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Ajna Chakra
Swami Nityabodhananda
Swami Nityabodhananda Saraswati
disciple os Swami Satyananda Saraswati
The Bihar School of Yoga, 1973.

INTRODUCTION

I CAN REMEMBER an old man from Austria who lost his father during early childhood. He attended the funeral ceremony which was a most solemn occasion, and he was so pained by the sadness of the occasion that he never visited his father's grave again. The old man had fought in the Austrian army in the first world war and stayed in his mother country until Hitler's army forced him out in 1939 when he Went to England. He fought with the British army and at the end of the second world war migrated to Australia where he finally settled down to become firmly established in that country. In 1965, 60 years after the death of his father, he made the pilgrimage back to his motherland. The pangs of his conscience were strongly telling him to visit his father's grave so that he could pay his respects to the memory of his dead father.

After some enquiries with relatives he found the cemetery, but alas, the records were incomplete and no trace of the whereabouts of his father's grave could be found in the files. His country had been ravaged by two world wars and little indeed was left from the pre-first world war era. So he set out with strong determination to systematically examine each gravestone of the huge cemetery. He started his quest in the morning and by late afternoon, in spite of his persistent efforts, he had had no success. Dejected, fatigued and exhausted he sat down, and his body fell so that it was supported by his arms with his hands covering his face.

In a flash he was not an old man anymore but a young boy walking behind his father's coffin. He could see his brothers, the inscription on the coffin, the coffin bearers and all the other mourners which made up the procession. This young boy followed in the procession until it came to a hole in the ground. Then, as if coming out of a dream, he returned to waking consciousness and there he was, looking down at the gravestone which bore th inscription of his father. We can understand that this experienc had exploded from the unconscious mind, but the eye which ha witnessed the experience and coordinated all the movements the physical body was his third eye or ajna chakra (agya cakra).

This is a book about ajna chakra, the chakra of Tapa Loka. By doing tapas, by dint of austerity and hard work this chakra can be awakened so that new planes and dimer sions of consciousness are opened up. The ajna chakra is spiritually, psychically and practically the most important chakra because of its overall effects on the psychic personality of man.

When you hold your hands over your eyes or simply cbs your eyes and become aware of the area around the eyebrow centre, you see sparks of light, like the twinkling of stars; maybe large pulsating white light or a circle of coloured light. In sleep yo can see your dreams; in meditation your visions. Sometimes, th most wonderful poetry seems to pour through the mind or, when you are working and working on a problem until completely fatigued, you resign; then in a flash, with the power of the sun, th solution strikes you. All these phenomena involve the function of subtle states of mind beyond the level of everyday waking consciousness. The link between conscious man and these types of phenomena is through the ajna chakra.

Man is more than just nerves, flesh, muscles, bones an blood. Throughout the body there are subtle centres and nadi, psychic nerves, which are described as having variou colours, as seen by clairvoyants. There are 72,000 nadis in th body, of which 14 are principal nadis. Out of these the three mos important are named ida, pingala and sushunim. All psychic systems have their physical aspects in th body. The ida nadi functions through the sympathetic nervou system. The pingala nadi functions through the parasympathetic nervous system. These three important nadis are linked with the breath in the nostrils.

When the left nostril is flowing freely, ida is functioning. h this state the man is ready for mental and imaginary work. This is: the moon or female aspect in man. When the right nostril is flowin1 pingala is functioning; the man is full of physical vitality and he is ready for action and physical work. This is the sun or male aspec in man. Ida has a cooling effect, whereas pingala has a heating effect.

These three nadis run from the perenium at the base of the spine to the medulla oblongatta. Sushumna goes directly up through the centre of the spinal cord. Ida and pingala interweave crossing from opposite directions up to the top of the spinal column.

At the points where ida and pingala cross are the psychic centres, called chakras. In the perenium is muladhar; at the base of the spine is swadhistan (swadh~sthAn); behind the navel is manipur; in the area of the heart is anahat; in the neck is vishuddhi; and a little above it is ajna. At the back of the top of the head is bindu chakra, and in the crown of the head is sahasrar. Each of these chakras have their physical aspects in the glands and plexuses.

The physical aspects of ama chakra are the pharyngeal plexus and the pineal gland. Ajna means command. It is variously named trikuti, jnana netra, brumadhya, triveni, mukta triveni, siva netra, bramiriha. It is through this centre that the guru may be communicated with, and is hence often called the guru chakra.

Similarly, "extra sensory perception" phenomena are also perceived through the guru chakra.

It is during deep meditation on this chakra that it can be actually perceived in a form which various yogis have described similarly. During the practice of kundalini yoga, the awakening of man's latent psychic energy occurs and the full glory of the colours, forms, structures, and functions of the chakras is experienced.


Introduction | Chapter 1 | Chapter 2 | Chapter 3 | Chapter 4 | Chapter 5 | Appendix
 

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