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In the mid-Sixties, many people believed that we were on
the verge of an exciting and glorious new age in human evolution.
The popular song, Aquarius, captured the spirit,
proclaiming that we would soon enjoy the fruits of harmony
and understanding... sympathy and peace ... mystic crystal
revelations and the mind's true liberation.
Many of us naively expected the human race to smoothly and
quickly cultivate the earth into a new Eden. During the
late Seventies, however, it seemed that this emerging paradise
might succumb to a blight of old values - buds and unripe
fruit gobbled up by the "me generation." Or worse,
it might be totally consumed by the raging fires of modern
times - such as nuclear holocaust, pollution, over-population
and material shortages. Optimists believed we were experiencing
growing pains, but the cynical wondered if there really
was a new age. Today, the question of a new age (or perhaps
we should say "new values" and bring the concept
down to earth where it belongs) is more important than ever,
for without some major changes in the next decade, we may
not have the luxury of speculating about the 1990's. With
this in mind, we asked a number of leaders in the spiritual/growth
movement what we could expect in the 1980's, and what influence
their particular teachings might have on the world. Trying
to pin them down, we asked whether the new age would blossom,
wither, or remain the same. We think that you will be stimulated,
challenged, and perhaps amused by these thought provoking
respons.
--Yoga Journal January 1980
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Joel Kramer
Some historical moments are more critical than others. Transitional
periods are such times. We live in a culture and a world
that are in transition. What transition actually means is
transformation, for as old ways of being crumble, we, individually
and as a species, must forge new meanings into life. We
are at a cusp point in our evolution - dangling between
the pleasures of adolescence and the urgency of adulthood.
Maturation comes when the spectrum of awareness broadens,
becoming more inclusive. Yoga is an age-old process of transformation
that can be creatively adapted to the needs of the times.
It helps break through the habits of mind and body that
bind us, opening up new ways of relating to each other and
the world. It also brings sensitivity, response-ability
(in its literal sense), and the flexibility that allows
us to assimilate change. In the coming years, we need to
further develop these capacities to meet the challenges
of the times. Yoga, at its core, is looking within to understand
the timeless question, Who am I?As
you delve into the deepest regions of your being, the knowledge
that comes is not merely about you, the individual, but
includes the understanding of your self as part of the total
fabric of life and as an active participant in the process
of evolution. The expanding of consciousness that is the
essence of evolution, actually gives us the capacity for
depth of communication. Yoga is essentially opening up to
deep communication within yourself, which leads to transformation.
When the parts of the whole open up to each other - breaking
the boundaries of separateness - real communication, which
is communion, occurs. This allows you to touch the existential
reality of others and share deeply in the movement of life.
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