User:Pmronchi/Sandbox

His practice
Even though both his Yoga and his Tibetan Buddhism practices involved mental exercises, Theos Bernard usually does not describe them in detail, nor their effects.

This is what Theos Bernard writes about his initial instructions for physical practice under the mail [AN: I think some of these instructions were given in person] guidance of his first Guru: Then one day, out of a clear sky, I was summoned by one who had just arrived from India. He proved to be my first spiritual teacher or Guru. [...] There was one posture, said my Guru, which I should try to develop at this time. This was Padmasana, or the lotus pose. This is considered to be the foremost of all Asanas, and it had to be learned if I expected to make any progress in the practice of Yoga. [...] The Guru further advised me not to hurry, but to develop this Asana by slow degrees, until I could maintain it with comfort. It was of the greatest importance for future work that I should not attempt to maintain the position for more than an hour's duration without expert advise. [...] My first exercise was to learn how to do the practice known as Uddiyana, or Inter-abdominal control. [...] I was advised to practice it every morning and every evening, and that the minimum number of times to do the exercise so as to derive benefit was 750, and the maximum 1500. [...] My ultimate goals was to do this 1500 times daily for a continuous period of six months. [...] This was to bring me to the ultimate development of Uddiyana, and then Nauli, which consists of gaining complete control over all abdominal muscles, so that it will be possible to isolate the recti and roll them in any direction. [...] My Guru would not go into the benefits to be gained by this exercise other than the purely physical ones. He insisted, however, that I should develop it to the same point of efficiency as Uddiyana. [...] I was to supplement these exercises with the posture known as Sirshasana, otherwise known as the head stand. [...] Indeed, it would be necessary, at some future time during my preparatory training, to develop it to the point of being able to remain on my head for three hours, and that I should maintain this practice for a period of at least a month, and preferably three months. [...] I immediately made a note of the time-consuming aspect of Yoga practice, but an inner determination told me that I would find the way.
 * Yoga practice

This is how Theos Bernard describes his advanced practice under the Maharishi: The Maharishi said that many of my letters had been read to him and that he was certain I was prepared and that he would choose an auspicious day for my initiation. In the meantime I was to prepare myself for this day. [...] I had scarcely sunk into sleep when four o'clock came and I had to be up. I set to work on Dhauti. [...] I followed this with Neti. [...] I devoted some fifteen minutes to [stretching the tongue for Khecari]. [...] I had been keeping up the practice of Uddiyana for some years; so I found no difficulty in doing the excercise 1500 times. This would usually occupy me for about half an hour. Then I would devote fifteen minutes to Nauli. [...] A quarter for six I set as the time to begin standing on my head for half an hour. [...] On finishing the head stand, I began my Pranayama practice. Eventually, I would devote most of the time to this practice. [...] I began the practice Bhastrika [...] this exercise at the rate of sixty strokes a minute was easy. I found I could do it at the top speed of 120 [...] but limited myself to the lower speed and did it for one minute only. [...] I inhaled slowly and as deeply and fully as possible, then suspended for one minute, then exhaled as slowly as possible. This in the beginning consumed two and one half minutes. My second round began at three minutes, so I did ten rounds in thirty minutes. After one week I lifted the suspension to two minutes. It was my plan to increase my Kumbhaka at the rate on one minute a week until I reached the first degree of perfection. All practices were aimed at that goal. [...] I finished that morning at seven o'clock, after three hours of practice. This was to be my daily minimum for the next few months. [...] At ten-thirty I resumed my practices, beginning with Khecari which I worked at for fifteen minutes. At a quarter before eleven I stood on my head for thirty minutes. After finishing the head stand, I took my seat in the Padmasana position and spent thirty minutes on Pranayama. I always began this exercise with Bhastrika as prescribed. By this time my body was warm enough to practice the Asanas. It is customary to practice these after everything else has been done, making rather a side issue of them. [...] There were sixteen Asanas which it was necessary for me to develop. [...] It would be sufficient for me to hold Padmasana for a period of three hours, but it was essential that I learn the technique of the others. [...] Lunch was brought in about one o'clock. This was my only real meal [...] my diet was eventually reduced to nothing but liquids: two glasses of clarified butter and several glasses of milk per day. This seemed ample and never have I been in better health. After lunch I reclined for the next hour or so. This period, when the heat was most intense, was usually devoted to reading. It is frequently the practice of [a] Yogi to set aside this time for visitors. [...] At four o'clock I began my practices in accordance with the schedule I had set for myself. At this time I was putting the emphasis on Uddiyana and Nauli, devoting an hour to them, and doing each 1500 times. By the end I was in a good sweat, and I thought it was high time I tried Basti. [...] It was five-thirty by the time I finished my experiment for the day, and I spent the next fifteen minutes in doing Khecari, which does not offer any physical exertion. At a quarter to six I went up on my head for half an hour. I followed this with thirty minutes of Pranayama [...] This was the discipline I was to follow for the next three months, gradually increasing my head stand and breathing exercises. At the same time I was to reduce my diet, until it was to be nothing but liquids, and to diminish my sleep until it was no longer than four hours each day. The Maharishi himself never slept more than two hours a day. [...] I had the feeling of never having been so busy in my entire life, yet here I was living in a jungle retreat, so far removed from the hurry and scurry of Western civilization. Indeed, there was not a spare minute. I had to be working constantly, never relaxing, in order to keep up. Yet as later I looked back upon this early discipline, I often asked myself how I could have been so lazy; for after the first month I added to my regular schedule the practice of Pranayama from midnight to one A.M. [...] During the last month of my training I practiced at each of the four intervals of twenty-four hours.

In Tibet he performed many rituals, but his main practice involved being in isolation within a cave for many days. His previous practice in Yoga not only opened to him the doors to Tibet, but also was the basis for his practice there.
 * Tibetan Buddhism practice