Liberation is not a place; it does not exist in the heavens, the earth
or the spirit-world. Freedom has no space, no time, no location; it can
only exist in the now, in the present moment. Moksha (liberation,
freedom) is the state of non-ego, where the “me” vanishes and one
stands free from all desires, actions and consequences in a total state
of oneness.
We are bound to this material world through attachment, desire, and the
inability to see or experience the oneness of all life. Maya
(illusion) is both the psychological separation between ego and the
universe and the psychological filter that colors all of our
experience. Maya is our memories, conceptions, judgments, and biases
that present a distorted sense of reality. These impressions of past
experiences become superimposed or projected on current experiences
creating a false reality. Maya reinforces the ego, strengthens
attachment, and defines our individual “story” that defines who we are
and our relationship to the external world.
To achive moksha, maya must be cast off, anava (ego) must be dissolved,
and both our attachments to pleasure and our aversions to discomfort
must be severed. Moksha arises spontaneously when we become completely
absorbed in the sensation of an experience without thought. This
“taste” of total absorption is common yet fleeting. Through the
practice of yoga, we seek to create the tools to consciously and
willfully "pierce the veil" of maya and see the transcendent nature of
reality. These tools include selfless work (karma yoga),
self-dissolving love (bhakti yoga), absolute discernment (jnana yoga),
and meditative immersion (raja yoga).
The most fundamental tool yoga gives us to create moksha is conscious
awareness. Through the use of awareness we can slowly begin to see our
projections, desires, attachments and judgments for what they are.
Once these distorting factors become conscious, they are able to
dissolve and unblock the way to a direct experience of reality. When we
become liberated from the illusionary world of maya we are able to be
in yoga: the union of the inner self (Atman) with the oneness of all
life--God!