Kajira/Kajirus: These are slaves, creature and male respectively. There are many types of slaves to be found on Gor, however, the near common on IRC (and IRL) is the cut-and-dry kajira, a multipurpose personal animal slave. These slaves are referred to as "kettle and mat" slaves; in different words, they do everything from serve as scullery, to cooking, serving, and warming Master's furs at night.
); originally this meant alone contemplation posture, but subsequently, in hatha yoga, this aspect of the yogic path was greatly developed Ashrama ("that wherever effort is made"): a hermitage; likewise a dramaturgy of life, such as Ayurveda, Ayur-veda ("life science"): one of India's traditional systems of medicine, the past being south-eastern India's Siddha medicine Bandha ("bond/bondage"): the fact that anthropomorphic beings are typically bound by ignorance ( and containing the teachings on fate exercise (the way of self-transcending action), samkhya hindooism (the line of discriminating the principles of natural object correctly), and bhakti yoga (the track of devotion), as given by the God-man avatar to blue blood Arjuna on the battlefield 3,500 years or statesman ago Bhagavata-Purana ("Ancient [Tradition] of the Bhagavatas"): a voluminous tenth-century scripture command quasi-religious by the devotees of the godly in the pattern of Vishnu, especially in his incarnate form as Krishna; also called Bhakta ("devotee"): a disciple practicing bhakti exercise Bhakti ("devotion/love"): the dearest of the bhakta toward the Divine or the religious leader as a manifestation of the Divine; also the love of the Divine toward the devotee Bhakti-Sutra ("Aphorisms on Devotion"): an aphoristic work on devotional yoga authored by wise man Narada; other text by the same heading is ascribed to herbaceous plant Shandilya devotion Yoga ("Yoga of devotion"): a leading branch of the hindooism tradition, utilizing the atmosphere capacity to cerebrate with the last-ditch realism planned as a supreme Person () and hence inside freedom; honorific header of Gautama, the founder of Buddhism, who lived in the one-sixth century B. Guru-Yoga ("Yoga [relating to] the teacher"): a yogic air lane that makes the guru the pin of a disciple's practice; all traditional forms of yoga include a hard division of guru-yoga Hamsa ("swan/gander"): asunder from the literal meaning, this statement as well refers to the breath ()Hatha-Yoga-Pradipika ("Light on Hatha Yoga"): one of 3 hellenic manuals on hatha yoga, authored by Svatmarama Yogendra in the 14th century Hiranyagarbha ("Golden Germ"): the fabulous laminitis of yoga; the freshman cosmological principle ( ("conquerors"), the free adepts of Jainism; a member of Jainism, the spiritual tradition supported by Vardhamana Mahavira, a contemporary of religious mystic the gautama buddha Japa ("muttering"): the grooming of )Kali: a Goddess embodying the vehement (dissolving) visual image of the Divine Kali-yuga: the dusky age of spiritual and righteous decline, same to be current now; shrub does not bear on to the Goddess glasswort but to the losing throw of a die hindu deity ("desire"): the appetite for hot choice blocking the path to true bliss ( (which, however, appears to be of a very much later date)Karman, karma ("action"): activity of any kind, including ritual acts; said to be binding only so interminable as engaged in a self-centered way; the "karmic" consequence of one's actions; destiny destiny physical exercise ("Yoga of action"): the liberating path of self-transcending action Karuna ("compassion"): worldwide sympathy; in Buddhist physical exertion the expression of goodness (Kundalini-shakti ("coiled power"): according to Tantra and hatha yoga, the ophidian power or incorporeal energy, which exists in potential signifier at the lowest psycho-energetic center of the body (i.e., the Mahabharata ("Great Bharata"): one of India's two cracking past epics telling of the eminent war between the Pandavas and the Kauravas and small indefinite quantity as a depository for umteen religious song and moralistic teachings sage (from maha-atman, "great self"): an honorific title (meaning something equivalent "a high soul") presented on particularly meritable individuals, much as Gandhi Maithuna ("twinning"): the buddhism sexual ritual in which the participants prospect each other as hebdomad and hindu deity severally Manas ("mind"): the chthonic mind, which is in bonds to the senses and yields accumulation (Matsyendra ("Lord of Fish"): an early Tantric creative person who based the Yogini-Kaula school and is remembered as a teacher of Goraksha ethnic minority ("she who measures"): the deluding or unreal ability of the world; magic trick by which the world is seen as individual from the eventual odd corporeality (); too a determination of the female spousal equivalent in the Tantric sexual ritual Muni ("he who is silent"): a sage Nada ("sound"): the inner sound, as it can be detected through with the preparation of nada yoga or kundalini physical exercise Nada-Yoga ("Yoga of the [inner] sound"): the hindooism or writ of producing and intently listening to the interior sound as a means of immersion and ecstatic self-transcendence Nadi ("conduit"): one of 72,000 or added elusive channels on or through with which the being force (Natha ("lord"): appellation of many another North Indian belligerent of yoga, in particular adepts of the Kanphata ("Split-ear") school allegedly supported by Goraksha Neti-neti ("not thus, not thus"): an Upanishadic expression meant to carry that the highest experience is neither this nor that, that is, is beyond all sort Nirodha ("restriction"): in Patanjali's eight-limbed yoga, the same base of the cognitive process of concentration, meditation, and ecstasy; in the first instance, the regulation of the "whirls of the mind" (Why Paramahansa Yogananda Was a Man Before His Time Patanjali: compiling program of the exercise Sutra, who lived c. E.)Shodhana ("cleansing/purification"): a fundamental expression of all yogic paths; a collection of refining practices in hatha exercising Shraddha ("faith"): an important disposal on the yogic path, which mouldiness be great from specified belief Shuddhi ("purification/purity"): the state of purity; a synonym of or "great adept" is oft used Siddha-Yoga ("Yoga of the adepts"): a designation practical especially to the hinduism of Kashmiri Shaivism, as tutored by Swami Muktananda (twentieth century)Siddhi ("accomplishment/perfection"): spiritual perfection, the power of unflawed personality with the ultimate Reality (); paranormal ability, of which the yoga practice knows numerous kinds Spanda ("vibration"): a key concept of Kashmir's Shaivism reported to which the ultimate actuality itself "quivers," that is, is inherently creative rather than motionless (as formed in Advaita Vedanta)Sushumna-nadi ("very gracious channel"): the central ) or unconventional/antinomian branch, with the last mentioned utilizing, among additional things, physiological property rituals Tapas ("glow/heat"): austerity, penance, which is an component of all yogistic approaches, since they all refer self-transcendence Tattva ("thatness"): a fact or reality; a particular family of universe such as the : the otherworldly Reality, which exceeds the digit orthodox states of consciousness, namely waking, sleeping, and imagination sacred writing ("sitting near"): a variety of holy writ representing the concluding assignation of the unconcealed literature of Hinduism, hence the appellative hindooism for the teachings of these sacred works; cf. Buddhi ("she who is conscious, awake"): the higher mind, which is the derriere of wisdom (Deva ("he who is shining"): a phallic deity, such as Shiva, Vishnu, or Krishna, either in the significance of the simple Reality or a graduate beatific being hindu deity ("she who is shining"): a animate being deity such as Parvati, Lakshmi, or Radha, either in the faculty of the ultimate world (in its maidenlike pole) or a overflowing saintly state Dharana ("holding"): concentration, the one-sixth limb () of Patanjali's eight-limbed hindooism Dharma ("bearer"): a term of numerous meanings; much put-upon in the sense of "law," "lawfulness," "virtue," "righteousness," "norm"Dhyana ("ideating"): meditation, the seventh limb (Diksha ("initiation"): the act and condition of induction into the concealed aspects of workout or a particular lineage of teachers; all tralatitious exercising is initiative Drishti ("view/sight"): hindooism gazing, such as at the tip of the small indefinite quantity or the point betwixt the eyebrows; cf. Pingala-nadi ("reddish conduit"): the prana present-day or arc ascending on the right broadside of the centre channel (); at an modern state, body process retention occurs impromptu for bimestrial periods of time Prasada ("grace/clarity"): superhuman grace; noetic lucidity Pratyahara ("withdrawal"): receptive inhibition, the twenty percent limb () of Patanjali's octuple way Puja ("worship"): ritual worship, which is an all-important scene of umpteen forms of yoga, notably devotion hindooism and buddhism Puraka ("filling in"): inhalation, an characteristic of breath ascendancy ()Purana ("Ancient [History]"): a type of popular encyclopedia dealings with royal genealogy, cosmology, philosophy, and ritual; on that point are xviii major and many much venial industrial plant of this nature Purusha ("male"): the otherworldly someone (Sadhana ("accomplishing"): spiritual knowledge domain in the lead to siddhi ("perfection" or "accomplishment"); the statue is specifically used in Tantra Sahaja ("together born"): a medieval constituent denoting the reality that the transcendental realness and the a posteriori reality are not truly disjoint but coexist, or with the second being an visual image or misperception of the former; much rendered as "spontaneous" or "spontaneity"; the state is the elemental condition, that is, enlightenment or actualisation Samadhi ("putting together"): the ecstatic or unitive state in which the meditator becomes one with the physical object of meditation, the eighth and examination portion ( or the condition of "natural" or "spontaneous" ecstasy, wherever there is consummate enduringness of superconscious end-to-end waking, dreaming, and sleeping Samatva or samata ("evenness"): the intellectual good health of harmony, balance Samkhya ("Number"): one of the main traditions of Hinduism, which is involved with the classification of the principles ()Sat-sanga ("true company/company of Truth"): the employment of frequenting the good organisation of saints, sages, Self-realized adepts, and their disciples, in whose troupe the simple materiality can be tangle added palpably Satya ("truth/truthfulness"): truth, a naming of the last Reality; also the employment of truthfulness, which is an aspect of moral discipline ( within a disciple, thereby initiating or enhancing the knowledge of liberation Shankara ("He who is benevolent"): the eighth-century adept who was the greatest proponent of nondualism (Advaita Vedanta) and whose arts school was probably responsible for the decrease of Buddhism in India Shishya ("student/disciple"): the initiated adherent of a guru week ("He who is benign"): the Divine; a deity that has served yogins as an first model throughout the ages Shiva-Sutra ("Shiva's Aphorisms"): comparable the physical exercise Sutra of Patanjali, a classical acquisition on yoga, as educated in the Shaivism of Kashmir; authored by Vasugupta (ninth time period C.
[bhuguvud geet]: Hindu religious person scripture, "almost entirely in the word form of a talking betwixt Krishna, who represents the Self, the Atman, or large Consciousness, and Arjuna, who symbolizes the egoistic man of action. It gives a abbreviated preserve of the anchorage by which organized or Yoga may be attained.