Web of Life7 - Up To The Eyes
Web of Life7 - Up To The Eyes
Web of Life7 - Up To The Eyes
by John Davidson
It is a two-way process. Just as mind affects biochemistry from above, so too do changes in
biochemistry affect mental processes from below.
The ajna chakra is described as having two petals, one white and one black. These are the
wings atop the Cadduceus the staff of Hermes, the insignia of the wise physician, the ancient
symbol of life portraying the six chakras in the physical body. Part of the gross physical
reflection of this centre would seem to be a combination of the pituitary gland and the
hypothalamus. These two glands between them are considered to be the control or command
system for all the other endocrine glands in the body. Considering that the ajna or command
chakra was so named perhaps thousands of years ago, it would seem a sensible move for
modern life sciences research to at least investigate the expositions of both ancient and modern
yogic teachings and philosophy. Yoga, after all, is a far older science of life and has stood a
greater test of time.
The hypothalamus represents the most obvious point of fusion and functional contact,
physiologically and anatomically, between the nervous and endocrine systems. Consisting of
specialized nervous tissue, fed by nerve connections from the brain, and lying below the
thalamus it takes its primary orders from the mid-brain, by a nervous message encoding as yet
unidentified. From there, hormones are carried in two special veins to the anterior lobe of the
pituitary gland.
The posterior lobe of the pituitary, on the other hand, is almost an extension of the
hypothalamus in that it is "fed" by a tract of nerve fibres down which at least two major
hormones travel for release upon a nervous impulse command from the hypothalamus.
The complexity of the roles played by these tattwas is reflected in the number of petals that are
spun into the chakras by the morphogenic pranic vibration, creating the pranic pathways or
nadis.
At the lower levels, there is actually some degree of correspondence between the number of
these petals and the hormones produced. There are, for example, four petals to the rectal chakra
and four main groups of adrenal hormones. But this may not be such a meaningful parallel, for
we are dealing with areas of functionality that are administered through each chakra and
though the endocrine glands represent a major aspect of this functioning, they do not, of course,
represent the whole.
At the sacral centre, which has six petals, the gonads are responsible for germ cell genesis and
maturation, as well as maintenance of the reproductive organs and secondary sexual
characteristics. The subtle watery tattwa also gives rise to the fluids in the body and their local
organization. One could probably figure out six functional headings for this area, but I am by no
means sure that this would be a valid way of understanding the manifestation of the more subtle
pranic functionality. And the interrelationship of the tattwas and chakras would also require
consideration and elucidation in any such model.
Then, proceeding higher, we find the eight-petalled fiery centre with part of its organizational
reflection lying in the pancreas, also possessing both exocrine and endocrine activity. Above
that, lies the airy centre with twelve petals and an even more complex and far reaching function.
On the one hand, it is responsible for the distribution of bodily oxygen from the lungs to the
tissues and the transport of carbon dioxide back to the lungs for elimination, and in the more
inward biochemistry, the protective aspects of the immune defence system is overseen from
this subtle centre.
Similarly, as we have described, the increasingly detailed and far reaching control of the
akashic element is reflected in the sixteen petals of the throat chakra with its endocrine aspect
of general metabolic rate control, its finger resting upon every molecular and subatomic button.
Here the complexity is such that the endocrine function is separated into two glands containing
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