TLDR: Ram Dass explores the major pathways of yoga—hatha (energy work), dhyan (meditation), jnana (wisdom and inquiry), bhakti (devotion), and tantra (working with the senses)—as distinct methods for spiritual awakening. Rather than prescribing a single path, he argues that each person must discover which form calls to them through direct experience, testing, and quieting the heart. The underlying principle across all yogas is recognizing that the self we think we are is not our true nature, and using whatever practice aligns with our temperament to realize this truth.
What Does It Mean That You Aren't Who You Think You Are?
Ram Dass begins with a foundational insight: the journey of awakening only begins when we realize we aren't who we think we are. This isn't a metaphorical statement but a direct observation about the nature of identity and consciousness. The person we take ourselves to be—our name, personality, social role, accomplishments, fears—is not our deepest nature. This recognition is both humbling and liberating, because it means the constructed self that causes so much suffering is not ultimately who we are.
This realization doesn't come as an intellectual belief but through direct experience. Most people spend their lives defending and promoting the person they think they are: seeking validation, avoiding shame, accumulating possessions, and protecting their image. But spiritual practice creates space to question this entire project. When this questioning deepens, the solid ground beneath the ego begins to crack. Rather than experiencing this as loss, practitioners often find genuine relief—the burden of maintaining a false identity begins to lift.
The Six Major Forms of Yoga: Which Path Calls to You?
Ram Dass teaches that yoga is not primarily a physical exercise system, though hatha yoga includes that. The word "yoga" literally means union—specifically, union with the One, the ultimate reality underlying all existence. Different yogas are different doorways into this realization, each suited to different temperaments and capacities.
Hatha Yoga: Working with Energy
Hatha yoga works directly with the body and its subtle energy systems. Through postures, breathing techniques, and energy management, practitioners purify the nervous system and direct vital force (prana) toward spiritual opening. Hatha is particularly suited to people who are kinesthetic—those who understand and relate to the world primarily through the body. For these people, moving through the body with awareness can become a direct gateway to transcendence. The physical practice quiets the chattering mind and brings consciousness into present-moment embodiment, which itself is a form of meditation.
Dhyan Yoga: The Path of Meditation
Dhyan yoga is the yoga of meditation—the deliberate cultivation of a concentrated, witnessing awareness. Rather than working through the body, practitioners sit in stillness and observe the mind, breath, and the space between thoughts. Through sustained practice, the mind becomes quieter and the witness consciousness becomes clearer. This path appeals to those who are naturally introspective and drawn to silence. The depth available in dhyan is profound: sitting quietly long enough, the mind eventually exhausts itself, and what remains is a state of pure awareness.
Jnana Yoga: The Path of Wisdom and Inquiry
Jnana yoga works through discrimination, inquiry, and the intellect. Practitioners study sacred texts, contemplate philosophical questions, and use rational analysis to discriminate between the permanent and the impermanent, the real and the unreal. This path directly challenges the mind's assumptions about reality. By asking "Who am I? What is the nature of consciousness? What is actually permanent?"—practitioners cut through delusion using the very tool (the mind) that created it. Jnana is suited to those with sharp, analytical intellects who need to understand their path intellectually before they can embody it.
Bhakti Yoga: The Path of Devotion
Bhakti yoga is the yoga of the heart—devotion, love, and surrender to the divine. Ram Dass has spoken extensively about bhakti as a primary path, particularly devotion to his guru Maharaj-ji. In bhakti practice, the heart opens through love: whether directed toward a guru, toward God, toward the divine in all beings, or toward service. As Ram Dass teaches, unconditional love is itself a gateway to the true nature. The heart naturally transcends ego; when we genuinely love, we are no longer in contraction around the separate self. Bhakti is suited to those whose nature is emotional, relational, and devotional.
Tantra Yoga: Working with Sensation and Energy
Tantra yoga embraces the senses and works with subtle energies, desire, and the body as a vehicle for enlightenment rather than an obstacle to it. Unlike paths that might advocate withdrawing from sensory experience, tantra transforms desire and sensation into doorways to the divine. Through practices involving sound, visualization, sexuality, and ritual, tantric practitioners dissolve the separation between sacred and profane, discovering the divine within all experience. Tantra appeals to those who are naturally sensual or who resist the denial-based approach of other spiritual traditions.
Choosing Your Path: Listen to Your Heart, Not Your Head
Ram Dass emphasizes that no single yoga is superior; rather, each person must discover which form calls to them. This discovery happens not through intellectual debate but through quieting the heart and opening with genuine curiosity. He uses his own example: he describes himself as a "chicken soup eclectic," meaning he draws from multiple traditions and practices depending on what serves him in the moment.
The key principle is that you discover your yoga by trying and testing, by watching what naturally unfolds when you practice, and by observing what your heart responds to. Some people will naturally gravitate toward the movement and energy of hatha. Others will be drawn to sit in silence and watch the mind in dhyan. Still others will find that studying scripture, contemplating koans, or engaging in philosophical inquiry opens them in ways that sitting alone cannot. And for many, the heart's call to devotion becomes undeniable when exposed to it.
The instruction to "listen to your heart" is not sentimental. It means following what genuinely calls you, not what you think should call you based on intellectual preference or spiritual status anxiety. Someone might believe jnana yoga is the highest path but find that they are actually a bhakti person—that devotion and love naturally transform them in ways analysis cannot. The spiritual path is not about being right or impressive; it's about waking up.
The Darkness Before Awakening
In the question-and-answer section, Ram Dass addresses the common experience of darkness, confusion, and difficulty that often precedes genuine spiritual growth. Many people experience a dark night of the soul—a period where everything meaningful seems to dissolve, doubts arise, old patterns feel more oppressive, and the path itself becomes unclear. Rather than viewing this darkness as failure or regression, Ram Dass suggests it is often exactly what is needed.
The darkness often indicates that the ego is being dismantled. When spiritual practice truly works, it cannot leave the false self intact. The constructed identity that kept life predictable and manageable begins to crack. This is destabilizing and frightening, but it is also the door to genuine transformation. The instruction during such periods is to continue practicing, to stay present with what is arising, and to trust the process even when it feels like dissolution.
Intuition, Attachment, and Spiritual Questions in Daily Life
Ram Dass also addresses practical spiritual questions that arise in daily life: how to trust intuition, how to work with attachment to outcomes in your child's life, and how social identities relate to spiritual practice. Throughout, his guidance points toward the same principle: compassion for yourself and others, releasing the illusion that you can control outcomes, and maintaining awareness of the deeper reality beneath surface appearances.
When asked about attachment to your child's predicament, he suggests that genuine love includes releasing your child to their own path and their own lessons. This doesn't mean indifference; it means caring deeply while surrendering the outcome. This is the wisdom of bhakti applied to family life—loving completely while remaining unattached to results.
Where to Go From Here
If you resonate with these teachings, begin by experimenting with different forms of yoga. If you're drawn to the body, try hatha yoga—asanas, pranayama, and energy practices. If you're drawn to silence, begin a meditation practice, even for ten minutes daily. If you have a philosophical or intellectual nature, study sacred texts or contemplate the nature of consciousness. If your heart opens through love and devotion, find an object of devotion, whether that is a guru, God, or service to others. The key is to begin, to observe what naturally emerges, and to trust your own direct experience rather than adopting beliefs about which path is right. Your awakening depends on finding the yoga that calls to you and practicing it with sincerity and patience.



