Section 1: Transcendental Yogi Tales Introduction
The tale of the Yogi
Is transcendental
In a dream of himself or herself
And always divine
In its outcome
As the love of the truth
Is fostered
Within each and all
In the grace and enchantment
Of what is possible
In the care of the whole
Of the ashram and people
Of his or her heart
Master Ananda shares from his heart transcendental stories of Yogis of the feminine, masculine and sometimes both through time. Each story aligns a blessing from the divine grace of the spirits that love humanity when a Yogi is present in your midst. The love of the two and the care of the ashram prevails in a divine sequencing of dream that only a master of truth can foster for others through time. May each story warm your heart and allow you to dream in Yogi parables of a fate divine ahead.
In the love of the love within,
Asur’Ana and Per
Tao
The love of the sway
Departs a rhythm
Of a soar into heaven
Like two birds of ourselves
Into the moonlit sky
In your arms I am forever
In the forever of the truth
Of the love of who I am
In a transcendental journey
Of a Yogi system
In which the nonphysical is real
And all else is not
And the love of spirit
Is sublime
The Truth of Ourselves
The flight path with the Yogi is divine. I soar and sail with Rareitish every other week in his recitals of music with his divine consort who dances under the starry night skies of his ashram “Suhana”. Suhana translates into “beautiful” in our language and indeed the land and lodging is beautiful indeed in Ashram Suhana. The lake is picturesque and can be bathed within in three regions; one for men and one for women and the other for partnerships. The love is high at noon and dinner is sublime at seven and the evenings often flow with amazing music from around the countryside as musician after musician arrives to add to the orchestra of the ashram. I too am a dancer at age eighteen known as Swarza. Swarza is the Yogi’s name for me that was offered at age fourteen as I motioned to remain in his care due to the truth that the Yogi is my father. Read more