Unlocking the Voynich: The Yoga of Mystery and Meaning

What if the answers to history’s greatest riddles were hidden in plain sight? In a recent piece for The Independent, Vishwam Sankaran explores how a new study suggests the legendary Voynich manuscript—a 15th-century book long thought undecipherable—might indeed be an elaborately encrypted text, not just nonsense. Science journalist Michael Greshko has recreated a cipher—using materials and techniques available to medieval scribes—that produces text uncannily similar to the Voynich’s mysterious script. His findings hint that this strange codex may hold real meaning, concealed behind patterns only now coming to light. 🧐 Seeing Through the Veil Unraveling the Voynich’s mystery draws us straight into the heart of yoga’s quest for Satya—truthfulness. For centuries, scholars, cryptanalysts, and mystics have argued: is the manuscript meaningful, or merely illusion? As…

When Memory Builds Mountains: Lessons from Ancient Andean Burial Sites

Tucked away in the Titicaca Basin, the burial mounds of Kaillachuro are rewriting what we thought we knew about the origins of monumental architecture. In a recent piece for Phys.org, Greg Watry details how these low-lying mounds, built by hunter-gatherers, hint at a different kind of legacy—one shaped not by elites or kings, but by generations of communal memory and ritual. What does it mean when the largest structures in a landscape arise from acts of remembrance, not dominance? When the visible marks of ancestry grow slowly, almost by accident, through hundreds of years of returning, grieving, and honoring the dead? 🪦 Ritual as Architecture Researchers once believed that monuments required hierarchy—a top-down impulse to impress or control. But at Kaillachuro, stone burial boxes and…

Should You Really Join the 5am Club? What Yoga Teaches About Early Risers

When was the last time you set your alarm for 5am—and actually got up, full of hope that a new morning routine would change your life? In a recent piece for Woman’s Health UK, Ian Taylor investigates what really happens when we try to join the so-called 5am club, and what our bodies, minds, and science have to say about it. It turns out, biology might be more powerful than ambition. Early rising isn’t a superpower available to all—your chronotype, genetics, and circadian rhythm have a say. For some, 5am feels natural; for others, it’s a daily struggle against the grain that can backfire, especially if it cuts into precious sleep. 🌞 Nature, Not Willpower Yoga philosophy often asks us to practice svadhyaya—self-study—before we leap…

Surveilled and Silenced: What Modern Security Teaches Us About Ahimsa and Satya

In a recent piece for WIRED, Lily Hay Newman and Matt Burgess unspool a week of unsettling headlines: phone surveillance tools now let ICE agents monitor entire neighborhoods, Iran imposes a total internet blackout on its people, a chatbot generates disturbing synthetic images, and cross-border hacking exposes deep vulnerabilities in government. Each story heightens the sense that the boundaries of our private, ethical, and collective lives are under siege from technologies meant to surveil, divide, and exploit. How do we keep our center in a world of constant scrutiny, deception, and shifting power? The yamas—ahimsa (non-harm) and satya (truthfulness)—offer not just philosophical refuge, but practices for living ethically in the midst of collective unease. 👁️ Surveillance and the Erosion of Trust When the digital dragnet…

Biohacking, Masculinity, and the New Wellness Hustle

In a recent piece for Maclean’s, Colleen Derkatch explores the rise of biohacking as the latest business in men’s wellness, reshaping how masculinity and health are sold—and bought—in our culture. On the surface, it’s a story about gadgets, supplements, and Silicon Valley eccentricity. But underneath, the story wonders: what happens when wellness is measured not by presence or ease, but by productivity and virility? 🔍 The Competitive Edge Biohacking’s rise in the “manosphere” reveals how vulnerable we are to the pressure of proving ourselves. As tech tools and testosterone stacks fill the shelves, the pursuit of self-optimization starts to look less like self-care and more like a never-ending competition with others—and with ourselves. This echoes the yogic concept of Satya, or truthfulness: seeing things as…

Why Compassion Feels So Hard (And Why We Try Anyway)

Compassion is easy in theory, but the moment someone cuts us off in traffic or says something sharp, the feeling can vanish like mist. Why is it so difficult to remain open-hearted when the world pinches or provokes us? The Buddhist Review, Tricycle, dives into the knotty roots of compassion’s challenges—and what it means to keep returning to this practice, again and again. Yoga, like Buddhism, recognizes that non-harming—ahimsa—isn’t always simple or automatic. It’s a discipline, a choice we meet anew each day, sometimes each breath. Compassion calls us to witness not only others’ suffering, but our own reactivity, judgment, and deeply grooved habits. 🪷 When Compassion Meets Our Edges Why do we recoil from compassion, especially toward people we find difficult? Often it’s old…

How Local Journalism Grounds Our Democracy (and Our Practice)

Democracy rarely crumbles in a blaze—it unravels quietly, as our sense of connection to each other and our communities begins to wear thin. In a recent piece for Bucks County Beacon, Stu Faigen explores why defending local journalism is vital for anyone who cares about democracy, and how its slow decline quietly undermines our shared civic life. The writer asks: Where do we see ourselves inside public life anymore? The answer, again and again, points to local journalism—an unassuming force that keeps our communities visible and accountable, offering orientation amid the noise. 🪞 Satya: Seeing Clearly, Speaking Honestly Yoga teaches us the value of satya—truthfulness—not as a blunt instrument, but as a practice of seeing and naming things as they are. Local journalism embodies satya…

Lost to Wildfire: The Finest Wood That Made String Instruments Sing

Flames swept through Altadena, California, leaving behind more than charred homes—they erased a lifetime’s collection of rare tonewoods, the soul of Mario Miralles’s world-class string instruments. For decades, Miralles, a renowned luthier, gathered spruce from the Dolomites and centuries-old maple from Bosnia, hand-picking each piece for its resonance and character. His instruments carried his DNA, echoing through the hands of artists like Yo-Yo Ma and Gustavo Dudamel. But the Eaton fire reduced his precious wood and home to ash, sparing only a nearly finished violin and a single guitar—symbols of both loss and survival. Yet from the rubble emerges a story of resilience: the instruments saved, the community that rose in support, the memory of music that continues despite destruction. As Miralles’s violin now sings…

Krishnamacharya’s Living Yoga

What does it mean to be a true polymath, to live so fully that every skill becomes a form of yoga? In a recent presentation by Nrithya Jagannathan, Director of the Krishnamacharya Yoga Mandiram, we meet Tirumalai Krishnamacharya—the father of modern yoga—as a Sarva-Tantra-Svatantra, a master of all systems who made his life a living laboratory of discipline, adaptability, and empowerment. From tracing his lineage to the 9th-century yogi Nathamuni, to teaching legendary students and championing inclusivity, Krishnamacharya’s story is not just one of tradition, but of radical innovation within the heart of yoga itself. 🌱 Tradition and Innovation Intertwined Krishnamacharya held tradition close—not as a relic, but as a dynamic, living current. He was initiated into Vedic studies at age five, mastered the six…

The Five Prana Vayus: Mapping the Currents of Life Force

Prana, often described as the vital life force, moves through the body along channels known as nadis, primarily residing in the Pranamaya Kosha—the sheath of energy that links body and mind (Yoga Breeze Bali; Online Yoga School). Our experience of breath, sensation, and aliveness is shaped by this underlying current (Yoga International). The ancient yogic tradition recognizes five primary expressions of prana in the body—called the prana vayus. Each vayu represents a distinct current or function: intake (prana), elimination (apana), assimilation (samana), expression (udana), and circulation (vyana) (Yoga International; Online Yoga School). This map gives us language for subtle experiences and helps attune our self-awareness on and off the mat (Clara Roberts-Oss). 🗺️ Snapshot: The Five Vayus Prana Vayu: Centered in the chest and heart,…