Kundalini Power
Kundalini Power
Kundalini Power
Bhagavad-Gita: 18 Chapters in
Sanskrit
BGALLCOLOR.pdf
Download Bhagavadgita-all 18
chapters in Sanskrit, English,
transliteration and word for word
translation.
Click below for Magnum Opus of Purnananda-Svami (1526 CE) on Kundalini Yoga
Serpent Power
Complete.pdf
This file has the complete book of The Serpent Power plus illustrations by me with highlights of
passages with the footnotes.
You may follow this convention of enunciation of alphabets for all other Chakras
also. For chanting of Bija mantras and the letters,
assume Lotus Position. The overdots above the Sanskrit letters indicate the M
terminator.
Fall into the Gap (Feb 4, 2009)
There are aspirants who do not want to be bothered with any Mantras, Stotras,
Karikas,Tantras, Yantras, Mental and Physical Gymnastics, Breath control, Yoga
classes and the like. Is there anything in the world that advocates and embraces
simplicity? Yes, there is. This is where you fall into the Gap.
You are a running stream of thoughts during awake and dream states. Between
thoughts, there is a gap or silence. Between movements, there is a stationary gap.
Between forward and backward movements as in a car there is a moment or gap
when there is no movement. You have to find that gap. That gap is free of
thoughts. That is where tranquility, peace and Universal Consciousness reside.
There is something between two thoughts; one calls it a Gap; another calls it a
connector. It is all semantics. Thoughts cannot rise or propagate in the mind lake
without consciousness; without the latter, there is no life. This Gap, this Universal
Consciousness is Unmesa, opening of Spiritual eye or whatever you want to call
it. It is the fount, the fountainhead, the origin, the Essence. This is where you
abide in your tranquil moment.
Once you find that Gap or Universal Consciousness, you hold on to it and stretch
it or stay in it as long as you can. Your mind is blank; the mind-slate is clean; the
mind lake is tranquil; the mind dies figuratively-- Mana-NAsa; there are no
thoughts; there is peace. In this cacophonic world, how is one going to find this
Gap? The best time for finding this Gap or opening is between 4 AM and 7 AM.
That is when you are most relaxed. You had the needed rest, sleep and
regeneration. The birds are not chirping; the sirens are not wailing. The kids are in
bed sleeping soundly. Stay in bed flat and supine. Keep your eyes closed with
curtains drawn the night before. Close your physical eyes; open your spiritual
eyes; and focus them into distant space where there is no object to perceive to
distract your attention. Turn off your Cerebral Mantle, the generator of thought
waves. It is not that difficult. Find that pristine silent thought-free gap. Hold on to
it and stay in it as long as possible. Your breathing slows down. Your heart rate
goes down. The Gap is the non-pharmacologic Beta Blocker that slows your
heart. You will live longer. The aspirant has to maintain a thoughtless state
(Nirvikalpa) so that by grace of the Divine or the Force he gains entry into
Universal Consciousness. You are in touch with your precious and pristine Self.
That is your Essential Self. You don't have to look for the Force; when you
remain free of thoughts, the Force will find you and embrace you. Your mind lake
has no waves. You dissolve in Universal Consciousness; you have become
identical with it; that is SamAvesa (identical guise with Universal
Consciousness). You overcame the thought barrier between your individual self
and the Universal Self. Universal Consciousness bathes your mind and prevents
generation of thoughts. This is what Kashmir Saivism recommends as UpAya or
the ways and means to enter the world of Universal Consciousness. It is called
SambhavopAya. It is Sambhava or SamAvesa or absorption of individual
consciousness in the Divine Consciousness. Here there is no need for breath
control, Mudras, Bandhas, Meditation or Mantras. End of Gap.
For the Hindus, the willing and the compliant, here are some suggestions for a
fuller life. When you get out of the bed, utter the name of Kesava (destroyer of
Kesin, Krishna) several times; this will set the day on a smooth path without
obstructions, obstacles and frustrations. Its potency is equal to supplicating to
Ganesa with "Om Ganesaya namah." When you go to bed, you count sheep
jumping over the fence as a sleep aid. The idea is that you concentrate so much on
the sheep that you forget the day's worries; counting eventually puts you to sleep.
Mentally chanting Narayana upon going to bed - the Hindu way of counting sheep
- and awakening brings benefits; the benefit of uttering the name in sleep though
not uttered comes to the devotee; that is the paradoxical Grace of Bhagavan.
Utter the name of Govinda as many times as possible when you are about
to eat. This will provide you your next meal and more thereafter. Consider many
mishaps that could happen between meals that could prevent you from eating your
next meal. Here eating your next meal means that you are alive and well. January
2010. Example: Think of the unfortunate earthquake victims in Haiti, who were
hale and healthy and the next moment.... I can't even think, fathom and narrate the
horror of their suffering. If you eat less or more, both are bad. In Hinduism, you
don't eat for yourself; you eat for the Atman, the Great Soul or the Universal Soul
in you. Bhagavad Gita says:
6.16: Yoga is not for him, who either eats too much, or eats too little. It is not for
him, who either sleeps too much or stays awake too long, O Arjuna.
9.27: Whatever you do, whatever you eat, whatever offerings you make,
whatever you give away, and whatever austerities you perform, O son of Kunti,
do that offering unto Me.
The Christian equivalent is saying the Grace before meals. All acts are done for
Him, which means service to mankind is service to Him.
Dear Lord, bless this food to the nourishment of our bodies and us to thy
service. In Christ's name we pray, Amen.
The Jews have more elaborate recitation of Grace before (Ha-motzi), after,
and between meals. They have Grace for wine, fruits, pastries, beverages, non-
earth foods (meat, fish, milk and cheese). A typical Jewish Grace is as follows:
Praised be Thou, O Lord (Adonai) our G-d (God), King of the universe who
brings BREAD from the earth or by whose word all things came into being.
For each food item substitute the name of that food in the Grace: Fruit of the vine,
fruit of the earth (vegetables), pastries....
You may notice in the Jewish Grace that by God's word all things came into
being. In Hinduism, God by His Will, thinks the Thinkables, utters the
Speakables, and creates the objects, Universe and beings. The Thinkable becomes
the Speakable and the Speakable becomes the Object. I think and speak Apple;
Abracadabra! I have Apple on the palm of my hand; I wish it is that easy. It is by
God's thought and word, creation comes into being. SUta Samhita says, Supreme
Consciousness is Motionless Apada (Stirless word or Brahman), which becomes
the four forms of Pada (word), which again can become Apada. That sound is
called NADA by the Tantrics, which is the origin of beings and objects. When
Bindu explodes, a sound is produced which is called SabdaBrahman (Sound
Brahman = Sound Consciousness). Bindu is like a spontaneously exploding
Wisteria Seed Pod. A German homeowner called the police and took cover
under the table when he heard a barrage of gunshots outside the house in his
garden. The police responded only to discover the seed-missiles were
shooting out of the exploding Wisteria pods.
The ancient pre-Christian and pre-Judaic Hindu concept is the body is PINDA
made of food; not only you dedicate the body to serve Him but also and more
importantly your soul to Him (Atma Samarpanam =
= Soul dedication). In my humble opinion, there is nothing in this universe that
Hindu religion has not fathomed which is present in other religions.
Who doesn't like to hear the sweet nectarian sound of his name uttered by
someone else? Among all names, Bhagavan likes to hear his devotees say
Govinda in couplets: Govinda Govinda.
In Judaism, out of due reverence for G-d (God), there is a prohibition on the
pronunciation of four-letter name (YHVH = Yod-Heh-Vav-Heh) except in prayer
or study. The common practice is to mispronounce the name (politely and
reverentially called deletion and substitution of syllables or letters) so Adonai is
mispronounced as Adoshem; Elohaynu and Elohim are mispronounced as
Elokaynu and Elokim. (The Hindu Chanters of hymns of 1000 names of Vishnu
have a supreme adherence to the proper enunciation of names. Any intentional
mispronunciation is sacrilegious and prohibited. Tantrics are very particular about
exact and precise pronunciation. When you invoke god or goddess, proper
enunciation is important. If the Hindu were to invoke and call god, JOHN SMITH
as JOAN SMYTHE, both deities (John Smith and Joan Smythe) get angry with
the invoker; consequences may be serious or they may simply forgive him
because they know his sincere devotion to both of them. In Hinduism,
unintentional mispronunciation does not invite the wrath of God. Here is a quote,
"Even if one were to slip on the proper method of reciting it (with faith and
completely surrendered), the Thirumanthra will not slip from its nature, which is
providing full protection to those reciting it. The Thirumanthra will protect
everyone who recite it, no matter how they do it. That is, it never fails in its
nature." It is like mispronouncing the name of the medication and taking it
internally. The medication still works and brings about its intended effect, no
matter what you call it.
In Hinduism there is ONE GOD and many are His or Her names. Hindus believe
that God is formless [Brahman] and One; people call Him or Her Brahman, The
Lord, Allah, Adonai or any other name if a new Prophet, Messiah or Guru comes
along in the future and establishes a new religion entirely unknown and
unimagined by us now. Consider the possibility that a new future prophet (Nuo)
declares establishment of a new religion, NUOISM AND CALLS HIS GOD
NUON and declares that all other Gods are defunct pretenders. Nuon, Nuo, and
Nuoism become legitimate because 3 billion people converted to Nuoism. Now I
know we should not be fighting with each other in the name of religion.) In
writing the word G-d (God) in Judaism, an observant Jew drops the letter O. G-d
is often referred to as Ha-Shem (The Name), the Ineffable Name, the Unutterable
Name or the Distinctive Name. To the Jew, God is One, both female and male
blended in One but He or She comes with many names and flavors. He invokes
and thanks Lord Adonai for Her kindness; he invokes God Elohim for being
harsh (justice) on him. Simply, Feminine Lord Adonai becomes Masculine God
Elohim depending upon dispensation. To him Female Lord (Lady) Adonai and
Male God Elohim are parents--though one-- keeping the children in line first by
giving soft love and then some tough love. Hinduism also has an androgynous
God by name Ardhanarisvara (Ardha-Nara-Isvara = half-man-Lord = Right half is
the Lord and the left half is female Sakti. Androgynous Siva is the same as
Elohim on the right and Adonai on the left of one body.
In Tibetan Buddhism, Dalai Lama is one of the incarnations of Avalokitesvara,
the Bodhisattva of compassion and the fourteenth in the line of succession that
began in 1391. The Male is Compassion and the Female is Knowledge; this
union leads to realization. The sexual union is symbolism in Tantric Buddhism in
Tibet. This union of Compassion and Knowledge is necessary to win over MAyA
and the false duality of object and subject. This fusion results in enlightenment.
To the Jews God is good and Lord and God: Lord with Female kindness and God
with Male Justice.
Utter the name of Rama in triplets (Rama, Rama, Rama) as many time as you can.
The utterance of a triplet once is equal to chanting the Sahasranamam (Vishnu's
1000 names) once and deriving its full benefits. The math is as follows: (Chuckle
if you must).
The word Rma, said three times, begets all the benefits derived from reciting
the entire Vishnu Sahasranamam. Rma = R + ma. R is the second
semivowel in the group-Ya, Ra, La, Va. Ma is the 5th labial among Pa, Pha, Ba,
Bha, and Ma. Two multiplied by five is 10; Rma said three times is
103 = 10x10x10 = 1000. See how a Hindu manipulates numbers!
Bhishma recited one thousand names of Maha Vishnu. Goddess Parvati asked
Siva, her Consort whether there is a shorter version of Sahasranamam (1000
names). Think of people or goddess in a hurry! Siva Peruman replied to Parvati:
Recitation of the one word Rama once will bring benefits equal to recitation of
all one thousand names.
Don't forget to supplicate and beg Sita Pirati to confer on you the supreme title of
Prapannan* after you surrender yourself (saranagati). She forgives all your minor
and major infractions and Ppams, lines up your head at the feet of Rama and
whispers in His ears to grant Raksa () to you.
= preservation, protection, salvation. Kakasuran obtained Raksa
from Sita abused physically by him, when everyone rejected and abandoned him.
Kakasuran is personification and euphemization of abuse by thought, word and
deed.
9.32 Sit in a comfortable position on a level surface with head, neck, and back in
one line; palms and hands facing upward on your lap; and gaze directed
downward.
9.33 Submerge the senses; focus the mind on your breath; breath in slowly; hold
the inhaled breath; exhale slowly; pay attention to the out-breath; hold the out-
breath and then inhale slowly.
9.34 Let Prana (breath) go up the lighted path of Susumna Nadi, fine as the Lotus
stalk. Upon arrival at the silent Anahata Chakra, peels of Pranava, Om fills the
center; chant the Mantra Om on the out-breath. (Solar rays pass up the Susumna
Nadi.)
9.35 Chant Pranava Mantra Om ten times at each sitting thrice daily; you will
gradually gain control over your breath; you will be ready for meditation.
9.36 Deep in the cave of the heart there is an inverted eight petal lotus bud
pointing down from its stalk. (note: heart here refers to spiritual heart, which is
present on the right side of the anterior chest--No! it is not an anatomical organ.)
9.37 While meditating, visualize the lotus petals open revealing in its center, Sun,
Moon, and Fire. See the Self (Krishna) in whatever native form one likes.
(The three canals of Susumna Nadi are one within the other, a tube within a tube:
outer tube is Rajasic Vajra Nadi which is the sun, the middle tube is Sattvic Chitra
Nadi (Moon), and the innermost tube is Brahma Nadi signifying passage of
Kundali and Kundalini consciousness. The inner tube is more subtle than the
outer tube; the innermost is the subtlest. It is said that normal human
consciousness becomes a higher consciousness as seen in gifted people like
Einstein and Superconsciousness in Yogi who is steeped in Kundalini Yoga.)
9.38 Whatever form of Krishna or Self you choose, let it shine and smile upon
you.
9.39 Krishna says, I will be in the center of the lotus as a dark nimbus cloud with
eyes and face radiating grace and love and Lakshmi sitting on my chest.
9.40 Visualize me with scintillating jewels, ankle bells, bracelets, and shining
lotus feet.
9.41 Let your mind build my image of my body in all its parts and see my
complete self as an immanent being there.
9.42 Shut out the external world; withdraw from all sensory stimuli; fix your mind
on me in the very center of the heart lotus; keep going towards the epicenter of the
lotus (involution).
9.43 As your travel towards the center and concentrate your attention, your mind
flows in a continuous stream; hold your attention on the benign face of My being.
9.44 Concentrate on My face for a while; later let My form vanish and what is left
behind is the Self; hold on to it and become one with it; now the Self and you are
one.
Within this Susumna there is a Nadi (river, tube, pipe, channel) by name
Vajra (thunderbolt) which is lustrous as Surya (sun) with Rajasic
(passionate, active) qualities. Again within this Vajra Nadi, there is another
Nadi, called Chitra (bright). It is of Sattvic (vituous) nature and of pale
colour. The qualities of Agni, Surya and Chandra (fire, sun and moon) are the
three aspects of Sabda Brahman. Here within this Chitra, there is a very fine
minute canal (which is known as Canalis Centralis). This canal is known as
Brahmanadi through which Kundalini, when awakened, passes from Muladhara
to Sahasrara Chakra. In this centre exist all the six Chakras (lotuses, viz.,
Muladhara, Svadhishthana, Manipura, Anahata, Vishuddha and Ajna).
The lower extremity of the Chitra Nadi is called Brahmadvara, the door of
Brahman, as Kundalini has to pass through this door to Brahmarandhra. This
corresponds to Haridwar which is the gate of Hari of Badrinarayan in the
macrocosm (physical plane). The Chitra terminates in the Cerebellum.
Chitra is the highest and most beloved of the Yogins. It is like a thin thread of
lotus. Brilliant with five colours, it is in the centre of Sushumna. It is the most
vital part of the body. This is called the Heavenly way. It is the giver of
Immortality. By contemplating on the Chakras that exist in this Nadi, the Yogi
destroys all sins and attains the Highest Bliss. It is the giver of Moksha.
When the breath flows through Susumna, the mind becomes steady. This
steadiness of the mind is termed "Unmani Avastha", the highest state of Yoga. If
you sit for meditation when Susumna is operating, you will have wonderful
meditation. When the Nadis are full of impurities, the breath cannot pass into the
middle Nadi. So one should practise Pranayama (breath control) for the
purification of Nadis.
Srivaishnavism is known for its three sacred Mantras. Srivaishnavism has the
distinct honor in embracing all castes in its fold; once you are a Srivaishnava, you
are equal with all other Srivaishnavas. The humility is the most important asset of
a SriVaishnava. He or she always signs off as, 'Adiyen' meaning that the person
is your humble servant serving at your feet. That Adiyen may be a physicist, a
physician, a musician.... To that person, serving at your feet is serving at the feet
of the devotee of the Lord, which is equal or more than equal to serving the Feet
of Bhagavan (Lord). For the meaning of the three mantras go to Srivaishnava
mantras.
Yours,
Commit all three Mantras to memory before you proceed. Or write them down
and chant in your mind from what you wrote on the paper.
Assume Padmasana posture. Take a deep breath and hold it. Chant the following
three Mantras silently in your mind while you hold your breath and exhale at the
end. You could do this for a period of about 5-10 minutes twice a day. It will
bring you peace and tranquillity. Deep breath for 3-4 seconds, mental chanting of
all three mantras for 15 - 20 seconds and exhalation of 3-4 seconds. The whole
procedure takes about 20 to 30 seconds in one cycle.
Buddhi, Ahamkara and Manas are linear in that Buddhi14 gives rise to
Ahamkara15 which gives rise to Mind or Manas16. Distal elements such
as hearing17 tactile sense18, vision and color19, tasting20, smell21 report to Mind or
Manas, which reports to Ahamkara, which reports to Buddhi. Buddhi interacts
with Chitta, the shuttle that moves knowledge back and forth between storage and
the front of consciousness or Buddhi.
The Tattvas.
Siva1, Sakti2, Sadasiva3, Isvara4, Sadvidya5, MyA6, Kla7, Niyati8, Kal9,
Vidya10, Rga11, Purusa12 Prakrti Tattva13, Buddhi14, Ahamkara15, Manas16,
hearing17 tactile sense18, vision and color19, tasting20, smell21, speech22, grasp23,
ambulation24, evacuation25, procreation26, sound27, palpation28, form29, taste30,
odor31, ether32, air33, fire34, water35 Earth36.
Perception moves from the sense organs to the mind in the apprehension of
General and Peculiar qualities, from indeterminate to determinate, from
preliminary to specific, from Nirvikalpam to Savikalpam. Higher need is moving
the perception to the soul. This is Intellectual perception, which is apprehension
by what is called Antakarna or Inner organ, consisting of Buddhi, Ego, Mind and
Chitta serving the soul. Going beyond General and Peculiar qualities or
perception is Intellectual Perception (). In the West, Mind and
Egoism are well discussed and explored; Buddhi and Chitta are poorly
understood.
Sense organs project their image on Manas, the mind. This is called
(Indriya-kAtchi = Seeing or perception through sense organs).
The first perception (the first look) is not complete and not determinate; it
is (Indeterminate perception). ArAgam ( = Rga is
desire) and Buddhi Tattva make it possible for Nivikalpa Indeterminate
Perception or knowledge to become SavikalpakKatchi ( =
Determinate Perception or Knowledge). It means that the knowledge is complete
and determinate. Indeterminate becomes Determinate perception; the latter
becomes an experiential knowledge, when impacted with desire and Buddhi (
(Tanvetanaik-Katchi). In this state, the sense knowledge
is subjected to psyche's desire, and Buddhi (Intuitive intellect). Experiential
knowledge () is internal experience of love, hate, pain,
pleasure... brought about by Rga or Desire and experienced by soul's intellect
after the sensory input goes through Indeterminate and determinate perception.
Indeterminate knowledgeDeterminate KnowledgeExperiential Knowledge.
You see a form behind a diaphanous screen; you don't know whether it is a male,
a female, or a statue. That is Indeterminate knowledge. The form moves and
comes in view before you. You apprehend the form as a woman; that is
determinate knowledge. The figure is a statuesque, living breathing young woman
and induces positive feelings and love at first sight; her demeanor is bewitching;
the juices start flowing ; the sensitized pheromonal receptors are heightened; the
adrenaline rush is palpable and causes palpitation; you without your awareness
develop a physical response to her; she kindles your desire and Buddhi gives a
thorough look-see; you are melting in the heat of passion; you desire for union;
that is Experiential perception or knowledge. This is the physical side of human
response. There is less knowledge among people with regards to spiritual side of
human response. You hear of ecstasy in seers and sages, when they meditate on
God. That spiritual ecstasy is compared to sexual bliss in Tantric texts. Sexual
bliss is difficult to express in words; so also is Spiritual bliss, but it is much more
intense, when the Yogi experiences what is called Turiya and Turiyatita, the 4th
and 5th state of human consciousness (the other three are wakefulness, dream
sleep and deep sleep). This is the ultimate human experience in this phenomenal
world.
Soul's intellect, when at work, goes after the objects. It uses the five sensory
organs like the eyes. Its perception is based on and limited by the organs. Indriya
KAtchi (Sense Perception) perceives without the stain of doubt and erroneous
apprehension the object's general quality without knowing its name and genus.
This is known as sense-knowledge. The first knowledge engendered by and
associated with the five sense-organs takes a foothold in Chitta (Determinative
Faculty) and remains in memory; later Buddhi (Intuitive Intellect) assigns a name,
genus and such attributes to the object and thus establishes a clear comprehension
of the object. This is known as MAnatha KAtchi (Intellectual Perception),
, Intellectual perception by the soul through the functioning of
the intellect.
External Sense Organs: They are the eyes, the nose, the tongue, the ears and the
skin, which serve to collect disparate sensations from the outer world. They are
outside of the Inner Organ.
Mind = = Manas. Mind is also called Lower mind. Mind is made of
thoughts when it is active (Manas-Vritti). Mind captures the images and sensory
impressions from the sense organs, which perceive the external world. There is a
continuous assault of the external world on the mind during waking hours. That
creates thought waves in the mind lake. In dream sleep, mind is active though
there is no contact with the external world. These are thought bubbles in the form
of audiovisual presentation rising from the subconscious mind. Mind suffers
from five afflictions. Five Klesas: avidya1 (ignorance), asmita2 (egoism),
raga3 (desire), abhinivesa4 (tenacity for mundane existence) and dvesha5
(aversion). These entities arise in a cascade fashion starting from Ignorance
giving rise to Egoism and so on. Avidya is not knowing that we take the non-
eternal as the Eternal, Impure as pure, pain as pleasure, desire sprouting
from egoism and aversion as real, and not identifying oneself with the Soul.
Chittam is not listed as one of the Tattvas TATTVAS-36 along with Buddhi14,
Ahamkara15, Manas16. It is said that Chittam is part of Prakrti Tattva13 . Vedanta
considers Anatahkarana as fourfold, while Sankhya and and Yoga Sastras
consider it as threefold; Siddha Siddhanta, one of the Inner Religions in Saivism
considers Antahkarana as fivefold: Chaitanya (Higher Consciousness), Chitta,
Buddhi, Ahamkara, and Manas. There are deities who preside over these
faculties: Vishnu-Achuta over Chitta; Brahman over Buddhi; Siva over
Ahamkara; Moon over the Manas.
More on Apohana and Smrti. Antahkarana is the inner organ or the repository of
Manas, Buddhi and Chitta. Chitta is a shuttle and moves knowledge back and
forth from the front burner of consciousness or Buddhi to back burner and vice
versa. When knowledge shuttles via the shuttle-express (Chitta) to the front of
consciousness, you call it Smrti or remembrance; when knowledge is put in
storage and not remembered, it is called Apohana (loss or forgetting); but it is
available upon demand. Impressions; analytical interpretation; and storage and
recall are the respective functions of Manas, Buddhi and Chitta, which work like
gears in the car; when one gear is on, the other two gears are disabled. The
components of the Inner Organ are functional. It is one entity with many
functions. Example. Father is a son, a husband, an uncle, a father-in-law.... He is
one person; his functions are according to his titles; he cannot mix his roles; when
he plays one role, the other roles are switched off.
The Buddhi is less subtle than Chitta, makes decisions and instructs the Mind
which works in collaboration with the five Janendriyas (sense organs = eyes, ears,
nose, tongue and skin). Mind serves as the blackboard whereon the sense organs
register their impressions, which are converted as concepts by the mind and
presented to Buddhi, which rejects most of them and keeps some as nuggets of
knowledge. Buddhi keeps moving the knowledge back and forth between the
front and back of the consciousness as Smrti and Apohana with the help of Chitta.
More on Pratyabhijna. Pratipam and Jna are the constituent words. Pratipam is
'facing oneself and what is forgotten'. Jna is 'Knowledge'. Tagare--Pratyabhijna
Philosophy. The present experience is identical and in total conformity with what
was experienced in the past; that is 'Recognition'. It is seeing or cognizing an
experience, an object or a person presently before you. You know Mr.XYZ from
the past. He remains in stored memory and yet that memory is not in the forefront
of your consciousness. When you see him suddenly before you in Niagra Falls,
you experience Pratyabhijna or Recognition. The knowledge has moved from
storage to the storefront, from the back burner to the front burner.
You have knowledge of God from Sacred texts, from experience, from inference
and from apprehension that one's own self is God. When an experience impinges
on you that says, 'I am that very Lord', you have come to Isvara Pratyabhijna or
Recognition of the Lord.
We need the Mind, Ego, Buddhi and Chitta to arrive at Saksin, Witness, Universal
Consciousness... These are aids or way stations. Each entity churns and propels knowledge from
one to the next. This churning is called Vritti. Once all entities have performed their functions,
they undergo autolysis, self-destruction, immolation, a sort of psychic apoptosis (programmed
death) for the time being. They do regenrate. By the way, these four entities are functional and
not anatomical entities. You cannot have matter enter the realm of Spirit. The matter has to die;
Mind has to die; Ego has to die; Buddhi has to die. The flesh dies and Spirit rises. Chitta has the
remembrance power (smrti, Recognition). All Vrittis dissolve and matter is reabsorbed by
Kundali as the Kundalini Sakti rises through the Chakras. This is the power needed for the Yogis
to dissolve in the Witness (God or Universal Consciousness, Inner Abider) and become one with
It. As Sakti moves from one matter to the next to go to the Spirit, each encounter with matter
evokes a response, 'Neti Neti, Not this, Not this. Once each entity is studied and rejected, Sakti
arrives at the Real Thing, Witness or Self. This is It. This is ultima Thule. In Pratyabhijna mode,
it turns itself inward and obtains Self-Knowledge. Abhijna is outbound, while Pratyabhijna is
inbound.
Jesus Christ experienced Pratyabhijna and said, Tat Tvam Asi (That thou art =
God You Are = That I am.) That = God.
John 8:58. Jesus said to them, Truly, truly, I say to you, before Abraham was
born, I am.
Exodus 3:14
14 God said to Moses, I AM WHO I AM; and He said, Thus you shall say to
the sons of Israel, I AM has sent me to you.
How coincidental is it that both the God of Abraham and Siva said the same
word(s)?
In Pratyabhijna mode, it turns itself inward and obtains Self-Knowledge. Abhijna is outbound,
while Pratyabhijna is inbound. Abhijna is to know external objects; Pratyabhijna is to know
oneself as the Self, Witness or the Universal soul.
In Kashmir Saivism, Pratyabhijna means Spontaneous Recognition. You are in spiritual search;
your Guru says what you are searching is you; you and the object of your search are one; you
and Self are one; Individual self and the Universal Self are one; You and Siva are one. One's true
self is nothing but Siva. The caveat is that the claimant should be pure to claim such a medallion.
What is the purpose of all this discussion? It is all about meditation. It is becoming one with the
object of your meditation. It is becoming one with your God. Remember you came from him;
you are a fragment (amsa) of Him or a spark according to Ramanuja. When you reintegrate with
Him, that is finding the fountainhead; that is like salmon going back to the redd (= the spawning
area or nest of trout or salmon).
In successful Mantra meditation, Mind dissolves in Buddhi and Buddhi dissolves in Chitta.
Chitta dissolves in the Self or Witness. This is essential for proper meditation. This sequential
process has four parts to it: meditation by the mind, chanting of mantra by Buddhi,
contemplation by Chitta, eventual dissolution in the Self. It goes from thought-initiation to
application to contemplation to dissolution. Chitta keeps you in the 'groove' . You need Chitta to
keep meditation, concentration and contemplation in sync. Mind is a mechanical meditator;
Buddhi is a fickle meditator; Chitta is a serene and steadfast meditator. Your aim is to graduate
to and dissolve in Chitta meditation and the self. Mind meditation and Buddhi meditation are
out-bound meaning the thoughts are out-bound in the world of happenings; you are in the world
of Nama and Rupa, names and forms. Chitta meditation is inbound in the sense it is in step with
the Atman, the Inner Soul, the Witness. At this juncture the Chitta goes into Smrti mode
(remembrance) and engages in deep contemplation. In remembrance mode, it is pratyabhijna. It
sees and recognizes God (Siva).
For successful Mantra Meditation, an aspirant must have the following qualities.
Santi = Serenity. Mind must be brought under control and trained not to chase after sense-
objects under the false belief that they provide happiness.
Dantah = Control of Sense-organs. One must strive to prevent the sense organs from exploring
the world of sense objects and imprinting on the mind the sensual experiences.
Param uparatah = Withdrawal of mind. Mind is trained to forget the sense enjoyments of the
past and desist from fancied sensual imageries.
Shanti Yuktah = Tranquility + Absorbed in = forbearance. One should train oneself not to
be disturbed and distracted by frustrations of daily living.
In the diagram below, you will notice that the Soul occupies the center; Mind,
Ego, and Intellect serve Chitta or Determinative
Mind, Buddhi, and Chitta are one entity with three different
functions (functional polymorphism) and so named
individually based on its function at that moment in time;
Chitta is hierarchically the most superior element of the three
and has the privilege of communicating with the Self or the
Soul which occupies the center of a human being (and the
diagram). When Chitta communes with the Soul, Mind, Ego
and Buddhi vanish (autolysis); peace and quiet prevail;
communion with the Soul is effective.
Soul, the King presides over, directs, and benefits from Mind,
Buddhi, Ego and Chitta. When they all go to battle for the
king, they all die with Chitta merging with the Soul. What it
means is mind the mechanical meditator, Buddhi the fickle
meditator and Ego the I-maker have to die for the Chittam to
meditate and find oneness with the soul. Manas-Nasa =
destruction of mind; Buddhi-Nasa = destruction of Buddhi;
Ahamkara-Nasa = destruction of Ahankara or ego. When there
is destruction of ego, mind, and intellect, there is tranquility,
there is no egotistical 'I' factor, there is no propagation
of thought waves from the mind, and there is no intellection
giving rise to extraneous concepts and notions. Under theses
circumstances there is only one EGO, that of God. Under
these ideal conditions, Chittam can go to work and meditate
on the Indivisible Oneness and merge with it. You know
how two big Egos fight it out in the Presidential
debates. You do not knock on the door of
Universal Consciousness with a mother lode of
human ego. You will not be allowed to enter and
there is no union of the individual self with the
Universal Self. In Hindu temples, there is a
flagstaff in the front of the temple, wherein the
devotee deposits his ego before he or she enters
the temple. When you board the plane, you take
your American Express and leave the firearm at
home.
These Psychic Nadis convey Prana Sakti and Manas Sakti (the
power of breath and mind). Kundalini lies coiled three and
half times like a serpent at the base of the vertebral column,
ready to spring. The three coils stand for A U M; three gunas,
sattva, Rajas, and Tamas; and three states of consciousness,
waking, dream sleep and deep sleep. The half coil stands for
transcendence above all the triads. This energy goes through
nodal points along the spine called Chakra or wheel, which is
represented by lotus petals, which always point towards the
goddess Kundalini where she is active. Where Kundalini sakti
is active (dynamic aspect of Sakti), that chakra is hot and
becomes cold when the energy leaves that chakra or plane.
Once the ascent is complete, the whole body except the crown
is as cold and rigid as a corpse. The nectar
released by the union of Sakti and Siva pervades
and sustains the whole body. The energy (sakti)
goes through channels from Muladhara chakra at
the base of the spine (Adhara Chakra or Support)
to the Sahasrara plane at the crown by channels
known as Nadis, which are subtle and not
physical. Below Muladhara Chakra, there are
Chakras of lower order, responsible for animal
and human instinct, and intellect. Kundalinis
purpose is for the Yogi to attain Samadhi. All the
senses including the sexual impulse are
suppressed and sublimated into prana or energy
that ascends the Susumna Nadi from Muladhara
Chakra to Sahasrara chakra where goddess
Kundalini and the Yogi achieve Mithuna (union) with Siva.
This is not a physical union. As you go up the Chakras, you
leave behind the body made of earth, water, fire, air, and
ether. It is the Spirit that unites with Siva. Siva is the purest of
the pure and does not allow contamination by matter. The
Yogi's soul departs the body and escapes through Brahma
Randhra, the anterior fontanel area, to merge with Brahman.
This area is said to be 12 inches above the crown and is called
Dvtasntam (Dvatasantam / dvadasanta), where absorption of
Yogi's consciousness into the Pure Consciousness (Universal
Consciousness) of the Lord takes place. It is Turiya and
Turiyatita state, 4th and 5th state of consciousness. Brahma
Randhra (anterior fontanel area on the top of the head) in the
skull is the entry and exit point for the soul. If you look at the
top of baby's (infant) head, you will see pulsations: that is
anterior fontanel and Brahma Randhra. The Sadhakas or
aspirants have to follow the eight point observance, known as
Ashtanga Yoga. Please read TMTM 01-09 for more details.
Note: The bones that you sit on are the Ischial tubercles which
form the base; the root of the phallus forms the top of the
triangle. See the triangle and the Kanda in the bottom of the
diagram. The Susumna Nadi is a cluster of three channels one
inside the other, a tube within a tube; of these, Brahma Nadi is
the most important, through which the Goddess Kundalini and
prana rise.
Susumna = Su + Sumna = Excellent + musical hymn,
happiness or joy = perfect harmony.
Chitra Nadi's lower end is called Brahma Dvara, the aperture or door of
Brahman, through which Kundalini enters; it ends in cerebellum.
The diagram shows the origin of the Ida and Pingala Nadis. The Right
testis is the origin of Ida Nadi; the left testis for the Pingala Nadi. It
eventually end in the respective nostrils. Note right testis channel ends
in the left nostril and left testis channel ends in right nostril. The prana
in these channels join the Susumna Nadi and the energy travels up. You
may ask the question what has testis to do anything with these
channels? The explanation is as follows:
Orgasm is for the flesh; Beatitude is for the spirit. Rise from orgasm to
Ecstasy (Spirit). Transmute your orgasm to beatitude. Go from testis to
Brahmarandhra. In Tantric terms, man moves from Pasu Bhava to
Divya Bhava (Animal man to Divine man.)
The trodden lovers living and conjugating in the pelvis (Muladhara and
Svadhisthana planes) can control their senses to reach Brahmarandhra
with the grace of Chinnamasta who lives in Ajna Chakra. The testicular
man can ascend to the level of spiritual man via the Ida, Pingala and
Susumna Nadis.
When sexual urge finds expression, the subtle substance gathers at the
gonads (testes) and prostate and assumes a gross form as opposed to the
subtle form of existence throughout the body. To rise to the level of
Urdhvaretas is to prevent emission and facilitate reabsorption into the
body of the stored seeds for in the perfected one it remains subtle for
ever with atrophy of the gonads and involution of phallus -- signs of
Urdhvaretas. Because of the subtle nature of Sukra and its pervasion
throughout the chaste body in Urdhvaretas and lack of it in the gonadal
and prostatic fluid, he smells like a lotus. (On the other hand, ordinary
mortals (men) smell like goats for obvious reasons.) In perfect ones, the
seminal energy rises to become the nectar (Amrta) of Siva Sakti,
according to Tantric Texts. This diffuse radiant energy (Tejas)
circulating in the body of the perfected ones, it is said, they, when cut,
bleed not blood but Tejas in the form of semen.
Manmatha and Rati are the archetypical lovers, living a life of sexual
indulgence in Muladhara and Svadhisthana planes, which is not
condemned by Tantrics. They have dominant oral, anal and genital
traits--deglutition, defecation, excretion, recreation and reproduction.
Chinnamasta walks on them on this private moment and stands on
them, which is rather discomforting to the lovers. The flesh is put on
notice; the flash of lightning sword severs the head and the spirit rises.
The head has all the sensory and motor organs (needed for a successful
sexual encounter), such as the brain, the motivator and the ultimate
enjoyer; nose, the purveyor of delicate aromas; mouth and tongue for
creative osculation and tactile pleasures; ears for subtle sounds of
music; and eyes, the imbiber of visual delights. The head of senses has
to come off for the spirit to rise. Standing or sitting on Kama and Rati
in Viparita Mithuna (Reverse Coition), Chinnamasta demonstrates that
she has overcome the sexual urges; self-decapitation with streams of
blood points to fearlessness, feeding and nurturing and sacrifice to
her devotees. (Consider this statement: "Be sure you distinguish
(discern) the Body (bread) and Blood (wine) of Christ from the other
food at the meal. Treat it reverently, do not just gulp it down.") Her
hymnal names, Yogini, Yoganirata, and Madanatura, indicate that she is
a female Yogi, a disciplined and controlled practitioner of Yoga, and
the one who cannot be conquered by Love god. Her nudity is a sign of
truthfulness because Truth when clothed is no longer Truth. One who
has the courage to stand decapitation for sacrifice, Truth, devotion, and
in war is a hero with discipline and self-control; he is the battle-ready
hero, a true devotee of Chinnamasta.
Other explanations.
Parvati went to Mandakini River for bathing with two attendants, Jaya
and Vijaya. When she finished bathing, the attendants asked her for
food for which she said that they had to wait until they reached home.
They kept persisting in their request and she, the merciful goddess, cut
her own head and the attendants on either side along with the severed
head drank from the three streams coming out of her headless body.
They all came back home satisfied in their hunger. Since then Parvati
was known as Chinnamasta. The attendants were hungry for spiritual
food, which can only be given by Chinnamasta. Only Jesus Christ can
offer spiritual food to his disciples.
This was told by Siva himself. When Siva and Parvati were in Viparita
Mithuna (Reverse coition or Parvati in superior position); this act was
called Mahavrata (Great Religious vow). At the end of emission,
Parvati became very fierce and emanated two saktis from her body,
Dakini and Varnini. You see what happens when the flesh rises and the
spirit falls; you have two persons longing for spiritual food. One day
Parvati/Chandika and her two attendants went to Pasubhadra River. At
noon, the attendants became hungry and Parvati/Chandika cut her head
and fed them and her own head with the streaming blood from her
headless body. That is spiritual nourishment. Once the feeding was
over, she put her head back on the body and headed back home. Siva
noticed pallor on Parvati/Chandika and thought that she was injured by
someone. He became very angry which made a part of him arise as
Krodha Bhairava (Krodha = anger; Bhairava = terror). That day was
designated as Viraratri, the day Chinnamasta was born.
Dakini and Varnini are interchangeable names for Jaya and Vijaya.
John 6:54
John He who eats my flesh, and drinks my
6:54 blood, has eternal life; and I will raise him
up at the last day.
In the above two episodes, some wonder why Chinnamasta did not
nurse to satiate the hungry attendants as Kali nursed Siva when she
found him on the battlefield. Instead she gave them her lifeblood.
All these to some experts mean that they are acts of destruction and
regeneration.
When she is resting, it is the ascent of the flesh and descent of the
spirit. When she is active, spirit is rising and flesh is dying. Let me
explain the last statements. Siva's consciousness is like the sun. The
earth is at an optimal distance from the sun so that it can sustain life
without fear of incineration or freezing. As the sun's rays go through
many layers that filter harmful rays, Sakti plays the modulating role.
The rays emerge from Siva and go to Bindu (and Nada) which makes
the building blocks of the universe and beings with the help of Maya
and Sakti. To mention a few, the building blocks (Tattvas) are the soul,
the body, the water, earth, air... There are 36 of them. TATTVAS-36.
What is out there in the cosmos is present in human body. The
Emerald Tablet of Hermes Trismegistus is a short
work which coins the well known term in occult circles
"As above, so below." The actual text of that maxim, as
translated by Dennis W. Hauck is "That which is Below
corresponds to that which is Above, and that which is
Above corresponds to that which is Below, to accomplish
the miracle of the One Thing."[12] The tablet also
references the three parts of the wisdom of the whole
universe, to which Hermes claims his knowledge of these
three parts is why he received the name Trismegistus
(thrice great, or Ao-Ao-Ao meaning "greatest"). -
Wikipedia
The Kundalini Chakras from Sahasrara to Muladhara centers are the
home for the building blocks of the human body. Ajna Chakra is the
home for the mind, Vishuddha for Ether, Anahata for air, Manipura for
fire, Svadhistana for water and Muladhara for earth. All the elements
are assigned a shape and color: Earth is yellow and square; Water is
translucent and crescent-shaped; Fire is red and triangular; Air is blue
and circular; Ether is smoky and oval. There are presiding deities in
charge of the building blocks at each center. Actually the five elements
are the origin of the Chakras. When the Kundali ascends, she is going
back to the source; spirit is rising. The source is pure Consciousness
which cannot be contaminated with matter, the Tattvas. She has to take
(consumes) the lock, stock and barrel meaning that she absorbs all the
Tattvas and the presiding deities into her (involution, destruction of
matter).
She absorbs all the elements as depicted in the diagram. The Christian
equivalent concept is dying to the flesh and gaining the spirit. Man is a
very dilute form of Siva meaning that there is a great divide between
Siva's pure Consciousness and human consciousness, not to speak of
animal consciousness. Man is Mini-Siva. Siva's Pure Consciousness is
like the sun and human consciousness is like the candle. Man has Pasas
and Malas (bondage and impurities). Siva does not tolerate or invite
impure souls to merge with him. He is pure metal and we are a slurry.
Slurry must undergo repeated purification process before it becomes
pure metal. That removal of impurity happens as Kundali absorbs them
and rises from one Chakra to the next above it.
Sakti has two aspects; Static and Dynamic. A car battery on the shelf is
Static Sakti or power. When the battery is connected to the car's ignition
and turned on, it becomes dynamic. When Kundalini Devi rests in
Muladhara, she is static and when she is roused (turning the ignition
keys) she becomes dynamic. Tantras say that the Yogi should use the
key to open the lock on the door and force the door open, wake up
Kundalini in Muladhara and join her in the voyage of spirit. One source
tells that Bhuvanesvari, one of the Mahavidyas, cuts the knots of the
Chakras and thus rises with the Sadhaka and Kundalini to merge with
Siva.
1. a chambered, many-seeded, globose fruit, having a tough, usually red rind and
surmounted by a crown of calyx lobes, the
edible portion consisting of pleasantly acid flesh developed from the outer seed coat.
Accomplished Yogis mention that Siva and Sakti are the Father and the Mother of the
Sadhaka or spiritual aspirant. The Mother gives a needed boost from below at the
Muladhara level and the Father pulls him by his spiritual power from above in Saharara
Chakra. It is left up to the seeker whether he wants to rise and reach the Father at the
top. If the sleeping Sadhaka does not heed to the parents, the loss is his in that when he is
in spiritual sleep he is awake to the world of happenings and when he is in spiritual
awakening, he is inert to the physical world around him. Spiritual awakening confers
wisdom, bliss and reunion with the parents. Kundalini power elevates man from mere
existence at the pelvic level to peerless heights of spiritual wisdom and Bliss. It elevates
human consciousness to superconsciousness. Human consciousness is equidistant
(hypothetical) between the consciousness of a worm and the Pure consciousness of Siva-
Sakti. Between worm and man there is a big chasm of consciousness; between man and
God, the chasm is not any less. When someone reaches the Sahasrara Chakra and the
thousand petals blossom out, a new consciousness, unlike human consciousness, dawns,
according to Swami Satyananda Saraswati. Once a Yogi obtains this new consciousness,
his knowledge does not depend on the senses like the eyes, ears.... You see things with
eyes closed; you hear sounds with ears shut.
A mnemonic device (is a memory aid). Pinga rhymes
with Ganga. Sa goes with Su = Sarasvati and Susumna.
Left and right brains have cross-over fibers to control contralateral side.
left brain and right nostril Right brain and left nostril Id
Pingala Nadi Nadi.
LEFT BRAIN FUNCTION --- RIGHT BRAIN FUNCTIONS--
PINGALA NADI IDA NADI
uses logic uses feeling
detail oriented "big picture" oriented
facts rule imagination rules
words and language symbols and images
present and past present and future
math and science philosophy & religion
can comprehend can "get it" (i.e. meaning)
knowing believes
acknowledges Appreciates
order/pattern perception spatial perception
knows object name knows object function
reality based fantasy based
forms strategies presents possibilities
practical impetuous
safe risk taking
Before the ENT doctors discovered Nasal Cycle, the Yogis of India had
a pretty good idea of what it was. The nose is innervated by Autonomic
Nervous system (ANS) and olfactory nerves. The former alternately
increases and decreases nasal resistance to air flow; the latter helps
identify smells. The sympathetic and parasympathetic nerves (ANS)
have control over the venous sinusoids in the nasal mucosa. When the
sympathetic fibers gain upper hand, that nostril has the least resistance
to airflow because there is shrinkage of nasal mucosa allowing the
passage open for airflow and the fellow on the other side is under the
influence of parasympathetic nerves increasing airflow resistance from
blockage of the nostril by boggy mucosa. This is Nasal Cycle. This does
not happen to everybody; one study indicates that it exists in 80% of the
population. The side you sleep on is the side with blockage; older you
get weaker it gets. Hypothalamus is said to be the center for the
alternation in Nasal Cycle. Nobody knows why it happens. The cycle
alternates once in 1 to 4 hours. Most of the time one nostril has good
airflow and the other nostril has bad airflow.
Ida (left) and Pingala (right) Nadis = left and right nostrils - allow
airflow alternately; left one allows passage of lunar energy; right one,
the solar energy. The right and left hemispheres of the brain function
contralateral to the patent nostril: Solar energy flow on the right nostril
controls the left hemisphere and Lunar energy flow on the left nostril
the right hemisphere. Physicians think that the ANS is the primary
controller rather than the medically nebulous solar and lunar energies.
Medicine loses its footing on the slippery slopes of energies of which
the doctors are not familiar with. Susumna Nadi functions well when
both Ida and Pingala Nadis are open and functioning. Yogis can open
Susumna Nadi at will for the passage of Prana or energy.
Each of six Chakras has its corresponding plexus and organs, having
functions of evacuation, excretion, reproduction, digestion, blood
circulation, and respiration. The higher centers such as Ajna and
Sahasrara discharge the functions of muscle coordination, sensory and
motor functions, cerebral function and Pure Consciousness. There are
students of Kundalini, who consider these centers as subtle centers
having nothing to do with anatomical parts and corresponding
functions. The lotuses at the respective Chakras are inside the Susumna
Nadi which is a subtle and not a physical channel or Nadi. The chakras
are subtle and have physical counterparts: Anahata chakra's physical
counterparts are the heart and cardiac plexus. The Lotus flower blooms
as Kundalini passes through it. On the petals are inscribed the 50 letters
of the Sanskrit alphabet. When the letters are uttered, each sound
"touches" its respective petal and the respective Chakra, which becomes
active. The Yogi or Sadhaka claims to see and feel the vibrations of
these letters inscribed on the petals during his meditative practice. The
sounds of Sanskrit letters are organized according to the organs used in
their articulation: Kantha (throat, guttural), TAlu (palatals), MUrddhA
(cerebrals), Danta (dentals), Ostha (labial). Brahmabijas (Ha and Ksa)
are in Ajna Chakra. When Ha is uttered, the head is touched by Ha. Va
to Sa, when uttered, touch the Muladhara Chakra. The first 16 vowels
(Am to Ah) touch the Visuddha Chakra; Ka to Tha, the Anahata
Chakra; Da to Pha, Manipura Chakra; Ba to La, Manipura Chakra; and
Va to Sa, Muladhara Chakra. The numbers at each chakra also indicate
the number of intersecting Nadis at that center.
('Fifty Sanskrit letters make a string of her instrument to sing her song,
out of which are woven all the forms of the worlds.')
Note the two words: Danta and Ostha are cognate with Dental and Os
(opening), another evidence that Sanskrit is the origin of words.
Sarasvati* River does not flow now. Its existence thousands of years
ago were confirmed by satellite images which appear like pentimento
below the surface. The archeologists say that Sarasvati River dried up
around 1900 BCE
.
The Yogi goes from lower to higher centers; he takes Sakti with him until he
reaches Sahasrara chakra, which may take many years of practice and dedication.
Once he reaches a center, it is easier for him to reach the center next time. With
the successful arrival at each higher center, he experiences Samadhi, bliss and new
powers. The bliss attained in Sahasrara is the same as in liberation; he attains
many supernatural powers. When Kundalini is stimulated by Asanas, Kumbhakas,
Bandhas, Mudras and Mantras, she enters Susumna Nadi after piercing the chakras
defended by Maya Sakti. When Kundali is forced to enter Susumna Nadi, she
remains there for the duration of Kumbhaka or retention of breath only. Once
Kumbhaka phase is terminated, Kundali comes back to Muladhara. Maintaining
and prolonging the duration of Kumbhaka come from constant practice. Once this
is achieved, the aspirant concentrates his mind and meditates on the conjoined dual
deity in each center or plane. (Conjoined dual deity - Kundali unites with the
center-specific deity in each center. Though they are two before union, the
combined form is one deity.) When the aspirant becomes perfect in Kumbhaka and
meditation on the combined deity and is able to hold his Prana and Kundali in
Susumna, he becomes the master of the gross element of that particular center
(example, water element in Manipura Chakra). When he becomes the master of all
five gross elements of the material world (Earth, Water, Fire, Air and Ether), he
exercises his power over them by choice. Some examples are levitation,
clairaudience, clairvoyance, prophecy, omnipotence and omniscience. Levitation
means that he can overcome the pull of the earth. By meditating on the united
deity, the aspirant's human consciousness becomes one with the pure
consciousness of the combined entity; in this process, the Sadhaka rises from the
material plane to the plane of Suddha Tattva or Pure Consciousness. He is
untouched by wealth, prestige, carnal desire, passion, and power. Ajna center is
the seat of Nada and Bindu (Bindu.htm), which are the material cause of the
universe. Others say that Bindu exists in the back of the head (brain) which
corresponds to the area of the head where the Brahmins and Hare Krishnas keep
their tuft of hair. When he unites with the combined deity of the center (Parasiva
and Siddha Kali), he is for ever free from the dualities of the world, and becomes
master of Vikrtic elements such as Mind, Ego, and Intellect.
Vikriti = transformed elements derived from Prakrti, matter.) He is no longer
required to perform exoteric worship (external worship). When Kundali reveals
herself to Sadhaka and introduces him to Saguna Brahman, Isvara or Clinical
Brahman he attains Sayuja mukti or union with God. He gives up his Subtle and
Causal body. He found Vasaka Sakti, Isvara, the fruit of his pursuit and he is very
near in finding the Vakya sakti, the very seed or essence of it. Vakya Sakti is
Brahman and the Sadhaka becomes one with Brahman. (Go to Tantra.htm for
details on Vakya and Vasaka saktis.) This is Brahman Knowledge, the ultimate
goal of Jnana Yoga; he is in eternal bliss, he swims in the ocean of Cit instead of
ocean of Samsara and there is no return to the mundane world. The aspirant must
be in excellent physical, mental, and moral condition to undertake the strenuous
aspects of Yoga, such as Kumbhaka, Asanas, Mudras and Bandhas. On the
contrary, Bhakti Yoga is total surrender to God and is not the preferred Yoga for
the Tantrics. Jnana Yoga is so arduous that the aspirants start practicing it at very
young age. Bakti Yoga can be a starter because Jnana Yoga is built on Faith.
Yama and Niyama are the foundation on which these disciplines are built. Bhakti
Yoga is fit for all age groups, all physical types, all pursuits, all inclinations. The
end result is the same for both disciplines: Liberation.
There are two routes for attaining oneness with Siva-Sakti: Vedantic and
Tantric. In both the Sadhaka has to face the lower forces of pelvic region at some
point in time during his or her journey. The Tantric takes on and fights these lower
forces at the outset of his journey, while the Vedantic (Vaidic) Sadhaka develops a
higher consciousness before he faces the pelvic forces. His inner purity, maturity
and higher consciousness become strong enough to overcome the pelvic forces.
(Pelvic forces: Living in the pelvis means mere animal existence that involves
eating, drinking, defecating, urinating, procreating, animal passions). These are
powerful forces which need to be addressed and sublimated: One eats to live. For a
greenhorn in Tantric Sadhana, a guru is necessary for proper guidance. A Tantric
Sadhaka struggles to overcome the base forces before he gets illumination; a
Vaidic Sadhaka acquires the necessary illumination to easily fight the lower pelvic
forces. Vaidic route is painless, long, and safe, while Tantric route is fast and
fraught with danger and demands a guide and guru to traverse the path.
The battle between Kundalini and Maya Sakti may result in discomfort, disease
and disability in Yogi. He should have a thorough knowledge of Kundalini Yoga
in its entirety before the Sadhaka tries to awaken Kundalini at Kanda (shape like a
bird's egg). Kali is Kundalini in Muladhara Chakra. When Kundalini is roused, she
becomes active: the desire for her consort, Paramasiva. The Yogin of yogins
becomes intense and rises through all chakras. As Kundalini rises and pierces
through each chakra, she takes into her body the resident tattvas at each center,
which enter into a Laya state (Laya Krama).
Laya = lysis = dissolution = involution. At Muladhara plane, she was the
sakti of all physical tattvas and as she ascends, they involute and dissolve in her,
her consciousness gets purer by each ascent through the chakras and at Sahasrara,
she is pure consciousness. Along with the tattvas, the resident devatas in the
chakras dissolve in her. The devata (the purveyor, modulator, and controller), is
the organ's resident godling. This ascent is from a physical plane to the spiritual
plane. When Mithuna (union) takes place between Sakti and Siva at Bindu in the
body of the Yogi, nectar (Amrta) flows down and pervades all Chakras and
gratifies the devatas (godlings, gods and goddesses) in each center with the
resultant immersion of Yogi in Bliss. Bindu corresponds to the area of brain that
underlies the tuft of a practicing Brahmana. This Mithuna is allegorized as
follows: a married woman (Kundalini) takes the royal road (Susumna), makes
periodic stops at the sacred places (Chakras), runs to embrace her Supreme
Husband, Para Siva, after the last leg of her ascent, and causes nectar to flow from
Sahasrara to Muladhara, appeasing all the resident Devatas in the chakras and
immersing the Sadhaka in bliss. (Bindu is located approximately at the posterior
fontanel area of the brain, which roughly corresponds to the site of origin of long
tuft of hair (kudumi) worn by the priestly Brahmins on the scalp.)
Kundalini goddess, having traversed the fourteen Granthas (knots), six Chakras,
three Lingas and five Sivas on her way to Para Siva, makes a return trip down the
chakras restoring everything that she absorbed into her and reaches Muladhara
chakra. The ascent is Laya Krama (Absorption) and her descent is Srsti Krama
(creation).
The jivatma (embodied soul) that tags along with Kundalini up and down the
chakras benefits from the experience of samadhi (bliss/ecstasy) at the highest level
and the mundane nature of life at Muladhara.
The creation cascade with the last tattva being earth undergoes involution as the
Sadhaka goes up the chakras; the descent restores the cascade again; thus, the
Sadhaka is a microcosm of the divinity. As the Sadhaka makes the ascent and the
fire of Kundalini ascends through Tapas, mantras and more, the lower stations and
the corresponding parts of the body become cold and rigid while the crown only is
warm to touch as the Sadhaka is in ecstasy. When the descent is complete, and
Kundalini comes to rest at Muladhara, the Yogi snaps out of superconsciousness
and regains the normal body temperature, suppleness and consciousness. The
reason why the body part is cold is that the Devata of the particular center has
been absorbed by Kundali on her ascent to Sahasrara; on her descent the Devatas
are restored to their former status thus the organs become warm again.
Kundalini goddess stays in Sahasrara for a brief period only; her natural
tendency is to come down to her home base, Muladhara. An accomplished
Sadhaka can hold her in Sahasrara as long as he wants (the most is three days and
three nights), thus enjoying ecstasy. Some bring Kundali goddess down to
Anahata (heart) and offer worship there; thus the heart is her elevated abode in that
particular Sadhaka. The Sadhaka now takes Kundali to Sahasrara from her heart
station or chakra. Kali Kundalini at the heart station is called Hamsa.
As Sadhaka ascends under his own effort with Kundali goddess to a higher
plane, the material world is withdrawn into the body of the goddess; the Sadaka
ascends from world-consciousness of Kundali at Muladhara to Universal
Consciousness and SatChitAnanda or Pure Bliss in Samadhi. Kundali is thus the
resident delegate of Siva Sakti in Jivatma (embodied soul). It is She who
accompanies the jiva to Siva for absorption and liberation (Mukti).
Unmani is a state when mind ceases to exist and ceases to entertain thoughs; in
other words the manasness of the Manas or mind ceases to exist. Unmani is
mandatory state for Yogi; no Unmani, no Yogi. When Unmani state is attained,
the Chitta is free from the mind (that keeps it attached to the world) and floats
freely in ether. Imagine the free-floating astronauts; the Yogis are "Ethernauts"
with no fear of cosmic radiation.
When moksa or liberation is attained while alive it is Jivan Mukti, the belief and
goal of Saivaites. Ramanuja believes in Videha Mukti when the Yogi's Jivatma
leaves the body by Brahma Randra (Anterior Fontanel) and becomes bodiless.
Though a Sadhaka has achieved Jivan Mukti, there is no guarantee that he will not
suffer from illness or injuries until his soul leaves the body; death puts an end to
miseries and obtains liberation to Jivan and Videha Muktas. The soul of man with
a bag of karma (most of us) leave by one or more of the seven apertures: mouth,
nostrils, eyes, and ears. The soul of the animal leaves the body by genitals or anus.
It is said by believers that the mark of departure is a stain in the gate and or a open
gate: example, blood in the nostrils, open mouth.
Susumna Nadi is the most important one and the Sadhaka redirects the Prana
from Ida and Pingala Nadis to Susumna which goes to Sahasrara where Prana
dissolves (laya). Ida Nadi is the conduit for mental functions, Pingala Nadi for
vital functions and Susumna Nadi for spiritual consciousness. Knowledge of
Brahman or Tattva Jnana has three steps before it is acquired: first, the knowledge
of Pranas, Chakras, Nadis, and Kundalini; second, the conscription of Kundali
goddess and third, merging with Brahman by laya brought on by Iccha (Will),
Knowledge (Jnana), and Action (Kriya) of Kundali goddess. Iccha, Jnana, and
Kriya are sequential events in case of Kundali goddess, while Jnana, Iccha and
Kriya (knowledge, will, and action) are those of a Sadhaka. The reasons are as
follows: The goddess (or Siva) exercises her Will or Desire (Iccha Sakti) first to
create, because She has the Knowledge (Jnana Sakti) or wherewithal to create and
thereafter She acts (Kriya) setting creation in motion. For earthbound jiva aspiring
to merge with Siva, the sequence is Jnana, Iccha and Kriya (knowledge, will, and
action). Knowledge of Kundalini Yoga is the first; arousing the power of
Kundalini Sakti is the second and represents the will; practicing the Asanas,
Mudras, Pranayamas, Bandhas is the third and represents the action. Man cannot
will an action without knowledge. Gain the knowledge, then exercise the will and
later put it into action. Siddhiar says that all souls taking origin from Goddess
(Brahman) receive Sakti (power) of knowledge, will and action like heat takes
origin from fire, which (fire) is different from heat; the fire (firewood) is the
source and substance and heat is an attribute and a derivative of fire. Iccha, Jnana,
and Kriya (fire and heat) are intrinsic and self-generating in the Goddess, while in
man they are of external (from Goddess) source.
Kundali (or God) exercises the Will first, uses the Knowledge second, that She
already has and third She put her knowledge-based plan into action (motion).
The Sadahka forces the prana (Up Breath) downwards and the Apana (Down
Breath) upwards and the collision and friction generate heat that wakes up Kundali
from her sleep; later he channels the Prana-Apana breath into Susumna Nadi. The
Sadhaka's jiva unites with Kundali who absorbs and replaces all tattvas in all
chakras with her own energy. Kundali in the lower Chakras is a physical energy;
as She goes up absorbing all the physical tattvas (Virat state, manifested state), an
involutional transformation takes place at Ajna center, where she is the sakti of
subtle body (Hiranyagarbha), a state subtler than Virat state; in Sahasrara, she
becomes Isvara (Sakti) who contains and conceals all that were absorbed so far in
a potential state. As she ascends, she goes into the state of Parabindu (Supreme
Bindu, Causal or Karana Bindu, Supreme Sakti, Nirguna Siva and Void
[Sunya]). Nirguna Siva is equal to Nirguna Brahman without attributes. From
Muladhara to Ajna Chakra, Kundalini goddess has absorbed all Asuddha Tattvas
and now she is Consciousness. The united Prana-Apana breath elicits Anahata
sounds. Later Prana, Apana, Nada and Bindu unite and offers the Yogi Bliss.
(Parabindu is in Sahasrara Chakra.)
There are others who recommend Bhukti and Mukti, as long as Bhoga is done
with propriety. Bhoga = enjoyment. When Bhoga is experienced in the name
of goddess or Siva, it is goddess or Siva enjoying it through the jivatma. The
same principle applies to Bhoga and Yoga. When propriety is observed over a
long time, Jnana Tattva dawns on the Sadhaka, who gets to enjoy liberation.
Others (Kaula) advocate that Yoga, Bhoga and Samadhi can coexist in Kundalini
Yoga, while invoking the goddess Kundalini.
K-U-N-D-A-L-I
L: Lightness of body.
Notes:
His Holiness Satguru Sivaya Subramuniyaswami of Hawaii Adheenam explains the planes of
existence below Muladhara Chakra. Page 134-135 Loving Ganesa.
Devotees sometimes ask, "Why is it that some souls are apparently more
advanced than others, less prone to the lower emotions that are attributes of
the lower chakras?" The answer is that souls are not created all at once. Lord
Siva is continually creating souls. Souls created a long time ago are old souls.
Souls created not so long ago are young souls. We recognize an old soul as
being re ned, selfless, compassionate, virtuous, controlled in body, mind and
emotions, radiating goodness in thought, word and deed. We recognize a
young soul by his strong instinctive nature, sel shness, lack of understanding
and absence of physical, mental and emotional re nement.
At any given time there are souls of every level of evolution. My satguru, Sage Yogaswami,
taught that The world is a training school. Some are in kindergarten. Some are in the BA class.
Each soul is created in the Third World (Causal world) and evolves by taking on denser and
denser bodies until it has a physical body and lives in the First World, the physical plane (the
world we live in). Then as it matures, it drops off these denser bodies and returns to the Second
and Third Worlds, the astral and causal planes.
1st world = The physical universe where five senses are the portals.
3rd World = Sivaloka = the world of Siva, the Spiritual plane, the Causal plane.
This process of maturation, occurring over many, many lifetimes, is the unfoldment of
consciousness through the chakras. First the young soul slowly matures through the ptla,
mahtala, rastala and the taltala chakras. Such individuals plague established society with their
erratic, adharmic ways. Between births, on the astral plane, they are naturally among the asuras
(beings with devilish qualities), making mischief and taking joy in the torment of others. When
lifted up into jealousy, in the sutla chakra, there is some focus of consciousness, and the desires
of malice subside. Finally, the ptla chakra sleeps.
Later, when the sutla forces of jealousy are thwarted, the young soul arises into anger,
experiencing ts of rage at the slightest provocation. As a result of being disciplined by society
through its laws and customs, the individual slowly gains control of his force; and a conscience
begins to develop. It is at this stage that a fear of God and the Gods begins to manifest. Now,
totally lifted up into the atala chakra, seventh of the fourteen force centers, the individual emerges
into the consciousness of the mldhra, the seat of the elephant God; and several of the chakras
below cease to function.
Here begins the long process of unfoldment through the higher chakras, a process outlined in
aiva Siddhanta as the progressive path of chary, kriy, yoga and jna.
1
Cp Jalal-uddin Rm
'I died a mineral and became a plant,
I died a plant and rose an animal,
I died an animal and I was man.
Why should I fear' When was I less by
dying?
Yet once more I shall die as man, to
soar
With the blessed angels, but even
from angelhood
I must pass on All except God
perishes
When I have sacrificed my angel soul,
I shall become that which no mind
ever conceived.
O, let me not exist' for Non-existence
proclaims,
"To him we shall return. "'
Feb 20, 2013. There are seven levels (1-7) below the
Muladhara Chakra with increasingly undesirable
qualities. the seventh is the lowest one.
Cauda equina has its astral center in Kanda, the confluence of Nadis and
the seat of Kundali goddess.
Muladhara: Elephant
Svadhisthana: Makara
Kundalini Experience
899. This body which is made of the 'five elements' is called the gross
body. The subtle body consists of Manas, Buddhi, Chitta and
Ahamkara. The body by which one realizes the bliss of God-vision and
continues to enjoy His union, is the causal body. In the Tantras it is
called Bhagavati-tanu. Beyond all is the Mahakarana---the First Cause.
901. Lord Chaitanya used to have three sorts of 'states': (I) the
conscious state in which the mind dwelt on the gross and the subtle
bodies, (2) the semiconscious state in which the mind soared to the
causal body and felt the 'causal bliss', and (3) the state of in-turned
consciousness (superconscious state) in which the mind used to merge
completely in the Mahakarana-the great First Cause.
There is a great similarity between this and the 'five sheaths' or Kosas of
the Vedanta--the Annamaya and Pranamaya Kosas (together forming
the gross body), the Manomaya and Vijnanarnaya Kosas (together
forming the subtle body) and Anandamayakosa (forming the causal
body). The First Cause is beyond all these Kosas. When the mind used
to merge in this First Cause, he (Sri Chaitanya) used to fall into
Samadhi; this is known as the Nirvikalpa or Jada Samadhi.
904. Describing his experience of the rise of the Kundalini, the Master
once said: "Something rises with a tingling sensation from the feet to
the head. So long as it does not reach the brain, I remain conscious, but
the moment it does so I am dead to the outside world. Even the
functions of seeing and hearing come to a standstill, and talking is then
out of the question. Who is to speak? The very distinction between 'I'
and 'you' vanishes. Sometimes I think I would tell you everything about
what I see and feel when that mysterious power rises up to this, or even
this (pointing to the heart and the throat). At that stage it is possible to
speak, which I do. But the moment it has gone above this (pointing to
the throat), somebody stops my mouth, as it were, and I am off my
moorings. I make up my mind to relate to you what I feel when the
Kundalini goes beyond the throat, but as I think over it, up goes the
mind at a bound, and there is an end of the matter!" Many a time did the
Master attempt to describe this state, but every time he failed. One day
he was determined to tell those present about these experiences and
went on with his description of them up to the stage when the energy
rises to the level of the throat. Then pointing to the sixth centre,
opposite the junction of the eyebrows, he said, "When the mind reaches
this point, one catches a vision of the Paramatman and falls into
Samadhi. Only a thin, transparent veil intervenes between the Jiva and
the Paramatman. He then sees like this ... " And as he attempted to
explain it in detail, he fell into Samadhi! When his mind came down a
little, he tried it again, and again he was immersed in Samadhi! After
several fruitless attempts like this, he said with tears in his eyes, "Well,
I sincerely wish to tell you everything without concealing a bit, but
Mother won't let me do so on any account. She gags me!"
905. Again referring to the different ways in which the Kundalini rises
to the brain, the Master would often say, "Well, that which rises to the
brain with a tingling sensation does not always follow the same kind of
movement. The scriptures speak of its having five kinds of motion.
First, the ant-like motion: one feels a slow creeping sensation from the
feet upwards like a row of ants creeping on with food in their mouths.
When it reaches the head, the Sadhaka (spiritual aspirant) falls into
Samadhi. Second, the frog-like motion: just as frogs make two or three
short jumps in quick succession and then stop for a while to proceed
again, in the same way something is felt advancing from the legs to the
brain. When this reaches the brain, the man gets Samadhi. Third, the
serpentine motion: as snakes lie quiet, straight or coiled up, but as
soon as they find a victim in front, or get frightened, they run in a
zigzag course, in like manner the 'coiled up power' rushes to the head,
and this produces Samadhi. Fourth, the bird-like motion: just as birds
in their flight from one place to another take to their wings and fly
sometimes a little high and sometimes low without however stopping
till they reach their destination, even so that power progresses and
reaches the brain, and Samadhi ensues. Fifth and last, the monkey like
motion: as monkeys going from one tree to another take a leap from
one branch to another and thus clear the distance in two or three
bounds, so the Yogi feels the Kundalini going to the brain, and Samadhi
ensues."
Spurious Ecstasy
907. Referring to a man who used to have a kind of emotional excitement that looked
like Samadhi externally, the Master said: "In real ecstasy one dives into the deeper
realms of one's being and becomes perfectly still. But what do we find here! Be quiet;
calm yourself. (To the others present.) Do you know the nature of this ecstasy? It is
like boiling one ounce of milk in a big pan. The pan seems to be full of milk, but
remove it from the stove and you would not find a single drop. Even the little quantity
that was there would have all stuck to the pan."
908. The realization of God is of two kinds-one consists in the unification of the
Jivatman and the Paramatman and the other in seeing Him in His personal
manifestation. The former is called Jnana, and the latter Bhakti.
909. Really God can be seen, my boys. As we are sitting and talking together, in the
very same way God can be seen and conversed with. Truly and sincerely I say so.
910. The manifestation of the Personal God is often a Spiritual Form, which is seen
only by a purified human soul. In other words, these forms of God are realized by the
organs of spiritual vision belonging to the spiritual body (Bhagavati-tanu) which is
derived from the Lord. So the perfect man alone can see these Divine Forms.
911. On being questioned whether those who see God see Him with the ordinary
fleshy eyes, the Master replied:
"No, He cannot be seen with the physical eye. In the course of Sadhana a 'Love-
body' is created in you, with eyes and ears of Love, and with them you see and
hear Him."
This is the sound of Pranava (Om). It comes from the Supreme Brahman and is audible
to the Yogis. The ordinary worldly men cannot hear it. The yogis can understand
that the sound rises on one side, from the 'region of the navel', and on the other,
from the supreme Brahman.
Samadhi and Realization of Brahman
913. What is the state of one's mind in Samadhi? It is like the state of
bliss that is experienced by a live fish which, after being kept out of
water for some time, is again put into it.
915. As a lamp brought into a room that has been dark for a thousand
years illumines it immediately, the light of Jnana illumines the Jiva, and
dispels his age-long ignorance.
Without Samadhi, Jnana never comes. Jnana is like the midday sun, in
which one looks around but finds no shadow of oneself. So when one
attains Jnana or Samadhi, one retains no shadow of egotism. But even if
there be some ego left, know for certain that it is now composed of
Vidya (purely divine elements) and not ignorance or Avidya.
918. When the question was raised whether the Buddha was an atheist,
the Master said: "He was no atheist; only he could not speak out his
realizations. Do you know what 'Buddha' means?- To become one with
'Bodha', the 'Supreme Intelligence-through deep meditation, to become
Pure Intelligence Itself. The state of self-realization is something
between 'Asti' and 'Nasti'-'being' and 'non-being'.
The 'being' and the 'non-being' are modifications of Prakriti. The Reality
transcends them both."
Get to the other side of both knowledge and ignorance. Ignorance is the
consciousness of the many, i.e., the Knowledge of diversity without
knowing the Unity, without knowing the one God. The egotism due to
erudition proceeds from ignorance. The conviction that God is in all
objects--that there is unity in variety--is called knowledge of Oneness.
Knowing Him intimately is realization (Vijnana).
Suppose your foot is pricked with a thorn. Well, you want a second
thorn to take it out. When the first thorn is taken out, you throwaway
both. So, in order to get rid of the thorn of ignorance, you bring in the
thorn of knowledge. Then you throwaway both ignorance and
knowledge with a view to getting the complete realization of the
Absolute. For the Absolute is beyond knowledge as well as ignorance.
Lakshmana once said to his Divine brother Rama: "O Rama, is it not
strange that a God-knowing man like Vasishtha Deva should have wept
for the loss of his sons, and would not be comforted?" Thereupon Rama
replied:
An enquirer: Sir, may I ask what remains after you have thrown away
both the thorns as you call them knowledge and ignorance .
The Master: Well, what remains is the eternally pure and absolute
Consciousness (Nitya-suddha-buddha-rupa). But how can I make it
clear to you? Suppose some one asks you what is the taste of clarified
butter? Is it possible to make the matter perfectly clear to him? The
utmost one may say in reply to such a question is, "The taste of butter is
precisely like the taste of butter." A girl who was
Psychology of Samadhi
920. When the nest of a bird is destroyed, it betakes itself to the sky.
Similarly, when the consciousness of the body and the outer world is
effaced from the mind, the Jivatman (individual Spirit) soars into the
sky of the Paramatman (Supreme Spirit) and merges itself in samadhi.
921. Humanity must die before divinity manifests itself. But this
divinity must in turn die before the higher manifestation of the Blissful
Mother (Brahmamayi) takes place. It is on the bosom of the dead
divinity (Siva) that the Blissful Mother dances Her celestial dance.
923. When the ego is effaced, the Jiva dies and there follows the
realization of Brahman in Samadhi.
925. God is beyond both mind and intellect as long as they are bound
within relativity; but He manifests Himself to them when they are
purified. It is lust and greed which make the mind impure. So long as
Avidya (ignorance) reigns in the heart, the mind and the intellect can
never be 'pure. Ordinarily, mind and intellect are known to be different
from each other; but in their purified state, they become one, and are
resolved into Chaitanya (Pure Consciousness). Then God, the
Chaitanya, becomes manifest to the Chaitanya.
And Vijnana means knowing with greater fullness. Some have only
heard of milk, some have but seen it, while others have tasted it. He
who has only heard of it is an ignorant man. He who has seen it is
the Jnani. But only he who has tasted it has attained Vijnana, that is,
has known it in its entirety. To see God and have intimate relation
with Him as with a near kinsman, is what is called Vijnana.
First you have to follow the process of 'Neti, Neti'-'not this, not this'. He
is not the five elements. He is not the senses, nor the mind, nor the
intelligence, nor the ego--He is beyond all categories. To get up to the
roof you have to leave below all the steps of the staircase one by one.
Of course the steps are not the roof. But when you reach the roof, you
find that the roof is made of the same brick, lime, mortar and sand as
the staircase. That which is the Supreme Brahman, has become the Jiva
and Jagat--the twenty-four categories of the philosophers. That which is
the Atman has become the five elements. You may ask why the earth is
so hard if it has come out of the Atman. Through His will everything is
possible. Are not flesh and bone made out of blood and semen? How
hard becomes the foam of the ocean?
After attaining Vijnana a man can live in the world as well. For then he
clearly perceives that He Himself has become the world of living and
non-living substances, that He is not outside the world. When
Ramachandra attained Jnana and refused to remain in the world,
Dasaratha sent Vasishtha to instruct him. Vasishtha said to
Ramachandra:
"Rama, if the world is outside God, you may give it up." Ramachandra
remained silent, for he well knew that nothing exists without God.
927. In music the notes gradually rise from the lowest to the highest
pitch and again come down in the reverse order; smilarly, after
experiencing non-duality in Samadhi one descends to a lower plane and
lives with the ego-consciousness. After divesting the banana plant of
all its sheaths one after another, one reaches its pith and takes that alone
to be the essential part. But later he considers that the sheaths also are of
the plant itself. Both of them are necessary to make the stem a complete
whole.
To another he said, "Bhava (divine ecstasy) and Bhakti --these are not
final."
930. On another occasion Sri Ramakrishna asked the same question to
Narendra, and received the same reply as before. To which the Master
remarked: "Why! I thought you were made of better stuff. How can you
be satisfied with such a one-sided ideal? My strength is all-sidedness. I
would like to enjoy fish, for instance, in a variety of ways fried and
boiled, made into soup, pickled, etc. I enjoy the Lord not only in His
unconditioned state of Oneness, as unqualified Brahman, in Samadhi,
but also in His various blessed manifestations through sweet human
relationship. " So do you likewise. Be a Jnani and a Bhakta in one."
Jung admits that he encounters a paradox in that the west holds the head
as the seat of consciousness, while in the East (India), Pelvis
(Muladhara) is the seat of consciousness, from where one has to ascend
through the Chakras to reach Higher Consciousness. The Psychology of
Kundalini Yoga, page 62. In consciousness we are in Ajna, and yet we
actually live in Muladhara. That is the Sthula aspect. It is as if we
viewed our psychology and the psychology of mankind from the
standpoint of a fourth dimension, unlimited by space and time. The
Chakra system is created from this standpoint. It is standpoint which
transcends time and the individual. IBID page 64-65.
Jung (July 26, 1875 to June 6, 1961) goes on to put people and nations
in various Chakras: ...in England, everything below diaphragm is taboo.
Germans always go a little below it and hence easily become emotional.
Russians live altogether below the diaphragm - they consist of
emotions. French and Italians behave as if they were below it but they
know perfectly well, as so everyone else, that they are not. IBID page
63.
Author's comment: The last phrase speaks for itself. Jung is clever in
that he puts the Sthula of western culture on the top only to bring it
down, because their Suksma (subtle, fine) culture is no better than
anybody else's, including Indians. The Outer Being of the west is
appealing, rich, beautiful and decorous but the Inner Being of humanity
with very few exceptions (Yogis) seems to be universally the
same - we are all in Muladhara Chakra; our habitat is pelvis; it takes
an effort to move and rise to other habitats (Chakras). On one hand he
puts the west on a higher physical (Sthula) plane; that is the reflexive
thinking, but soon reflective thinking takes over. He manipulates our
psyche very adroitly: he slaps on the face one moment and pats the back
the next moment. It appears that he grudgingly appreciates the
psychophysical concepts in Kundalini Yoga conceived thousands of
years ago in India (actually it is revealed wisdom), but it did not shut his
eyes to the dirt and grime of Indian life (the Sthula, External aspect).
Car and currency do not necessarily run parallel with the Susumna Nadi
of higher Consciousness above the pelvis. His justification for praising
the Sthula of western culture, is that (in his words) without personal
life, without the here and now , we cannot attain to the suprapersonal.
Personal life (profession, bank accounts, family, social connections)
must first be fulfilled in order that the process of the suprapersonal side
of the psyche can be introduced, (IBID, page 66). My comment: An
avadhuta = Avadhuta is the one who has shaken off the world and
practices Kundlini, though he is mired in dirt, grime and rags; there are
multitudes of them, that we do not hear of, in India. Then Jung riles
himself by saying: our Anahata Center is Anahata in Muladhara,...it is
only our personal consciousness that has attained Ajna, but we, from the
aspect of the cosmic Chakra system, are still in Muladhara... a personal
culture, where gods have not yet awakened from sleep.
This is what Jung says: We in the west are in Anahata Chakra, 3 steps
below from merging with God's consciousness, but judging from the
Kundalini perspective we in the west live in the pelvis (Muladhara
plane).
What Jung says is an impossible situation: living in the pelvis and at the
same time, claiming to be a step or two away from merging with God.
Author: The Hindu is told that ego, one of the Tattvas, is handed down
to him from God; when he comes face to face with God, there can be
only One Ego, that is His. The True Hindu leaves his infinitesimal ego
at the doorstep of the temple or place of worship. Breaking of the
coconut in the temple is symbolic of breaking one's ego (Ahamkaram)
in the presence of God. Man's ego is like a lighted candle at High
Noon; it serves no purpose except to tell it exists. The man's
infinitesimal ego is the cause of all miseries in this world. A true Hindu
regards Ahamkaram (I-doer or ego) is an inimical force and one best
to be without. Self-effacement esp. in the presence of God (under all
conditions and places) is a welcome trait.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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2. (Yoga.) The 12th and last stage of experience of the soul in yoga
practice;
Notes:
When Susumna Nadi opens and the current flows upwards, the yogi
transcends the senses and the intellect and become supersensuous and
superconscious.
Earth,
Water and Anahata
Fire. and Ajna Nada and Sahasrara
Origin
Lower Visuddha Chakra Bindu Chakras Chakra
three Chakras
Chakras
Brahma Vishnu Rudra Sadasiva
Mahesa shines
Saiva shines in shines in shines in shines in the
in the sheath of
View Food Breath the Mind sheath of
Consciousness.
Sheath. Sheath. Sheath. Bliss.
Saiva view is expressed by a real-life sage-poet by name Umapati
Sivacharya (around 1300 C.E.) in Chidambaram, Tamil Nadu.
Sakti as Prakrti first evolves mind (Buddhi, Ahamkara, Manas) and senses
(Indrya), and then sensible matter (Bhuta) of fivefold form (" ether" "air" "fire"
"water" "earth ")1 derived from the supersensible generals of the sense--particulars
called Tanmatra, When Sakti has entered the last and grossest Tattva (" earth ")--that
is, solid matter--there is nothing further for Her to do. Her creative activity then
ceases, and She rests. She rests in Her last emanation, the "earth" principle. She is
again coiled and sleeps. She is now Kundali-Sakti, whose abode in the human
body is the Earth centre or Muladhara-Cakra. As in the supreme state She lay
coiled as the Mahakundali round the Supreme Siva, so here She coils round the
Svayambhu-Linga in the Muladhara. This last centre or Cakra and the four above it
are centres of the five forms of Matter. The sixth centre is that of Mind. Consciousness
and its processes through Sakti prior to the appearance of Maya are realized in the
seventh lotus (Sahasrarapadma) and centres intermediate between it and the sixth or
Ajna Mind centre. Woodroffe.
Feb 22, 2013. Low self-esteem, loneliness, fear, unfounded guilt and
remorse all are symptoms of the abyss of consciousness so feared by
devas and humans alike, and described in scripture and protected
against by spiritual preceptors. It is plain to see that the doors of the
chakras below the mldhra must be rmly closed, sealed off, before
serious yoga practice is sought for or performed.--
SivayaSubramuniyaSwamy, Himalayan Academy.
The seven trunks of the white elephant (name: Iravatham) in the golden
yellow square (the earth element) represent the seven minerals, seven
negative and seven positive qualities in man, seven forces in man, seven
forces in nature, seven principal substances in man (chyle, blood, flesh, fat,
bone, marrow, semen). Seven negative qualities: pride, covetousness, lust ,
anger , gluttony, envy, and sloth. The six enemies or sins of the human race
are lust (Kama), anger (Krodha), greed (Lobha), delusion (Moha), pride
(Mada), envy (Matsarya), which are the six divisions of the army, that is
Samsara (life on earth). Lord Krishna lists the following as demonic qualities
in the Bhagavad Gita: 16.4: Fraud, arrogance, self-conceit, anger, rudeness,
and ignorance are the qualities of those born of demonic nature. Krishna lists
the following positive qualities. 16.2-3: Ahimsa, truthfulness, freedom from
anger, renunciation, tranquillity, abstaining from slander, compassion to all
creatures, absence of greed, gentleness, modesty, absence of fickleness
(absence of agitation), vigor, forgiveness, fortitude, cleanliness, absence of
malice, and absence of pride: These are the qualities of the one born of divine
nature. The qualities associated with Muladhara Chakra are passion,
sexuality, illusion, anger, greed, hatred, delusion, avarice, and sensuality. The
qualities, manifest as an expression of karma from previous births, may force
themselves on a person as one's persona. It is difficult to confront and cope
with an overt Muladhara-dominant personality.
Sakti, represented by the inverted red triangle, is the source of all Tattvas and
manifold appearance of beings and universe. Inverted triangle is always a
representation of female gender. This Triangle is the Sthula (gross) aspect of
Suksma (subtle) Kamaraja Triangle in Sahasrara Chakra. Note the
superimposition of Lingam over the triangle. Inside the triangle is Dhumra
Linga (Dhum = smoky) with Kundalini in three and half coils and a
crescent moon at the top of the lingam. It is said that Lingam is the icon of
maleness. It is of the color of molten gold with the down-pointing head. He
is revealed by Jnana and Dhyana (knowledge and meditation). He is
Svyambhu Lingam because by knowledge we know He is without attributes
(transcendence); by Dhyana we know He is Isvara with attributes. The lingam
is of the appearance of a leaf bud broad at the base, tapering at the tip and
blue green (Syama) in color. Meditate upon the beautiful blue-green Siva.
The crescent on top of the Lingam represents Sakti. The three coils represent
three Gunas: Sattva, Rajas and Tamas. BG02. The half a coil represents
transcendence of the Gunas by Kundalini, who sleeps when our spirit sleeps
and we are awake to the material world. When our spirit is awake, Kundalini
is awake and our flesh goes to sleep. There are two deities, Brahma and
Dakini, on the right upper hand corner of the yellow square. Child Brahma
represents creation, and brings solace and freedom from fear. Dakini plays
the role of creator, sustainer, and destroyer. Ganesa is the Devata of this
Chakra.
Towards the top of the inverted triangle, there is Bija mantra, Lam l.
Bija = seed.
(Iravatham (Airavata) the elephant, came out of the Milk Ocean as a by-
product of churning of the ocean for the main purpose of getting ambrosia
and became the possession of Indra, the chief of gods, thunder, rain and
lightning. It is one of the eight male and eight female elephants, which came
out of the Golden Egg and act as the guardians of directions. Krishna,
speaking of his divinity, says to Arjuna in Bhagavad Gita, 10.27, "Know Me:
Among horses to be Ucchaisravas born along with the nectar. Of the
elephants, I am Airavata. Of men, I am king." )
Most of the children (1-7 yrs of age) operate on Muladhara plane. They are
worried about their immediate needs like eating, playing, sleeping, excretion,
evacuation, possessing.
He, with an ear that has a rolled palm leaf (as an ear ornament), the Rider of
bull (Nandi), the Wearer of pure white moon (in his locks),
The Wearer of hot ashes of cremation grounds, the Stealer of my heart, mind
and soul (Ullam),
More on Kunadalini: She is slender like the lotus stalk; She is the creator of
this world by Her Mayic Sakti. She is Jaganmohini, the world-bewilderer.
She covers the opening of Brahma Dvara by her mouth (the gated portal of
entry into Susumna NAdi) and drinks the nectar that flows out. She (Her
snake-like form) winds herself three and half times around Siva-Lingam. She
is effulgent like a silvery lightning. She hums like bees; She is the source of
all sounds and words in the universe in all languages. She makes poetry in
Sanskrit, Prakrita and other languages. She writes pictorial poetical
compositions that appear like a lotus flower or horse. (Padma-Bhanda or
Asva-Bhanda). Men and beings breath on account of Her. She appears like a
row of lights in Muladhara Center. The Supreme Bindu pops and out pours
the unmanifested sound (Avyakta-rava), which assumed the form of Kundali
in men and women and manifests itself as alphabet, prose and poetry. This
sound undergoes change as Pasyanti in Svadhistana Chakra, unites with
Buddhi-Tattva in Anahata Chakra (Anahata sound), becomes Vaikhari
speech in throat (Visuddha Chakra), goes to the rest of the speech apparatus
in the mouth and nose and produces the intonation of all Sanskrit letters. She
is the worship-worthy Damsel of sixteen by name Devi Kundalini in full
bloom of her youth with beautiful well-formed breasts. She is adorned with
jewels, effulgent like a moon, red in complexion, and mesmerizing with her
roving eyes: all indicative of a woman of passion. She is the Ishta-devata
(deity of one's liking). She is lightning and Syama, warm in winter, cool in
summer and lustrous always like molten gold. Before entering Brahma Dvara
of Susumna Nadi, She is Brahman, radiating like millions of moons, all rising
at the same time; She sports four arms and three eyes, holds a book, and a
Vina (stringed musical instrument), sits on a lion, dispels fear in Her devotees
and confers boons by Abhaya and Vara Mudras. She is Para (Supreme),
BrahmAnI (creatrix), Sri Paramesvari (Supreme ruler and controller), and
KalA (Nada Sakti). She is the Ambrosial lake which draws from Nityananda -
Eternal Bliss. Her radiance illumines the whole universe and the Cauldron of
Brahmanda. Meditate on Cit-KalA united with Lakshmi whose form is like
the tapering flame of light. Kundalini is within the flame, above and below as
Brahma, Vishnu, Siva, Sun, Moon, Prana (life-breath), and the Fire of
Dissolution (KAlAgni = Time-Fire). The following is the lineage of
Nityananda Parampara. From Nityananda (Nirguna Brahman), comes Saguna
Brahman; from Saguna Braman Sakti; from Sakti, NAda; from NAda,
Bindu; from Bindu, Kundalini. Ambrosia is produced by the union
of Kundalini with Brahman (Nityananda, the attributeless Brahman).
Nityananda is the Supreme repository of Ambrosia from whom it goes to
Para-Bindu and further on to Ajna, Visuddha, Anahata, Manipura, and
Svadhisthana and eventually reaches Muladhara Chakra.
What is the utility of all that is said so far in the last paragraph? He who
meditates on Her becomes the Supreme wordsmith, the leader (king) among
men and Master of arts and learning. His body is free from diseases; his spirit
becomes one big Happiness (Maha Ananda). Pure of body, spirit, and
disposition, and blessed with musical words, he worships and serves Brahma,
Vishnu and Siva, the foremost among gods.
The Bija Mantra is pronounced as Lang and the petals sounds are Vang,
Shang, Kshang and Sang.
The larger outer circle petals open outwards and the inner circle petals
open inwards; the larger one represents the conscious element of living
and the smaller one the storehouse of the unconscious
karmic element. The crescent-space between the circles
houses a crocodile, which represents the silent subsurface
movement of karma in the flow of life. The crescent is
compared to Kunda flower. The back of the crocodile
carries the Bija Mantra Vam. The Bindu Mantra houses
two deities: Vishnu and Rakini. Vishnu of blue color
sports four arms and yellow robe (Pitambaram). Rakini is of the color of
blue lotus, decorated with ornaments and raiment. Her hands hold
weapons; her mind and mood are high from drinking nectar. She is the
deity of vegetable kingdom. The world of Svadhisthana Chakra is
Bhuvarloka, just above Bhu (the world) and the second level of spiritual
awareness. It also has control over taste. Vegetarians realize this
Chakra.
The Yogi who meditates on this Chakra has control over and no fear of
water. Taste and tongue are the Tanmatra and the sense organs
connected with Svadhisthana. The organs of action (Karmendriyas) are
the kidneys, ureters and bladder and sexual organ. Among the Prana,
Vyana is the prana of this Chakra. Pranamaya Kosa of the subtle body
resides in the Svadhisthana and Manipura Chakras. Some regard that
Pranamaya Kosa resides in Anahata and Visuddha Chakras. See the
chart below.
The meditator on this Chakra conquers the six enemies or sins of the
human race, lust (Kama), anger (Krodha), greed (Lobha), delusion
(Moha), pride (Mada), envy (Matsarya), which are the six division of
the army, that is Samsara (life). He becomes very felicitous with words,
prose, poetry and discourse and removes the darkness of Avidya by his
luster.
None of us with a few exceptions can recall our past lives. This memory
loss for the past life experiences is a gift from God for its persistence is
a handicap for the new you. Just like we inherit the genetic load from
our parents, we inherit tendencies / Vasanas, behavior patterns / gunas,
knowledge, skills etc from our past lives. If your parents have the trait
for Cystic Fibrosis and if you happen to inherit the recessive genes, you
suffer from Cystic Fibrosis. Our Karma chooses our parents (the genes),
the environment and heredity. The very fact that we do not remember
our experiences from our infancy does not negate the existence of
such experiences. It is reported that Buddha remembered and recalled
the experiences from his previous lives. Ask a five year old what he
remembers when he was a month old; he gives you blank stare and a
quizzical look. It is the same with our experiences of the past life; they
happened and are not remembered.
Svadisthana Chakra harbors the latent seeds of Samskaras,
Vasanas, and Karma (SVK). The seeds germinate under appropriate
conditions. (It is like the milk (lactose) intolerance. One is fine until one
drinks milk. The milk gives a bloated abdomen and diarrhea from
undigested lactose which is fermented by bacteria in the bowel.) This
Chakra and its associated brain are the repository of impressions
gathered in everyday life situations, which register different imprints:
high-impact, low-impact or indifferent. Getting into a car accident is a
high-impact imprint. Your hair getting mussed up in a sudden gust of
wind is a low-impact imprint. A person passing by you causes an
indifferent imprint. All this is tucked away in the unconscious and our
behavior shows that imprint in various ways without our conscious
awareness; that action, reaction, or behavior is the proof of germination
of dormant seeds of Karma. All these dormant Karmas waiting for
germination prevent the ascent of Kundalini past Svadhisthana.
Awakening of Svadhisthana chakra brings on the latent dormant
impressions from the unconscious to the surface, causing difficulties in
his behavior towards the world around him and his reactions to external
events. It is somewhat similar to midlife crisis; it was a spiritual crisis
for Buddha when he faced the temptress Mara and Jesus Christ when he
faced the tempter Satan. It is a test of your mettle; it is a hurdle to
onward spiritual progress. If one goes through this purification, the
journey is that much easier. After the aspirant overcomes all the
temptations of flesh, greed, anger, hate, and jealousy in his mind, he
still cannot subjugate the acute sense of taste. As you may have noticed
from the media that so many of our fellow citizens (Gov. Eliot Spitzer)
succumb to the temptations and adversity of Svadhisthana Chakra, they
take a hard fall from which they may not recover fully-- March 2008.
2013: He lost his election bid. Once you have control over and
transcend the base elements, you will go to Manipura Chakra. One is a
Pasu (animal-man) in Muladhara and Svadhisthana Chakras. Now he is
on his way to becoming a Vira (Hero or man-man) in Anahata, and
Divya (god-man) in Ajna and beyond. He needs a Guru to guide him
through this vulnerable period.
1 Cp Jalal-uddin Rm
'I died a mineral and became a
plant,
I died a plant and rose an animal,
I died an animal and I was man
Why should I fear' When was I
less by dying?
Yet once more I shall die as man,
to soar
With the blessed angels, but even
from angelhood
I must pass on All except God
perishes
When I have sacrificed my angel
soul,
I shall become that which no mind
ever conceived.
O, let me not exist' for Non-
existence proclaims,
"To him we shall return "'
From The Principal Upanisads by
Dr. Radhakrishnan
page 57.
Chakras-sites-plexuses = kundal67.jpg below
Bhakti (devotion), Prapatti and Saranagati (surrender to God),
absorption, and union are all transmuted sexual energy, which is not
really dead in a Sadhaka but stays as a dormant seed, ready to sprout
under right (here read it as wrong) conditions. Swami Satyananda
Saraswati says that sexual energy manifests as Avidya (ignorance) at its
lowest level, sex at physical level, love in emotional level and spiritual
experience at the highest level. Page 154, Kundalini Tantra.
In Nada yoga, Muladhara is the seat of Paravani. The sound goes
through modification and augmentation from a soundless sound (to the
human ears) to its fifth level at Vishuddha chakra, when it blossoms
into human speech. The intermediary stages of sound are Pasyanti or
visual sound of Svadhistana and Manipura Chakras and the Madhyama
mental sound (Anahata) of the spiritual heart (Anahata Chakra). The
sound progresses from primal high-frequency sound of Para Nada to
gradually lower frequency of Pasyanti and Madhyama sounds and
expresses in Vishuddha Chakra as Vaikhari (articulated speech).
Let me give you an idea how a product can be both beneficial and
poisonous. Pharmaceutical companies make drugs that have
stereoisomers which are mirror images of each other. One member of
the pair is pharmacologically safe, useful and curative and the mirror
image may be toxic. FDA has asked the drug companies to remove the
toxic isomer and market the useful one. When you take medications, the
good effects are from the good isomer and the side effects are from the
bad isomer.
The gods and demons wanted to live eternally and so churned the
Ocean of Milk for the nectar of immortality. Both poison and Nectar
came up from the depths of the ocean. Poison made them sick. Siva
came to the rescue and swallowed the poison and retained it in his
throat because swallowing meant death. That is why Siva is called
Nilakantappa, the One with the blue throat. As you see, the ocean is the
same but the products are the exact opposites. Vishnu did not think that
the demons deserved to live eternally and gave the nectar to
gods. Thus, the throat of Siva had the ability to neutralize the poison.
Vishuddha Chakra at the throat level has the ability to purify the mixed
nectar and destroy the poison. Gods and Demons in Hindu
mythology have one father (Kasyapa) and two mothers: Aditi, the
mother of gods and Diti the mother of demons. Interestingly the
mothers are sisters married to Kasyapa. What all this means is that all
of us (man) are part god and part demon. Which part is dominant makes
us different, one from the other. Hindu mythology had the solution to
kill the demons. All the male gods could not kill a demon and his clones
(the idea of clones existed in ancient India) by themselves
individually. They donated their individual saktis and weapons for a
common cause; the saktis (Tejas) coalesced, congealed and morphed
into an agglomerate female goddess, Durga, who eventually killed the
demons, the male gods could not. When Durga was killing the demon,
drops of blood fell on the battlefield and each drop became a demon;
there were millions of demons, all clones of one demon. (Now you
know that the idea of clones have existed in ancient India.) She sucked
the bone marrow dry and ate all the demons: end of story. Durga is the
One who kills the demons in us, when we pray to Her and She shows
Her Grace to us.
Yogis are of the opinion that the Bindu Visarga (the secretory organ),
Lalana (storage organ) and Vishuddha Chakra (processing organ) are
interconnected and communicate with the cranial nerves and the organs
they serve. Thus they attest to supremacy of Bindu in the functioning of
all these systems under its purview. The Yogis say that the Bindu
Visarga is an anatomically elevated point with fluid around it on the
surface of the cortex adjoining the Posterior Fontanel area of the
skull. It is a point that was never identified or dissected out or
delineated by the anatomist. Bindu is the origin of nectar and the
building blocks of the universe. They also claim that Ajna Chakra and
pineal gland are connected.
Prapanchasara Tantra says Parabindu splits into two parts: the right
side is Bindu (male, Purusa or Ham) and the left is Visarga (female,
Prakrti or Sah. The union of Bindu and Visarga is Hamsah which is the
universe. Siva is androgynous: union of Visarga and Bindu
(=Ardhanarisvara).
Anatomy of Omkara: The Sanskrit letter has a crescent and a dot on top
of it. The crescent and the dot are known as Chandrabindu (moon with
dot / Moon-Dot).
OM is the progenitor sound of all Bija Mantras. Nada and Bindu are
two saktis (power). Naada (Nada) is sound and Bindu is dot, or point.
Nada and Bindu are the progenitors of Tattvas, the building blocks of
the universe. Nada is Sakti and Bindu is Siva (Siva-Sakti); Nada is
action and Bindu is static; Nada is white and Bindu is red. Nada
(Chandrabindu/ Nadabindu) over the Omkara is the couch, on which
Paramasiva in his Bindu form is reclining. Chandrabindu is Nada and
Bindu, Sakti and Siva in one unit.
Verse 36: I pay homage to Sambhu (Siva) who abides in His Ajna
Chakra, effulgent as millions of suns and moons together and whose left
side is the Supreme Consciousness in the form of Devi
(Ardhanarisvara = Androgynous Siva). Votary with deep devotion
attains the Self-conscious and Self-effulgent state which is not in
material plane, goes beyond the relams of the light of the moon, sun and
fire and is beyond the beyond.
This is the descritption of the Sadhaka of Samaya cult who kindled the
fire of Kundali and rises with her to Ajna Chakra. Sahasrara Chakra at
the level of midbrain is Jyotir mandala (The Luminous Realm), above
the reach of the moon, sun, and fire, which illumines only the Ajna,
Anahata, and Svadhisthana Chakras respectively. The Moon in
Sahasrara Chakra is different and partless (Niskala) meaning it has no
tithis or digits, always a Full Moon and an eternal Spiritual Light of
Bliss-Consciousness. The resident deities adored and worshipped in
Ajna Chakra are Para Sambhunatha and Cit-paramba.
In the Hindu mythology the Cakori bird delights in and imbibes the
moonlight. As the Kundali comes to rest in Vishuddha Chakra, the
darkness of ignorance dissipates with the descent of Light of
Consciousness and Bliss. The adored and worshipped deities here are
Vyomanesvaran and Vyomanesvari. Some Yogis beleive the resident
deity is Ardhanaaresvara or Sadasiva (form of Siva).
Verse 38. I worship the great pair of swans (Ham and Sa Siva and
Sakti) which enjoy only the tasty sap of the full-blown lotus of
knowledge, which glide in Manasa Mind Lake of great men, whose
conversations are contained in the eighteen systems of knowledge
which separate virtue from evil (as the swan separates the milk from
water).
Verse 40. Sakti as Lightning is the foe of darkness. With Her flashing
and shining jewels studded with many-colored gems Sakti appears like
a rainbow. I worship the incomparable dark clouds which rain on the
three worlds burnt by the fire of dissolution, which has Manipura
Chakra, as the sole place of surrender.
Clairvoyance:
Diagramatic representation of the Chakras look like Pizza pies with slices.
The light dances on the discs as undulations and oscillations. The
Sahasrara Chakra radiates golden rays, the intensity depending on the
development of the individual; sometimes there is variations at different
times in the same individual. He calls the Chakras, lower physiological,
middle personal and higher spiritual.
The Muladhara Chakra receives two forces, the serpent fire from the
earth and the vitality from the sun. One's personality is the medium of
reception of forces for the 3,4, and 5th Chakras. He says that 6 and 7 are
connected to pituitary and pineal glands and developed in spiritually
enlightened persons. Moral standing of a person has no relevance with
the unfoldment of Chakras. This is in sharp contrast with the commonly
held view that Yama and Niyama and the rest of the Ashtanga Yogam
are very important in the realization of the upper Chakras. He suggests
though that the petals are associated with moral qualities. The
Muladhara Chakra with four quadrants appear to him as divided by a
flaming cross of the serpent fire with a fiery orange-red color petals.
The Visuddha Chakra has 16 spokes with blue light looking like a moon
on rippling water. Blue and green alternate in its sections.
The Ajna Chakra has one half rose and yellow and the other half
purplish blue. He speaks from his experience that each half has 48
spokes or undulations; in all there are 96 though the Indian texts
describe only two petals.
He believes that there is a force deep down in the earth; he calls it the
laboratory of the Holy Ghost, the place of the terrific fire of the
underworld, which is in contrast to the fire of vitality that comes from
the sun.
During the ceremony, the boy's mother wraps a loincloth around his
waist and gives him the following advice.
The Guru invests him with the sacred thread and chants the Mantra.
The Brahmana boy wears white cotton thread; the Ksatriya, red
hemp; Vaisya, yellow wool. White Cotton may satisfy all.
The priest dons him with the thread and gives him the Gayatri
Mantra. GAYATRI The affair is more elaborate than what I mentioned
here. The young initiate goes to beg for food, while the fire of Yajna
continues. He approaches woman and says, "Om bhavati bhikshaam
dehi." (O good woman, please give me alms (food.) To the male donor
he says, Om bhavaan bhiksaam dehi." Once the alms are given, the
recipient says, "Om Svasti." Svasti = may it be well with thee.
Gayatri Mantra:
On the twenty = eighth day, you obtain vision of the three Mandalas,
each separately; on the thirty = third day, you obtain one panoramic
view of all Mandalas. Extend your vision and see the twenty = four
Tattvas, the earth and other elements in that order. (This is like the
astronaut's view of the earth; but the Yogi's prana and Consciousness
travel greater distances.)
Ajna Chakra is 6th Chakra. Between the 6th Chakra and Sahasrara
Chakra are minor chakras, Manas and Soma (Moon). Manas (Mind)
lotus of 6 petals is the seat of sensation of hearing, touch, sight, smell,
taste, and experiencing of dream and hallucination. Above these centers
is Adya Sakti, 12-petalled Chakra within the pericarp of Sahasrara
Chakra. Above these are Sun, Moon, Maha = Vayu and Brahma
Randhra. See diagram. The square in the middle of the triangle is the
seat of Sakti (A-ka-tha Sakti). Adya Sakti is obviously female Sakti
meaning the Original Sakti and is the origin of the universe. She is also
Kali. Adya Sakti originates from attributeless Brahman; that is primary
manifestation. The secondary manifestation is Ahamkara which is made
of three Gunas, Sattva, Rajas, and Tamas. From Tamas originates the
five senses: sound, touch, color and vision, touch and smell. From
Sattvic Guna come the five sensory organs, which in turn give rise to
earth, water, fire, air, and sky. There are many variant descriptions on
the origination of senses, organs, the Great elements, the Tanmatras.
Manas Chakra is a minor Chakra and a lotus of six petals above Ajna Chakra.
These petals are the seat of sensations of hearing, touch, sight,
The idea is that the Yogi in his ascent has to climb all these levels to
attain realization. Each level is a rung in the staircase leading to
realization. The Sakti is also the progenitor of the universe and beings.
Nada and Bindu are on either side of Jeweled Altar within the triangle,
as seen on the diagram. This is known as Nada-Bindu-Manipitha
Mandalam. The Guru abides in the altar, worthy of meditation and
worship. Bija is Parasakti Maya; Bija, Nada, and Bindu are Fire,
Moon and Sun. Nada the Moon is white. Bindu the Sun is red. The
body of NAda, Bindu and Mani-PItha is Cit, Jnana or Pure
Consciousness, not connected to Maya, the Matter
(Cinmaya = Jnanamaya = substance is Knowledge,
Consciousness), worthy of meditation.
Siva Himself worships and encourages the votaries to worship this 12-
petalled lotus within the pericarp of Sahasrara Chakra, the center of
which is occupied by Sakti. These 12 petals have 12 letters inscribed on
them (Lotus of 12 letters - DvAdasa Arna SarasIruha). They are sa, ha,
kha, phrem, ha, sa, ksa, ma, la, va, ra, yUm. It is known as Gurumantra.
The Pericarp of the Sahasrara Chakra of one thousand petals is the
abode for 12-petal Adya Sakti Lotus with seats for Sakti, Surya Chakra,
Moon Chakra with 16 petals, Maha Vayu and Brahmarandhra. The
pericarp of the 12-petal lotus is part of the Pericarp of Sahasrara Lotus.
The Pericarp is the womb wherein abide all the above entities. Citrini is
the name of the stalk of the 12-petal lotus; thus the lotus adorns
Citrini. (note: kundal10.gif is replaced by Kundal55.jpg.)
Sabdabrahman (Sound Brahman) is Clinical Brahman or God or
Goddess, meaning that He or She is not the impalpable, invisible entity
but the palpable, visible entity which is the entire breathing pulsating
universe. Everything you see, hear, feel, taste, and touch, the forces of
nature, the universe beyond this earth are all goddess. Kamakala
(Adya Sakti) is that Sabdabrahman with three saktis: creation,
maintenance and destruction. It is the abode of power
(Sakti = AbalAlayam = AbalA + Alayam = Sakti + abode). This
Sakti is represented by an inverted triangle, the sides being Will,
Action and Knowledge. These three entities cannot be put in any other
form except a triangle. They are distinct in its parts and yet the whole.
The triangle has three corners occupied by three Bindus: VAhini Bindu,
fire; Chandra Bindu, Moon; Surya Bindu (Sun). These lines are also
called Sakti Vama (creation), Sakti Jyesthi (maintenance) and Sakti
Raudri (destruction). The Saktis "sprout from three Bindus." The
associated deities are Brahma, Vishnu and Rudra with their respective
spouses; gunas, Rajas, Sattva and Tamas; and related portfolios. The
lines of the triangle are formed by 48 letters of Sanskrit alphabet
starting with Vowel A. The 16 Vowels form one line; the 2nd line is
that of 16 consonants starting with Ka; the 3rd line is that of 16
Consonants starting with Tha; thus, the triangle is called A-Ka-Tha
Triangle. These lines are also called Vama line, Jyesta line, and Raudri
line. The line of Fire is Vama line; the line of Moon is Jyesta line; the
line of Sun is Raudri line. These lines originate from the three Bindus.
This inverted triangle has A at its inverted apex, Ka at the left corner
and Tha at the right corner. The remaining alphabets, ha, la, ksha are in
the inside corners of the triangle. See the diagram below. The line of
Sattva (Jayestha; line of Vishnu, Moon, maintenance) is at the top; the
line of Tamas (Line of Raudri; line of Siva, Sun and destruction) is on
the right side of the Goddess ; the line of Rajas (Line of Vama. line of
Brahma, Fire and creation) is on left side of the Goddess, who is called
Abala meaning Sakti and her abode is Abala-Alayam (AbalAlayam).
She is also called KAma-kalA in triangular form, the lines being Vama
line, Jyesta line, and Raudri line. These three lines (Saktis) sprout from
the three Bindus. She is KAmakalA composed of three-sakti form
(Trisakti-Rupa).
The three Bindus (Tri-bindu) are considered both as one entity and three
separate entities. Tri-bindu is the supreme Tattva, includes Brahma,
Vishnu and Siva, and the triangle made of letters. Brahma line (line of
Prajapati) is composed of letters A to Visarga. Vishnu line is composed
of letters from Ka to Ta. The line of Siva (Raudri) is composed of
letters from Tha to Sa. Line of VAma or Line of Fire starts in the South
at Vahini Bindu and goes to North-East corner at Chandra Bindu. Line
of Moon or Line of Jyestha goes from North-East corner and goes to
North-West corner at Surya Bindu. The line of Sun or the line of Raudri
starts from the North-West corner at Surya Bindu and goes south to
Vahini Bindu. This Triangle joining the three Bindus is KAmaKalA.
Brahma-Fire is the origin of life, Vishu-Moon is the preserver, Sun-Siva
is the destroyer of the universe. Sakti being coiled up in Bindu in the
South springs like a sprout goes in Vama (anti-clockwise) on the line of
Fire to Isana corner in the NE point. She is Vama Sakti. The she goes to
NW corner and back to South. The Bindus are also known as Surya,
Chandra and Vahini. (Siva line, Vishnu line, and Brahma line). Within
the triangle are the 2 imperishable Bindus (Chandra and Surya
Bindus at the upper corners), which have the void in them in which
abides Siva also known as ParamaSiva.
Antaratma is the Inner Atma of atomic dimension, which pervades every object. It is the inner bodiness (AntarangatA), the
spark of Paramatma. It is Hamsa known only to Yogis. When this Paramahamsa is spread (Vyapta) throughout creation then
all Bhutas
spring up in their order (Ether, Air, Fire, Water and Earth). This Hamsa Bird displays itself in the Lake of Ignorance (Avidya)
in the mud of illusion and infatuation, which is the world. Hamsa on becoming other-worldly and dissolving, it reveals the
Atman (Self). Then its birdness ceases. SohamAtma is established which is supreme experience or Paramatma. Woodroffe
Hamsa Mantra of Visuddha Chakra is Ajapa Mantra, Chantless Mantra. All of us recite this Mantra without volition. It is the
Mantra of every breath. Hamsa is Ham + Sa. Ham sound goes out with the Out-breath and Sa goes in with the In-breath. It is
the Mantra of all beings. Hamsa is created and sustained by the sun. This solar breath is the cause of human breath. The
Cosmic Counterpart of Hamsa is Siva-Sakti.
Hu Hasah Mantra: Ha or the sun when invoked by Mantra raises the heat in Muladhara Chakra and wakes up and
adtivates Kundalini Sakti. Sah of the Mantra brings about the Will or Iccha (desire) in the Goddess and makes Her rise up the
Chakras. Hum raises the heat and Sah moves Her up carrying the Prana. This is facilitated by Asvini Mudra by which the
Yogi contracts and relaxes the anal muscles so that VAyu (Vital air) ascends up the Susumna Nadi and pops as it enters.
Brahma = Bharati = VAma = Iccha. Hari = Ksiti = Jyestha = Jnana. Siva = AparnA = Raudri = Kriya. The
male elements in these three groups are SAntA and the female elements are AmbikA.
1 Here Fire is the origin of life, and is therefore associated with Brahma. Moon is associated with Visnu, And the Sun spoken
of here stands for the twelve suns (Aditya) which rise to burn the world at dissolution (Pralaya).
--Woodroffe
The letters Ha, La and Ksa stay as milestones at the inner corners of the
triangle, giving it the character of a Mandala. The triangle's apex is
pointing down. If one looks at the triangle-- s-- with apex down, the
inner corner at the apex shows Ha, the right inner corner La and the left
inner corner Ksa.
If one has to take a walk around it, the triangle is always on one's left,
meaning that one should walk around it in an anti-clockwise direction.
Bindu, Nada and Bija do not make the jeweled altar, because the altar is
of the color of pale red gem; it is neither white nor red. Nada is below
the Mani-Pitha and Bindu is above it. Mani-Pitha is above Antaratma.
Antaratma is Hamsa in the 12-petalled Lotus. The eternal Guru sits on
the Mani-Pitha like a mountain of silver. One should meditate on all of
the above elements. The Pitha shines on account of the pale red luster
of the gems and puts to shame the reddish-yellow lightning
flash. (Guru is white like a mountain of silver and Bija is also white.
Mani-Pitha is also known as SimhAsana, the lion's seat. )
The body of Bindu, Nada and Mani-Pitha is Cinmaya or Jnana-maya,
meaning that their substance is Pure Cit (Consciousness), not associated
with MAyA. Cinmaya body is the Bija Mantra (Ai) of Sarasvati, the
12th vowel. (Maya is different from MAyA; Maya means Chock-full
. MAyA means Matter or precursor of Matter. example: Ananda-maya
= Chock-full of Bliss or happiness.)
One meditates on the lines of Fire, Sun and Moon, and Mani-Pitha
illumined by the light of the three lines.
The line of Fire or the Line of VAmA or Brahma emanates from Vahni
Bindu (Vahni = Fire) in the south and goes to the North-East corner.
The Line of Moon or Line of Jyestha or Vishnu emanates from the
Chandra-Bindu in the North-East corner and goes to the Surya Bindu in
the North-West corner. The Line of Sun or Line of Raudri or Sambhu
emanates from Surya Bindu in the North-West corner and goes south to
the Vahni Bindu. This triangle thus formed, is KAma KalA. Guru is
seated on Visarga, which consists of two Bindus (Chandra-Moon and
Surya-Sun) at the upper angles of the inverted triangle; Moon is in the
NE corner and the Sun is in the NW corner. Within the two Bindus,
OO, in the Void, is Siva known as Parama Siva.
She (KAma KalA), of the form of letters on the lines, stays coiled up in
the subtle form of Kundali, comes out as a sprouting seed from the
south, goes to the IsAna corner (NE corner) and is known as Sakti
Varna, CitkalA ParA and Line of Fire. She returns to the place of
sprouting in the south corner.
Purananda swami says, " I adore the Lotus Feet of the Guru resting on
the jeweled five-fold footstool. The feet look like young leaves. The
nails look like shining moons." Adoration here means meditation on
the footstool and the feet of the Guru, which destroys all sins. The feet
of the Guru is seen in the space between the pericarps of the two
Lotuses (12-petal lotus and 1000-petal Sahasrara Lotus). Nectar flows
from the feet of Guru. The nectar offers liberation.
The Guru abides in the pericarp of the 12-petal lotus. Kankala Malini
says that one should meditate on the excellent Antaratma of a thousand
petals, on the shining throne between Nada and Bindu, on the throne
and on the Guru. Guru's cool beauty is like that of the full moon. His
lotus Hands are raised to grant boons and dispel fear.
Hamsa Pitha is the seat of the Guru with the smiling face and remains
within the A-Ka-Tha Triangle in the region of Chandra Mandala in the
pericarp of Sahasrara Lotus, which (the pericarp) points upwards, while
the head of the Sahasrara lotus is turned downwards. Remember that the
pericarp of the 12-petal lotus is in the pericarp of Sahasrara Lotus. So
Guru's place is in the pericarp of the 12-petal Lotus and also of the
pericarp of Sahasrara Lotus.
(3) Nda-Bindu;
The five faces of Siva are Western Sadyojata, Northern left Vama Deva,
Southern (right) Aghora, and Eastern (front) Tatpurusa and Isana, on
whom one should meditate. These are locations of the faces as the
spectator looks at them. His western face looks in the easterly direction.
Siva actually has six faces: All of the five faces and the concealed 6th
face, Tamasa, which Nilakanta of the color of dark blue caused by
poison, Kala kuta. These faces spoke the hymns of praise to Siva. By
listening, reciting, meditation and Sadhana one would obtain the fruit of
liberation.
The three lines take origin from three Bindus, which are the Sun, the
Moon and the Fire. Brahma line is line of Rajas; Vishnu line is line of
Sattva, Line of Siva or Rudra is Tamas. These lines enclose Yoni
Mandala. The Sattva line is horizontal; the Rajas line is on its left and
the Tamas line is on its right as in the diagram. This Triangle is the
Abode of Sakti (AbalAlaya). Iccha, creative Will, or KAma is Siva-
Sakti and KalA is their manifestation. KAma is desire; KalA is
manifestation of Iccha Sakti. SAkti is KAmakalA (Desire
Manifestation), Tripurasundari. Siva is KAmesvara and Sakti is
KAmesvari. She is Tripure, who is the treasure of Kula and a red
beauty. Tripure = three cities; three Bindus (three circles); three lines;
three angles; three syllables; three lines of Bhupura of Sri Yantra;
creator of three Devis (Vama, Jyestha, Raudri) and three Devatas
(Brahma, Vishnu and Rudra); Iccha, Jnana and Kriya; three Kutas; three
Bindus as the face and two breasts; Rajas, Sattva, and Tamas. Traipura
Trikona (Triangle)in Muladhara is the Sthula aspect of the Suksma
Sakti in Sahsrara
Anjani has five parts: 1) Suksma [The most important Central Nadi], 2)
Susuksma, 3) Amrta, 4) Amrta-Sambhava, 5) Vyapini. Nada has four
parts: 1) Indhika [kindling/ kindler, nature of knowledge], 2) Dipika, 3)
Rocika, 4) Mocika. Nirodhini Sakti has five parts or kalAs: 1)
Rundhini [obstructing, Obscurant], 2) Rodhini (Obstructing), 3) Raudri
(Fearsome), 4) Jnanabodha (Consciousness of Wisdom), 5) Tamopaha
(dispeller of darkness). Rodhini and Rundhani are obstructive forces
which prevent lower deities like Brahma from attaining higher state of
Nada. Nada is the Supreme Sakti. These KalAs are Sarvadeva-
Nirodhika (the doorkeepers and Bouncers). The spiritually advanced
souls can pass through these gates, while less developed souls cannot go
past the obstructions. All these subdivision you note in the above two
paragraphs are facilitators and obstructors who facilitate spiritual souls
(by preventing any fall from above or allowing them to go past the
obstruction) and obstruct the undeveloped ones from climbing up. Siva-
Sakti will merge only with Pure Souls. The beauty of facilitators is that
they do not allow a Perfected Pure soul to fall down.
Nirodha = holding back. Vyapti = all pervasiveness. Nirodika =
Subtle energy or force in Pranava (Om).
Judaism is also of the belief that the world came into existence out of
nothing (Singularity of science, Avyakta of Hindus).
Nirodhini Sakti stays between Sadasiva Tattva (Will or Iccha Sakti) and
Isvara Tattva. One has to be a Pure Soul to go to and past Sadasiva
Tattva. When the Yogi is qualified to rise, Nirodhini Sakti does not
offer any obstruction and lets him obtain Grace in Sadasiva Tattva.
Iccha Sakti is a facilitator in the rise of the deserving Yogi. Nirodhini
Sakti obstructs undeserving Yogi from entering into Nada. The Yogi on
the ascent goes past Nadanta (end of Nada) and arrives at the stage of
Vyapini, wherein a sensation of pervasive spiritual bliss far beyond the
physical body into the expansive sky takes place. At this stage of
development, all positive and negative existential elements cease,
only Manana (the faculty of mentation) remains and the stage Samana
(Samani2) is reached. The uppermost stage is Unmana (Unmani1)
when all mentation ceases to exist and the Yogi becomes one with Siva
Consciousness; Here is Niskala Siva and Parama Siva. (In Kundalini
Yoga, there are corresponding seven Saktis: Unmani1, Samani2, Anji3,
Mahanada4, Nada5, Ardhachandra6, and Bindu7 - Here the depiction
is descent & development of Tattvas (Tattva-Srsti); Yogi on his
ascent goes from AUM to Bindu, Ardhachandra, Nada, Mahanada,
Anji, Samani and Unmani.)
kundal56.jpg
You may notice here that the Tattvas, Saktis and KalAs are one and the same
depending on their hierarchical position. It is like the Company CEO holding many
positions and portfolios at the same time. His designations, job descriptions and
powers are many and different according to the hierarchical position of the individual
entity. Sakti is a Jill of All Trades. There are also many confusing overlaps in the
hierarchy because there is semantic confusion which is not intentional but is based on
the Yogi's experience. This semantic confusion is very common in the medical field
among researchers and clinicians. What one calls as B, is P to another one. When they
come together in the International convention to sort out the semantics and find out B
and P are the same, they by agreement keep one name and drop the other name. Or
they may give it a new name. The Yogis have not come together to sort out the
semantics.
Visvanatha says, Nirvana Sakti is Samani2. One sources tells, it has two KalAs or
Inner Force: NirvAna KalA and AmA KalA, the 17th and 16th KalAs respectively.
KAlicarana says Nirvana Sakti is Unmani1. Samani2 is none other than Unmani1 in
its 2nd position.
KAlicarana says that Nirvana Sakti is 17th KalA, CinmAtrA and Nirvana KalA.
Visvanatha says Nirvana KalA is VyApini3 Tattva which is SaktisvaRupa, ParAtparA
and above 16th KalA (AmA KalA). VyApini3 is the third hierarchical position of
Unmani1, Samani2 being the second.
Sakti Tattva = Samani, Vyapini, and Anjani Shaktis. Saguna Brahman. KalAs
appear. The sakti consists of 16 parts (KalAs) of power. The deity with full power (all
16 parts in one; it is like a 16-cylinder engine!) is PUrna KalAmUrti. 1-part deity is
KalAmUrti. A deity with a fraction of one part is Amsa MUrti. A deity with a fraction
of the latter is AmsAamsa MUrti. Siva is partless and Sakti has 16 parts. These 16
parts are latent and exist in a potential state in Sakti. They become manifest when
Maya Prakrti, the material cause of the universe, becomes functional and manifest.
MAya is compared to the skin covering the seed; this sheath is inside the other five
Kancukas or sheaths, enveloping Saktis (Kancuka = sheath). MAya of Saiva
Siddhanta is unlike MAya of VedAnta. MAya sheath covering the Real Siva has at
least two qualities: ignorance and transformation. Its ignorance has the ability to
transform the infinite limitless Self of Sakti into something or someone with
limitations. During that process, the limited Jiva or the individual soul becomes tainted
with Maya Mala and Karma Mala. Just think of Kancukas as straight jacket which
limits a person. They curtail the natural perfections as they exist in the Supreme Self
and thus constitute the evolved Self or Purusa - Woodroffe. Human being is an
infinitely dumb-down version of the Supreme Self or God. Sakti has four parts: Nivrrti,
Pratistha, Vidya, and SAnti. Divine Sakti as a KalA (Inner Force) is negation
(Sunyatisunya), an empty space-giving or vacuity-producing power (AvakAsadA)
which is the negative pole of the conjoint Siva-Sakti Tattvas. --Woodroffe Garland of
Letters page 210.
MAyA is taken as the first innermost envelope or sheath of the Self though it is called
the "sixth" Kancuka or jacket or sheath. Directly or indirectly the MAyA is the
progenitor of other five sheaths.
Here is a description of Saktis and their KalAs (Inner Force). Unmani is the First Sakti
of Siva; it is Pure Consciousness, the one with gazillion Wattage and gazillion
Voltage... Pure Consciousness like gazillion suns is dazzling and so through a series of
step-down transformers, the voltage is reduced to light a one-watt human being and
one-watt human consciousness. This step-down process is effected by transformation
of Unmani1 to Samani2, Vyapini, to Anji3, Mahanada4, Nada5, Ardhachandra6 and
Bindu7 and so on and so forth. Human beings of low voltage circuit cannot handle
Siva's High Voltage Pure Consciousness. Diagram: Nirvana Ama kala
(TATTVA11.gif)
Nirvana Sakti (Unmani, 17th KalA, CinmAtrA) is the AntargatA of
NirvAna KalA which is the AntargatA of AmA KalA. AntargatA = In-
dweller.
and Sakti.
(Bindurupa Siva) and ParA (Sakti). It is the Creative aspect (Anjani) of
Vyapini Tattva. AmA is both Srstyunmukhi
(looking towards creation and Urddhva-Saktirupa (looking upwards or
towards liberation). Srstyunmukhi is Adhomukhi
meaning downwrd-turned-mouth (petals). Petals turned down before
Kundali ascends
demons.
There are five elements: Ether, Air, Fire, Water, and Earth.
There are five Lower Chakras: Muladhara, Svadhisthana,
Manipura, Anahata and Visuddha Chakras.
There are five Highest Tattvas: Siva, Sakti, Sadasiva, Isvara and
Vidya Tattvas that control our lives.
There are five forms of matter: Solid, Liquid, Gas, Plasma, and
Bose-Einstein Concentrates.
There are five airs (Prana): Prana, Samana, Apana, Udana and
Vyana.