DAILY PHOTO: Kote Sri Anjaneya Swamy Temple, Mysore

Image

Photograph of the Kote Sri Anjaneya Swamy Temple and Palace Gates in Mysore (Mysuru,) Karnataka, India.

PROMPT: Free

Daily writing prompt
What job would you do for free?

Operating a car crusher seems like it would be satisfying. Any activity that goes with the flow of increasing entropy would be a nice change. Most human endeavor feels Sisypheanly futile.

DAILY PHOTO: Colorful Mural in Mussoorie

Image

Photograph of wall murals in Mussoorie, India.

PROMPT: Olympic Sports

Daily writing prompt
What Olympic sports do you enjoy watching the most?

Summer: Gymnastics and Diving because it all seems impossible.

Winter: Short Track Speed Skating because of its high-speed crashes, and Curling because it’s mesmerizing like a slow-motion crash.

Slow Burn [Senryū]

Photograph of an overgrown scale model of Dutch Square. The model is located on Bukit Cina (Chinese Hill.)
bedraggled buildings:
nature digests what it eats
ever so slowly.

DAILY PHOTO: Melaka Murals in a Chinese Style

Photo of wall mural of a dark horse and a white horse with Chinese text and stamp. Taken in Melaka, Malaysia's Chinatown [Jonker Street area.]
Photo of a mural of ferry laborers taken in Melaka, Malaysia.
Photo of a mural of a lady showered in flower petals taken near the riverwalk in Melaka, Malaysia.

Horizon [Haiku]

Photograph taken from the coast near Melaka, Malaysia of ships on a distant horizon.
ships at horizon
look tiny between vast sea
& endless sky.

BOOK: “The Yoga Tradition of the Mysore Palace” Trans. / Ed. / Introduction by N.E. Sjoman

The Yoga Tradition Of The Mysore PalaceThe Yoga Tradition Of The Mysore Palace by N.E. Sjoman
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Online

This book consists of a translation of The Śrītattvanidhi, a description of 122 Hatha Yoga postures (asana) that has been attributed to Krishnaraja Wodeyar III (Maharaja of Mysore – b.1794 – d. 1868,) as well as notes and commentary on the postures by the Sanskrit scholar, N.E. Sjoman, notes that serve to map said postures to their present-day counterparts. Sjoman also writes an extensive introduction that explores the evolution of the body of yogasana as we now know them, with discussion of varied sources, his research rooted in archival study in Mysore. A copy of the original The Śrītattvanidhi, (of varied readability) is included in the text.

Because India is top-heavy in terms of population and influence, outside of India yoga practitioners might be forgiven for failing to understand how important Mysore and the patronage of the Wodeyar royalty to T.T. Krishnamacharya was in the development of asana-centric yoga as we know it today. Krishnamacharya taught Pattabhi Jois (Ashtanga Vinyasa,) B.K.S. Iyengar (prop yoga,) and Indira Devi (Yogini to the stars,) among other prominent 20th century teachers. It is from these teachers onward that yoga practice would be recognizable to the average practitioner of today.

This book links the postures of The Śrītattvanidhi to the names / versions known today (typically linked by the names from B.K.S. Iyengar’s Light on Yoga.) Sjoman also maps these asana to other prominent sources like Hatha Yoga Pradipika, Gheranda Samhita, Krishnamacharya’s Yogamakaranda, Pattabhi Jois’s Yoga Mala, and Yogeshwaranand Parmahansa’s First Steps to Higher Yoga, linking them primarily through a series of indices.

If you’re interested in the evolution of yoga postures over time, I’d highly recommend this book as a quick way to get a basic grasp of the subject.

View all my reviews

PROMPT: Community

Daily writing prompt
How would you improve your community?

First, I would have to figure out what my community is.

Playful Thief [Kyōka]

Photograph taken in Lucknow, India in the garden of the Mushir Zadi tomb.
puppy guards 
a stolen garment
it hopes owner
will attempt to retrieve,
so that play can ensue.