The Lost Art of Kriya Laya Yoga
Experience the forgotten secrets of Tantric Kriya and Laya Yoga with our extensive online training
In the different branches of yoga, the mostly undiscovered Kriya Laya tradition is a wild, untamed beast—a symphony of rhythm and counting, a dance of body and spirit that leaves the mundane Asana Yoga far behind. While Hatha Yoga sits quietly in its corner, focusing on holding a pose for the sake of health and flexibility, Kriya Laya Practice is out there in the wild, moving, shifting, flowing like a river through the mountains of the mind. Sounds promising, right?
Asana and Movement
Kriya Laya sadhana begins with Asana, yes, but it’s not the kind of still, meditative posture you might expect. It’s alive, constantly in motion, drawing the body into a dance that aligns with the Chakras. Every pose is a gateway into the heart of the Goddess, every sequence a step on a journey into the depths of your unknown self.
Multifaceted Engagement
In Kriya Laya Practice, you’re not just holding a pose. No, your brain is a beehive of activity, buzzing with visualizations, counting, and Mudras. You’re not just moving your body; you’re engaging every part of your mind, every corner of your consciousness, in a dance that leaves no room for distraction. You use your body to play chess with your mind.
Complex Pranayamas
And then there’s the breath, pranayama. These aren’t simple, commercialized box breathing techniques. They’re elaborate, labyrinthine sequences that you have to memorize and perform with precision, sometimes for hours. The breath becomes a bridge, a path to another universe, engaging parts of the brain you didn’t even know existed. This is not breathwork; it is not work at all—it is a prayer to the unknown river of existence. Forget about gurus and gods; do not believe in any of that. Just see what your body-mind will come up with.
Integration of Practices
Where can you find these practices today? Some of them were stolen and rebranded. For example, infamous Yogi Bhajan used some of them and distorted them to the max. Then there is Sadhguru, who rebranded a few of them into his system, Inner Engineering. A few modern yogis have gotten hold of some of the exotic traditions. And then there is Forbidden Yoga. We hold an archive of hundreds of lost Tantric Kriya Yoga practices, which are performed individually. Yes, Tantra doesn’t always mean you have to eyegaze with someone.
Because our archive is so extensive, we decided to put most of our Laya Yoga Kriyas into an extensive online training. The training can either last 52 days, which is sufficient for most people (108 USD), or provide access to the entire archive of this lost tradition to a select audience. This one-year journey, priced at 54,000 USD, is, admittedly, not for everyone. This training is a transmission of an ancient lineage. People may try out the first 52 days for 108 USD to get a taste of it.