European
Awakening of muladhar
0:15 - 0:57 (42 min)

A lecture on the Mūlādhāra chakra, karma, and associated yoga practices.
"Prārabdha, or karma prārabdha, first your destiny is created, and then your body."
"The awakening of the Kuṇḍalinī means wisdom. You become very wise, you become self-confident."
The speaker delivers an in-depth explanation of the root (Mūlādhāra) energy center, linking it to one's karma, destiny, and foundational consciousness. He describes its symbolism—the red color, four-petaled lotus, elephant, and coiled serpent representing past karmas—and clarifies the nature of a true Kuṇḍalinī awakening. The session includes practical guidance, with demonstrators showing postures like Bhujaṅgāsana and Śalabhāsana to activate and regulate this chakra.
Filming location: Croatia
Mind and chakras
1:05 - 1:30 (25 min)

A lecture on the nature of the mind, subconscious impressions, and yogic philosophy.
"Our senses are mostly connected to and work with the consciousness, the awakened state."
"The mind is that principle which functions between the conscious and subconscious, pendling up and down."
The teacher provides a detailed explanation of how sensory impressions become stored desires in the subconscious, using the analogy of an unfulfilled ice cream craving manifesting in a dream. He describes the mind as a pendulum between conscious and subconscious levels, warning against blocking mental energy and instead advocating for directing it through self-discipline. The talk expands into the relationship between emotion, intellect, consciousness, and the nadis (Ida, Pingala, Sushumna), linking psychological concepts to the chakra system and the dormant energy of kundalini.
Filming location: Brisbane, Australia
The Forms of the Divine
1:35 - 2:07 (32 min)

A spiritual discourse on the formless and manifest aspects of the divine.
"One is what we can call God, but we cannot see God; it is only God. That is called Nirākāra. Nirākāra means there is no form or posture."
"The second is Sākār. Sākār means with a form, like a statue or our body, so that we can worship God."
A spiritual teacher delivers a satsang on Guruji's birthday, explaining the concepts of Nirākāra (formless God) and Sākār (God with form). Using examples like Jesus, Krishna, and Buddha, he illustrates how divine incarnations suffer and are often misunderstood. The talk expands to cover creation stories, the cycles of the Yugas, and the importance of righteous living and sādhanā (spiritual practice) in the current Kali Yuga.
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
A Spiritual Journey: Lessons from the Himalayan Lakes and Caves
2:09 - 2:29 (20 min)

A satsang sharing spiritual lessons from Himalayan pilgrimage.
"I never give up. You also should never give up." "When things should be, they will be. You must agree with this."
Swami Shantipuri addresses the gathering on his Sannyasa birthday, recounting his journey to the Satopant Lake in the Himalayas after his Guruji's Mahasamadhi. He describes a profound meditation experience there, from which he received three core spiritual lessons symbolized by the lake: to accept life's events like the shore accepts waves, to cultivate inner calm by having no expectations, and to give freely from one's inner reservoir of wisdom like a flowing stream.
Filming location: Vép, Hungary
Bhajan singing on the Satsang
2:30 - 2:57 (27 min)

A devotional introduction and singing of a traditional bhajan.
"We can sing a very beautiful bhajan from Swāmī Lālā Nānjī. It is called Manarata Nāma, and it means, 'Oh my mind, repeat the name of God, repeat your mantra.'"
"Give your body and mind to Sāddhā Gurudeva, and he will destroy all your doubts and all your bad qualities. In the holy lotus feet of Satguru Deva reside all holy pilgrimages."
The speaker introduces a lesser-sung bhajan by Swāmī Lālā Nānjī, emphasizing the urgency of spiritual practice in human life. They explain the bhajan's theme of repeating the divine name and extol the glory and essential role of the true Guru in guiding devotees across the ocean of worldly existence. The session includes singing verses from the bhajan and concludes with salutations.
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
Bhajans evening from the Strilky Ashram
3:05 - 4:08 (63 min)

Evening satsang from Strilky Ashram, Czech Republic. Bhajan singing and translation.
Bhajan evening in the Strilky Ashram
4:15 - 5:08 (53 min)

Evening satsang from Strilky Ashram, Czech Republic. Bhajan singing and translations. We shouldn't hold animals in a cage. They feel much pain there. Let them be free. We are also like that bird in the
Bhajan singing from Jadan
5:15 - 5:26 (11 min)

Evening satsang with Vishwaguruji from Jadan Ashram, Rajasthan, India.
The Aim of Human Life, Melbourne
5:30 - 7:03 (93 min)

Swamiji introduces MM Swami Jasraj Puri and explaines in great detail what means Mahamandaleshwar and Akkhara. Ashram: A means welcome, Shram means work. Ashram means: Come to work here on your body, mind, consciousness and realisation. Space is the endless glory of God. We don't know where is the beginning or the end. We are limited. The endless space is like a mother, the cosmic consciousness. Between space and consciousness is Yoga shakti. Yoga is balancing, harmonising and uniting. God is manifested in the form of vibration, sound, resonance - OM - Everything comes from that and merges in that. Yogis are meditating on that. The aim of human life is to help, to serve, to support others and selfrealisation. The human life is a precious diamant but we will not get it again and again. Translation of the bhajan: Sadho bhai ab kyu karo the moro. Recorded in Melbourne, Australia.
Yoga in Daily Life Workshop in Villach on 13th of June
7:10 - 8:48 (98 min)

A closing discourse on integrating spiritual awareness into daily life, from sleep to nourishment.
"In deep sleep, you know nothing of being a millionaire or a beggar. In deep sleep, you know nothing of whether you are sick or healthy."
"Therefore, before going to sleep, one says to God: 'What I have done all day... I offer all the fruits of my actions. Lord, forgive me if there was anything not good.'"
Swami Avatarpuri concludes a seminar by guiding attendees through a sacred daily rhythm. He explains the unity experienced in deep sleep, followed by prayers upon waking and mindful practices with water, air, and earth. The talk emphasizes gratitude, the divinity in natural elements, and the importance of offering one's actions. He details a spiritual approach to nourishment, advocating for fresh, whole foods and traditional preparation, linking physical health to inner peace and meditation.
Filming location: Austria
Mental food
8:55 - 10:53 (118 min)

Swamiji in Sliac, April 2007
Practicing of the system 'Yoga in Daily Life', Level 1 - Part 4
11:00 - 12:04 (64 min)

Practicing of the system "Yoga in Daily Life", Level 1 - Part 4, in Om Vishwa Deep Gurukul Swami Maheshwaranand Ashram, Jadan, Rajasthan, India on 23rd of October 2009.
The Imperative of Daily Practice
12:10 - 12:49 (39 min)

A direct address to yoga students on the necessity of disciplined daily practice for physical and mental purification.
"Practicing means at home—here you only learn. Practicing for just one week is ineffective; it must be a continuous, daily process."
"We must become sāttvic. Where the body is sāttvic, there is no vikāra. Vikāra exists in the mind as well."
Swami Avatarpuri (Swāmījī) leads a satsang, critiquing the lack of consistent practice among attendees. He stresses that health through daily āsana, prāṇāyāma, and seasonal cleansing techniques like Śaṅkha Prakṣālana is the essential foundation for spirituality. He expands on the concepts of vikāra (impurity/illness) and the guṇas, urging a transformation in diet (āhār), recreation (vihār), behavior (ācār), and thought (vicār). The talk includes practical instructions, responses to questions about cleansing practices, and a call for teachers to become examples of yogic health.
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
How to practice The System Yoga in Daily Life
12:55 - 14:04 (69 min)

Morning satsang with Vishwaguruji from Strilky Ashram, Czech Republic. You have been practicing many times, many years following Yoga in Daily Life, you now asanas, and the effects. We should not forget the importance of following a system as described in the book. Yoga in Daily Life is a name for a system, but we are not commercial, we are like friends and humble to all other people. You should read the book The Hidden Powers in Humans. Practicing Bari Kathu Pranam
Webcast from Auckland
14:10 - 14:53 (43 min)

Evening satsang with Vishwaguruji from Auckland, New Zealand.
The importance of the Om Ashram
15:00 - 15:50 (50 min)

Evening satsang with Vishwaguruji from Jadan Ashram, Rajasthan, India. Welcoming words of Swami Gyaneshwarji, bhajan singing. Short talks about the features and the importance of the Om Ashram. Our eyes now can see our Gurudev and the result of the work done last 30 years. We are lucky ones to be here on this holy place and enjoying the darshan of Gurudev.
Visiting Alakpuriji's cave
15:55 - 17:03 (68 min)

A spiritual discourse reflecting on the sacred Himalayan cave of Alakpurījī and the path of yoga.
"People were protecting and protecting from the enemies. And so Alakpurījī’s cave is a big rock. And it had no door. All the ṛṣis there did not build any doors."
"When we meditate, or we say, 'Alak Purījī Mahādev Kī Jai,' the whole rocks there are glaciers, rocks. When we meditate, there is a beautiful sound of the Alaknandā river."
Swami Ji leads a satsang, weaving together a description of the remote Himalayan cave, stories of ascetics like Devpurījī, and parables about spiritual pursuit. He emphasizes that true yoga is the inner purification of the heart to achieve oneness, drawing lessons from the harsh, beautiful landscape and the devotees who journey there. The talk concludes with analogies about cultivating inner divinity and peace.
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
Mansik Puja, Vienna
17:10 - 17:58 (48 min)

A discourse on the practice and philosophy of Mānasik Pūjā, or mental worship.
"Many people ask questions: how to meditate, what to imagine... So, the best solution is Mānasik Pūjā. When you perform the mental ceremony, you come out of your meditation full of strength, energy, love, and clarity."
"Imagine that you are in the seva of your iṣṭadevatā... For this much time mentally, you are together. You are with it, and then you also get prasāda... This is a beautiful mānasik pūjā."
The lecturer addresses devotees from an ashram in Vienna, explaining the concept and technique of mental worship of one's chosen deity (Iṣṭadevatā). He describes it as a solution to the emptiness that can arise in other forms of meditation, detailing how to mentally perform services like bathing, dressing, and offering food to the divine form. He shares a personal anecdote of his Guruji's disciplined practice and emphasizes that this internal seva cultivates love, dispels negative emotions, and reflects the divine light present in every heart.
Filming location: Vienna, Austria
Enjoy
18:05 - 19:12 (67 min)

A closing satsang reflecting on the essence of spiritual practice during a summer seminar.
"You know what the best food is? First, when you are hungry, they say hunger is the best cook. Second, the best meal is when you don't have to cook or wash the dishes."
"If you have so many stones in your pocket, you will go down. See this symbolically. If you believe and think that some crystal will save your life and change your destiny, what are we doing? We are believing that that stone is much stronger than Mahāprabhujī."
The lecturer addresses the assembly, weaving personal anecdotes from his decades with Gurudev into teachings on discernment. He critiques an over-reliance on rituals, numbers, and external objects like crystals, emphasizing instead the supreme power of mantra, guru, and inner confidence. Key themes include navigating collective influences, distinguishing real practice from distraction, and cultivating the unwavering, urgent devotion exemplified in a story about Paramahaṁsa Rāmakṛṣṇa. The talk concludes with an emphasis on satsang as a vital support.
Filming location: Vép, Hungary
Do you know if you stay sanyas?
19:20 - 19:36 (16 min)

A personal reflection on the mantra of fullness and formative encounters with a guru.
"That is full, this is full. From fullness, fullness proceeds. Taking fullness from fullness, fullness alone remains."
"You are so happy now, but you don't even know if you will remain a sannyāsī."
The lecturer begins by chanting the Pūrṇatā mantra, linking it to a memory of Gurudev. She shares stories from her early days in India, detailing her initial nervousness around Holī Gurujī and their subsequent, wordless connections. She recounts a pivotal moment after her sannyās initiation when Gurujī's prophetic warning later provided crucial guidance during a personal crisis years later.
Filming location: Jadan, Rajasthan, India
Three levels of the consciousness and prana
19:40 - 20:49 (69 min)

Evening satsang from Summer Retreat in Vep, Hungary. The three levels of the consciousness are: awakened, sleep and deep sleep. We should realize the second when level of the consciousness is changing from awakened state to sleep and from sleep to deep sleep. There is a connection between ten pranas, physical body the state of consciousness.
Develop your wisdom, do not steal
20:55 - 21:43 (48 min)

A spiritual discourse addressing imitation, authentic wisdom, and the importance of satsaṅg.
"Imitation is stealing. It is not truth, but imitation."
"If the butter has been eaten by all these other writers... they ate only the butter; they did not eat the cow. So, milk the cow."
The lecturer speaks on the prevalence of imitation in the material and spiritual worlds, using examples from currency counterfeiting to plagiarized scriptures. He recounts a parable where a disciple laments that all wisdom has been taken by past saints, and Gurujī's response is to use the intellect (the cow) with devotion to produce fresh wisdom. The talk emphasizes generating original spiritual insight, warns against bad company (ku-saṅga), and concludes with an explanation of a bhajan by Mahāprabhujī about losing one's way by leaving the Guru's shelter.
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
Around the world - Inauguration Nandeshwar
22:00 - 22:05 (5 min)

Arrival of Nandeshwar to Om Ashram. Jadan, Rajasthan, India.
Around the world - International Seminar on Indian Culture (1/2)
22:10 - 23:31 (81 min)

Seminar on Indian Culture worldwide with Vishwaguruji. Apex University, Jaipur, India.
The Forms of the Divine
23:35 - 0:07 (32 min)

A spiritual discourse on the formless and manifest aspects of the divine.
"One is what we can call God, but we cannot see God; it is only God. That is called Nirākāra. Nirākāra means there is no form or posture."
"The second is Sākār. Sākār means with a form, like a statue or our body, so that we can worship God."
A spiritual teacher delivers a satsang on Guruji's birthday, explaining the concepts of Nirākāra (formless God) and Sākār (God with form). Using examples like Jesus, Krishna, and Buddha, he illustrates how divine incarnations suffer and are often misunderstood. The talk expands to cover creation stories, the cycles of the Yugas, and the importance of righteous living and sādhanā (spiritual practice) in the current Kali Yuga.
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
American
Australian
