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Surya Namaskara as Sadhana – A Morning Conversation with the Sun

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There’s one dawn in Rishikesh I’ll never forget. The Ganga was wrapped in mist, the air cool enough to wake every cell, temple bells ringing softly in the distance.

First round of Surya Namaskara — clumsy, mechanical.
Second round — the breath started finding its own rhythm.
By the fourth — something changed. The body felt lighter, the spine awake, the mind softer. I wasn’t “doing yoga” anymore — I was just moving, breathing, being.

That’s when Surya Namaskara becomes sadhana — not a workout, not a to-do, but a way of showing up fully to yourself.

It’s More Than Just Exercise

Yes, Surya Namaskara has twelve steps, but inside those steps lives something deeper — posture, breath, and meditation all woven together.

When you let the breath guide the movement — inhale to rise, exhale to bow — the mind stops racing. It’s like crossing a bridge from the noisy outer world to the quiet one inside.

And that’s when you realize — yoga is not about “doing more.” It’s about coming back to yourself.

Finding Stillness in Movement

Each round feels like a wave: breath in, expand; breath out, surrender.

Practice at sunrise and something magical happens — the left and right energies in the body start to balance. After a few rounds, there’s a pause between breaths where the mind feels completely still.

Even though you are moving, inside, there’s quiet.

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What Changes with Daily Practice

I’ve seen this in myself and in students at Prakruti Yogashala Rishikesh:

Energy: Mornings stop feeling heavy. Even with less sleep, the fog clears.

Focus: The mind feels gathered, not scattered.

Emotions: Anger, worry, sadness — they’re still there, but they don’t run your day.

One student told me, “My life hasn’t changed, but I have. I’m less reactive, less rushed.”

That’s the real gift — it changes the way you meet life.

Keep It Simple

You don’t need 108 rounds. Start with five. Here’s a simple way I love to practice:

  1. Stand quietly before you begin. Close your eyes. Feel the ground under your feet.
  2. Set a small intention — peace, clarity, or just to be fully present.
  3. Move slowly, with breath. Don’t force. Let breath choose the speed.
  4. Pause at the end. Hands at heart, eyes closed, notice how you feel.

Even five rounds done this way can shift the entire day.

More Than a Strong Body

Yes, Surya Namaskara builds strength and flexibility, but the deeper gift is this — it connects you to yourself.

It wakes up the solar plexus chakra — the fire in your belly that gives confidence, courage, and the ability to “digest” life.

The sun will rise tomorrow, whether we notice it or not. But when we pause, bow, and breathe with it, something inside lines up with something eternal.

Here at Prakruti Yogashala and join yoga course in rishikesh, we don’t see Surya Namaskara as just exercise. We see it as a morning prayer — a way of saying, “Yes. I am here. I am ready for this day.”

Tomorrow morning, before the phone buzzes, before the world gets loud, step onto your mat. Offer a few rounds, not for your body alone, but for your heart.

Let strength rise.
Let gratitude bloom.
Let stillness hold you.

Om Suryaya Namaha

With love from Rishikesh,
Prakruti Yogashala

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