Guest guest Posted April 27, 2006 Report Share Posted April 27, 2006 dear abbas, jane and others i guess there will always be different opinions, even on basic issues like foot position in hatha yoga asanas or pranayama for e.g., when doing a standing forward bend in hatha yoga, i was taught by my teachers who claimed a millennia old lineage that the feet should be positioned at a 45 % angle, like a "V" - other teachers practicing in the West will tell you that this is wrong (however, if you look at the positions of the bones in the pelvis, the feet should probably be pointed in a "V" so as to open the pelvis and maximize the stretch) from my understanding, taking any substance in through the nose and out the mouth is nasya, whether its water, oil, choornam etc neti is a specific technique in which the water enters one nostril and exists the other - using water (jala) or other substances as appropriate, e.g. herbal decoctions, milk decoctions, etc snorting water into the nose is not really neti proper, and nor is taking the water into the mouth and forcing it out the nose the latter method i think could be particularly problematic, as i mentioned before, with water being forced into the sinuses and eustachian tube - certainly do not attempt this if you have any nasal congestion as far as taking substances in the mouth and out the nose, ayurvedic practices seems to avoid doing this, such as in dhuma, the therapeutic inhalation of smoke, which is always performed by inhaling the smoke into the nostrils and out the mouth, not the other way around as far as the basic method of jala neti, i have some materials from my book i could post, but i found a reasonably good explanation on wikipedia, of all places: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neti if it is insufficient i can comment further best... todd caldecott On 27-Apr-06, at 5:40 AM, ayurveda wrote: > Message: 2 > Wed, 26 Apr 2006 23:06:32 +0500 > "Abbas Ali Siddiqui" <abbasasi > > But there > is also a different opinion received from Mr. Suryanagara which > says that > one can take water in mouth and push it out through mouth-nose > connection > i.e. through the mouth, out of the nose as opposed to the method > stated by > you i.e. through the nose, out of the nose. Caldecott todd (AT) toddcaldecott (DOT) com www.toddcaldecott.com <*> ayurveda/ <*> ayurveda <*> Your Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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