The Rough Guide to Nepal

Page 45

SPIRITUAL PURSUITS AND ALTERNATIVE THERAPIES BASICS illness. However, before leaving the country you can donate unused medicines to the destitute through the dispensary at Kathmandu’s Bir Hospital, or to the Himalayan Buddhist Meditation Centre in Kathmandu, which gives them to monks.

Children Throughout Nepal – principally along the tourist trails – children will hound you. Repeatedly shouting “namaste” or “hello” at the weird-looking stranger is universal and often kids will ask you for “one dollar”, “chocolate” or “pen”. They’re not orphans or beggars, just ordinary schoolkids who’ve seen too many well-meaning but thoughtless tourists handing out little gifts wherever they go. A firmbut-gentle hoina holaa! (“I don’t think so!”) is usually enough. Few children would ever ask a Nepali for money, so reacting like a local will quickly embarrass them. Sometimes, however, they will tag along for hours; the best defences are a sense of humour and/or a strategic lack of engagement. Street children are a different case. Don’t give (or not directly – donations to a children’s charity will do more good – see box, p.72), and watch your wallet.

Spiritual pursuits and alternative therapies Nepal has a multitude of traditional and progressive disciplines, and though the country can seem something of a spiritual supermarket, its tolerant atmosphere makes it a great place to challenge your assumptions and study other systems of thought.

designed to unify the individual’s consciousness with the universe. Techniques include Karma yoga (basically altruism), Bhakti yoga (devotion, recognizable by the chanting) and Jnana yoga (deep meditation, best practised only after mastering one of the other kinds). What most Westerners would recognize as yoga springs from Raja yoga, probably formulated around 600 BC. It has eight astanga, or limbs (not to be confused with the yoga style with the same name, Ashtanga), each a step to realization. Three of these have a physical emphasis, and it is from this root that yoga’s reputation for pretzel poses and headstands comes. Whatever the name of a particular variation, be it Bikram, Kundalini, or Ashtanga, all types of yoga that use asanas (or positions) as an aid to developing the self are generally referred to as hatha yoga. Most practices also include Pranayam – breathing exercises. You’ll find several kinds in Nepal, including the Sivanand school (a slow style with asanas and lots of spiritual guidance), Iyengar (a very exacting school that uses some props and focuses on alignment) and practices that follow particular gurus from India, usually including elements of Raja, Bhakti and Karma yoga. There are reviews of yoga centres around Kathmandu (see p.100) and Pokhara (see p.216) in the relevant sections of the guide.

Buddhist meditation and study

Meditation is closely related to yoga, and the two often overlap: much of yoga involves meditation, and Buddhist meditation draws on many Hindu yogic practices. However, meditation centres in Nepal generally follow the Tibetan Buddhist tradition. Buddhist meditation is a science of mind. To Buddhists, mind is the cause of confusion and ego, and the aim of meditation is to transcend these. The past thirty years have seen an explosion of Vipassana (“insight”) is the kernel of all forms of outfits teaching yoga and meditation to both Buddhist meditation; related to hatha yoga, it foreigners and locals. The allied health fields of emphasizes the minute observation of physical ayurvedic and Tibetan medicine are also an attracsensations and mental processes to achieve a clear tion for many travellers to Nepal. Many programmes understanding of mind. Another basic practice don’t require a lengthy commitment, although any ipi8hfBu+Fu1Tqp6g5eaALs= common to most schools of Buddhism, shamatha residential courses are worth booking well in (“calm abiding”) attunes and sharpens the mind by advance. For more detailed background on means of coming back again and again to a Hinduism and Buddhism, the spiritual bases for meditative discipline. Several centres in the many practices, see “Religion” (p.396). Kathmandu Valley run rigorous residential courses in this practice. Yoga Tibetan Buddhist centres start students out with vipassana and shamatha as the foundation Yoga is more than just exercises – it’s a system of for a large armoury of meditation practices. spiritual, mental and physical self-discipline,

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