Autobiography of a Yogi

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When Autobiography of a Yogi first appeared in 1946, it was acclaimed as a landmark work in its discipline. The New York Occasions hailed it as “a uncommon account”. Newsweek pronounced it “fascinating”. The San Francisco Chronicle declared, “Yogananda presents a convincing case for yoga, and people who ‘got here to scoff’ might stay ‘to hope.” At the moment it’s nonetheless probably the most extensively learn and revered books ever printed on the knowledge of the East.

This audio version, that includes Academy Award winner Ben Kingsley’s masterful narration, incorporates the entire textual content of Paramahansa Yogananda’s life story, an absorbing account of a singular seek for Fact. Yogananda describes his experiences with modern-day saints and illuminated masters of India, and presents a definitive introduction to the entire science and philosophy of Yoga.

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Clients discover the ebook profoundly inspiring, stuffed with nice truths, and insights. They describe it as a fascinating learn that’s satisfying. Readers reward the writing high quality as great, private, and poetic. In addition they point out the autobiography is fascinating and offered with humility. Opinions are blended on the authenticity, with some discovering it actual and plausible, whereas others say it is riddled with nonsense.

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8 reviews for Autobiography of a Yogi

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  1. Bubba Johnny

    …for Christians
    The Autobiography of a Yogi is much loved by millions around the world – it is even translated into Russian and Chinese – so another commentary by those who are drawn to meditation and eastern religious perspective is unnecessary. My comments I hope are for those Christians particularly, who would like to deepen their experience of God, but are wary about confusing their own religious beliefs by being influenced by theologies that may be in conflict with their own.Much of the world is in a crisis of faith. Marginalized by modernism, darwinism, humanism, and the constant minimizing of spiritual and religious life. Radical fundamentalism in Islam and elsewhere, is gaining credibility, often just out of desperate resistance to moral relativism, at least on the surface. Suddenly in the age of information, many religious and spiritual choices are available, some questionable pop versions of profound traditions, some bizarre distortions, both of which can consume the precious commodities of faith and enthusiasm (Greek: with the feeling of God) and trap a person in a merry-go-round of distractions from a true experience of God. And there are others that are inspiring and life changing, that may not be the doorway to one’s own spiritual path, but nevertheless are the precious outstretched hand of God, infinite in his ability to nudge his children toward their true home and identity in Spirit. Truly it is difficult to figure out which is gold and which is ‘fool’s gold, and the same voice of cautious that is important in order to be discriminating can also overpower the gentle voice of a Soul call. Some Christians, i.e., Unitarians for instance, feel that the influence of other religions only deepens their own belief structures. This is neither right or wrong, it is matter of temperament. Others do not want to have to think about the validity or consistency of the theology they, for whatever reasons, call their own. And this is certainly a legitimate concern – after all, faith is most useful when it is committed and non-conflicted.As both a Ph.D. in Philosophy, and as ordained Lutheran Minister, and 40 year practitioner of Yoga Meditation, it is not tangential for me to study and integrate useful things into deepening my spiritual life and experience. Studying theology and the various spiritual traditions and sorting the wheat from the chaff is is part of my professional scholarly pursuits, it is what I do. So I hope this is helpful!Let’s look at the landscape objectively. Theologically, there are over 2000 different protestant sects with a wide diversification of interpretation of scripture. The Russian and Greek Orthodox have many abrupt differences with the Roman Catholic, and both have global differences with Protestantism. There is the LDS Church, and a host of esoteric Christian sects some dating to the time of Christ. Suddenly, we have choices, other than what we were born into! This is as much a headache as it is illuminating. Which one is right? Which one is wrong? Or this not the point at all? What of all these different interpretations were just the beginning – the beginning to a direct experience of God, that is not vulnerable to the written word?Theologians and scholars, and I will cautiously include myself, have a widely diversified interpretation of scripture, and biblical history, And since mid- 20th centuries, with the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls and the Nag Hamadhi Scrolls, we have scripture that predates the centuries of rewrites and modifications by mortals al with their own ideas about exactly what Jesus taught! Few scholars would deny the levels of rewrites and over-rights that of occurred through the centuries. And to suddenly have fresh scriptures such as these is mind bending to say the least. The crisis of faith goes all the way to the top! Today Christian theologians are as much at each other’s throats in 21st century as they were in the 4th century at the Council of Nicaea where fist fights literally broke out between bishops of the very very diverse Christian sects that existed at the time. Men at work and play.What scriptures to finally be included in the Bible we know today and accepted as Divine Truth, and which ones were to be tossed out, was predominately decided at Nicaea, by a Roman Emperor, who like all emperors truly believed he was Divine, and who it is now known was not a Christian at all (until his `cover-the-bases’ conversion on his death bed – 400 years after Christ spoke the words. Most modern theologians are in a horrible predicament because they simply cannot in good conscience, accept a non-christian’s choices.Gospels like Philip and Thomas, even the Pseudo-Clementines (Recognitions) and the Protevangelium and others – are clearly legitimate, if not more pure, than the strongly conflicted Synoptic Gospels that disagree on every other page, nor are they bound up with the hostile language of Paul, who’s open animosity to the Jerusalem Church (Nazarene) of Jesus and his family, composes about half of the New Testament. And Paul didn’t even know Jesus, claiming only his `divine perception’ of Jesus. Nor did he spend much time in contact with Peter and James (brother of Jesus and the one that Jesus clearly states as the one you should follow `for whom heaven and earth were created’) – the time can be measured in weeks, not months or years. I personally happen to believe that Paul’s hellenized, novelized, and romanticized, version, though strongly in contradiction with Jesus’ own teachings, actually was Divinely inspired, and important in the proliferation of the teachings, but only for the purpose of creating a watered down version, that common people could embrace and could be easily accepted. One might compare this to the proliferation of Islam today. But the price has been horrific and could actually destroy the `church’ as we know it.I go into this for a purpose. Coming to grips with the crisis in faith and finding a solution is what is needed. It is no secret that the Church as been at war on obfuscating scientific discoveries for centuries. And now it is no secret that the Gospels are quite flawed. What we don’t need is a crisis of faith without a path to resolution – a resolution that will lead to a deeper more personal conviction that transcends the `apparent’ contradictions. God is at no inconvenience when it comes to genius and Christians need not be concerned that somehow Science will find a universe absent of God! The Truth can handle skepticism and discernment effortlessly!Consider what that muddled scriptural scenario means, in terms of what the ‘Word’ means in scripture. Discerning an accurate depiction of what Jesus taught – is like someone saying somethings in the 1600`s, almost 200 years before there was a United States, and when the average person only lived 35 years – and only nobles and monks could read and write – and taking His words, that were finally written down by people many years later, by people who did not hear them directly, little more than hearsay – and then this being rewritten by different humans with their various agendas, and then interpreted today by a bunch of political motivated men, fiercely in competition with each other to the point of killing one another, and finally to be decided on by politically appointees under the thumb of megalomaniac Emperor like Mao or Stalin! This is exactly the history of the Gospels, now accepted by the vast majority of Christians as the true Word. In reality the Emperor of Rome, Constantine the Great `decided’ what was the truth and what was not, through his bishops – and his decision making was based on the political consolidation of an empire torn apart, and in desperate need of reigning in the wildly diverse Christians sects, now an influential political force to be reckoned with, but also with the incumbent mystery religions of the time through the Roman Empire.Add to this – the centuries of tweaking before and after, not to mention what happens when one becomes absorbed in the fascinating history of Jesus’ Messianic Judaism and how it was distorted and evolved into Pauline Roman Christianity, the whole conundrum can be stupefying. One may realizes, that the interpreting scripture is a nest of worms, without a reference point. This is not to diminish the import of the Scriptures, but to clearly point out that without a rosetta stone, it is near impossible to discern a `final unequivocal true version’.Don’t worry, I would not toss a grenade into anyone spiritual well being without pointing the way to safety!Conflict can be illuminating and advance the spiritual seekers understanding. And Jesus certainly does not fail to provide the path to resolution! What if the `Word’ is not black marks on white paper, slaves to the limitations of mortal minds, vulnerable to interpretation and misconception by both well meaning and deceptive men alike? Heaven knows how hard it is to send an email and have someone not confuse your intentions! Words!!! But what if the “Word’ that proceedth out of the `mouth of God’ is in fact the very stuff of God, and knowable in such a way that it cannot be misinterpreted? Isn’t this the nature of `Truth’? What if we do as Jesus admonished us to do “Be still and know that I am Lord”. That reference point is the experience of God within. We are admonished by Jesus to `Love thy God with all thy heart, and all thy mind…’, but how are we to love God, if we don’t know God? And this is exactly the purpose of meditation and what Yogananda seeks to provide us an introduction to. He teaches the science of stilling the mind, and there behind the roar of our thoughts, fears, worries – there we `know’. Here… all scriptures come into focus. It doesn’t matter what religion you belong to or what you believe – The Autobiography of a Yogi, is a introduction to the science of Meditation. Yogananda is deeply steeped in Christian theology (See his fabulous interpretation of the Bible), as was his Guru. Not only is this a fascinating account of modern day saints who dedicated their lives to God, it is an introduction to the scientific techniques to having a direct experience of the Soul, the spark of God with in. One can then interpret the scriptures from their heart, from their own inner truth, and here they come alive so personally. All else is small print.I would just add: Although this is a great version of Autobiography of Yogi, that if you do decide to go on and learn the techniques of meditation – go to Yogananda’s organization, Self Realization Fellowship, ONLY, not the knock offs.

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  2. Paul

    Best elucidation on the synthesis of spirituality, Science and philosophy I’ve ever read.
    This book will Astound you with its technical knowledge and depth and its powerful testimony of the miraculous. The Integrity abd genius Yogananda brings will convince you that the fantastical Miracles and experiences he describes truly happened. Inthe all-important synthesis of spirituality, science and philosophy required to attain true esoteric knowledge of life, the world and the universe, no one does it better or brings it all together better than Yogananda. A truly remarkable man and remarkable book. If this book was required reading in every school the world would be a far better place.

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  3. Son of Surya

    A wonderful book, highly recommended for anyone interested in the spiritual path
    Autobiography of a Yogi was recommended to me by various sources as one of the basic books any spiritual seeker should read. The moment I picked it up I already wholeheartedly agreed and after reading the book in its entirety, I think it is one of the best spiritual books written in the last century. I certainly agree that it should be included in the library of all spiritual persons.I was not familiar with Yogananda before, so reading an autobiography of someone unknown to you might seem a bit strange. But it really reads like a novel. Swami Yogananda had a lovely, narrative writing style which makes the book very pleasurable to read. Yogananda recalls his early childhood and his search for a guru. A large part of the book is spent recalling anecdotes about the time with his guru, Sri Yukteswar, and Yogananda’s spiritual development. Being a westerner with virtually no knowledge about Yoga (apart from knowing some people practicing ‘Hatha Yoga’ – most of whom are focusing on the physical aspects and practising yoga for ‘relaxation’ and ‘well being’ only), I think the book does a good job at explaining the purpose and different practises / variants of Yoga. All concepts (unknown to many westerners) are explained clearly, also many footnotes are included, among which are many from the publisher to update the information after Yogananda’s death.What surprised me is the great number of references to the life of Jesus and/or the christian Bible. I didn’t expect to find this in a book about a Yogi. But this only strengthens my conviction that there is only one true, underlying spiritual path to the various religions. Also, later I learned that Yogananda had a high degree of Christ consciousness. Maybe the numerous references were also included to make the book appeal more to the western mind, as it was Yogananda’s life-long mission and divine plan to bring Yoga to the west. Anyhow he does a great job. In the second half of the book, Yogananda’s successful effort to bring yoga to the west is described in detail, of course also with many inspiring, uplifting and wonderous anecdotes.In the book there are many descriptions of ‘miraculous’ happenings by the Yogis. These stories are fun to read and makes one wonder at the powers of these great masters. I’m sure the average western mind will be fascinated with these stories and this may be a reason to include them (I reckon that in India this is less regarded as extraordinary).All in all I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in spirituality, as it really contains many deep truths about life and its purpose. Of course it is not necessary for everyone to begin practising yoga (although it made me consider it), it is written in such a way that the truths are universal.Yogananda has written many books, and I think this would be the perfect book to start with as it lays a nice fundation explaining his life and many concepts.

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  4. Archaon

    There is no loss of quality in this format. Paramahansma’s inspiring journey reaches through the ether with all the same impact.

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  5. Matheo Galatis

    It opens the mind to so many possibilities and can help us step briefly outside of our limited thinking and understand how to access greater levels of consciousness. I love Yogananda’s story, his relentlessness to teach his work and the state of inner peace he achieved prior to leaving his body. Still impactful after more than 14 years of reading this book.

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  6. naresh r.

    Muy interesante

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  7. Kristian T

    En besvikelse

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  8. ANIL SHARMA

    An amazing autobiography of the great Yogi of India known as the father of Yoga in the west. Quality of paper, printing and photos all are excellent. It’s a masterpiece.

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    Autobiography of a Yogi
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