Guest guest Posted July 9, 2005 Report Share Posted July 9, 2005 Also, The following will help in getting to a deeper understanding of what you need to do and how you need to be to flow with the "lessons" and distill what needs to be. Direct experience is the best teacher. Sat Nam, Dharam THE COMPLETE ADI MANTRA FOR INDIVIDUAL MEDITATION To center yourself before a set of Kundalini Yoga we chant the Adi Mantra 3 - 5 times. Adi means the first or primal; Mantra is the creative projection of the mind through sound. This mantra is the first creative action. It centers you into the higher self and reminds your lower minds that it is not your ego that will practice or teach Kundalini Yoga. Technically it is the linking mantra for the Golden Chain. The golden chain is the inner spark of Kundalini that is passed person to person; teacher to student; guru to teacher; cosmos and God to guru. By chanting this and linking, the exercises and meditations that you practice are guided by your higher consciousness and all the teachers that have brought this opportunity to you. It makes you very receptive and sensitive to the messages of your body, mind, and intuition. HOWEVER, it is only to be used as a link when you are to teach. It is not like an individual mantra which is complete in itself. It is a hook that creates a flow which you serve. If your need is spiritual linkage and guidance then there is another form that is used: the complete Adi Mantra. The complete individual form of the mantra immerses you in awareness and guidance for your personal situation. It establishes a guiding beam between you in your immediate state and your higher consciousness that is true through all states. It is very useful if you are entering Shakti Pad in Kundalini Yoga. It is also excellent as a means to gain perspective and direction. Yogi Bhajan explained this when he said, "Use this mantra in its complete form anytime you have a lack of faith or any similar thing: Many of you will enter Shakti Pad, or you are in it, this mantra will help: With the grace of Guru Ram Das, when this mantra is chanted five times on one breath, the total spiritual knowledge of all teachers who have ever existed or who will ever exist on this earth is beseated in that person." HOW TO RECITE: Sit in an easy pose with your spine erect. Bring both palms in front of the heart center of the chest facing upward. Touch the sides of the palms along the little fingers and sides of the hands, as if you will receive something in them. Form Gian mudra in each hand by gently touching the tip of the first finger to the tip of the thumb. Focus your eyes on the tip of the nose. Inhale deeply and chant the words as you exhale. Chant the entire mantra three to five times on one breath. Keep the number of repetitions per breath constant. The sound Dev is chanted a minor third higher than the other sounds. The sound of devaa carries slightly on the 'aa' sound. THE MANTRA: ONG NAMO GURU DEV NAMO GURU DEV NAMO GURU DEVAAAAAAAA * to listen to an audio clip of it, http://www.sahej.com/Adi-mantra_long-form.ram Continue 11 to 31 minutes for a powerful meditation and guidance. He did not restrict longer periods of practice if you desire it. The sound of Ong is created in the inner chambers of the sinuses and upper palate. It is the "ng" sound that is emphasized. The first part of Namo is short and rhymes with "hum". The first' syllable of the word Guru is pronounced as in the word, "good." The second syllable, "ru", has a sound that rhymes with the word "true." The word Dev rhymes with "save." The aa in Devaa is chanted with the mouth open and the sound vibrating as ah from an open throat. THE MEANING: Ong is the creative energy of the total cosmos and consciousness of the creator as experienced in this creation. It has the connotation of energy and activity. It creates involvement without attachment. It generates shakti, the generative force of life. Note that the sound is not Om. That sound is for withdrawal and relaxation. Namo means to bow to or to call on. The connotation is one of respect and receptivity. It is the type of bowing that grants dignity through acknowledging a higher consciousness and discipline. Ong Namo calls on your consciousness to become subtle and receptive to its own higher resources. It instructs the conscious and the subconscious to let go of the normal restrictions to functioning that is imposed by our limited ego. Guru means wisdom or teacher. It does not mean a personality. It refers to a source of the knowledge. Not just any knowledge. It is the kind of knowledge which transforms you, that alleviates pain and that increases your awareness. Guru in the spiritual context is the embodiment of the infinite. The word can be broken into parts: Gu means darkness or ignorance; ru means light or knowledge; Gur means a formula to systematically attain a goal; so a guru is something which can give you a gur to transform your gu to ru! Dev means subtle, etheric, divine or belonging to the realms of God. It implies sophistication and wisdom. Guru Dev Namo calls on the subtle wisdom that guides you in an impersonally personal manner. It is a wisdom that is stored and transmitted through the subtle and radiant bodies of the aura. It is the realm and guidance of Guru Ram Das. If the limited individual ego in which we normally live is a small pond, then Ong Namo release us into a vast and endless ocean. Guru Dev Namo gives us the experience of the wisest seer and all of his charts to guide us to the many ports we are to serve and experience. <http://www.real.com/R/RC.021204r1cp_home_dlrhap_bb_2.def.img..R/forms.real.com/\ real/realone/realone.html?dc=727726725&type=dlrhap_bb_2&beta_bypass=true&bbits=t\ rue&&pp=realone&src=072104realhome_2_2_2_1_1_1,021204r1cp_home_dlrhap_bb_2> E T wrote: > Sat Nam, > > I have experienced the same issue here, between Kundalini Yoga, > Sadhana, healing meditations/mantras & Hatha Yoga. The heat just > became too much and the energy was quite overwhelming, which has > caused me to put my practice on hold for a bit. Also, in all the > classes I've taken, including teacher training, I cannot say that I > was ever made aware of what to do with this spontaneous burst excess > of energy, nor how one should go about the closing down of the > chakras. Sitali Pranayam helped a bit with the heat, not the energy. > > If anyone can shed further light on this, it would be great. > > Peace profound, > Emma > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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