Guest guest Posted November 16, 2004 Report Share Posted November 16, 2004 Yoni mudra is closing ears, nose, mouth, eyes by withdrawing it from the external world and attending to the Yoni. The Eyes see the Yoni, the nose smells the Yoni, the mouth tastes the yoni and the ears hear the moans of the woman. I love this group!!.. :-) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 16, 2004 Report Share Posted November 16, 2004 i have not heard of this. Can you quote the source? jessica_malone1000 <jessica_malone1000 wrote: Yoni mudra is closing ears, nose, mouth, eyes by withdrawing it from the external world and attending to the Yoni. The Eyes see the Yoni, the nose smells the Yoni, the mouth tastes the yoni and the ears hear the moans of the woman. I love this group!!.. :-) / Meet the all-new My – Try it today! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 17, 2004 Report Share Posted November 17, 2004 93 , sankara menon <kochu1tz> wrote: > i have not heard of this. Can you quote the source? > > jessica_malone1000 <jessica_malone1000> wrote: > Yoni mudra is closing ears, nose, mouth, eyes by withdrawing it from the external world and attending to the Yoni. The Eyes see the Yoni, the nose smells the Yoni, the mouth tastes the yoni and the ears hear > the moans of the woman. Well, truely speaking there is a base for this (although i didn't understand exactly what Jessica meant by saying what she said LOL). As i remember there is a verse in Yoni-tantra describing this practice, although is doesn't call it "yoni" or "khechari" mudra. However i assume the original practice of khechari was sexual; only later it was "internalised" in Gorakshanatha's tradition. Moans of the woman in the time of maithuna are described as anahata- nada by Maheshvarananda and Abhinavagupta and that nada is to be meditated upon. Also we can recall two verses from Vijnanabhairava in this connection. I really think that this interpretation of Yoni-mudra is original one, while yogic one is the later invention upon it. If we compare names "Yoni-mudra", "Shanmukhi" and also "Khechari" (which is not the same but related), we may see this. "Shanmukhi" is associated not only with Shanmukha/Skanda but also with "sixth mouth" [of Shiva] which is yogini-mukha or pichu-vaktra. And this sixth mouth is Yoni! The "flight", khechara, was originally connected with vamacharic practices, melanas of siddhas and yoginis. So... A. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
synecdoche Posted May 28, 2009 Report Share Posted May 28, 2009 while that's an interesting interpretation, and certainly fun to put into practice, it doesnt hold much water for me. yes, a khumbak full of holes. how can you postulate that a later 'interpretation' of khechari was instituted? are we not biologically complete and designed in a certain way? what is possible now has always been possible...from the beginning. think about it. i mean....it's a circle. the process that the r'shis encountered was one of remembrance and re-encountering of the original design parameters. if khechari seems difficult or dangerous, don't practice it...but don't try n change it around to call it something it isnt. you can't block your nostrils from the inside out or stimulate your pineal by eating a girl out....however...you can do those things, if you practice khechari, WHILE eating a girl out! (just be sure n keep perspective...lol:rolleyes:) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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