Swamiji TV

Other links

European
We should be good for others
0:35 - 1:03 (28 min)
Recorded on
A cold night in a forest reveals our fundamental unity and compassion. I recall a family sheltering animals from the cold, embodying selfless care. This contrasts with a world pursuing material gain and harming life, as in hospitals. True yoga is not mere exercise but daily kindness to all beings, aligning with our inner goodness. We are interconnected; anger and negativity harm this unity. By returning to thoughts of the divine guide within, we cultivate inner beauty and purity. In this challenging age, we must remain strong, help others, and recognize we are all one essence. "Try to thank you, to thank you all the times." "This is what we call yoga in daily life." Filming location: Austria
At the roots of our Parampara
1:10 - 2:42 (92 min)
Recorded on
Evening satsang from Himalaya. Swami Dyaneswarpuri said that we should use our name Yoga in Daily Lide otherwise somebody else will do it. It is a big oportunity to visit in Badrinath with Vishwaguruji which is a very importana pilgrimage place in India. Sadwi shanti has felt love for her childhood towards mountens. She speaks about her journey in the Himalayas. She many times came back there and feel like her home. She tells her experiences in Sri Devpuriji's cave. Vishwaguruji's family had a brass plate which was special. There is difference between piano and harmonium. There are different customs when a girl or a boy is born in a willage. Vishwaguruji tells some stories from his childhood. Vishwaguruji has a rishi parampara in his family. Ravana was lerned but he has ego and desire. The story of Ravana and Vidhata Ravanas daughter and her husband. Furudev can change zhe desteny. Guru and disciple is one. In India there is living God. The story of Guruji and one of his discipe who w
Mother and father
2:50 - 3:20 (30 min)
Recorded on
The mother is primary, her connection to the child is fundamental and sacrificial. A mother carries the child and will protect it above all else, even at her own physical peril. The father provides and is good, but the mother's bond is immediate and profound. One must have good children and be good parents. Current difficulties arise when parents did not act properly. The spiritual practice involves the navel center, which originates from the father's seed but is received and known by the mother's body. From a single seed comes great growth. "A mother is a mother. For the child, she is very humble and very good." "The nābhi is which came from the father... but the mother, she was feeling that my child is in something, in my body, yes. Father doesn't know, he cannot understand, but she knows." Filming location: Austria
Yoga is One
3:25 - 3:56 (31 min)
Recorded on
Yoga is the practice of yoga in daily life. Many have taken the teachings and given them other names, but what they offer for practice is often incomplete. True yoga requires full discipline, not merely physical exercises. A core principle is non-harming; one must not eat meat or consume alcohol. Many modern adaptations accommodate rather than uphold these standards. Our comprehensive books provide the correct path. The practice is for everyone, regardless of background, but it demands daily commitment to the entire teaching, not just discussion. We must return to the authentic beginning and proceed step by step. "It says meat can be eaten and so on? No." "Yoga is the yoga. It is the yoga, and that is all." Filming location: Villach, Austria
We are all disciples
4:00 - 4:30 (30 min)
Recorded on
The grace flows from Mahāprabhujī to his disciple, Maṅgīlālji. All revered beings are manifestations. When Maṅgīlālji requested his mantra, Mahāprabhujī declared he had no need, calling him the greatest. All are disciples regardless of origin. The complete ones are as described: life is essentially just two, Śiva and Rāma. Maṅgīlālji, made of Rāma, is above all and is a Jīvan Mukta. That liberated state is the ultimate goal for which one must strive. Blessings flow from their mantra. "Please, Gurudev, give me my mantra as well." "You have no need for that. You are Maṅgalāl, but you are the greatest of the great." Filming location: Jadan, Rajasthan, India
At the roots of our Parampara
4:35 - 6:07 (92 min)
Recorded on
Evening satsang from Himalaya. Swami Dyaneswarpuri said that we should use our name Yoga in Daily Lide otherwise somebody else will do it. It is a big oportunity to visit in Badrinath with Vishwaguruji which is a very importana pilgrimage place in India. Sadwi shanti has felt love for her childhood towards mountens. She speaks about her journey in the Himalayas. She many times came back there and feel like her home. She tells her experiences in Sri Devpuriji's cave. Vishwaguruji's family had a brass plate which was special. There is difference between piano and harmonium. There are different customs when a girl or a boy is born in a willage. Vishwaguruji tells some stories from his childhood. Vishwaguruji has a rishi parampara in his family. Ravana was lerned but he has ego and desire. The story of Ravana and Vidhata Ravanas daughter and her husband. Furudev can change zhe desteny. Guru and disciple is one. In India there is living God. The story of Guruji and one of his discipe who w
AUM and Chakras
6:15 - 7:20 (65 min)
Recorded on
The resonance of OM and the balance of the nāḍīs govern health and consciousness. The body is a system of 72,000 nerves, centered on three primary channels: the left, the right, and the central Suṣumṇā. The left nostril, or moon channel, governs emotion and change, influenced by lunar tides. The right nostril, or sun channel, represents steady consciousness and solar fire. Their alternating flow every 14 minutes balances the hemispheres and glands. Prāṇāyāma purifies these channels. Techniques like Nāḍī Śodhana involve alternate-nostril breathing to cleanse the nervous system indirectly through lung and blood purification, not by forcing air into nerves. Chanting OM, with its four sounds originating from the navel, creates resonance that heals internal organs. Physical practice must begin with gentle body warming to prepare the joints and circulation, not with advanced postures. Headaches are addressed through hydration and postures like forward bends to increase cranial blood flow. Breath exercises like Bhastrikā and Kapālabhāti cleanse the head and remove tension. Ultimately, these practices relax all nāḍīs, dissolve stress, and restore natural health. "The left nostril is the moon. The principle of the moon is water, and the principle of the water is emotion." "We cannot put the air in our nerves, but it goes through the purification of our lungs, our oxygen." Filming location: Sydney, Australia
Donate to handicapped people if you can
7:25 - 8:05 (40 min)
Recorded on
A grand ceremony is planned at the ancient Ālakpurījī temple. The temple, though once small, has grown and requires renewal. A beautiful chariot will bring a revered elder for the disciples. Many will participate in a slow procession with kalaśas and bhajans. All saṃnyāsīs are invited globally. The following day marks an anniversary connected to global peace work through the United Nations. This connection facilitates charitable action for humans, animals, and nature. Support for these universal causes is sought. "Whatever you can give, you may give. This money will go only for that purpose." "We help people, animals, and nature; we protect water and so on." Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
AUM and Chakras
8:10 - 9:15 (65 min)
Recorded on
The resonance of OM and the balance of the nāḍīs govern health and consciousness. The body is a system of 72,000 nerves, centered on three primary channels: the left, the right, and the central Suṣumṇā. The left nostril, or moon channel, governs emotion and change, influenced by lunar tides. The right nostril, or sun channel, represents steady consciousness and solar fire. Their alternating flow every 14 minutes balances the hemispheres and glands. Prāṇāyāma purifies these channels. Techniques like Nāḍī Śodhana involve alternate-nostril breathing to cleanse the nervous system indirectly through lung and blood purification, not by forcing air into nerves. Chanting OM, with its four sounds originating from the navel, creates resonance that heals internal organs. Physical practice must begin with gentle body warming to prepare the joints and circulation, not with advanced postures. Headaches are addressed through hydration and postures like forward bends to increase cranial blood flow. Breath exercises like Bhastrikā and Kapālabhāti cleanse the head and remove tension. Ultimately, these practices relax all nāḍīs, dissolve stress, and restore natural health. "The left nostril is the moon. The principle of the moon is water, and the principle of the water is emotion." "We cannot put the air in our nerves, but it goes through the purification of our lungs, our oxygen." Filming location: Sydney, Australia
Selfless action and bhajans
9:20 - 9:52 (32 min)
Recorded on
Evening satsang with Vishwaguruji from Jadan Ashram, Rajasthan, India. Swami Gyaneshwar's report from Jadan. You know, I've been living in India for a while now. If you come to Jadan from Jaipur, you will feel the special atmosphere, the peace of the place. In the minds of Indian sages, secular and spiritual knowledge go hand in hand. Karma yoga is selfless help. In Jadan, there is always the possibility to continue the work. In the West, people are used to being alone at any time, so it is difficult to work together with others. Chanting bhajans creates the emotional basis for karma yoga.
Yoga, Faith, and Integration: A Personal Journey and Panel Discussion
10:00 - 11:04 (64 min)
Recorded on
Yoga is a faith-based system for wellness and healing, integrating consciousness with the body. A personal testimony describes overcoming a cancer diagnosis by refusing conventional treatment and rewriting one's mental blueprint. The individual believed revised thoughts would communicate with cells and DNA to halt disease progression, attributing survival solely to yoga practiced with faith and discipline. This illustrates yoga's potential beyond physical postures, focusing on divine energy and consciousness. Panelists discuss integrating traditional Āyush systems like Homeopathy, Āyurveda, and Siddha with yoga and modern medicine. Homeopathy treats the whole person mind-body-intellect economically. Āyurveda and yoga share principles of removing prāṇic blockages through detoxification and lifestyle. Siddha medicine inherently includes yoga and varma therapy. All emphasize a holistic, health-centric approach over a disease-centric model, addressing root causes like stress and suppressed urges. The World Health Organization supports developing evidence-based yoga modules for non-communicable diseases and exploring integrative service delivery. The spiritual core of yoga is to raise human consciousness, with health benefits being natural side effects. "If you allow God’s energy to run into your system by removing the ignorance that blocks it, God will provide the miracles." "Yoga and Āyurveda are like the two faces of the same coin. If we can integrate both concepts, probably we can render wonderful results." Filming location: Delhi, India
How shall we go further?
11:10 - 12:10 (60 min)
Recorded on
The unity of all beings resides in the divine. Different paths and names lead to the same truth. All are coming to the Guru's grace. The soul is one, like a drop returning to the ocean. The physical body and worldly possessions are temporary and left behind. All humans, animals, and life are to be respected equally. A realized yogi lives in divine joy, seeing no difference between stone and diamond, beyond all dualism and desire. That yogi lives in the world as if dead to the ego, immersed in emptiness and peace. The essential practice is to be humble, loving, and without anger, recognizing our shared humanity and spiritual origin. "Like the ocean, we know how much water is in the ocean. And it goes up in the air nicely." "This yogi is living, but inside he is dead. He lives as if he is dead, but he lives, because there is nothing in him, there is only emptiness." Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
Remembering on the Gurupurnima Satsang
13:35 - 14:25 (50 min)
Recorded on
The path is known only with the Guru. Countless rivers flow through long valleys, yet without a guide, one cannot know the way. A disciple once sought initiation, asking for the external cloth of renunciation. The true Guru instead offered to color the disciple's own heart, not the outer garments. The Guru's grace is the disciple's sole bliss. One must learn to understand oneself within the body and beyond. When such a great being lives among humans, they reveal the divine. Only that true Guru can accomplish this; no one else can. A true Guru does not speak of leaving or make claims about the self. The disciple and Guru are one, yet the Guru holds the discipline. The pure drop from the source is singular and cleansing. "Please make me a sanyāsī and spread this cloth to me." "Do you want your clothes to be colored, or do you want your own heart to be colored?" Filming location: Jadan, Rajasthan, India
Yoga is One
14:30 - 15:01 (31 min)
Recorded on
Yoga is the practice of yoga in daily life. Many have taken the teachings and given them other names, but what they offer for practice is often incomplete. True yoga requires full discipline, not merely physical exercises. A core principle is non-harming; one must not eat meat or consume alcohol. Many modern adaptations accommodate rather than uphold these standards. Our comprehensive books provide the correct path. The practice is for everyone, regardless of background, but it demands daily commitment to the entire teaching, not just discussion. We must return to the authentic beginning and proceed step by step. "It says meat can be eaten and so on? No." "Yoga is the yoga. It is the yoga, and that is all." Filming location: Villach, Austria
The stone will melt
15:05 - 15:57 (52 min)
Recorded on
The sky of the self is the ultimate goal, requiring complete merger into its purity. Achieving this is both simple and profoundly difficult. One must dissolve into that sky, just as water blends into milk. Many cannot understand this truth initially, just as many did not recognize divine figures like Krishna or Rama in their time. The ocean of nectar is the illuminated knowledge within, but doubt makes one an inert stone within it, unable to taste the nectar. The Guru is the giver, and the soul must become like the clear, blemish-free sky. The heart, often hard as iron, must melt through inner fire to become pure and strong. The human body represents universal principles—head, hands, trunk, and legs—but all humans are fundamentally one, beyond division. Live to serve all creatures with health and happiness. "Prakāśa is that sky. Prakāśa is the sky, and it is like an ocean, and that is the ocean of nectar." "Śrī Guru Ātmā, Paramātmā, it is Paramātmā, the highest one. Paramātmā, that means Param, and that Param is beyond, beyond this whole sky." Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
Why yoga is more than physical exercises
16:05 - 16:53 (48 min)
Recorded on
Evening satsang with Vishwaguruji from Jadan Ashram, Rajasthan, India. Deep means light, prakash. Prakash means spiritual awakening, knowledge. Even a blind person can see the inner light. Explanation of the bhiksha tradition - asking for food. Things can go in the best way or in a negative way. Yoga is not only asana and pranayama. We have to develop that quality.
How shall we go further?
17:00 - 18:00 (60 min)
Recorded on
The unity of all beings resides in the divine. Different paths and names lead to the same truth. All are coming to the Guru's grace. The soul is one, like a drop returning to the ocean. The physical body and worldly possessions are temporary and left behind. All humans, animals, and life are to be respected equally. A realized yogi lives in divine joy, seeing no difference between stone and diamond, beyond all dualism and desire. That yogi lives in the world as if dead to the ego, immersed in emptiness and peace. The essential practice is to be humble, loving, and without anger, recognizing our shared humanity and spiritual origin. "Like the ocean, we know how much water is in the ocean. And it goes up in the air nicely." "This yogi is living, but inside he is dead. He lives as if he is dead, but he lives, because there is nothing in him, there is only emptiness." Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
AUM and Chakras
18:05 - 19:10 (65 min)
Recorded on
The resonance of OM and the balance of the nāḍīs govern health and consciousness. The body is a system of 72,000 nerves, centered on three primary channels: the left, the right, and the central Suṣumṇā. The left nostril, or moon channel, governs emotion and change, influenced by lunar tides. The right nostril, or sun channel, represents steady consciousness and solar fire. Their alternating flow every 14 minutes balances the hemispheres and glands. Prāṇāyāma purifies these channels. Techniques like Nāḍī Śodhana involve alternate-nostril breathing to cleanse the nervous system indirectly through lung and blood purification, not by forcing air into nerves. Chanting OM, with its four sounds originating from the navel, creates resonance that heals internal organs. Physical practice must begin with gentle body warming to prepare the joints and circulation, not with advanced postures. Headaches are addressed through hydration and postures like forward bends to increase cranial blood flow. Breath exercises like Bhastrikā and Kapālabhāti cleanse the head and remove tension. Ultimately, these practices relax all nāḍīs, dissolve stress, and restore natural health. "The left nostril is the moon. The principle of the moon is water, and the principle of the water is emotion." "We cannot put the air in our nerves, but it goes through the purification of our lungs, our oxygen." Filming location: Sydney, Australia
We have to go on that path
19:15 - 20:12 (57 min)
Recorded on
This bhajan is a meditation on the holy feet of Alak Purījī. Singing it places one in that divine presence, bathing in the Caraṇāmṛta that flows eternally. This sacred river, Alak Purījī, is the Divine Mother, Nanda Devī, whose radiance sustains the universe. It represents the primordial source from the Satyuga, a lineage from Brahmaloka. The path of devotion is as narrow as walking on a knife's sharp edge, requiring total concentration amidst worldly distractions. One must walk this path with unwavering focus on the Guru, not divided like cheese. The present age demands this focus to awaken and save souls through this grace. The word "Alak" signifies that which is beyond writing or full description. "Feel yourself in meditation at the holy feet and the holy dust of Alak Purījī." "The path is called Khaṇḍa Kī Dhār. The sharp part of the knife, and over on that you have to walk."
The stone will melt
20:20 - 21:12 (52 min)
Recorded on
The sky of the self is the ultimate goal, requiring complete merger into its purity. Achieving this is both simple and profoundly difficult. One must dissolve into that sky, just as water blends into milk. Many cannot understand this truth initially, just as many did not recognize divine figures like Krishna or Rama in their time. The ocean of nectar is the illuminated knowledge within, but doubt makes one an inert stone within it, unable to taste the nectar. The Guru is the giver, and the soul must become like the clear, blemish-free sky. The heart, often hard as iron, must melt through inner fire to become pure and strong. The human body represents universal principles—head, hands, trunk, and legs—but all humans are fundamentally one, beyond division. Live to serve all creatures with health and happiness. "Prakāśa is that sky. Prakāśa is the sky, and it is like an ocean, and that is the ocean of nectar." "Śrī Guru Ātmā, Paramātmā, it is Paramātmā, the highest one. Paramātmā, that means Param, and that Param is beyond, beyond this whole sky." Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
At the roots of our Parampara
21:20 - 22:52 (92 min)
Recorded on
Evening satsang from Himalaya. Swami Dyaneswarpuri said that we should use our name Yoga in Daily Lide otherwise somebody else will do it. It is a big oportunity to visit in Badrinath with Vishwaguruji which is a very importana pilgrimage place in India. Sadwi shanti has felt love for her childhood towards mountens. She speaks about her journey in the Himalayas. She many times came back there and feel like her home. She tells her experiences in Sri Devpuriji's cave. Vishwaguruji's family had a brass plate which was special. There is difference between piano and harmonium. There are different customs when a girl or a boy is born in a willage. Vishwaguruji tells some stories from his childhood. Vishwaguruji has a rishi parampara in his family. Ravana was lerned but he has ego and desire. The story of Ravana and Vidhata Ravanas daughter and her husband. Furudev can change zhe desteny. Guru and disciple is one. In India there is living God. The story of Guruji and one of his discipe who w
Morning Yoga practice, Umag, Croatia (1/9)
23:00 - 0:37 (97 min)
Recorded on
A guided practice integrating meditation, yoga, and prāṇāyāma to cultivate awareness and inner harmony. Begin by relaxing the body and mind, aligning the posture. Follow the breath, using the mantra "So Ham" to synchronize with the inhalation and exhalation. Feel prāṇa entering and tensions releasing. Center awareness in the heart space, feeling it expand and relax, allowing peace and love to spread. After meditation, proceed to physical practice. Perform warm-up exercises and āsanas like Daṇḍāsana, focusing on straight posture and coordinated breathing. Practice sequences for the arms, shoulders, and feet with conscious movement. Advance to postures such as Marjari Āsana and Meruākaraṇāsana, maintaining balance and breathing deeply. Conclude with Kathā Praṇām and prāṇāyāma, specifically Nāḍī Śodhana, to purify the energy channels. Always maintain a straight back, relax the abdomen, and coordinate movement with breath. Finish by chanting Oṁ and grounding the awareness. "Feel how with every inhale you are taking in prāṇa, how your consciousness is becoming brighter and brighter, happier and more relaxed." "Keep your back straight and go down only to the level which your muscles can hold with your back straight." Filming location: Umag, Croatia
American
Australian

Email Notifications

You are welcome to subscribe to the Swamiji.tv Live Webcast announcements.

Contact Us

If you have any comments or technical problems with swamiji.tv website, please send us an email.

Download App

YouTube Channel