Practice of the Month
Garbhasanskar workshop guides expecting mothers on the path of conscious motherhood 
The Garbhasanskar Workshop, organised by iPregatips in collaboration with AYG Academy, an Associate Centre of the Indian Yoga Association (IYA), was held on 10 December 2025 at 6:00 pm. The session welcomed expecting mothers into a warm, nurturing, and insightful learning environment focused on conscious...
Shiv Darshan Yoga Vidyalaya conducts Maruthi Maha Yajna for World Peace 
Shiv Darshan Yoga Vidyalaya, an Associate Centre of the Indian Yoga Association (IYA), organised a sacred Maruthi Maha Yajna for World Peace, conducted with deep reverence by Swami Gambhirananda. The event witnessed heartfelt participation from devotees who gathered in large numbers to invoke peace, harmony,...
Easy Yoga Studioz touches lives through community wellness initiatives 
Easy Yoga Studioz, an Associate Centre of IYA, collaborated with the Lions Club to conduct wellness programmes for senior citizens, hospital staff, and children from boys’ and girls’ orphanages. Over two days, tailored sessions were conducted for different age groups, with over 200 participants benefiting...
CYE conducts skill training programme on Yoga and Health Management 
The Centre for Yoga Education (CYE), an Associate Centre of IYA, organised a Two-Day Skill Training Programme on Yoga Skills and Health Management under RUSA 2.0 at Alagappa University, Karaikudi, on 23–24 October 2025.The programme commenced with a welcome address by Prof. S. Saroja, followed...
YogAI 2025 explores the Interface of Yogic Science and Artificial Intelligence at WCSC 
Vethathiri Maharishi College of Yoga Research Centre, a unit of the World Community Service Centre (WCSC) which is a Member Institute of IYA, organised its first International Conference – “Yogic Science through Artificial Intelligence (YogAI 2025)” on 13–14 December 2025. The conference was preceded by...
Yogis Trust hosts three-day Yoga and Meditation camp in Courtallam 
Yogis Trust, an Associate Centre of IYA, organised a three-day Yoga and Meditation Camp from 12–14 December 2025 at the serene premises of Ramakrishna Ashram, Aintharuvi, Courtallam, Tenkasi District, Tamil Nadu. Participants from various regions across Tamil Nadu attended the camp with keen interest. Each...
Students experience the spirit of Karma Yoga through seva at Chiranjiv Foundation 
Students of Chiranjiv Foundation, an Associate Centre of IYA, enthusiastically participated in a Karma Yoga Practical Activity on 7 December 2025, gaining firsthand experience of Nishkama Karma—selfless action performed with devotion and responsibility. The students engaged in meaningful activities such as: Gardening and soil preparationPlantation...
Gramin Upkar Sansthan promotes Surya Namaskar among youth in Ranchi 
Gramin Upkar Sansthan, Ranchi, an Associate Centre of the Indian Yoga Association (IYA), successfully organised Surya Namaskar yoga sessions on Sunday, 14 December 2025, at Vaishnave Prabhat Shakha, Gayatri Nagar, Pirra, Kathitand, Ranchi, Jharkhand. The session was conducted under the guidance of Shri Ajay Dubey,...
Rajasthan SCC hosts Gurudev Sri Sri Ravi Shankar 
On the auspicious occasion of the Jaipur visit of Gurudev Sri Sri Ravi Shankar ji, Chairman of the Indian Yoga Association, the Rajasthan State Chapter Committee of the Indian Yoga Association extended a warm and heartfelt welcome to him. Being in the divine presence of...
Krish Yoga Vidhyaalaya hosts 3-Day transformative workshop 
Krish Yoga Vidhyaalaya, an Associate Centre of the Indian Yoga Association, successfully organised a transformative three-day yoga workshop in collaboration with Puvidham Rural Development Trust in Dharmapuri. The first day, held on 10th October 2025 at the Krish Yoga Vidhyaalaya campus, focused on an immersive...



Book your PRINT copies

[wpforms id=”2536″ title=”false” description=”false”]
14 Jan 2026

Blog

Understanding The True Self:A Journey Beyond the Physical Body
Editorial

Understanding The True Self:A Journey Beyond the Physical Body 

By Shri K.C Jain, Treasurer, IYA & Director, Adhyatm Sadhna Kendra

In the clamour for reality, have you ever found yourself wondering who you really are? Or what is your true self? Many of us have sought to discover our true selves and yet, only few succeed. It is often said that through meditation we know our true self. The question then arises, when we talk of knowing our true self, do we mean to say that we start knowing our habits, our behavior, our intellectual level, our physical strength, or is it something else?

In meditation, when we talk about the true self, we are talking about our existence. In an earlier post, I have mentioned that our existence is made of two aspects – the physical body and the consciousness. Now, the physical body is matter. And matter has four properties – colour, touch, taste and smell. Anything that is matter in the universe has to have these four properties.

At the same time, our physical body also includes the sensory organs which enable us to know these four properties of matter in its multiple forms. The sensory organs may be understood to be the functional extension of the physical body and do not possess individually the properties of matter. They allow us to know matter or the properties of matter. But that is where their role comes to an end. They do not carry out any analysis or take any judgement with regard to what they have sensed. They simply pass on the information they have received to the human mind, which is also the physical extension of the body. The mind is what analyses the information received by the sensory organs, stores it in our memory, and if the need be, visualizes on the basis of the memory.

It is important to remember that the physical body consists of the body or matter; the sensory organs, the extension of the body to perceive; and the mind which, keeps the memory of that which has been perceived by the sensory organs. So they are all part and parcel of the physical body. Now let us try to understand the consciousness in this light. By its very definition, the consciousness is devoid of the four properties of matter, implying that it cannot be known by the sensory organs. And if it cannot be known through the sensory organs, there cannot be any memory related to it or any analysis related to it by the mind. Consequently, knowing the true self would mean travelling beyond the physical body, travelling beyond the sensory organs, travelling beyond the mind, and to the consciousness.

However, the journey to knowing the true self must be mediated through the physical body itself. Here, the body, the sensory organs and the mind lead us to a situation where we connect to the consciousness. The first step in this process is to stabilize the body – it has to be in a state of total relaxation. The moment the body is relaxed, the sensory organs will also relax, as will the mind, slowing down the thought process. This leads to a state where we start travelling beyond the body, beyond the sensory organs, beyond the thoughts, towards consciousness, to the true self.

The process I have described here is not instantaneous; it takes time. But the journey has begun. The objective will be achieved when one is able to see clearly the distinction between the physical body and consciousness.

Related posts

Leave a Reply

Required fields are marked *