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> , " jagbir singh "

<adishakti_org> wrote:

> >

> >

> > Dear Semira,

> >

> > Definitely and without question the Divine Message will triumph

> > over the organization itself. In future more and more people

> > will embrace its central message of evolving into the eternal

> > spirit that all religions, holy scriptures and prophets have

> > since time immemorial upheld. The Divine Message is a spiritual

> > sanctuary, a beacon of hope, joy, peace of eternal life to all

> > humans. The Shakti/Holy Spirit/Ruh/Aykaa Mayee is the Divine

> > Feminine that gives Self-realization/Birth of Spirit/Baptism of

> > Allah/Opens Dasam Dwar for humanity to enter the Sahasrara/

> > Kingdom of God/Niche of lights/Inner Sanctuary within where

> > Brahman/God Almighty/Allah/ Waheguru resides as THE LIGHT.

> > Semira, not only the current Sahaja Yoga organisation but all

> > religious organizations as well have merely been intended as

> > temporary vehicles and starting points for the Divine Message.

> >

> > jagbir

> >

> >

> > , " jagbir singh "

<adishakti_org> wrote:

>

> By the way things are moving the Adi Shakti will eventually

> triumph. All we need to do as Her bhaktas is to stand our ground

> and not yield an inch because Truth always triumphs. Years of

> silence from religious regimes is the sure sign that the Devi and

> Her Divine Message to all humanity cannot be challenged, and will

> eventually be victorious in Her battle against the evil forces.

> All we need to do is to fearlessly announce the Truth. Shanti,

> Shanti, Shanti.

>

 

Kundalini Shakta (Yoga)

 

The word " Yoga " comes from the root " yuj " which means " to join " and,

in its spiritual sense, it is that process by which the human spirit

is brought into near and conscious communion with, or is merged in,

the Divine Spirit, according as the nature of the human spirit is

held to be separate from (Dvaita, Vishishtadvaita) or one with

(Advaita) the Divine Spirit. As, according to Shakta doctrine, with

which alone we are concerned, the latter proposition is affirmed,

Yoga is that process by which the identity of the two (Jivatma and

Paramatma),-- which identity ever in fact exists,-- is realized by

the Yogi or practitioner of Yoga. It is so realized because the

Spirit has then pierced through the veil of Maya which as mind and

matter obscures this knowledge from itself. The means by which this

is achieved is the Yoga process which liberates from Maya. So the

Gheranda Samhita, a Hathayoga treatise of the Tantrik school, says

(Chap. 5): " There is no bond equal in strength to Maya, and no power

greater to destroy that bond than Yoga. " From an Advaita or Monistic

standpoint, Yoga in the sense of a final union is inapplicable, for

union implies a dualism of the Divine and Human spirit. In such a

case, it denotes the process rather than the result. When the two

are regarded as distinct, Yoga may apply to both. A person who

practices Yoga is called a " Yogi. " According to Indian notions all

are not competent (Adhikari) to attempt Yoga; only a very few are.

One must, in this or in other lives, have first gone through Karma

or ritual, and Upasana or devotional worship and obtained the fruit

thereof, namely, a pure mind (Citta-shuddhi). This Sanskrit term

does not merely mean a mind free from sexual impurity, as an English

reader might suppose. The attainment of this and other good

qualities is the A B C of Sadhana. A person may have a pure mind in

this sense and yet be wholly incapable of Yoga. Citta-shuddhi

consists not merely in moral purity of every kind, but in knowledge,

detachment, capacity for pure intellectual functioning, attention,

meditation and so forth. When, by Karma and Upasana, the mind is

brought to this point and when, in the case of Vedantik Yoga, there

is dispassion and detachment from the world and its desires, then

the Yoga path is open for the realization of Tattva-jñana, that is

ultimate Truth. Very few persons indeed are competent for Yoga in

its higher forms. The majority should seek their advancement along

the path of ritual and devotion.

 

There are four main forms of Yoga, according to a common

computation, namely, Mantrayoga, Hathayoga, Layayoga, and Rajayoga,

the general characteristics of which have been described in The

Serpent Power. It is only necessary here to note that Kundali-yoga

is Layayoga. The Eighth Chapter of the Sammohana Tantra, however,

speaks of five kinds, namely, Jñana, Raja, Laya, Hatha, and Mantra,

and mentions as five aspects of the spiritual life, Dharma, Kriya,

Bhava, Jñana, and Yoga; Mantrayoga being said to be of two kinds,

according as it is pursued along the path of Kriya or Bhava. Many

forms of Yoga are in fact mentioned in the books. There are seven

Sadhanas of Yoga, namely, Sat-karma, Asana, Mudra, Pratyahara,

Pranayama, Dhyana, and Samadhi, which are cleansing of the body,

seat, postures for gymnastic and Yoga purposes, the abstraction of

the senses from their objects, breath control (the celebrated

Pranayama), meditation, and ecstasy, which is of two kinds,

imperfect (Savikalpa) in which dualism is no'. wholly overcome, and

perfect (Nirvikalpa) which is complete Monistic experience -- " Aham

Brahmasmi " , " I am the Brahman " -- a knowledge in the sense of

realization which, it is to be observed, does not produce Liberation

(Moksha) but is Liberation itself. The Samadhi of Laya-yoga is said

to be Savikalpa-Samadhi, and that of complete Raja-yoga is said to

be Nirvikalpasamadhi. The first four processes are physical and the

last three mental and supramental (see Gheranda Samhita, Upadesha,

I). By these seven processes respectively certain qualities are

gained, namely, purity (Shodhana), firmness and strength (Dridhata),

fortitude (Sthirata), steadiness (Dhairya), lightness (Laghava),

realization (Pratyaksha), and detachment leading to Liberation

(Nirliptattva).

 

What is known as the eight-limbed Yoga (Ashtanga-yoga) contains five

of the above Sadhanas (Asana, Pranayama, Pratyahara, Dhyana, and

Samadhi) and three others, namely, Yama or self-control by way of

chastity, temperance, avoidance of harm (Ahimasa) and their virtues,

Niyama or religious observances, charity and so forth, with Devotion

to the Lord (Ishvara-pranidhana), and Dharana, the fixing of the

internal organ on its subject as directed in the Yoga practice. For

further details, I refer the reader to my introduction to the work

entitled The Serpent Power. Here I will only deal shortly with Laya-

yoga or the arousing of Kundalini Shakti, a subject of the highest

importance in the Tantra Shastra, and without some knowledge of

which much of its ritual will not be understood. I cannot enter into

all the details which demand a lengthy exposition, and which I have

given in the Introduction to the two Sanskrit works called

Satcakranirupana, and Padukapañcaka translated in the volume, The

Serpent Power which deals with kundalini Shakti and the piercing by

Her of the six bodily centers or Cakras. The general principle and

meaning of this Yoga has never yet been published, and the present

Chapter is devoted to a short summary of these two points only.

 

All the world (I speak, of course, of those interested in such

subjects) is beginning to speak of Kundalini Shakti, " cette femeuse

Kundalini " as a French friend of mine calls Her. There is

considerable talk about the Cakras and the Serpent Power but lack of

understanding as to what they mean. This, as usual, is sought to be

covered by an air of mystery, mystical mists, and sometimes the

attitude: " I should much like to tell you if only I were allowed to

give it out. " A silly Indian boast of which I lately read is, " I

have the key and I keep it. " Those who really have the key to

anything are superior men, above boasting. " Mysticism, " which is

often confused thinking, is also a fertile soil of humbug. I do not,

of course, speak of true Mysticism. Like all other matters in this

Indian Shastra the basis of this Yoga is essentially rational. Its

thought, like that of the ancients generally, whether of East or

West, has in general the form and brilliance of a cut gem. It is

this quality which makes it so dear to some of those who have had to

wade through the slush of much modern thought and literature. No

attempt has hitherto been made to explain the general principles

which underlie it. This form of Yoga is an application of the

general principles relating to Shakti with which I have already

dealt. The subject has both a theoretical and a practical aspect.

The latter is concerned with the teaching of the method in such a

way that the aspirant may give effect to it. This cannot be learnt

from books but only from the Guru who has himself successfully

practiced this Yoga. Apart from difficulties, inherent in written

explanations, it cannot be practically learnt from books, because

the carrying out of the method is affected by the nature and

capacity of the Sadhaka and what takes place during his Sadhana.

Further, though some general features of the method have been

explained to me, I have had no practical experience myself of this

Power. I am not speaking as a Yogi in this method, which I am not;

but as one who has read and studied the Shastra on this matter, and

has had the further advantage of some oral explanations which have

enabled me to better understand it. I have dealt with this practical

side, so far as it is possible to me, in my work, The Serpent Power.

Even so far as the matter can be dealt with in writing, I cannot,

within the limits of such a paper as this, deal with it in any way

fully. A detailed description of the Cakras and their significance

cannot be attempted here. I refer the reader to the work entitled

The Serpent Power. What I wish to do is to treat the subject on the

broadest lines possible and to explain the fundamental principles

which underlie this Yoga method. It is because these are not

understood that there is much confused thinking and misty, if not

mystical, talk upon the subject. How many persons, for instance, can

correctly answer the question, " What is Kundalini Shakti? " One may

be told that it is a Power or Shakti; that it is coiled like a

serpent in the Muladhara; and that it is wakened and goes up through

the Cakras to the Sahasrara. But what Shakti is it? Why, again, is

it coiled like a serpent? What is the meaning of this? What is the

nature of the Power? Why is it in the Muladhara? What is the meaning

of " awakening " the power? Why if awakened should it go up? What are

the Cakras? It is easy to say that they are regions or lotuses. What

are they in themselves? Why have each of the lotuses a different

number of petals? What is a petal? What and why are the " Letters " on

them? What is the effect of going to the Sahasrara: and how does

that effect come about? These and other similar questions require an

answer before this form of Yoga can be understood. I have said

something as to the Letters in the chapters on Shakti as Mantra and

Varnamala. With these and with other general questions, rather than

with the details of the six Cakras, set forth in The Serpent Power I

will here deal.

 

In the first place, it is necessary to remember the fundamental

principle of the Tantra Shastra to which I have already referred,

viz., that man is a microcosm (Kshudrabrahmanda). Whatever exists in

the outer universe exists in him. All the Tattvas and the worlds are

within him and so are the supreme Shiva-Shakti.

 

The body may be divided into two main parts, namely, the head and

trunk on one hand, and the legs on the other. In man, the center of

the body is between these two, at the base of the spine where the

legs begin. Supporting the trunk and throughout the whole body there

is the spinal cord. This is the axis of the body, just as Mount Meru

is the axis of the earth. Hence man's spine is called Merudanda, the

Meru or axis-staff. The legs and feet are gross matter which show

less signs of consciousness than the trunk with its spinal white and

gray matter; which trunk itself is greatly subordinate in this

respect to the head containing the organ of mind, or physical brain,

with its white and gray matter. The position of the white and gray

matter in the head and spinal column respectively are reversed. The

body and legs below the center are the seven lower or nether worlds

upheld by the sustaining Shaktis of the universe. From the center

upwards, consciousness more freely manifests through the spinal and

cerebral centers. Here there are the seven upper regions or Lokas, a

term which Satyananda in his commentary on Isha Upanishad says,

means " what are seen " (Lokyante), that is, experienced and are hence

the fruits of Karma in the form of particular re-birth. These

regions, namely, Bhuh, Bhuvah, Svah, Tapah, Jana, Mahah, and Satya

Lokas correspond with the six centers; five in the trunk, the sixth

in the lower cerebral center; and the seventh in the upper Brain or

Satya-loka, the abode of the supreme Shiva-Shakti.

 

The six centers are the Muladhara or root-support situated at the

base of the spinal column in a position midway in the perineum

between the root of the genitals and the anus. Above it, in the

region of the genitals, abdomen, heart, chest or throat and in the

forehead between the two eyes (Bhrumadhye) are the Svadhisthana,

Manipura, Anahata, Vishuddha and Ajña Cakras or lotuses (Padma)

respectively. These are the chief centers, though the books speak of

others such as the Lalana and Manas and Soma Cakras. In fact, in the

Advaita Martanda, a modern Sanskrit book by the late Guru of the

Maharaja of Kashmir, some fifty Cakras and Adharas are mentioned:

though the six stated are the chief upon which all accounts agree.

And so it is said. " How can there be any Siddhi for him who knows

not the six Cakras, the sixteen Adharas, the five Ethers and the

three Lingas in his own body? " The seventh region beyond the Cakras

is the upper brain, the highest center of manifestation of

Consciousness in the body and therefore the abode of the supreme

Shiva-Shakti. When " abode " is said, it is not meant, of course, that

the Supreme is there placed in the sense of our " placing, " namely,

it is there and not elsewhere. The Supreme is never localized whilst

its manifestations are. It is everywhere both within and without the

body, but it is said to be in the Sahasrara, because it is there

that the Supreme Shiva-Shakti is realized. And this must be so,

because consciousness is realized by entering in and passing through

the highest manifestation of mind, the Sattvamayi Buddhi, above and

beyond which is Cit and Cidrupini Shakti themselves. From their

Shiva-Shakti Tattva aspect are evolved Mind in its form as Buddhi,

Ahamkara, Manas and associated senses (Indriyas) the center of which

is in and above the Ajña Cakra and below the Sahasrara. From

Ahamkara proceed the Tanmatras or generals of the sense-particulars

which evolve the five forms of sensible matter (Bhuta), namely,

Akasha ( " Ether " ), Vayu ( " Air " ), Agni ( " Fire " ), Apas ( " Water " ), and

Prithivi ( " Earth " ). The English translations given of these terms do

not imply that the Bhutas are the same as the English elements of

air, fire, water, earth. The terms indicate varying degrees of

matter from the ethereal to the solid. Thus Prithivi or earth is any

matter in the Prithivi state; that is, which may be sensed by the

Indriya of smell. Mind and matter pervade the whole body. But there

are centers therein in which they are predominant. Thus Ajña is a

center of mind, and the five lower Cakras are centers of the five

Bhutas; Vishuddha of Akasha, Anahata of Vayu, Manipura of Agni,

Svadhisthana of Apas, and Muladhara of Prithivi.

 

In short, man as a microcosm is the all-pervading Spirit (which most

purely manifests in the Sahasrara) vehicled by Shakti in the form of

Mind and Matter the centers of which are the sixth and following

five Cakras respectively.

 

The six Cakras have been identified with the following plexuses

commencing from the lowest, the Muladhara: The Sacrococcygeal

plexus, the Sacral plexus, the Solar plexus (which forms the great

junction of the right and left sympathetic chains Ida and Pingala

with the cerebro-spinal axis.) Connected with this is the Lumbar

plexus. Then follows the Cardiac plexus (Anahata), Laryngeal plexus,

and lastly the Ajña or cerebellum with its two lobes, and above this

the Manas Cakra or sensorium with its six lobes, the Soma-cakra or

middle Cerebrum, and lastly the Sahasrara or upper Cerebrum. To some

extent these localizations are yet tentative. This statement may

involve an erroneous view of what the Cakras really are, and is

likely to produce wrong notions concerning them in others. The six

Cakras themselves are vital centers within the spinal column in the

white and gray matter there. They may, however, and probably do,

influence and govern the gross tract outside the spine in the bodily

region lateral to, and co-extensive with, the section of the spinal

column in which a particular center is situated. The Cakras are

centers of Shakti as vital force. In other words they are centers of

Pranashakti manifested by Pranavayu in the living body, the

presiding Devatas of which are names for the Universal Consciousness

as It manifests in the form of those centers. The Cakras are not

perceptible to the gross senses, whatever may be a Yogi's powers to

observe what is beyond the senses (Atindriya). Even if they were

perceptible in the living body which they help to organize, they

disappear with the disintegration of organism at death.

 

In an article on the Physical Errors of Hinduism, (Calcutta Review,

XI, 436-440) it was said: " It would' indeed excite the surprise of

our readers to hear that the Hindus, who would not even touch a dead

body, much less dissect it (which is incorrect), should possess any

anatomical knowledge at all.......It is the Tantras that furnish us

with some extraordinary pieces of information concerning the human

body ......But of all the Hindus Shastras extant, the Tantras lie in

the greatest obscurity...... The Tantrik theory, on which the well-

known Yoga called 'Shatcakrabheda' is founded, supposes the

existence of six main internal organs, called Cakras or Padmas, all

bearing a special resemblance to that famous flower, the lotus.

These are placed one above the other, and connected by three

imaginary chains, the emblems of the Ganges, the Yamuna, and the

Sarasvati......Such is the obstinacy with which the Hindus adhere to

these erroneous notions, that, even when we show them by actual

dissection the nonexistence of the imaginary Cakras in the human

body, they will rather have recourse to excuses revolting to common-

sense than acknowledge the evidence of their own eyes. They say,

with a shamelessness unparalleled, that these Padmas exist as long

as a man lives, but disappear the moment he dies. " This

alleged " shamelessness " reminds me of the story of a doctor who told

my father " that he had performed many postmortems and had never yet

discovered a soul. "

 

The petals of the lotuses vary being 4, 6, 10, 12, 16 and 2

respectively, commencing from the Muladhara and ending with Ajña.

There are 50 in all, as are the letters of the alphabet which are in

the petals; that is, the Matrikas are associated with the Tattvas

since both are products of the same creative Cosmic Process

manifesting either as physiological or psychological function. It is

noteworthy that the number of the petals is that of the letters

leaving out either Ksha or the Second La, and that these 50

multiplied by 20 are in the 1,000 petals of the Sahasrara, a number

which is probably only indicative of multitude and magnitude.

 

But why, it may be asked, do the petals vary in number? Why, for

instance, are there 4 in the Muladhara and 6 in the Svadhisthana?

The answer given is that the number of petals in any Cakra is

determined by the number and position of the Nadis or Yoga " nerves "

around that Cakra. Thus, four Nadis surrounding and passing through

the vital movements of the Muladhara Cakra give it the appearance of

a lotus of four petals. The petals are thus configurations made by

the position of Nadis at any particular center. These Nadis are not

those which are known to the Vaidya of Medical Shastras. The latter

are gross physical nerves. Rut the former here spoken of are called

Yoga-Nadis and are subtle channels (Vivara) along which the Pranik

currents flow. The term Nadi comes from the root " Nad " which means

motion. The body is filled with an uncountable number of Nadis. If

they were revealed to the eye the body would present the appearance

of a highly complicated chart of ocean currents. Superficially the

water seems one and the same. But examination shows that it is

moving with varying degrees of force in all directions. All these

lotuses exist in the spinal column.

 

An Indian physician and Sanskritist has, in the Guy's Hospital

Gazette, expressed the opinion that better anatomy is given in the

Tantras than in the purely medical works of the Hindus. I have

attempted elsewhere to co-relate present and ancient anatomy and

physiology. I can, however, only mention here some salient points,

first pointing out that the Shivasvarodaya Shastra gives prominence

to nerve centers and nerve currents (Vayu) and their control, such

teaching being for the purpose of worship (Upasana) and Yoga. The

aims and object of the two Shastras are not the same.

 

The Merudanda is the vertebral column. Western Anatomy divides it

into five regions; and it is to be noted in corroboration of the

theory here exposed that these correspond with the regions in which

the five Cakras are situate. The central spinal system comprises the

brain or encephalon contained within the skull (in which are the

Lalana, Ajña, Manas, Soma Cakras and the Sahasrara); as also the

spinal cord extending from the upper border of the Atlas below the

cerebellum and descending to the second lumbar vertebra where it

tapers to a point called the filum terminale. Within the spine is

the cord, a compound of gray and white brain matter, in which are

the five lower Cakras. It is noteworthy that the filum terminale was

formerly thought to be a mere fibrous cord, an unsuitable vehicle,

one might think, for the Muladhara Cakra and Kundali Shakti. Recent

microscopic investigations have, however, disclosed the existence of

highly sensitive gray matter in the filum terminale which represents

the position of the Muladhara. According to Western science, the

spinal cord is not merely a conductor between the periphery and the

centers of sensation and volition, but is also an independent center

or group of centers. The Sushumna is a Nadi in the center of the

spinal column. Its base is called the Brahmadvara or Gate of

Brahman. As regards the physiological relations of the Cakras all

that can be said with any degree of certainty is that the four above

the Muladhara have relation to the genito-excretory, digestive,

cardiac and respiratory functions, and that the two upper centers,

the Ajña (with associated Cakras) and the Sahasrara denote various

forms of its cerebral activity ending in the response of Pure

Consciousness therein gained through Yoga. The Nadis on each side

called Ida and Pingala are the left and right sympathetic cords

crossing the central column from one side to the other, making at

the Ajña with the Sushumna a threefold knot called Triveni; which is

the spot in the Medulla where the sympathetic cords join together

and whence they take their origin -- these Nadis together with the

two-lobed Ajña and the Sushumna forming the figure of the Caduceus

of the God Mercury which is said by some to represent them.

 

How then does this Yoga compare with others?

 

It will now be asked what are the general principles which underlie

the Yoga practice above described. How is it that the rousing of

Kundalini Shakti and Her union with Shiva effect the state of

ecstatic union (Samadhi) and spiritual experience which is alleged.

The reader who has understood the general principles recorded in the

previous essays should, if he has not already divined it, readily

appreciate the answer here given.

 

In the first place, there are two main lines of Yoga, namely, Dhyana

or Bhavana Yoga and Kundali Yoga, the subject of this work; and

there is a marked difference between the two. The first class of

Yoga is that in which ecstasy (Samadhi) is attained by intellective

processes (Kriya-jñana) of meditation and the like, with the aid, it

may be, of auxiliary processes of Mantra or Hatha Yoga (other than

the rousing of Kundalini Shakti) and by detachment from the world;

the second stands apart as that portion of Hatha Yoga in which,

though intellective processes are not neglected, the creative and

sustaining Shakti of the whole body is actually and truly united

with the Lord Consciousness. The yogi makes Her introduce him to Her

Lord, and enjoys the bliss of union through Her. Though it is he who

arouses Her, it is She who gives Jñana, for She is Herself that. The

Dhyanayogi gains what acquaintance with the supreme state his own

meditative powers can given him and knows not the enjoyment of union

with Shiva in and through his fundamental Body-Power. The two forms

of Yoga differ both as to method and result. The Hathayoga regards

his Yoga and its fruit as the highest. The Jñanayogi may think

similarly of his own. Kundalini is so renowned that many seek to

know Her. Having studied the theory of this Yoga, I have been often

asked: " Whether one can get on without it. " 'The answer is: " It

depends upon what you are looking for. " If you want to rouse

Kundalini Shakti to enjoy the bliss of union of Shiva and Shakti

through Her and to gain the accompanying Powers (Siddhi) it is

obvious that this end can only, if at all, be achieved by the Yoga

here described. But if Liberation is sought without desire for union

through Kundali then such Yoga is not necessary; for Liberation may

be obtained by pure Jñanayoga through detachment, the exercise, and

then the stilling of the mind, without any reference to the central

Body-Power at all. Instead of setting out in and from the world to

unite with Shiva, the Jñanayogi, to attain this result, detaches

himself from the world. The one is the path of enjoyment and the

other of asceticism. Samadhi may also be obtained on the path of

devotion (Bhakti) as on that of knowledge. Indeed, the highest

devotion (Parabhakti) is not different from knowledge. Both are

realization. But, whilst Liberation (Mukti) is attainable by either

method, there are other marked differences between the two. A

Dhyanayogi should not neglect his body knowing that as he is both

mind and matter each reacts, the one upon the other. Neglect or mere

mortification of the body is more apt to produce disordered

imagination than a true spiritual experience. He is not concerned,

however, with the body in the sense that the Hathayogi is. It is

possible to be a successful Dhyanayogi and yet to be weak in body

and health, sick, and short-lived. His body and not he himself

determines when he shall die. He cannot die at will. When he is in

Samadhi, Kundali Shakti is still sleeping in the Muladhara and none

of the physical symptoms and psychical bliss, or powers (Siddhi)

described as accompanying Her rousing are observed in his case. The

Ecstasis which he calls " Liberation while yet living " (Jivanmukti)

is not a state like that of real Liberation. He may be still subject

to a suffering body from which he escapes only at death, when, if at

all, he is liberated. His ecstasy is in the nature of a meditation

which passes into the Void (Bhavanasamadhi) effected through

negation of all thought-form (Citta-vritti) and detachment from the

world; a comparatively negative process in which the positive act of

raising the central power of the body takes no part. By his effort

the mind, which is a product of Kundalini as Prakriti Shakti,

together with its worldly desires is stilled so that the veil

produced by mental functioning is removed from Consciousness. In

Layayoga, Kundalini Herself, when roused by the Yogi (for such

rousing is his act and part), achieves for him this illumination.

 

But why, it may be asked, should, one trouble over the body and its

Central Power, the more particularly as there are unusual risks and

difficulties involved? The answer has been already given -- alleged

completeness and certainty of realization through the agency of the

Power which is knowledge itself (Jñanarupa Shakti), an intermediate

acquisition or Powers (Siddhi), and intermediate and final

enjoyment. This answer may, however, be usefully developed as a

fundamental principle of the Shakta Tantra.

 

The Shakta Tantra claims to give both Enjoyment (Bhukti) in the

world and Liberation (Mukti) from all worlds. This claim is based on

a profoundly true principle, given Advaitavada as a basis. If the

ultimate reality is the One which exists in two aspects of quiescent

enjoyment of the Self, in liberation from all form and active

enjoyment of objects, that is, as pure spirit and spirit in matter,

then a complete union with Reality demands such unity in both of Its

aspects. It must be known both " here " (Iha) and " there " (Amutra).

When rightly apprehended and practiced, there is truth in the

doctrine which teaches that man should make the best of both worlds.

There is no real incompatibility between the two, provided action is

taken in conformity with the universal law of manifestation. It is

held to be false teaching that happiness hereafter can only be had

by absence of enjoyment now, or in deliberately sought-for suffering

and mortification. It is the one Shiva who is the Supreme Blissful

Experience and who appears in the form of man with a life of mingled

pleasure and pain. Both happiness here and the bliss of Liberation

here and hereafter may be attained, if the identity of these Shivas

be realized in every human act. This will be achieved by making

every human function, without exception, a religious act of

sacrifice and worship (Yajña). In the ancient Vaidik ritual,

enjoyment by way of food and drink, was preceded and accompanied by

ceremonial sacrifice and ritual. Such enjoyment was the fruit of the

sacrifice and the gift of the Devas. At a higher stage in the life

of a Sadhaka, it is offered to the One from whom all gifts come and

of whom the Devatas are inferior limited forms. But this offering

also involves a dualism from which the highest Monistic (Advaita)

Sadhana of the Shakta Tantra is free. Here the individual life and

the world-life are known as one. And so the Tantrik Sadhaka, when

eating or drinking or fulfilling any other of the natural functions

of the body does so, saying and believing, Shivo'ham, " I am Shiva " ,

Bhairavo'ham, " I am Bhairava " , " Sa'ham " , " I am She " . It is not

merely the separate individual who thus acts and enjoys. It is Shiva

who does so in and through him. Such an one recognizes, as has been

well said, that his life and the play of all its activities are not

a thing apart, to be held and pursued egotistically for its and his

own separate sake, as though enjoyment was something to be filched

from life by his own unaided strength and with a sense of

separatedness; but his life and all its activities are conceived as

part of the Divine action in nature -- Shakti manifesting and

operating in the form of man. He realizes in the pulsing beat of his

heart the rhythm which throbs through and is the sign of the

Universal Life. To neglect or to deny the needs of the body, to

think of it as something not divine, is to neglect and deny the

greater life of which it is a part; and to falsify the great

doctrine of the unity of all and of the ultimate identity of Matter

and Spirit. Governed by such a concept, even the lowliest physical

needs take on a cosmic significance. The body is Shakti. Its needs

are Sakti's needs; when man enjoys, it is Shakti who enjoys through

him. In all he sees and does, it is the Mother who looks and acts.

His eyes and hands are Hers. The whole body and all its functions

are Her manifestation. To fully realize Her as such is to perfect

this particular manifestation of Hers which is himself. Man when

seeking to be the master of himself, seeks so on all the planes to

be physical, mental and spiritual; nor can they be severed, for they

are all related, being but differing aspects of the one all-

pervading Consciousness. Who is the more divine: he who neglects and

spurns the body or mind that he may attain some fancied spiritual

superiority, or he who rightly cherishes both as forms of the one

Spirit which they clothe? Realization is more speedily and truly

attained by discerning Spirit in and as all being and its

activities, than by fleeing from and casting these aside as being

either unspiritual or illusory and impediments in the path. If not

rightly conceived, they map be impediments and the cause of fall;

otherwise they become instruments of attainment; and what others are

there to hand? And so the Kularnava Tantra says, " By what men fall

by that they rise. " When acts are done in the right feeling and

frame of mind (Bhava), those acts give enjoyment (Bhukti), and the

repeated and prolonged Bhava produces at length that divine

experience (Tattvajñana) which is liberation. When the Mother is

seen in all things, She is at length realized as She who is beyond

them all.

 

These general principles have their more frequent application in the

life of the world before entrance on the path of Yoga proper. The

Yoga here described is, however, also an application of these same

principles, in so far as it is claimed that thereby both Bhukti and

Mukti are attained. Ordinarily, it is said, that where there is Yoga

there is no Bhoga (enjoyment); but in Kaula teaching, Yoga is Bhoga,

and Bhoga is Yoga, and the world itself becomes the seat of

Liberation (Yogo bhogayate, mokshayate samsarah).

 

By the lower processes of Hathayoga it is sought to attain

 

a perfect physical body which will also be a wholly fit instrument

by which the mind may function. A perfect mind, again, approaches,

and in Samadhi passes into, Pure Consciousness itself. The Hathayogi

thus seeks a body which shall be as strong as steel, healthy, free

from suffering and therefore long-lived. Master of the body he is,

master of both life and death. His lustrous form enjoys the vitality

of youth. He lives as long as he has the will to live and enjoy in

the world of forms. His death is the " death at will " (Iccha-mrityu);

when making the great and wonderfully expressive gesture of

dissolution (Samhara-mudra) he grandly departs. But it may be said,

the Hatha-yogis do get sick and die. In the first place, the full

discipline is one of difficulty and risk, and can only be pursued

under the guidance of a skilled Guru. As the Goraksha Samhita says,

unaided and unsuccessful practice may lead not only to disease but

death. He who seeks to conquer the Lord of Death incurs the risk, on

failure, of a more speedy conquest by Him. All who attempt this Yoga

do not of course succeed or meet with the same measure of success.

Those who fail not only incur the infirmities of ordinary men, but

also others brought on by practices which have been ill pursued or

for which they are not fit. Those again who do succeed, do so in

varying degrees. One may prolong his life to the sacred age of 84,

others to 100, others yet further. In theory at least those who are

perfected (Siddha) go from this plane when they will. All have not

the same capacity or opportunity, through want of will, bodily

strength, or circumstance. All may not be willing or able to follow

the strict rules necessary for success. Nor does modern life offer

in general the opportunities for so complete a physical culture. All

men may not desire such a life or may think the attainment of it not

worth the trouble involved. Some may wish to be rid of their body

and that as speedily as possible. It is therefore said that it is

easier to gain Liberation than Deathlessness. The former may be had

by unselfishness, detachment from the world, moral and mental

discipline. But to conquer death is harder than this, for these

qualities and acts will not alone avail. He who does so conquer

holds life in the hollow of one hand, and if he be a successful

(Siddha) Yogi, Liberation in the other. He has Enjoyment and

Liberation. He is the Emperor who is Master of the World and the

Possessor of the Bliss which is beyond all worlds. Therefore it is

claimed by the Hathayogi that every Sadhana is inferior to Hathayoga.

 

The Hathayoga who works for Liberation does so through the Yoga

Sadhana here described which gives both Enjoyment and Liberation. At

every center to which he rouses Kundalini he experiences a special

form of bliss (Ananda) and gains special powers (Siddhi). Carrying

Her to the Shiva of his cerebral center he enjoys Supreme Bliss

which in its nature is Liberation, and which when established in

permanence is Liberation itself on the loosening of Spirit and Body.

She who " shines like a chain of lights " , a lightning flash -- in the

center of his body is the " Inner Woman " to whom reference was made

when it was said, " What need have I of any outer woman? I have an

Inner Woman within myself. " The Vira (heroic) Sadhaka, knowing

himself as the embodiment of Shiva (Shivo'ham), unites with woman as

the embodiment of Shakti on the physical plane. The Divya (Divine)

Sadhaka or Yogi unites within himself his own Principles, female and

male, which are the " Heart of the Lord " (Hridayam Parameshituh) or

Shakti and Her Lord Consciousness or Shiva. It is their union which

is the mystic coition (Maithuna) of the Tantras. There are two forms

of union (Samarasya), namely, the first which is the gross (Sthula),

or the union of the physical embodiments of the Supreme

Consciousness; and the second which is the subtle (Sukshma), or the

union of the quiescent and active principles in Consciousness

itself. It is the latter which is Liberation.

 

Lastly, what, in a philosophical sense, is the nature of the process

here described? Shortly stated, Energy (Shakti) polarizes itself

into two forms. namely, static or potential (Kundalini) and dynamic

(the working forces of the body as Prana). Behind all activity there

is a static background. This static center in the human body is the

central Serpent Power in the Muladhara (Root-support). It is the

Power which is the static support (Adhara) of the whole body and all

its moving Pranik forces. This Center (Kendra) of Power is a gross

form of Cit or Consciousness; that is, in itself (Svarupa), it is

Consciousness; and by appearance it is a Power which, as the highest

form of Force, is a manifestation of it. Just as there is a

distinction (though identical at base) between the supreme quiescent

Consciousness and Its active Power (Shakti), so when Consciousness

manifests as Energy (Shakti), it possesses the twin aspects of

potential and kinetic Energy. There can be no partition in fact of

Reality. To the perfect eye of the Siddha the process of Becoming is

an ascription (Adhyasa). To the imperfect eye of the Sadhaka, that

is, the aspirant for Siddhi (perfected accomplishment), to the

spirit which is still toiling through the lower planes and variously

identifying itself with them, Becoming is tending to appear and

appearance is real. The Shakta Tantra is a rendering of Vedantik

Truth from this practical point of view, and represents the world-

process as a polarization in Consciousness itself. This polarity as

it exists in, and as, the body is destroyed by Yoga which disturbs

the equilibrium of bodily consciousness, which consciousness is the

result of the maintenance of these two poles. In the human body the

potential pole of Energy which is the Supreme Power is stirred to

action, on which the moving forces (dynamic Shakti) supported by it

are drawn thereto, and the whole dynamism thus engendered moves

upward to unite with the quiescent Consciousness in the Highest

Lotus.

 

There is a polarization of Shakti into two forms -- static and

dynamic. In a correspondence I had with Professor Pramatha Natha

Mukhyopadhyaya, on this subject, he very well developed this point

and brought forward some suitable illustrations of it, which I am

glad to avail myself of. He pointed out that, in the first place, in

the mind or experience this polarization or polarity is patent to

reflection: namely, the polarity between pure Cit and the Stress

which is involved in it. This Stress or Shakti develops the mind

through an infinity of forms and changes, themselves involved in the

pure unbounded Ether of Consciousness, the Cidakasha. This analysis

exhibits the primordial Shakti in the same two polar forms as

before, static and dynamic. Here the polarity is most fundamental

and approaches absoluteness, though of course, it is to be

remembered that there is no absolute rest except in pure Cit. Cosmic

energy is in an equilibrium which is relative and not absolute.

 

Passing from mind, let us take matter. The atom of modern science

has, as I have already pointed out, ceased to be an atom in the

sense of an indivisible unit of matter. According to the electron

theory, the so-called atom is a miniature universe resembling our

solar system. At the center of this atomic system we have a charge

of positive electricity round which a cloud of negative charges

called Electrons revolve. The positive and negative charges hold

each other in check so that the atom is in a condition of

equilibrated energy and does not ordinarily break up, though it may

do so on the dissociation which is the characteristic of all matter,

but which is so clearly manifest in radioactivity of radium. We have

thus here again a positive charge at rest at the center, and

negative charges in motion round about the center. What is thus said

about the atom applies to the whole cosmic system and universe. In

the world-system, the planets revolve round the Sun, and that system

itself is probably (taken as a whole) a moving mass around some

other relatively static center, until we arrive at the Brahma-bindu

which is the point of Absolute Rest, round which all forms revolve

and by which all are maintained. He has aptly suggested other

illustrations of the same process. Thus, in the tissues of the

living body, the operative energy is polarized into two forms of

energy -- anabolic and catabolic, the one tending to change and the

other to conserve the tissues; the actual condition of the tissues

being simply the resultant of these two co-existent or concurrent

activities. In the case, again, of the impregnated ovum, Shakti is

already presented in its two polar aspects, namely, the ovum

(possibly the static) and the spermatozoon, the dynamic. The germ

cell does not cease to be such. It splits into two, one half, the

somatic cell gradually developing itself into the body of the

animal, the other half remaining encased within the body practically

unchanged and as the germ-plasma is transmitted in the process of

reproduction to the offspring.

 

In short, Shakti, when manifesting, divides itself into two polar

aspects -- static and dynamic -- which implies that you cannot have

it in a dynamic form without at the same time having it in a static

form, much like the poles of a magnet. In any given sphere of

activity of force, we must have, according to the cosmic principle,

a static background -- Shakti at rest or " coiled " as the Tantras

say. This scientific truth is illustrated in the figure of the

Tantrik Kali. The Divine Mother moves as the Kinetic Shakti on the

breast of Sadashiva who is the static background of pure Cit which

is actionless (Nishkriya); the Gunamayi Mother being all activity.

 

The Cosmic Shakti is the collectivity (Samashti) in relation

 

to which the Kundali in particular bodies is the Vyasti (individual)

Shakti. The body is, as I have stated, a microcosm

(Kshudrabrahmanda). In the living body there is, therefore, the same

polarization of which I have spoken. From the Mahakundali the

universe has sprung. In Her supreme form She is at rest, coiled

round and one (as Cidrupini) with the Shivabindu. She is then at

rest. She next uncoils Herself to manifest. Here the three coils of

which the Tantras speak are the three Gunas, and the three and a

half coils to which the Kubjika Tantra alludes are Prakriti and its

three Gunas together with the Vikritis. Her 50 coils are the letters

of the alphabet. As She goes on uncoiling, the Tattvas and the

Matrikas, the Mothers of the Varnas, issue from Her. She is thus

moving, and continues even after creation to move in the Tattvas so

created. For as they are born of movement, they continue to move.

The whole world (Jagat) as the Sanskrit term implies, is moving. She

thus continues creatively active until She has evolved Prithivi, the

last of the Tattvas. First She creates mind and then matter. This

latter becomes more and more dense. It has been suggested that the

Mahabhutas are the Densities of modern science: Air density

associated with the maximum velocity of gravity; Fire density

associated with the velocity of light; Water or fluid density

associated with molecular velocity and the equatorial velocity of

the Earth's rotation; and Earth density, that of basalt associated

with the Newtonian velocity of sound. However this be, it is plain

that the Bhutas represent an increasing density of matter until it

reaches its three-dimensional solid form. When Shakti has created

this last or Prithivi Tattva, what is there further for Her to do?

Nothing. She, therefore, then again rests. She is again coiled,

which means that She is at rest. " At rest, " again, means that She

assumes a static form. Shakti, however, is never exhausted, that is,

emptied into any of its forms. Therefore, Kundali Shakti at this

point is, as it were, the Shakti left over (though yet a plenum)

after the Prithivi, the last of the Bhutas has been created. We have

thus Mahakundali at rest as Cidrupini Shakti in the Sahasrara, the

point of absolute rest; and then the body in which the relative

static center is Kundali at rest, and round this center the whole of

the bodily forces move. They are Shakti, and so is Kundali Shakti.

The difference between the two is that they are Shakti in specific

differentiated forms in movement; and Kundali Shakti is un-

differentiated, residual Shakti at rest, that is, coiled. She is

coiled in the Muladhara, which means fundamental support, and which

is at the same time the seat of the Prithivi or last solid Tattva

and of the residual Shakti or Kundalini. The body may, therefore, be

compared to a magnet with two poles. The Muladhara, in so far as it

is the seat of Kundali Shakti, a comparatively gross form of Cit

(being Cit-Shakti and Maya-Shakti) is the static pole in relation to

the rest of the body which is dynamic. The " working " that is the

body necessarily presupposes and finds such a static support; hence

the name Muladhara. In one sense the static Shakti at the Mula-dhara

is necessarily co-existent with the creating and evolving Shakti of

the body; because the dynamic aspect or pole can never be without

its static counterpart. In another sense, it is the residual Shakti

left over after such operation.

 

What, then, happens in the accomplishment of this Yoga? This static

Shakti is affected by Pranayama and other Yogic processes and

becomes dynamic. Thus, when completely dynamic, that is, when

Kundali unites with Shiva in the Sahasrara, the polarization of the

body gives way. The two poles are united in one and there is the

state of consciousness called Samadhi. The polarization, of course,

takes place in consciousness. The body actually continues to exist

as an object of observation to others. It continues its organic

life. But man's consciousness of his body and all other objects is

withdrawn because the mind has ceased, so far as his consciousness

is concerned, the function, having been withdrawn into its ground

which is consciousness.

 

How is the body sustained? In the first place, though Kundali Shakti

is the static center of the whole body as a complete conscious

organism, yet each of the parts of the body and their constituent

cells have their own static centers which uphold such parts or

cells. Next, the theory of the Tantriks themselves is that Kundali

ascends, and that the body, as a complete organism, is maintained by

the " nectar " which flows from the union of Shiva and Shakti in the

Sahasrara. This nectar is an ejection of power generated by their

union. My friend, however, whom I have cited, is of opinion (and for

this grounds may be urged) that the potential Kundali Shakti becomes

only partly and not wholly converted into kinetic Shakti; and yet

since Shakti -- even as given in the Mula center -- is an

infinitude, it is not depleted, the potential store always remaining

unexhausted. In this case, the dynamic equivalent is a partial

conversion of one mode of energy into another. If, however, the

coiled power at the Mula became absolutely uncoiled, there would

result the dissolution of the three bodies, gross, subtle and

causal, and consequently Videha-Mukti -- because the static

background in relation to a particular form of existence would,

according to this hypothesis, have wholly given way. He would

explain the fact that the body becomes cold as a corpse as the

Shakti leaves it, as being due, not to the depletion or privation of

the static power at the Muladhara, but to the concentration or

convergence of the dynamic power ordinarily diffused over the whole

body, so that the dynamic equivalent which is set up against the

static background of Kundali Shakti is only the diffused five-fold

Prana gathered home -- withdrawn from the other tissues of the body

and concentrated along the axis. Thus, ordinarily, the dynamic

equivalent is the Prana diffused over all the tissues: in Yoga, it

is converged along the axis, the static equivalent of Kundali Shakti

enduring in both cases. Some part of the already available dynamic

Prana is made to act at the base of the axis in a suitable manner,

by which means the basal center or Muladhara becomes, as it were,

over-saturated and reacts on the whole diffused dynamic power (or

Prana) of the body by withdrawing it from the tissues and converging

it along the line of the axis. In this way the diffused dynamic

equivalent becomes the converged dynamic equivalent along the axis.

What, according to this view, ascends, is not the whole Shakti but

an eject like condensed lightning, which at length reaches the

Parama-Shivasthana. There, the Central Power which up-holds the

individual world-consciousness is merged in the Supreme

Consciousness. The limited consciousness, transcending the passing

concepts of worldly life, directly intuits the unchanging Reality

which underlies the whole phenomenal flow. When Kundali Shakti

sleeps in the Muladhara, man is awake to the world; when she awakes

to unite, and does unite, with the supreme static Consciousness

which is Shiva, then consciousness is asleep to the world and is one

with the Light of all things.

 

Putting aside detail, the main principle appears to be that,

when " wakened " , Kundali Shakti either Herself (or as my friend

suggests in Her eject) ceases to be a static Power which sustains

the world-consciousness, the content of which is held only so long

as She " sleeps " : and when once set in movement is drawn to that

other static center in the Thousand-petalled Lotus (Sahasrara) which

is Herself in union with the Shiva-consciousness or the

consciousness of ecstasy beyond the world of forms. When

Kundali " sleeps " man is awake to this world. When She " awakes " he

sleeps, that is loses all consciousness of the world and enters his

causal body. In Yoga he passes beyond to formless Consciousness.

 

I have only to add, without further discussion of the point, that

practitioners of this Yoga claim that it is higher than any other

and that the Samadhi (ecstasy) attained thereby is more perfect. The

reason which they allege is this. In Dhyanayoga, ecstasy takes place

through detachment from the world, and mental concentration leading

to vacuity of mental operation (Vritti) or the uprising of pure

Consciousness unhindered by the limitations of the mind. The degree

to which this unveiling of consciousness is effected depends upon

the meditative powers (Jñanashakti) of the Sadhaka and the extent of

his detachment from the world. On the other hand, Kundali who is all

Shakti and who is therefore Jñanashakti Herself produces, when

awakened by the Yogi, full Jñana for him. Secondly, in the Samadhi

of Dhyanayoga there is no rousing and union of Kundali Shakti with

the accompanying bliss and acquisition of special Powers (Siddhi).

Further, in Kundali Yoga there is not merely a Samadhi through

meditation, but through the central power of the Jiva a power which

carries with it the forces of both body and mind. The union in that

sense is claimed to be more complete than that enacted through

mental methods only. Though in both cases bodily consciousness is

lost, in Kundalini-Yoga not only the mind, but the body, in so far

as it is represented by its central power (or may be its eject) is

actually united with Shiva. This union produces an enjoyment

(Bhukti) which the Dhyanayogi does not possess. Whilst both the

Divya Yogi and the Vira Sadhaka have enjoyment (Bhukti), that of the

former is said to be infinitely more intense, being an experience of

Bliss itself. The enjoyment of the Vira Sadhaka is but a reflection

of it on the physical plane, a welling up of the true Bliss through

the deadening coverings and trammels of matter. Again, whilst it is

said that both have Liberation (Mukti), this word is used in Vira

Sadhana in a figurative sense only, indicating a bliss which is the

nearest approach on the physical plane to that of Mukti, and a Bhava

or feeling of momentary union of Shiva and Shakti which ripens in

the higher Yoga Sadhana into the literal liberation of the Yogi. He

has both Enjoyment (Bhukti) and Liberation (Mukti) in the fullest

and literal sense. Hence its claim to be the Emperor of all Yogas.

 

However this may be, I leave the subject at this point, with the

hope that others will continue the esquire I have here initiated. It

and other matters in the Tantra Shastra seem to me (whatever be

their inherent value) worthy of an investigation which they have not

yet received.

 

Kundalini Shakta (Yoga)

http://www.sacred-texts.com/tantra/sas/sas29.htm

 

 

SHAKTI AND SHAKTA

by Arthur Avalon (Sir John Woodroffe), [1918]

 

Chapter 1: Indian Religion As Bharata Dharma

http://www.sacred-texts.com/tantra/sas/sas01.htm

 

Chapter 2: Shakti: The World as Power

http://www.sacred-texts.com/tantra/sas/sas02.htm

 

Chapter 3: What Are the Tantras and Their Significance?

http://www.sacred-texts.com/tantra/sas/sas03.htm

 

Chapter 4: Tantra Shastra and Veda

http://www.sacred-texts.com/tantra/sas/sas04.htm

 

Chapter 5: The Tantras and Religion of the Shaktas

http://www.sacred-texts.com/tantra/sas/sas05.htm

 

Chapter 6: Shakti and Shakta

http://www.sacred-texts.com/tantra/sas/sas06.htm

 

Chapter 7: Is Shakti Force?

http://www.sacred-texts.com/tantra/sas/sas07.htm

 

Chapter 8: Cinacara (Vashishtha and Buddha)

http://www.sacred-texts.com/tantra/sas/sas08.htm

 

Chapter 9: The Tantra Shastras in China

http://www.sacred-texts.com/tantra/sas/sas09.htm

 

Chapter 10: A Tibetan Tantra

http://www.sacred-texts.com/tantra/sas/sas10.htm

 

Chapter 11: Shakti in Taoism

http://www.sacred-texts.com/tantra/sas/sas11.htm

 

Chapter 12: Alleged Conflict of Shastras

http://www.sacred-texts.com/tantra/sas/sas12.htm

 

Chapter 13: Sarvanandanatha

http://www.sacred-texts.com/tantra/sas/sas13.htm

 

Chapter 14: Cit-Shakti (The Consciousness Aspect of the Universe)

http://www.sacred-texts.com/tantra/sas/sas14.htm

 

Chapter 15: Maya-Shakti (The Psycho-Physical Aspect of the Universe)

http://www.sacred-texts.com/tantra/sas/sas15.htm

 

Chapter 16: Matter and Consciousness

http://www.sacred-texts.com/tantra/sas/sas16.htm

 

Chapter 17: Shakti and Maya

http://www.sacred-texts.com/tantra/sas/sas17.htm

 

Chapter 18: Shakta Advaitavada

http://www.sacred-texts.com/tantra/sas/sas18.htm

 

Chapter 19: Creation as Explained in the Non-dualist Tantras

http://www.sacred-texts.com/tantra/sas/sas19.htm

 

Chapter 20: The Indian Magna Mater

http://www.sacred-texts.com/tantra/sas/sas20.htm

 

Chapter 21: Hindu Ritual

http://www.sacred-texts.com/tantra/sas/sas21.htm

 

Chapter 22: Vedanta and Tantra Shastra

http://www.sacred-texts.com/tantra/sas/sas22.htm

 

Chapter 23: The Psychology of Hindu Religious Ritual

http://www.sacred-texts.com/tantra/sas/sas23.htm

 

Chapter 24: Shakti as Mantra (Mantramayi Shakti)

http://www.sacred-texts.com/tantra/sas/sas24.htm

 

Chapter 25: Varnamala (The Garland of Letters)

http://www.sacred-texts.com/tantra/sas/sas25.htm

 

Chapter 26: Shakta Sadhana (The Ordinary Ritual)

http://www.sacred-texts.com/tantra/sas/sas26.htm

 

Chapter 27: The Pañcatattva (The Secret Ritual)

http://www.sacred-texts.com/tantra/sas/sas27.htm

 

Chapter 28: Matam Rutra (The Right and Wrong Interpretation)

http://www.sacred-texts.com/tantra/sas/sas28.htm

 

Chapter 29: Kundalini Shakta (Yoga)

http://www.sacred-texts.com/tantra/sas/sas29.htm

 

Chapter 30: Conclusions

http://www.sacred-texts.com/tantra/sas/sas30.htm

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