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The Dharma Method

7 Daily Steps to Spiritual Advancement

Published by Destiny Books
Distributed by Simon & Schuster

About The Book

A practical guide to simple daily techniques for rapid spiritual progress

• Explores 11 time-tested methods for spiritual advancement and how you only need to include 7 each day for spiritual growth and personal enlightenment

• Includes wisdom from spiritual masters from nearly every religion, including Christianity, Buddhism, Hinduism, and more

• Offers routines, tips, and tricks to keep you on track, mantras for success and sacred connection, and exercises to apply these spiritual lessons in your everyday life

Enlightenment means becoming a light unto yourself. But how does one get on the path to enlightenment? In this practical spiritual guide, Simon Chokoisky shares 11 time-tested yet simple daily techniques to help you find your spiritual path, or “dharma,” no matter what your spiritual background--be it Christian, Hindu, Buddhist, or Agnostic. He explains how everyone has a unique learning style as well as a spiritual style--your “Dharma type”--and how the Dharma method allows you to pick any seven of the 11 methods described in the book to practice. You can even change them daily, all based on your unique needs. And by holding to the 7/11 “rule” daily, you’ll soon find yourself on the road to rapid spiritual progress and personal enlightenment.

In this book, the author explains how he distilled these 11 spiritual techniques from centuries of methods used by spiritual masters from around the world. He details the 5 different Dharma types and provides personality tests to determine your type. He provides routines, tips, and tricks to keep you on track as well as thoughtful exercises to help you apply spiritual principles in your everyday life. He explores how to apply the commandments of the Judeo-Christian tradition, the Yoga Yamas and Niyamas, and the Buddhist 8-fold path based on your Dharma type. He discusses the power of sound and how to use mantras for success and sacred connection. He also explains the best ways to purify your body and mind as well as how to create a “standing wave” of spiritual power to recharge yourself anytime during the day.

Showing how spirituality is inherent in each of us and is abundant, free, and easy to cultivate, the author reveals how you can best cultivate your spiritual light and share it with the world.

Excerpt

Chapter 8

Inside Out

In this chapter I reference a number of studies demonstrating what common sense and our ancestors have known for ages--that being in nature is good for you. . . . In spiritual parlance, Nature is inherently sattvic, it brings clarity and light to your life, and spending time in Nature lets some of that sattva rub off on you.

In the Vedic worldview, Nature is made of five great Elements. By separating ourselves from the elements outside us, we isolate ourselves from our own nature inside, leading to disorders in the body and the mind. To bring sattva into our daily life, we can reconnect to at least four out of these five elements on a daily basis.

The 5 Elements of Dharma

The 5 dharma types are perhaps the most important key to cultivating sattva in your life. Each type is associated with an Element in this order:
Earth--Laborer
Water--Merchant
Fire--Warrior
Air--Educator
Space--Outsider

While it’s important to integrate all 5 elements to truly connect with nature, you get extra benefit by focusing on the element corresponding to your dharma type. When Laborers integrate the Earth element, they become rock solid, stable, and anchored to their dharma. When Merchants channel the Water element, their prosperity flourishes. The Fire element helps Warriors attain their goals faster. Exposure to Air inspires Educators--who tend to stay too long stuffed up in the laboratory, in front of the computer, or in the classroom--refreshing their bodies while rebooting their minds. Having organized Space around them helps Outsiders feel calmer. [Following are some suggestions to help you intentionally connect to the elements.]

Earth

The Earth element is everything solid in our experience, including the bones in our bodies and the bricks in our houses. Earth is security and stability, shelter and food. To connect to it is to ground yourself in this security. Try taking your shoes off every day for at least 15 minutes to feel the sand or grass under your toes. Try sitting in the park, rolling around, or even playing in the mud. Feeling the earth on your body can drain your cares and worries, and balance stress levels.

If you’re worried about money or your place in the world, your bones and joints may show stress like lower back pain. Adding strontium, zinc, magnesium, and vitamin D to your diet will help rebuild your body structure and relationship to the earth. This is just one way to bring awareness to the earth element in your body. It is a step to reconnecting with nature--the nature within you. Though not essential for everyone, if you are deficient in any of these minerals, they may be an essential part of your well-being, from digestive health to proper sleep, which translates into improved sattva and better meditation.

Water

Spending time in and around Water contributes to sattva since water purifies the body, mind, and emotions. It is not enough to take a shower every day--drippy tap water can’t compare to the sheer quantity and quality of an ocean wave submerging you, or pure rain sprinkling your head and body, or a waterfall gushing around you, stripping you of all negativity. Nature’s water sources are the first choice when it comes to connecting to this element. Surfing, sailing, swimming, and diving all work.

Fire

In chapter 1 we saw how getting up at or before sunrise can infuse you with sattva all day long. But exposure to the midday sun is also useful. Take advantage of the sun’s natural vitamin D-producing light, making sure at least a third of your body is exposed and spending 15-30 minutes in the midday sun. Of course, if you have sensitive or cancer-prone skin that burns under sun exposure you can minimize or skip this practice, but be sure to get your vitamin D through dietary supplementation.

Healthy vitamin D levels range between 30 to 100 ng/ml, with 20-30 ng/ml considered insufficient and anything below 20 ng/ml deficient. Even sub-clinical vitamin D deficiencies can show up as depression, low libido, low energy, diminished cognitive function, and more. If you can’t get vitamin D from the sun, make sure to get it in your diet or as a supplement and get your levels checked every year!

Air

The Air element connotes movement in body and mind because it relates to the brain and nervous system, which stimulate your leg muscles to run and your mind to race. It regulates communication, both within your body and with the outside world via speech and writing. The Air element also relates to touch, since the nerves that communicate sensation to our brain also respond to touch receptors in the skin. Therefore massage, self-myofascial release on a foam roller, or mat yoga or Pilates on the floor are some ways to vicariously pamper the Air element in your body.

Space

In the age of smartphone digital screens, where many of us find it hard to look up from our devices, it is even more important to step out of the digital box and widen our horizons. Creating sacred Space in our lives begins in the body by fasting and clearing the GI tract. It continues by honoring and decluttering the center in our homes--the place of spirit. Finally, creating Space means exposing yourself to the great expanses of nature. Try staring at the far horizon. Or, simply spread out a blanket, lie down, and look at the sky above. You know, like when you were little and your life seemed full of possibility. Staring into the vastness of Space creates aspiration and wonder.

About The Author

Simon Chokoisky is a pioneer in using Vedic Astrology and Dharma Typing to help people discover their soul’s purpose. He runs a private consulting business based on his trainings in Vedic life mapping and Vedic Astrology. The author of The Five Dharma Types and Sex, Love, and Dharma as well as the creator of the Decoding Your Life Map with Vedic Astrology DVD series, he travels widely conducting seminars. He lives in Phoenix, Arizona.

Product Details

  • Publisher: Destiny Books (October 16, 2018)
  • Length: 160 pages
  • ISBN13: 9781620552865

Raves and Reviews

“With wit and clarity Chokoisky transforms Vedic teachings into this relevant, helpful guide for living a more sacred life. This book is the perfect companion for anyone on the path of self-awareness and healing.”

– Bridgette Shea, L.Ac., MAcOM, author of Handbook of Chinese Medicine and Ayurveda

“An exceptional book, it is both deeply traditional and surprisingly refreshing and innovative. With an impressive command of Vedic knowledge, Chokoisky reveals the essence of dharma and confidently walks the reader through its full realization within a Western lifestyle. All this in an entertaining, uplifting, and effortlessly brilliant tone.”

– Shai Tubali, author of Unlocking the 7 Secret Powers of the Heart

“Written in an easy, conversational tone, The Dharma Method succeeds in breaking down a complex subject and updates ancient wisdom for the modern world. Chokoisky has written a wonderful primer for those seeking fundamental principles and practices of the spiritual path.”

– Mary Mueller Shutan, L.Ac., author of The Body Deva

“What a wonderful book! The Dharma Method explains sacred spiritual teachings in a way that’s concise and digestible. It is loaded with really useful reference material and practical things you can do to reach your spiritual goal.”

– Darren Cockburn, author of Being Present

"Author Simon Chokoisky says in his preface that the working title for The Dharma Method was 'The Lazy Person's Guide to Enlightenment.' So what, exactly, is this book offering help with? Basically, mindfulness. This is the mindfulness guide for people who don't want to hear about angels, chakras, or vibration levels. There is, as you might imagine, a chapter devoted to each of the 11 suggested practices to guide novitiates in their use, but they are all more practical than philosophical. I consider this a recommended read if you are a practical minded reader who finds many similar books too fluffy to make it through."

– Patricia Mullen, FacingNorth.net

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