of the word Japa means without. Thus, Ajapa-Japa is the practice of Japa without the mental effort normally needed to repeat the mantra. In other words, it has begun to come naturally, turning into a constant awareness. The practice of constant remembrance evolves in stages:

  • At first, you intentionally repeat the syllables of the mantra internally, as if you are talking to yourself in your mind. You allow the inner sound to come at whatever speed feels comfortable to the mind. Sometimes it is very slow, as if the mind were wading through a vat of honey. At other times it is very fast, as if flying through the sky without restraint.

  • With practice, the mantra japa is repeated automatically, like a song that you have heard many times, which just comes on its own. (Some practitioners consider this automatic repeating to be the meaning of Ajapa-Japa, though there is a subtler meaning, as described below.)

  • Gradually, you merely remember the mantra with attention drawn to it. It is more like noticing what is already happening, rather than causing it to happen. It is somewhat like the attention stance of listening rather than speaking, though you might not literally hear the sound.

  • In time, the feeling of the mantra is there, even when the sound or remembering of the syllables is not there. For example, sometimes people will say, "OM, Shanti, Shanti, Shanti," where the word Shanti means peace or tranquility. During the remembering of the word there may be two things--the word and the feeling of peace or tranquility. When the syllables fade away, the feeling may still be there; this is remembrance of the feeling of the mantra.

  • As the practice evolves, there comes a pervasive awareness of the mantra, subtler than both the syllables and any surface level meaning or definition. This constant awareness is the meaning of Ajapa-Japa of the mantra.

        Choice of mantras for meditation
There are many mantras, words, or compact prayers that can be used for Japa and Ajapa-Japa. Virtually all of the meditation traditions, spiritual lineages, and religions have mantra in one form or another.


Some words have specific meaning, while others are seed syllables having only feeling, not literal, word-for-word definitions.
Some have religious significance, while others are completely non-sectarian.
Some have very subtle effects on energy, while others are more like positive affirmations given to train the conscious mind.
Whatever mantra, word, or syllables are used, useful benefits will come from the practice of Japa and Ajapa-Japa. 


There are some popular mantras like AUM, SOHAM, HAM SAH, and you can choose to work with them freely, as there are some mantras highly specialized, which meaning and purpose  as well as modus operandum ,you can find only if received through initiation form a yoga master/teacher, who realized into himself the power of that mantra (a Mantrika),  being able to transmit it to you in the moment of initiation ( shaktipat).

  • NOTE 1 : Whatever mantra you choose, know that you can have spiritual results only after repeating the mantra daily, for months, and years, not less than 100.000 repetitions. That is a serious work for a real seeker, and not only 108 times as heard from some guides. 108 its a Ritual fit number, and never a number fit for Liberation and Enlightenment. Serious seekers remember that!

  • NOTE 2 : Japa and Ajapa Mantra meditation are the first stages in working with a mantra, highly beneficially for mind as said. However the purpose is to attain higher states of mind, being able to be absorbed in deep meditation through sound/mantra. The next and last stage in working with a mantra is thus Laya Yoga ( the stage where.you hear the subtle sound of the mantra (the sound found beyond silence) and becoming one with it, you are absorbed into its field of energy, your consciousness becoming ONE with the mantra of choice and one with the deity. What happens in that moment and after that, well, you will need to see it yourself. But only the very curious and committed yogis will work diligently and find out..There is no place for weak willed in the superior planes of spiritual world. This Is the Truth!  



mantra
blog author image

Laurence Milner

LAURENCE has studied Hatha yoga,Vinyasa , Yin Yoga , Yin Yang Yoga , Mantra and Yantra Yoga (Raja), Tantra, Kundalini, Tibetan Yoga and Tibetan Vajrayana Buddhism, being a Master Yoga teacher and an inspiring spiritual guide

Back to Blog
mantra

About Mantra

March 13, 20235 min read

MANTRA YOGA: JAPA AND AJAPA-JAPA

Mantra yoga is A key to stabilizing the mind

Many students of meditation and spiritual life complain of a noisy mind, out of control senses, and emotional challenges. One of the most significant, single suggestions of the ancient sages is the use of mantra japa, or sacred word to focus the mind. No amount of intellectualizing will convince you of this. It must be practiced for the benefits to be experienced. 
    Constant remembrance of mantra in Mantra yogaRegardless of what mantra you use, one of the most important principles is the practice of constant remembrance. By cultivating such a steady awareness many benefits come:

  • One who practices mantra japa in this way will find that the challenges and stressors of daily life are not nearly as disturbing.

  • The mantra gives a place of refuge, an oasis in which the mind can rest.

  • It is not escape, denial, or repression, but a tranquil companion.

  • The objects of the senses begin to lose their control over actions.

  • The incoming streams of negative thoughts, emotions, and desires from the unconscious mind attenuate, or become weaker.
    The mantra japa gradually becomes a best friend of the mind.
    Mantra japa leads one in the direction of deeper meditations, and subtler spiritual experiences. 

            Japa and Ajapa-Japa - Meditation technique

    Japa means repeating or remembering the mantra, and Ajapa-Japa means constant awareness. The letter A in front of the word Japa means without. Thus, Ajapa-Japa is the practice of Japa without the mental effort normally needed to repeat the mantra. In other words, it has begun to come naturally, turning into a constant awareness. The practice of constant remembrance evolves in stages:

  • At first, you intentionally repeat the syllables of the mantra internally, as if you are talking to yourself in your mind. You allow the inner sound to come at whatever speed feels comfortable to the mind. Sometimes it is very slow, as if the mind were wading through a vat of honey. At other times it is very fast, as if flying through the sky without restraint.

  • With practice, the mantra japa is repeated automatically, like a song that you have heard many times, which just comes on its own. (Some practitioners consider this automatic repeating to be the meaning of Ajapa-Japa, though there is a subtler meaning, as described below.)

  • Gradually, you merely remember the mantra with attention drawn to it. It is more like noticing what is already happening, rather than causing it to happen. It is somewhat like the attention stance of listening rather than speaking, though you might not literally hear the sound.

  • In time, the feeling of the mantra is there, even when the sound or remembering of the syllables is not there. For example, sometimes people will say, "OM, Shanti, Shanti, Shanti," where the word Shanti means peace or tranquility. During the remembering of the word there may be two things--the word and the feeling of peace or tranquility. When the syllables fade away, the feeling may still be there; this is remembrance of the feeling of the mantra.

  • As the practice evolves, there comes a pervasive awareness of the mantra, subtler than both the syllables and any surface level meaning or definition. This constant awareness is the meaning of Ajapa-Japa of the mantra.

        Choice of mantras for meditation
There are many mantras, words, or compact prayers that can be used for Japa and Ajapa-Japa. Virtually all of the meditation traditions, spiritual lineages, and religions have mantra in one form or another.


Some words have specific meaning, while others are seed syllables having only feeling, not literal, word-for-word definitions.
Some have religious significance, while others are completely non-sectarian.
Some have very subtle effects on energy, while others are more like positive affirmations given to train the conscious mind.
Whatever mantra, word, or syllables are used, useful benefits will come from the practice of Japa and Ajapa-Japa. 


There are some popular mantras like AUM, SOHAM, HAM SAH, and you can choose to work with them freely, as there are some mantras highly specialized, which meaning and purpose  as well as modus operandum ,you can find only if received through initiation form a yoga master/teacher, who realized into himself the power of that mantra (a Mantrika),  being able to transmit it to you in the moment of initiation ( shaktipat).

  • NOTE 1 : Whatever mantra you choose, know that you can have spiritual results only after repeating the mantra daily, for months, and years, not less than 100.000 repetitions. That is a serious work for a real seeker, and not only 108 times as heard from some guides. 108 its a Ritual fit number, and never a number fit for Liberation and Enlightenment. Serious seekers remember that!

  • NOTE 2 : Japa and Ajapa Mantra meditation are the first stages in working with a mantra, highly beneficially for mind as said. However the purpose is to attain higher states of mind, being able to be absorbed in deep meditation through sound/mantra. The next and last stage in working with a mantra is thus Laya Yoga ( the stage where.you hear the subtle sound of the mantra (the sound found beyond silence) and becoming one with it, you are absorbed into its field of energy, your consciousness becoming ONE with the mantra of choice and one with the deity. What happens in that moment and after that, well, you will need to see it yourself. But only the very curious and committed yogis will work diligently and find out..There is no place for weak willed in the superior planes of spiritual world. This Is the Truth!  



mantra
blog author image

Laurence Milner

LAURENCE has studied Hatha yoga,Vinyasa , Yin Yoga , Yin Yang Yoga , Mantra and Yantra Yoga (Raja), Tantra, Kundalini, Tibetan Yoga and Tibetan Vajrayana Buddhism, being a Master Yoga teacher and an inspiring spiritual guide

Back to Blog

TIBETAN YOGA

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UPANISHADS

mantra

About Mantra

March 13, 20235 min read

MANTRA YOGA: JAPA AND AJAPA-JAPA

Mantra yoga is A key to stabilizing the mind

Many students of meditation and spiritual life complain of a noisy mind, out of control senses, and emotional challenges. One of the most significant, single suggestions of the ancient sages is the use of mantra japa, or sacred word to focus the mind. No amount of intellectualizing will convince you of this. It must be practiced for the benefits to be experienced. 
    Constant remembrance of mantra in Mantra yogaRegardless of what mantra you use, one of the most important principles is the practice of constant remembrance. By cultivating such a steady awareness many benefits come:

  • One who practices mantra japa in this way will find that the challenges and stressors of daily life are not nearly as disturbing.

  • The mantra gives a place of refuge, an oasis in which the mind can rest.

  • It is not escape, denial, or repression, but a tranquil companion.

  • The objects of the senses begin to lose their control over actions.

  • The incoming streams of negative thoughts, emotions, and desires from the unconscious mind attenuate, or become weaker.
    The mantra japa gradually becomes a best friend of the mind.
    Mantra japa leads one in the direction of deeper meditations, and subtler spiritual experiences. 

            Japa and Ajapa-Japa - Meditation technique

    Japa means repeating or remembering the mantra, and Ajapa-Japa means constant awareness. The letter A in front of the word Japa means without. Thus, Ajapa-Japa is the practice of Japa without the mental effort normally needed to repeat the mantra. In other words, it has begun to come naturally, turning into a constant awareness. The practice of constant remembrance evolves in stages:

  • At first, you intentionally repeat the syllables of the mantra internally, as if you are talking to yourself in your mind. You allow the inner sound to come at whatever speed feels comfortable to the mind. Sometimes it is very slow, as if the mind were wading through a vat of honey. At other times it is very fast, as if flying through the sky without restraint.

  • With practice, the mantra japa is repeated automatically, like a song that you have heard many times, which just comes on its own. (Some practitioners consider this automatic repeating to be the meaning of Ajapa-Japa, though there is a subtler meaning, as described below.)

  • Gradually, you merely remember the mantra with attention drawn to it. It is more like noticing what is already happening, rather than causing it to happen. It is somewhat like the attention stance of listening rather than speaking, though you might not literally hear the sound.

  • In time, the feeling of the mantra is there, even when the sound or remembering of the syllables is not there. For example, sometimes people will say, "OM, Shanti, Shanti, Shanti," where the word Shanti means peace or tranquility. During the remembering of the word there may be two things--the word and the feeling of peace or tranquility. When the syllables fade away, the feeling may still be there; this is remembrance of the feeling of the mantra.

  • As the practice evolves, there comes a pervasive awareness of the mantra, subtler than both the syllables and any surface level meaning or definition. This constant awareness is the meaning of Ajapa-Japa of the mantra.

        Choice of mantras for meditation
There are many mantras, words, or compact prayers that can be used for Japa and Ajapa-Japa. Virtually all of the meditation traditions, spiritual lineages, and religions have mantra in one form or another.


Some words have specific meaning, while others are seed syllables having only feeling, not literal, word-for-word definitions.
Some have religious significance, while others are completely non-sectarian.
Some have very subtle effects on energy, while others are more like positive affirmations given to train the conscious mind.
Whatever mantra, word, or syllables are used, useful benefits will come from the practice of Japa and Ajapa-Japa. 


There are some popular mantras like AUM, SOHAM, HAM SAH, and you can choose to work with them freely, as there are some mantras highly specialized, which meaning and purpose  as well as modus operandum ,you can find only if received through initiation form a yoga master/teacher, who realized into himself the power of that mantra (a Mantrika),  being able to transmit it to you in the moment of initiation ( shaktipat).

  • NOTE 1 : Whatever mantra you choose, know that you can have spiritual results only after repeating the mantra daily, for months, and years, not less than 100.000 repetitions. That is a serious work for a real seeker, and not only 108 times as heard from some guides. 108 its a Ritual fit number, and never a number fit for Liberation and Enlightenment. Serious seekers remember that!

  • NOTE 2 : Japa and Ajapa Mantra meditation are the first stages in working with a mantra, highly beneficially for mind as said. However the purpose is to attain higher states of mind, being able to be absorbed in deep meditation through sound/mantra. The next and last stage in working with a mantra is thus Laya Yoga ( the stage where.you hear the subtle sound of the mantra (the sound found beyond silence) and becoming one with it, you are absorbed into its field of energy, your consciousness becoming ONE with the mantra of choice and one with the deity. What happens in that moment and after that, well, you will need to see it yourself. But only the very curious and committed yogis will work diligently and find out..There is no place for weak willed in the superior planes of spiritual world. This Is the Truth!  



mantra
blog author image

Laurence Milner

LAURENCE has studied Hatha yoga,Vinyasa , Yin Yoga , Yin Yang Yoga , Mantra and Yantra Yoga (Raja), Tantra, Kundalini, Tibetan Yoga and Tibetan Vajrayana Buddhism, being a Master Yoga teacher and an inspiring spiritual guide

Back to Blog
mantra

About Mantra

March 13, 20235 min read

MANTRA YOGA: JAPA AND AJAPA-JAPA

Mantra yoga is A key to stabilizing the mind

Many students of meditation and spiritual life complain of a noisy mind, out of control senses, and emotional challenges. One of the most significant, single suggestions of the ancient sages is the use of mantra japa, or sacred word to focus the mind. No amount of intellectualizing will convince you of this. It must be practiced for the benefits to be experienced. 
    Constant remembrance of mantra in Mantra yogaRegardless of what mantra you use, one of the most important principles is the practice of constant remembrance. By cultivating such a steady awareness many benefits come:

  • One who practices mantra japa in this way will find that the challenges and stressors of daily life are not nearly as disturbing.

  • The mantra gives a place of refuge, an oasis in which the mind can rest.

  • It is not escape, denial, or repression, but a tranquil companion.

  • The objects of the senses begin to lose their control over actions.

  • The incoming streams of negative thoughts, emotions, and desires from the unconscious mind attenuate, or become weaker.
    The mantra japa gradually becomes a best friend of the mind.
    Mantra japa leads one in the direction of deeper meditations, and subtler spiritual experiences. 

            Japa and Ajapa-Japa - Meditation technique

    Japa means repeating or remembering the mantra, and Ajapa-Japa means constant awareness. The letter A in front of the word Japa means without. Thus, Ajapa-Japa is the practice of Japa without the mental effort normally needed to repeat the mantra. In other words, it has begun to come naturally, turning into a constant awareness. The practice of constant remembrance evolves in stages:

  • At first, you intentionally repeat the syllables of the mantra internally, as if you are talking to yourself in your mind. You allow the inner sound to come at whatever speed feels comfortable to the mind. Sometimes it is very slow, as if the mind were wading through a vat of honey. At other times it is very fast, as if flying through the sky without restraint.

  • With practice, the mantra japa is repeated automatically, like a song that you have heard many times, which just comes on its own. (Some practitioners consider this automatic repeating to be the meaning of Ajapa-Japa, though there is a subtler meaning, as described below.)

  • Gradually, you merely remember the mantra with attention drawn to it. It is more like noticing what is already happening, rather than causing it to happen. It is somewhat like the attention stance of listening rather than speaking, though you might not literally hear the sound.

  • In time, the feeling of the mantra is there, even when the sound or remembering of the syllables is not there. For example, sometimes people will say, "OM, Shanti, Shanti, Shanti," where the word Shanti means peace or tranquility. During the remembering of the word there may be two things--the word and the feeling of peace or tranquility. When the syllables fade away, the feeling may still be there; this is remembrance of the feeling of the mantra.

  • As the practice evolves, there comes a pervasive awareness of the mantra, subtler than both the syllables and any surface level meaning or definition. This constant awareness is the meaning of Ajapa-Japa of the mantra.

        Choice of mantras for meditation
There are many mantras, words, or compact prayers that can be used for Japa and Ajapa-Japa. Virtually all of the meditation traditions, spiritual lineages, and religions have mantra in one form or another.


Some words have specific meaning, while others are seed syllables having only feeling, not literal, word-for-word definitions.
Some have religious significance, while others are completely non-sectarian.
Some have very subtle effects on energy, while others are more like positive affirmations given to train the conscious mind.
Whatever mantra, word, or syllables are used, useful benefits will come from the practice of Japa and Ajapa-Japa. 


There are some popular mantras like AUM, SOHAM, HAM SAH, and you can choose to work with them freely, as there are some mantras highly specialized, which meaning and purpose  as well as modus operandum ,you can find only if received through initiation form a yoga master/teacher, who realized into himself the power of that mantra (a Mantrika),  being able to transmit it to you in the moment of initiation ( shaktipat).

  • NOTE 1 : Whatever mantra you choose, know that you can have spiritual results only after repeating the mantra daily, for months, and years, not less than 100.000 repetitions. That is a serious work for a real seeker, and not only 108 times as heard from some guides. 108 its a Ritual fit number, and never a number fit for Liberation and Enlightenment. Serious seekers remember that!

  • NOTE 2 : Japa and Ajapa Mantra meditation are the first stages in working with a mantra, highly beneficially for mind as said. However the purpose is to attain higher states of mind, being able to be absorbed in deep meditation through sound/mantra. The next and last stage in working with a mantra is thus Laya Yoga ( the stage where.you hear the subtle sound of the mantra (the sound found beyond silence) and becoming one with it, you are absorbed into its field of energy, your consciousness becoming ONE with the mantra of choice and one with the deity. What happens in that moment and after that, well, you will need to see it yourself. But only the very curious and committed yogis will work diligently and find out..There is no place for weak willed in the superior planes of spiritual world. This Is the Truth!  



mantra
blog author image

Laurence Milner

LAURENCE has studied Hatha yoga,Vinyasa , Yin Yoga , Yin Yang Yoga , Mantra and Yantra Yoga (Raja), Tantra, Kundalini, Tibetan Yoga and Tibetan Vajrayana Buddhism, being a Master Yoga teacher and an inspiring spiritual guide

Back to Blog

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