Despite its title,
Hatha Yoga: The Report of a Personal Experience was less personal and more technical than Bernard's fictionalised 1939 account of hatha yoga,
Heaven Lies Within Us. An introduction explains the principles of hatha yoga.
Overview The main part of the book recounts Bernard's own experience, starting with a chapter on asanas and the reason he was "prescribed" them by his teacher. There follow chapters on purifications (
shatkarmas), yoga breathing (
pranayama), yogic seals (
mudras), and meditative union (
samadhi). Asanas are seen to be just one component of hatha yoga. There is a short biography of the author and an academic bibliography with primary sources—the
Yoga Sutras, the
Hatha Yoga Pradipika, the
Siva Samhita, and the
Gheranda Samhita—and the secondary sources available to him, including
Kuvalayananda's 1931
Asanas and
Sir John Woodroffe's 1918
Shakti and Shakta. He describes his experiences with asanas "calculated to bring a rich supply of blood to the brain and ... the spinal cord", namely
sarvangasana (shoulderstand),
halasana (plough),
pascimottanasana (forward bend), and
mayurasana (peacock); and "reconditioning asanas" to "stretch, bend, and twist the spinal cord", namely
salabhasana (locust),
bhujangasana (cobra), and
dhanurasana (bow). These mastered, he took on the meditation asanas, the most important being the cross-legged
siddhasana and
padmasana, though he also learnt other meditation seats,
muktasana,
guptasana,
bhadrasana,
gorakshasana, and
svastikasana, and the kneeling meditation poses
vajrasana and
simhasana. He then worked in detail on
sirsasana (headstand) and its variations. Bernard learnt all six purifications,
dhauti (cleaning the digestive tract),
basti (colonic irrigation),
neti (nasal wash),
trataka (fixed gazing),
nauli (abdominal massage by the abdominal muscles), and
kapalabhati (skull-polishing breath). In pranayama, he learnt
surya bhedana (the so-called sun-piercing breath), sitting in siddhasana and employing the abdominal lock
uddiyana bandha to help move the air. He then learnt
ujjayi breathing (meaning "victorious"), sitkari (hissing sound) and sitali (cooling breath), followed by the cleansing
bhastrika and the soothing
bhramari (buzzing like a bee). The goal of pranayama, he states, is kevala, the suspension of breath; he became able to hold his breath for four minutes at a time, but found doing this repeatedly "almost impossible". He was taught to accompany this with
khechari mudra, the folding back of the tongue, enabling his kevala to extend to five minutes. , as described in the
Hatha Yoga Pradipika, the
mudras trap
prana and help to unblock the central
sushumna channel, allowing
Kundalini to arise and enabling progress towards
samadhi. The mudras that Bernard practised were
maha bandha (all three body locks at once), khechari mudra as just described, uddiyana, the supplementary technique of
asvini mudra,
jalandhara bandha (throat lock),
pasini mudra,
vajroli mudra (other locks), and "yogasana" (by which was meant
yogamudrasana, the legs in lotus position, the body folded forward). The account of samadhi, which Bernard did not claim to have attained, is necessarily largely theoretical, quoting the medieval texts at some length. However, he goes on a three-month retreat to study with "a well-trained Yogi at his hermitage", based on "the theory of an inner light". After two months, he sees the lights, which are of different colours. The retreat ends with "a ceremony that occasionally is employed to establish fully the inner experience of absorbing the mind in these lights." His teacher makes clear that "no amount of ceremony can awaken
Kundalini." Bernard concludes that during his studies of yoga he "found that it holds no magic, performs no miracles, and reveals nothing supernatural"; as for "the Knowledge of the True", that, he states, "must remain a mystery".
Illustrations The book is illustrated with 37 high-quality
monochrome photographs, all of Bernard himself executing asanas, mudras and
bandhas (body locks) as described in the text. 19 of these are full-page illustrations; the remainder are half-page. The last five plates all show stages in
Uddiyana Bandha. All have a
studio background of diffuse clouds and a plain floor with lighting from the front and above, as seen in the illustration of Sirsasana discussed below. These were among the first photos of an American executing yoga poses ever published. Bernard was an accomplished photographer himself, shooting "an astounding 326
rolls of film (11,736 exposures) as well as 20,000 feet of motion picture film" during his three months in Tibet in a "near obsessive documentation" of what he saw. In the view of Namiko Kunimoto, Bernard's photographs taken in the East served to authenticate the travel narrative and to construct Tibet "as a site of personal transformation." Back in the United States, Bernard's photographs of himself, whether in Tibetan dress or performing yoga poses such as
Baddhapadmasana in the studio (a photo that also appears as plate XX in the book), appeared frequently in
Family Circle magazine from 1938, "reveal[ing] his willingness to commodify spirituality and assumptions of exoticism".
Approach In his Preface, Bernard explains his approach to the studies he undertook: with legs in
Padmasana, Plate XXVIII in the book. He explains "I was given a series of practices to be used when standing on my head. Interlock the feet, as in padmasana, then slowly lower the limbs until the knees touch the arms, and then return the interlocked legs to the original perpendicular position without losing balance." He quotes the
Hatha Yoga Pradipika account of the pose and the powers it brings, adding "To obtain these benefits one must be an accomplished Yogi." Bernard's approach to the book is to describe each task he was given simply and directly, stating its purpose, and then his own experience of working with it, together with any advice he was given about it. For example, on
Sirsasana he writes: Bernard explains how he went about the task, indicating both his dedication and the time required to reach the prescribed standard: He then describes the effects of the practice: He is frank about the difficulties: ==Publication history==