• A place to relax and nourish your mind, body and spirit
  • We offer a range of holistic therapies aimed at enhancing both your physical and emotional well-being.
  • Our sorrows and wounds are healed only when we touch them with compassion.
  • Love is the great miracle cure. Loving ourselves works miracles in our lives.
  • All healing is first a healing of the heart.
Showing posts with label retreats. Show all posts
Showing posts with label retreats. Show all posts

Living Yoga Retreats in Cusco (Sacred Valley)

Living yoga retreats in natural surroundings for peace of mind and inner healing, very close to Cusco.


Each week, we offer special packages that include relaxation, harmony, various workshops, ceremonies for prosperity, and more. Our beautiful eco-yoga farm is located in the Sacred Valley of the Incas. The yoga huts and houses are set along the River Vilcanota and are surrounded by the Valley's picturesque mountains.

The yoga retreat includes:

1 Yoga Class
Philosophy of Yoga
Meals
1 Sound Healing Therapy and 1 Nidra yoga session.
Fire Ceremony for Prosperity
Lodging in an ecological farm
Trekking to a beautiful waterfall
1 Water Ceremony
Transportation is not included but it is around 8 soles return.

You will need to bring :
A flashlight
Sun Cream
Water
Toiler paper
Sleeping bag (if you have one)

Please contact us for scheduling, more information or to reserve your spot for the next retreat. We would love to hear from you!

Retreat for 2 Days/1 Night
Cost: S./250 Peruvian Soles

Retreats start on:
Mondays, Wednesdays, and Saturdays

At least 4 participants are necessary for the retreat. Please call or email us to confirm.

In order to participate we ask that you pay a deposit of 50 soles prior to the date of the retreat. You can pay us directly at our Ashram. Please let me Know when you are coming.

We will meet at 10 am
We will coming back approximately at 5 pm the next day, arriving to Cusco city at 6:30 pm more or less. :)

Please let me know if you are also interested in any healing therapies or a massage.

P.s. The location of the retreat is in an ecological farm where there are basic facilities, i.e. no electricity, no internet access or cellular signal, or hot water.
We use compost toilets and encourage living in harmony with nature.
The room where you will sleep in is shared with other participants.

*Ask us about group discounts, group retreats, and other packages


Ways of Acquiring Knowledge and Faith

Based on the knowledge of the Vedas, we have a practical understanding of how and why Western psychologists are going wrong in their understanding of the phenomena of consciousness all together.

There are different levels of consciousness and different ways of acquiring consciousness and knowledge. Presently we have a more or less limited awareness of reality, according to the knowledge we have acquired up to now. Depending on the way knowledge is acquired, our awareness will grow accordingly. The three ways of acquiring knowledge are:

Direct perception

This is called pratyaksa or direct sensual perception. Being to certain extents conditioned by the physical experience of life, we do not have a direct perception of consciousness. Rather we are bound to look upon everything as a kind of physical phenomena. We can only perceive the gross reality by smelling, tasting, seeing, touching and hearing about the same qualities of the manifested world. Thus we can never adopt an impartial vision about faith and the soul in terms of relevance. We are confined and imprisoned by the shackles of our senses. We can understand this by using the example of the eye. Our eye can not see things which are very far away. At the same time it can not see things, which are very close, like the eye lids. In other words there is only a certain spectrum of experience and this is very limited and gross. Therefore faith, soul, creator, etc. can be considered by some people as fabrications of the human mind.

Deduction, logic and comparison

Above the sensual perception, there is the way of expanding one’s awareness through experimentation, comparison, logic and study. This process is called anumana.

A very important question in this process is the causal effect. What causes what, and what are the effects of different interactions in the physical world? The mind and intellect are playing the most prominent role in anumana. As this process is based on the experience of our physical senses or the thoughts and knowledge of others (which is again at some point based on sensual perception), it is again limited, even though some deeper awareness can be there.

Anumana allows us at least to take into consideration that there are things which we cannot see. Still it is not broad-minded enough to simply accept information, which could be revealed in one way or another from a higher dimension. This is a symptom of weak faith. As the process is very speculative, we can never come to the final conclusion about higher truths of existence. Revelations from higher dimensions are as real as there is a cause for every dimension. As there is a father of every son, there is also a creator of everything created. It is not an unreasonable proposal at all.

Through spiritual practice and inner quest

When we enter into the third way of acquiring knowledge, which is called sabda, we see it confirmed that there is knowledge of great importance, which cannot be verified with pratyaksa nor with anumana. Such type of knowledge can be received and realized only through faith and spiritual practice and it can be further established by prayer or inner conversation with the Master within all of us.

On the platform of anumana we tend to speculate a little bit about everything. Eventually in the end we cannot develop a real determination or strong faith of any kind. We tend to see everything in relative terms, and to such a degree that even our theoretical knowledge of positive religious and moral principles is of no avail to situate us in a healthy harmonious situation.

Sabda on the contrary is the divine revelation as documented in the holy Vedic scriptures. Every principle of truth is announced therein. Receiving sabda from the appropriate source brings about a growth of awareness and allows us to do as much additional research into transcendence as we like, or until we are satisfied with the result.

We can see that there are tremendous differences of awareness of reality in accordance with the faith we have, and resulting from that, differences in the system in acquiring knowledge we use. By helping to expand another person’s awareness, we can help them to solve problems. One may be dreaming of a lion and being scared, but as soon as the person wakes up, they will realize that that there is no reason to be afraid.

In the same way by expanding our awareness towards the understanding of the all-good and all-meaningful purpose of life and existence we can overcome the difficulties of our present situation.

By understanding the different levels of individual consciousness and how this consciousness is being formed by different social circumstances of life, and at the same time how it influences and forms the social environment, we learn how to help people allow positive influences to enter their lives and how to help them to protect themselves from destructive influences.

No environment in this world is absolutely good or bad. We have only to find out how to adjust properly. In other words there is no perfect world, as long as we do not rise to a perfect level of awareness and appropriate action.

In India we can see, for example, how the specific ritualism, popular teachers and popular interpretations of teachings impress people. They impress them so much that sometimes apparently ridiculous ideas, which contradict the very same sacred revelations they are based upon, are deeply ingrained into the faulty behavior of individuals.

For example the Vedas state very clearly that the human being should be considered exclusively for their personal qualities and by their work, not by their birth. The very so-called preachers of Vedic wisdom, the Brahmins, have a strong current insisting to the contrary. They claim that only by being born in a Brahmin family, one gets entitled to act as a Brahmin in society.

It is mainly the interest for name, fame and money which spoils the social atmosphere and which creates all the disturbances on an individual as well as on a collective level. These lower interests appear sometimes as materialistic concepts and sometimes they hide themselves behind the banner of religion. Our environment is loaded with preconceived faulty notions of the past, and all of them are the basis for the faulty assumptions and teachings of the present.

Doubt and faith

In the spiritual quest and in the search for true health, it is really important to question all values. We have to personally knock at the door of truth within our heart and keep our eyes open for sensible trustworthy revelations, as we go through our natural process of accepting and rejecting, between doubt and faith. As naturally as there must be doubt there can also be faith, the opposite of doubting. Doubting has been established within the creation to help us find what we can trust in.

When we find what we can trust in, at that moment we can exercise the doubting of the doubting process as such and embrace our faith whole-heartedly. We may call this process anumana with the support of sabda. “Is there still doubt about how we can have full faith?”

The power of discrimination is God-given and faith is the crown-jewel of having properly exercised our evaluation.

Doubt and faith have accompanied us since the childhood. As a child we did not say that we trusted a certain person. We said rather or not we liked or disliked a person. If you liked someone you would go anywhere with them, despite what they might say to you. And if you did not like someone, even if it was your father or mother, you would not submit to their directions, at least internally.

Therefore OIDA-therapy increases faith and decreases doubt so that a you can search for a healthy environment of individuals, where you can happily put your full faith. Such an environment will help you to become healthier or more spiritually advanced, if you prefer to see it that way.

http://www.oidatherapy.org

Yoga Inbound - Tours to India.

Dear Visitor, please let us introduce ourselves... We belong to a Bhakti-Yoga-School in Berlin and whilst living out our dreams and ideals we were carried to many places around the planet. We would like to invite everybody to take part in our programs, giving you the opportunity to meet extraordinary people in extraordinary locations. The Inbound Yoga Club is a place where our conciousness can evolve, a place where you are always welcome.
Swami Paramadvaiti has been living the Bhakti Yoga way of life for over 35 years and throughout his lifetime has opened up countless projects, ashrams and yoga centres. He developed the system of Inbound Yoga to give to everybody a holistic and individual way of approaching yoga and spirituality through a number of diverse and interesting techniques. On our tours we will visit some of these centres and we'll have the opportunity for intense practice, to discover unique ways of living and, most importantly, discover ourselves ...
Pati (Thomas Fiedler) will be your german and english speaking tour guide and is the chairman of the Inbound Yoga Tours. He will assure your trip to be an unforgetable one, so remarkable that you'll not want to come back home! In Germany, he offers the wellness seminar"VIsions & Movement", currently the only one of its kind.
Mohini (Elizabeth Lopez Osorio) has been practicing Bhakti Yoga for 14 years and has opened several centres in South America, emphasizing mainly on women's community work and spiritual refuge. Her warm and affectionate character, experience and maturity in social interaction makes her the ideal tour guide, specialising on South America.
Bhagavatamrita (Benjy Munro) has lived in Ecuador for many years and runs his own yoga centre "Tulasi Yoga School". He is the route planner and specialized tour guide for South America. He will teach yoga, especially advanced asanas, and lead the expeditions into Ecuador's diverse jungle. For five years he managed our wonderful yoga retreat "Vrindavan Jardin Ecologico" situated in Rio Negro.
Gourkeshava lives in Vrindavan (India) and has been leading several temple projects for many years. He is the route planner for our Indian tours. Besides this he is also responsable for the organisation of the Vrinda book store, the Vaishnava Academy (the leading institution in spreading the Bhakti Yoga philosophy) and the central Inbound Tours office in India. He is currently running the website www.vina.cc.
Vamsi (Waldemar Konrad Hartlaub) practices Yoga for more than 25 Years and developed his own style, called Aqua Yoga. As a musician he is known as Conny Hard and performs worldwide with Bhajan and Mantra Meditation combined with elements derived from Rock and Pop. He speaks five languages and visited all continents of Earth. He lived in Ecuador for the last 10 years where he founded several ashrams and yoga centers for international Inbound School of Yoga. Since 2009 he is a member of the Inbound Yoga Club e.V. and works for us as tour guide and yoga teacher.

Yoga Inbound - Tours to India.

What is the meaning of YOGA ?
The word yoga derives from Sanscrit, the oldes language of the planet- the "latin" of India. Yoga comes from the stem "yuj" which means "connection" - a connection between the real self, the soul, and the origin of the soul. Reestablishing this connection is the goal of all practices and helps us to achieve a perfect harmony within ourselves and the surrounding world. The exercises most commonly known throughout Europe and the US, the asanas, belong to Hatha Yoga, which is a part of the eightfold yoga, Ashtanga Yoga. Ashtanga Yoga belongs to one of the three main paths, Jnana Yoga, the yoga of knowledge. The other paths are Karma Yoga, the yoga of fulfilling human duties, and Bhakti Yoga, the yoga of transcendental dedication. Inbound Yoga brings together advantages of all three paths and enables the practitioner to reach perfect harmony of body, mind and soul. Yoga is the vehicle by which to start this voyage and the key to find strength, peace and love, which reside within each and every one of us. Liberating ourselves of day to day stress is the first step to discovering a more conscious and happy way of life. We are happy to present you Inbound Yoga as the contemporary way to practice this ancient wisdom.
Perfect Harmony
Harmony is the goal of lifes quest. Every living entity searches for happiness and satisfaction. But still we live in a world with so much suffering, in a world where ultimately everything ends with death. So how can one find harmony here? What does harmony actually mean and what means perfect harmony? The answer of yoga is very complex. The instructions and the practice start with the harmony of body, mind and soul. The asanas, the body work of Hatha-Yoga, cleanse the body and lead to excellent health. Pranayama and dhyana do the same for the mind and create a perfect interaction between body and mind. The result of this practice is deep inner peace and balance. The mind clears up, fears vanish and the inner ease shines out of the yogi to his surrounding. But this peace is just the first step, not the final goal of yoga. When the yogi advances more on his path he discovers his own spiritual nature, which is only temporarily connected to his body. He experiences that this spiritual identity is his true self and that to live according to this fact will free him of all pains of life. The highest form of harmony is living according to the reason for activity of his true identity - flawless spiritual love, Prema Bhakti. This all-embracing love is that strong that even the search for harmony becomes secondary and only the object of this love stays in the focus of attention. And who is this "object"? He is the origin of all being, the source and father of all souls.
Vedic Wisdom
The Vedas are Indian scriptures of wisdom from which all yoga paths and ways of hinduism are derived. They say about themselves that they are apaurusheya. That means that they do not origin in the limited world of human imagination but that they are extramundane, transcendental. Their wisdom is divine and not touched by time and space. To mankind they offer unlimited knowledge about the world and itself. The three main paths of yoga guide us through different levels of self discovery until perfect consciousness. - By Karma Yoga one learns that he is part of the big community of all living entities and that he should not behave egotistic, for his and all others sake. - Jnana Yoga, the yoga of knowledge, teaches the yogi that his existence as a part of this community is jurt temporary and that therefore there is a higher goal to realise his own nature as an atma, not body, not mind but an eternal individual entity, a spark of immortal divine consciousness. - Bhakti Yoga, the yoga of loving dedication, lets you realise that the real potential of the true self, the atma, is pure spiritual love, Prema Bhakti. This love is directed towards the origin of all being, who is a person, eternal, all-conscious and source of all kinds of happiness. Scriptures are not the only source of wisdom and knowledge. Similarly there are the great masters in whom this knowledge lives and shines. People who realised the perfection of yoga are able to make these states of consciousness accessible to us in a way that is only possible through personal exchange, not by theoretical studies. They can give us hints and help on how to advance from our own current platform on the path of yoga. Similarly it is important to visit places which had been sanctified by transcendental revelation and at those one can purify and prepare ones consciousness. These places are mostly sites where the eternal origin of all existence, God, in one of his many aspects revealed his nature and desires and by this had shown the way to all-embracing love.
Soul
According to vedic revelation the living entity consists of the unity of gross and subtle body as well as the atma. The gross body is made of flesh and bone, just what we normally name as the body. The mental parts like mind, intelligence, character, feeling, thinking is the subtle body or mental body. That means that not only the body as we know it is something external but also something that personal and intimate as ones own character. But, then what is our real identity? Atma, the spiritual soul, is the vedic answer to that question, the definition of life. It is the answer on the question "Who am i?". But what is the meaning of atma? Atma is the term for the true self of every living entity. The vedic scriptures describe this topic not from the view of a human or this world but from a devine standpoint, from a perspective beyond time and space. This makes the often asked question redundant, if the human has a soul because it is not the human that lives but the soul which gives life to the human body. When the body looses its functionality the atma with the subtle body remains and is forced to take a new gross body. The only exception to this are atmas who attained spiritual perfection. Spiritual perfection does not only mean to theoretically accept but to perceive that the true identity is atma, a divine spark of consciousness - eternal, individually conscious and full of bliss. Similarly perfection means, not only to know ones own nature as atma but also to perceive the nature of ones origin, the nature of god. This nature is revealed according to the spiritual individuality of the atma, whose natural relation to the origin blossoms into divine love.