
Communications Expresso – Starts 3 March
February 24, 2026
Shanti Yoga Teacher Training
February 24, 2026Despite many global misconceptions, yoga is not about physical contortion or outlandish feats. Twisting the body into impossible positions, standing on one's head and generally torturing oneself with difficult and even dangerous activities—such as being buried alive for months at a time, sleeping on beds of nails, pushing skewers through one's cheeks or contorting the body and holding those contortions for months or years until the limbs become permanently fixed in unnatural positions—are all far removed from yoga. Yoga, often widely taught in the West as a series of physical exercises that promote suppleness, health, and beauty, is also a subject of the many misconceptions about yoga. None of these is correct.
The aim of Yoga is the harmonious development of the whole person: body, mind and spirit. All genuine yoga paths have this aim; they simply differ in the means they use to attain it.
Yoga offers a systematic path to self-knowing through several core pillars. These include:
- Hatha Yoga & Asanas:
Unlike repetitive exercise, asanas are stable postures held with relaxation and concentration. They stretch the muscles, stimulate internal organs, and balance the body’s psychic centers (chakras), ensuring the mind has a healthy vessel through which to function. - Pranayama (Breath Control):
Proper breathing is essential for purifying the blood and manipulating "prana" (life force). It corrects the shallow breathing patterns caused by modern sedentary lifestyles, leading to total well-being. - Nidra (Relaxation):
Since stress is a primary factor in modern illness, learning to relax is vital. True yoga cannot be practiced while tense; Thus, relaxation is a cornerstone of the discipline. - Dhyana (Meditation):
Meditation is the ultimate goal of all yoga practices. It provides the tools for self-realization, helping us understand who we are and our purpose in life.
Are Yoga practices still relevant today?
Modern life provides countless resources for physical comfort and sensual enjoyment. Airconditioned environments, vehicle travel, sleeping on a thick, soft, mattress, going to cinemas, theatres and clubs, along with watching sports on television for recreation, using sleeping pills and wake-iup pills and all kinds of medicines and drugs in an attempt to get peace and rest and to counteract the negative effects of everyday life. However, instead of peace, contentment, rest and happiness we feel the increasing burden of physical, mental and emotional tension. We struggle to find skilful ways to unburden ourselves from life's frustrations and anxieties.
In this modern age of technological miracles, where countless aids exist to comfort life, it seems almost a contradiction—yet it's true—that very few people can enjoy these luxuries. Many people have wealth, but they live in poverty - poverty of will, poverty of strength to enjoy life and they only remember the happiness of childhood. In recent years, many people, especially young people, have turned to using alcohol, drugs, LSD, hashish, marijuana, amphetamines, heroin, ice, cocaine and so on to try to find meaning and order in their lives or to escape what they see as an impossible situation. Many others, young and not so young, turn to alcohol, tranquillisers, sleeing pills and tobacco to help them cope.
Yoga is the perfect way for all people to find meaning and purpose in life. The systematic practice of yoga leads to the ultimate goal: self realisation, beyond which there is nothing else.
Shanti Yoga
- The exercises and postures relax and still the body.





