The ancient master-student relationship model from Patanjali's tradition, adapted for learning from multiple lineages with proper lineage respect.
Guru-shishya parampara is the Sanskrit term for the transmission of wisdom from qualified teacher to receptive student across generations, fundamental to Patanjali's tradition and Hindu learning models. This is not casual instruction but initiated relationship where the guru recognizes the student's readiness and the student surrenders their defenses to genuine transformation. In modern apprenticeship across traditions, this model offers crucial insights while requiring adaptation. The parampara emphasizes that wisdom transmits not through books alone but through living relationship, modeling, and initiated experience. For apprentices learning from multiple traditions, this raises important questions: How do you honor lineage integrity while drawing from many sources? How do you find authentic teachers versus charlatans? Patanjali suggests that sincere practice naturally attracts real teachers; the tradition also warns against false gurus motivated by ego or profit. The apprentice across traditions navigates this by maintaining dual loyalty: honoring specific lineages while recognizing that authentic teachers in any tradition share similar qualities and point toward similar truths.
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