Geeta-Physics

Bhuvarloka · The Contemplative Path

Yoga &
Meditation

A Discipline of Attitude, Awareness, and Right Living

Yoga is not a set of exercises to be performed, nor a state to be achieved. It is a way of orienting oneself — towards steadiness, inwardness, clarity, and balance. The tradition that gave rise to it understood that the quality of one's living determines the quality of one's understanding. This path begins not in the body alone, but in the whole of how one lives.

योग — Yoga — Union

"Yoga is not an achievement
but an attitude."
Master E.K. — Ekkirala Krishnamacharya

The practitioner who approaches yoga as a series of milestones to collect has misunderstood its nature entirely. What is cultivated through sincere practice is not a list of accomplishments — it is an orientation: a steady, unhurried, attentive relationship with one's own body, breath, mind, and daily conduct. This reorientation, sustained over time, is yoga itself.


Three Dimensions of the Discipline

Why This Path

I

A Way of Living

Yoga does not begin when you step onto a mat and end when you leave it. The tradition is unambiguous: yoga is a complete discipline of living — encompassing conduct, awareness, the rhythm of daily life, and the quality of one's relationships. A weekend practice is a beginning. A transformed way of living is the direction.

II

Meditation as Refinement

Meditation is not an escape from the world, nor a technique for relaxation alone. It is the systematic education of attention — training the mind to observe without reacting, to remain steady without becoming rigid, and to see clearly without distortion. This quality of trained awareness transforms not just meditation sessions but every encounter in life.

III

Systematic & Integrated

Classical yoga is a coherent system, not a collection of disconnected techniques drawn from different traditions at will. It proceeds in an ordered way — from the ground of ethical conduct, through posture, breath, and withdrawal of attention, into the subtler disciplines of concentration and meditation. Each stage prepares the ground for the next.


The Teacher

Study Yoga & Meditation
with Dr. Tejaswi

Dr. Tejaswi's approach to yoga and meditation is rooted in the classical understanding — that practice is a means, and a transformed quality of living is the measure of real progress. Teaching here is neither performance-focused nor trend-driven. It is patient, structured, and honest about what the discipline requires.

Sessions are suited to sincere beginners and to those who have practised before but wish to understand what they are doing more deeply — to move from mechanical repetition toward genuine comprehension of the why and how behind each element of practice.

"The practice is not for those who want to be seen doing it. It is for those who want to be genuinely changed by it."
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Classical Foundation

Rooted in the traditional understanding of yoga as a complete and ordered discipline, not a fitness or wellness trend.

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Practical & Clear

No mystical overstatement. Each practice is explained plainly — what it does, why it is done, and how to do it correctly.

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Theory & Practice Together

Understanding the logic of the system — the classical eight-limbed structure — deepens and sustains the practice considerably.

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Contemplative Depth

For those who want not just a healthier body but a steadier mind and a more integrated, aware way of living.


From Ground to Depth

The Path of Practice

The classical tradition does not begin with advanced postures or exotic meditation techniques. It begins with the ground — with the simplest and most fundamental requirements for genuine progress.

I
Stage One

Right Foundation

Ethical orientation, sincerity of intention, and the development of self-regulation. These are not preliminaries to be hurried through — they are the very soil in which the rest of the practice takes root. Without this ground, later stages remain unstable regardless of how diligently they are practised.

II
Stage Two

Body and Posture

Stability, alignment, comfort, and embodied awareness. Āsana in its classical sense is not gymnastics — it is the cultivation of a body that can remain still without strain, and a posture that supports rather than hinders inward attention. The body is the first instrument to be brought into order.

III
Stage Three

Breath and Regulation

Careful observation and gradual refinement of the breathing pattern. Prāṇāyāma is not simply deep breathing — it is the systematic education of the respiratory cycle, which in turn has a direct and measurable effect on the state of the nervous system and the quality of the mind's attention.

IV
Stage Four

Withdrawal and Attention

Gradually reducing the pull of external distraction and learning to gather the mind's scattered attention into a single, stable orientation. This is not suppression — it is the patient redirection of awareness from the outer surface of experience toward its quieter interior.

V
Stage Five

Meditation

Steady inner observation, growing clarity, and the quality of silence that follows from sustained practice. Meditation at this stage is not a technique applied occasionally — it is a matured capacity for clear, undistracted, compassionate attention that begins to express naturally across all areas of life.

VI
Stage Six

Living Yoga

The final measure of genuine practice: that calmness, balance, and awareness begin to express in daily conduct — in how one responds to difficulty, how one listens, how one works, and how one relates to others. Yoga lived is yoga fulfilled.


Classical Logic of the Discipline

Foundations of Yoga
& Meditation

Genuine practice is not random self-improvement technique. It is a coherent system with its own logic, its own sequence, and its own understanding of what the mind is and how it changes.

Ethics & Conduct

Ethical Foundation

Inner life does not begin in meditation — it begins in the quality of one's daily conduct. How one speaks, acts, and relates to others constitutes the outer layer of the yogic discipline. A mind habituated to dishonesty or cruelty cannot become genuinely still in meditation; it carries its outer patterns inward.

Sequence & Depth

Ordered Practice

Yoga unfolds in an orderly progression — not because tradition demands hierarchy, but because each level of practice genuinely prepares the ground for the next. Attempting advanced techniques without the prior stages produces, at best, superficial results and, at worst, instability. Depth cannot be rushed; it must be earned through regularity.

The Mind

Training the Mind

The goal is not to suppress the mind's activity violently but to educate it into steadiness. The mind that has been trained through practice becomes less reactive, less scattered, and more capable of sustained attention. This is not a mystical claim — it is a straightforward description of what happens when any faculty is systematically exercised over time.

Breath

Breath as Bridge

Breath occupies a unique position in the practice: it is simultaneously a physical function and the most accessible point of influence on the mind's state. By learning to observe and regulate the breath, the practitioner gains a direct and reliable means of moving from the physical surface of experience into its quieter inward dimension.

Meditation

Meditation as Clarification

Meditation does not produce blankness — it produces clarity. The mind that has been steadied through practice begins to see its own patterns, reactions, and assumptions with increasing honesty. This self-knowledge, arrived at through quiet observation rather than forceful analysis, is one of the most practically valuable results of sustained practice.

Integration

Yoga in Daily Life

The fruit of practice must express itself in living. A person whose meditation hour is peaceful but whose daily interactions are marked by impatience, reactivity, or dishonesty has not yet integrated the practice. The classical tradition is clear: the test of yoga is not in the sitting — it is in the standing up and walking out into ordinary life.


The Larger Scope

Yoga as a Way of Life

There is a common misunderstanding that yoga practice is something one does in a designated time and place — and that it has nothing to do with the rest of one's hours. The classical tradition disagrees directly with this view. Yoga is not a technique added to life; it is a quality of life itself.

The practitioner who maintains a daily practice but neglects the simplicity, honesty, and attentiveness that the tradition considers equally essential has separated the practice from the purpose. Discipline and clarity, when genuinely cultivated in formal practice, are meant to express themselves in conduct — in how one listens, works, responds to difficulty, and relates to others.

This does not require renunciation of ordinary life. It requires that ordinary life itself become the field of practice — that the steadiness cultivated on the mat be brought to the desk, the kitchen, the conversation, and the moment of irritation that arrives without warning and asks for a response.

"The measure of practice is not how long one sits in stillness, but how one rises and moves through the day."
Six Qualities of Yogic Living
Discipline
तपस् — Tapas
Regular, sustained effort even when the impulse is absent. Yoga deepens only through consistent practice — not through occasional intensity followed by long gaps.
Clarity
विवेक — Viveka
The capacity to see things as they are rather than as one wishes or fears them to be. Clarity is both a fruit of practice and a condition that makes further practice possible.
Simplicity
संतोष — Santoṣa
A life of genuine contentment — not deprivation, but freedom from the restless accumulation of things, stimulation, and distraction that dissipates the attention practice is trying to gather.
Steadiness
स्थिरता — Sthiratā
The quality of remaining composed under the conditions that ordinarily disturb composure. Steadiness is not indifference — it is the trained capacity to respond rather than merely react.
Right Living
यम — Yama
Ethical conduct as a structural element of the practice itself — not a moral instruction imposed from outside, but the recognition that the quality of inner life depends on the quality of outer behaviour.
Inner Alignment
समत्व — Samatva
The gradual alignment of thought, speech, and action — a coherence that makes the practitioner's inner and outer life increasingly continuous, rather than divided into a spiritual corner and everything else.

How Practice Unfolds

From Conduct to Contemplation

I

Conduct

Ethical orientation and self-regulation as the outer ground of the entire practice. The quality of daily conduct shapes the quality of the mind that arrives at the mat.

II

Body

Posture, alignment, and the cultivation of a stable, comfortable physical presence. The body is prepared, not perfected — made fit for sustained inward attention.

III

Breath

Observation and gradual refinement of the breathing cycle. Breath is the practitioner's most reliable bridge between the physical and the mental dimensions of experience.

IV

Attention

Training the direction and steadiness of awareness. The mind that previously ran outward is educated, slowly and patiently, to remain present and collected.

V

Living

The complete expression — when the clarity, steadiness, and awareness cultivated in formal practice becomes the actual texture of one's daily life and relationships.


Begin

Take the First
Sincere Step

Yoga does not demand extraordinary circumstances, unusual talent, or perfect readiness. It asks only for sincerity and the willingness to begin — and then to continue, regularly, without making the practice into a performance for oneself or anyone else.

"Yoga is not an achievement but an attitude. When that attitude becomes stable, practice becomes life." — Master E.K.

Dr. Tejaswi Katravulapally

PhD (Quantum Physics), M.Sc. (IIT Madras), B.Tech. (LNMIIT).

Bridging the depths of Science and the wisdom of the Vedas

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