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31
redbushlighter
USA
22 Posts

Posted - Sep 30 2019 :  4:28:07 PM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Topic  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Message  Delete Topic
Hello people,

I practice pranayama and mantra meditation for 10 min and 20 min repectively, 2x a day. Sometimes, mostly on my second sit of the day, I will feel a bit loaded, as it were. Energetically. This doesn't happen all the time, but when it does I usually start wondering if it's a good idea to stop for the day.

I try not to stop even if I'm feeling a bit overloaded, cause I don't want to be reacting to an uncomfortability. I want to work through whatever is going on. I'm not sure if this is the right view however, because I can't tell if the overload feeling is purification or if it's a result of me overdoing things. I don't seem to be straining too hard, I just focus on the mantra and gently come back to it when I've drifted off.

How do you know when you've done enough meditation for the day? I can't seem to differentiate between purification and overload, as they both tend to be rather uncomfortable. I've always been a bit stubborn so I always just wanna work through the uncomfortable feeling, whether it be based in purification or too much practice.

Does this make sense? I'd love to hear everyones view on this. Advice is appreciated too.

Thanks all :-)




Christi
United Kingdom
3684 Posts

Posted - Oct 02 2019 :  03:05:04 AM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Visit Christi's Homepage  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
Hi Redbushlighter,

Basically, energetic overload is purification that is happening at such a speed that it feels uncomfortable. The advice given in AYP is that if your experiences from practice are uncomfortable or painful, then it is best to self-pace accordingly. This way, you will make the fastest progress possible, because you will be able to find a pace of practice for yourself that produces the most purification with the least discomfort. It will mean that you will be able to continue over the long-term without a lot of stops and starts in your practice, which is generally unhelpful for progress.

See here for more on self-pacing:

Kundalini symptoms, imbalances and remedies


Christi



kumar ul islam
United Kingdom
716 Posts

Posted - Oct 02 2019 :  5:29:27 PM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
personally my practice is very sensitive ,its knowing the signs of openings and overload ,being comfortable is the optimum way for progress ,friction from overload can be off putting and can lead to wanting a break or to stop ,i have found that once overload is detected then its best to reduce practice to a minimum even if its just sitting for a few minutes no mantra no pranayama ,this may only apply only when you know what openings or flow or whatever you wish to name it become apparent from this overload is gauged ,this state or baseline becomes the new normal without overload ,the flywheel only needs a nudge to keep it turning its the turning that matters not how fast, momentum is provided by continued practice but it doesnt have to be a hammering just a gentle tap ,symtoms for overload range from neck ache ,lethergy ,headache ,aggression ,blurring ,and many more ,openings or flow is a general feeling of well being ,patience ,love ,exspansion ,a desire for equanimity and a feeling of knowing with few peak exsperiences interlaced at times just to keep your attention ,purification and overload are so close they almost touch being between the two is a merry dance sometimes the disco lights are on and at times your left sitting on the side waiting for the next song because you dont like the tune best to be the DJ knowing which song is on next and relaxing inbetween spinning the discs ,yogananda quoted i believe "yoga should start and end in ease "buts that easy when your a master i suppose
32
hristi
United Kingdom
3684 Posts

Posted - Oct 02 2019 :  03:12:04 AM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Visit Christi's Homepage  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
Hi Dancer,

Having some degree of inner silence already established is the major pre-requisite for taking on Samyama practice. So, if you are experiencing that, then you are certainly ready to take it on.

Both Samyama and Yoni Mudra are advanced practices, so you would follow the general advice given on taking on advanced level practices. This includes:

1. That your practice routine should already be stable before taking on any additional practices.

2. To take on only one advanced practice at a time.

3. To allow at least 3 or 4 weeks between taking on one advanced practice and the next to give enough time to see how the new practice affects your subtle neurobiology.

4. To monitor the effects of the new practice routine and self-pace accordingly.


Both practices are very powerful and beautiful. Enjoy!

Christi




dancer303
Germany
7 Posts

Posted - Oct 02 2019 :  04:48:29 AM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
Christi, thank you very much!
33
PIckle23
USA
3 Posts

Posted - Apr 16 2020 :  10:35:59 PM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
Thanks again to everyone who posted responses. Thank you Dogboy and smileforme for your wisdom born from experience. I thought I would post an update on my situation and again solicit advice, although I suspect it might simply be emphasizing grounding practices again.

I am now exactly three months out from my first major experience with what I now know was kundalini energy stirring. I don't feel quite as unbalanced, but it does not seem as if the energy is really anywhere close to dying down in its intensity. I am more used to it and I have reaped the benefits of the stay-at-home orders by being able to lie down while working on my laptop. Basically, I think because I have been more relaxed and able to lie down rather than feel the energy moving up into my head and surging in my back at work, it has not bothered me as much-- which doesn't mean it is running less intensely. And just this past Saturday I went to the bathroom in the middle of the night and flopped back down on my bed on my stomach with my head propped up slightly on the pillow and drifted off back into a light sleep. I woke to my feet shaking with the energy and then knew for certain that it was kundalini moving as it surged with intense quaking power up my back and hit the top of my head with a bit of heat. It was over in a matter of seconds but I had not felt anything that intense before. I believe this is the classic kundalini awakening energy movement? Again, I do not seem to get any cognitive effects with the energy (thank goodness). But it is quite obtrusively physical. I've been walking and eating a heavier diet. I'm not sure if it makes too much of a difference. I can still do most of my normal activities and ignore the energy, although sitting on hard surfaces is hard for me as I really sense the energy in my spine then.

I watched a few YouTube videos and got a 0-3 years estimation on how long a kundalini awakening might take to integrate. Mine really does not seem anywhere near as symptom-filled or as strong as some of the awakenings I have heard described. I know Christi said it would be hard to estimate as it is dependent on my unique matrix of obstructions, but if I continue to ground and avoid spiritual practices can I hope for some lessening of the energy in a few months? Haha, just looking for some reassurance here. Thank you so much!

Edited by - PIckle23 on Apr 17 2020 12:50:47 AM




maheswari
Lebanon
2348 Posts

Posted - Apr 17 2020 :  04:08:41 AM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
Hello dear
definitely walking and eating heavier (i recommend meat) helps a lot
Continuous grounding and stopping all spiritual practices will sure lead to a gradual decrease in symptoms and their intensity
34
Healthcare - Holistic and Modern / Re: Yoga and spine health issue
« Last post by AYPadmin on April 17, 2020, 08:12:03 AM »
jclone
United Arab Emirates
6 Posts

Posted - Apr 16 2020 :  3:33:51 PM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
make sure you do things gradually and don't exert too much pressure.
35
Christi
United Kingdom
3684 Posts

Posted - Apr 17 2020 :  06:18:31 AM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Visit Christi's Homepage  Edit Topic  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Message  Delete Topic
Hi guys,

I will be holding two online one-day retreats with timings suitable for people living in the USA or Canada time zones.

They will take place on Saturday the 25th April and Saturday 2nd May.

You will need to have the free Zoom app downloaded to your computer.

Each day will consist of a guided sitting practice session in the morning followed by questions and answers. In the afternoon we will have another sitting practice session followed by a talk on AYP practice.

These are being offered by donation.

The schedule for each day will be:

9am ? 10.30 am (EST) ? Guided sitting practices: Deep Meditation, Spinal Breathing Pranayama, Samyama, followed by questions and answers.

4pm ? 5:30pm (EST) ? Sitting practices, followed by a talk on AYP practices.

The times are in Eastern Standard Time (EST).

Details are here


Contact me through my website if you would like to join for one or both of these days.


Christi
36
Anahora
Sweden
12 Posts

Posted - Apr 15 2020 :  06:21:04 AM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
This is so great, I will join! Downloading zoom now!

Hope you have a great day!




Presence Light
Algeria
11 Posts

Posted - Apr 16 2020 :  6:57:20 PM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
Great thanks Christi Thank you Yogani Thank you everyone




Christi
United Kingdom
3684 Posts

Posted - Apr 17 2020 :  04:07:09 AM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Visit Christi's Homepage  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
Hi guys,

The 19th and 26th April are now fully booked.

There are still some places left for the 3rd May.
37
Ionia
USA
2 Posts

Posted - Mar 28 2020 :  8:24:10 PM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Topic  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Message  Delete Topic
Hey everyone,
I?m fairly new to this particular practice and was hoping you could help me clarify where exactly my focus of visualization should be. I?ve been sort of visualizing my spine in front of my inner vision and tracing the path with my attention from that ?outside? point of view and I just realized this may not be usual/correct. Is it important to be tracing the path with your attention actually inside the spine?
Thanks!




Dogboy
USA
1711 Posts

Posted - Mar 28 2020 :  8:49:03 PM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
Welcome Ionia

Yogani?s advice from lesson 229:

quote:
: It is everyone's tendency to begin spinal breathing looking from the outside, imagining the tiny thread of a nerve between the perineum and brow. Over time it internalizes due to the rise of inner sensory experience. The experience of the cool and warm currents is the beginning of that, an excellent "handle" to bring the attention inward during spinal breathing, and that is why it is discussed in the lessons (#63). On our journey from external to internal, we can imagine being inside, but not to the point of strain, as this will detract from the natural flow of spinal breathing. It is like meditation in that sense - we just easily favor the direction we want to go in, not forcing.

There are many forms of spinal breathing (Lesson 206). This is acceptable because spinal breathing is not nearly as delicate a procedure as deep meditation due to the physicality of breath, which regulates the overall process. So, there is room for variations while maintaining effectiveness. This is not so with deep meditation, which involves the management of attention only. That is why we are "stingy" with our attention in meditation, always favoring the easy procedure of picking up the mantra and letting it refine naturally to stillness in the mind.

In spinal breathing, as long as we are slowing down (restraining) the breathing and cycling the attention with it going between the brow and the perineum, it will work. Due to this relative sturdiness of spinal breathing, we are able to introduce and stabilize into habit many of the other practices in the lessons. It is relatively easy to incorporate new practices while doing spinal breathing without disrupting our practice excessively. Of course, if we shift to the crown instead of the brow in our attention cycle with breathing, all bets are off. That dramatically increases the risk of instability of our inner energies.


As long as you end the inhale at the third eye and the exhale at the root, you should be fine. Visualizing the spine can be done with soft attention/intention. Hope this helps.




Ionia
USA
2 Posts

Posted - Mar 28 2020 :  9:28:56 PM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
Dog boy,
Thank you very much. That was just what I needed#128522;

38
Support for AYP Pranayama, Mudras and Bandhas / Re: Yoni mudra
« Last post by AYPadmin on April 16, 2020, 01:24:13 PM »
Cato
Germany
65 Posts

Posted - Jan 24 2020 :  11:22:02 AM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
quote:


Do you have severe myopia, btw? (A serious question with a follow-up, if yes)

-D


Is there something to consider concerning yoni mudra and severe myopia? I indeed have severe myopia...




BlueRaincoat
United Kingdom
1550 Posts

Posted - Jan 29 2020 :  11:14:49 AM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
quote:
Originally posted by Cato
Is there something to consider concerning yoni mudra and severe myopia? I indeed have severe myopia...

No, it does not matter in the least. The effects of yoni mudra are at a different level than physical eye sight.




Blanche
USA
606 Posts

Posted - Jan 30 2020 :  06:18:59 AM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Visit Blanche's Homepage  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
Hi Cato,

Yoni mudra is probably beneficial for your eyes. Many years ago I read in a book that sambhavi mudra (which is part of yoni mudra) and yogic eye exercises when practiced regularly reduce and may even eliminate the need for eyeglasses. I have tested this some decades ago: My myopia decreased after 6 months of practice, but I still need glasses. I used to do eye exercises and sambhavi 15-20 minutes every day.




Cato
Germany
65 Posts

Posted - Feb 04 2020 :  09:28:53 AM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
Hi Blanche,

thank you, this is good news, as my myopia really bothers me. It really is high myopia and it can go along with negative effects for the retina.




Blanche
USA
606 Posts

Posted - Feb 05 2020 :  06:22:02 AM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Visit Blanche's Homepage  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply

 [/\]
39
mikeli
USA
1 Posts

Posted - Jan 28 2020 :  4:13:12 PM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Topic  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Message  Delete Topic
Hello can anybody tell the name of this mudras??
https://imgur.com/gallery/tCJH4V3




Blanche
USA
606 Posts

Posted - Jan 29 2020 :  06:02:13 AM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Visit Blanche's Homepage  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
It seems to be a variation of hakini mudra, which is supposed to stimulate concentration, and maha sacral mudra, associated with the healing process in the lower pelvis.
40
Support for AYP Pranayama, Mudras and Bandhas / Kechari Mudra
« Last post by AYPadmin on April 16, 2020, 01:20:50 PM »
Shamith
India
5 Posts

Posted - Oct 21 2018 :  11:11:44 PM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
Respected, can you tell me. How did you enter into kechari 4 and up. What was the angle ? I


quote:
Originally posted by albechan

Dear All,
I would like to request your kind advice with regards to kechari mudra as I read with deep interest what you wrote.
I already wrote another similar post, but I realized it was on the wrong section.
Although I just started to practice yoga, I became strongly interested in the discipline because of my innate ability to perform kechari mudra. I am 39 and I've been playing with my toungue behind the uvula since I was a child. I can literally spend hours with my toungue resting on "the secret spot" Yogani mention at the base of the nasal sept and can reach kechari 4 with great ease thanks to the unusual anatomy of my toungue (very long, very thin when stretched and with an extremely malleable frenulum). Perhaps, I can even do kechari 5 as I can fold back my toungue enough to block any air intake through my throat. As I just discovered the importance behind this practice, I've been doing it with much more attention and interest.
I am lucky enough to have a job and a life style which allows me to spend long hours in silence (I do meditation pretty regularly as well) so that I can go on with my daily routines while keeping my toungue resting on the secret spot and focus on breathing. Still I don't really feel the ecstatic conductivity you talk about. I wanted to understand if you think it's ok to keep practicing kechari mudra for such a long time (I can last on stage 2 easily 7-8 hours per day as that position feels more comfortable to me than keeping my toungue in a ?normal? resting position). On a side note, I can say that I have never experienced any strain or discomfort from this.
Thank you so much for your time.
Love




Shamith
India
5 Posts

Posted - Oct 21 2018 :  11:17:48 PM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
People who have finished Kechari Stage 4. Requesting help with the request.

Which is the right angle to insert the tongue and upward ? Up beneath the secret spot. It seems the passage is closed, not upward. Thanking you.




Shamith
India
5 Posts

Posted - Oct 22 2018 :  01:13:54 AM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
Can one tell me which side is the entry level to go up. Is it the side where secret spot is or opposite side. Thanking you




Leonardo Neiva
Brazil
1 Posts

Posted - Mar 27 2019 :  12:10:24 PM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
Thank you this post has helped me a lot to connect in essence




Jesus2.0
Algeria
3 Posts

Posted - Aug 21 2019 :  1:09:17 PM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
Hi guys and galls.
I have read the lesson on kechari mudra and found it to be quite accurate, although I do not believe any yoga has to be difficult or complicated or that anyone should intentionally cut/snip their frenulum, this is poor advice in my humble opinion.
Any questions will be answered with love,
Namaste x




Jesus2.0
Algeria
3 Posts

Posted - Aug 21 2019 :  2:40:33 PM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply

I honestly believe kechari mudra to be one of the most important ?physical keys? to acension! Not to be taken lightly or entered into until you are ready to let go of everything you?ve ever known and experience reality x




Z1839
USA
10 Posts

Posted - Nov 24 2019 :  12:43:12 PM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
I have two brief questions on kechari mudra.

First, I feel like i've nearly reached the nasal passage area. Do the bones/cartilage in the septum feel like they have a different texture than the soft, slimy texture of the soft palate? It feels sort of long a sponge to me.

Also, does the mouth need to be open at all? I've watched some videos on Kechari mudra and they usually have an open mouth, but I wasn't sure if they were just doing so to show the camera.




Dogboy
USA
1711 Posts

Posted - Nov 24 2019 :  3:10:31 PM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
I can do ketchari 2, and the tip of my tongue touches the bone cartilage you see at the nasal hole on a skull. Everything below that is the slimy/soft tissue you mentioned.

If I open my mouth slightly it moves the tongue maybe a millimeter higher. I have seen those YouTube videos, and they are indeed doing it to show you. Generally the mouth remains closed.




Z1839
USA
10 Posts

Posted - Nov 25 2019 :  7:02:13 PM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
quote:
Originally posted by Dogboy

I can do ketchari 2, and the tip of my tongue touches the bone cartilage you see at the nasal hole on a skull. Everything below that is the slimy/soft tissue you mentioned.

If I open my mouth slightly it moves the tongue maybe a millimeter higher. I have seen those YouTube videos, and they are indeed doing it to show you. Generally the mouth remains closed.


Thank you! It seems like I may be close to stage 2. What happens is that I roll my tongue back until I find some pressure. After, there's a sort of popping feeling and the tip of my tongue snaps erect upward, and the pressure is released.

My tongue then starts stretching upwards, and my jaw opens very slightly. I feel my uvula sort of jump upward and touch underneath my tongue. After some maneuvering and relaxing into it, I feel this sort of harder spongy type of tissue.




Z1839
USA
10 Posts

Posted - Nov 28 2019 :  7:22:30 PM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
Just another follow up,

My body seems to really want to do Udiyanna/Nauli bhanda while doing kechari. It seems like it helps relieve pressure and tension in my throat in pallet. Any input on the matter?




Dogboy
USA
1711 Posts

Posted - Nov 28 2019 :  9:34:30 PM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
The soft tissue is ?the veil? you (eventually) bypass the enter 2, the harder tissue beyond is the roof of your nasal passage.

While I stay in ketchari while meditating, I wouldn?t do uddiyana/nauli then, but otherwise, if doing them is relieving pressure, why not? I have heard you can lessen a gag reflex by palming your thumb and squeezing it, and that may be the same action here: to find relief in a particular area, divert you attention to another area of the body.




Blanche
USA
606 Posts

Posted - Nov 29 2019 :  10:33:21 PM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Visit Blanche's Homepage  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
quote:
Originally posted by Z1839

Just another follow up,

My body seems to really want to do Udiyanna/Nauli bhanda while doing kechari. It seems like it helps relieve pressure and tension in my throat in pallet. Any input on the matter?


The spontaneous engagement of uddiyana/nauli during the practice of kechari mudra is a normal occurrence as the purification of the nervous system increases and the ecstatic conductivity becomes more and more active. In fact, as a result of the awakening of the ecstatic conductivity, the engagement of one mudra triggers the activation of other mudras and bandhas, in a process you are experiencing now and what Yogani calls ?whole body mudra? - see lesson 212. So practice wisely and enjoy!




CAA
USA
11 Posts

Posted - Dec 05 2019 :  10:56:15 AM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
I can use my pinky to move the tongue tip to the elastic band behind the uvula.. This band is very tight! Is this common with people who are successful with going past it? Does it need be stretched?




Z1839
USA
10 Posts

Posted - Dec 05 2019 :  5:09:06 PM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
quote:
Originally posted by Blanche

quote:
Originally posted by Z1839

Just another follow up,

My body seems to really want to do Udiyanna/Nauli bhanda while doing kechari. It seems like it helps relieve pressure and tension in my throat in pallet. Any input on the matter?


The spontaneous engagement of uddiyana/nauli during the practice of kechari mudra is a normal occurrence as the purification of the nervous system increases and the ecstatic conductivity becomes more and more active. In fact, as a result of the awakening of the ecstatic conductivity, the engagement of one mudra triggers the activation of other mudras and bandhas, in a process you are experiencing now and what Yogani calls ?whole body mudra? - see lesson 212. So practice wisely and enjoy!


Thank you! It seems as if my body is intuitively trying to equalize the pressures between my lower abdomen/diaphragm and in my head sinuses by going into uddiyana/nauli. The pressure is then trying to synchronize with the effort involved with focusing my eyes at the center between my eyebrows- gentle yet intense attention to that point.

Interestingly, in my last Kriya meditation my body wanted to do a jyoti mudra type movements to equalize the pressure in my sinuses to my uddiyana/nauli. It was just my fingers in my ears and eyelids.




Dogboy
USA
1711 Posts

Posted - Dec 05 2019 :  7:35:33 PM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
quote:
I can use my pinky to move the tongue tip to the elastic band behind the uvula.. This band is very tight! Is this common with people who are successful with going past it? Does it need be stretched?


No, it will yield when you are ripe for it. Just keep playing with it as you are, and also dedicated to your meditation practice, for that prepares you also.




CAA
USA
11 Posts

Posted - Dec 05 2019 :  8:35:03 PM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
I should have been more clear.. Didnt mean stretch with a tool per se, just with the tongue itself by repetition. I can feel it kinda wanting to give way.




Z1839
USA
10 Posts

Posted - Dec 09 2019 :  5:46:22 PM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
It seems like I?ve made some breakthroughs in Kechari. I?m not sure what specific stage I?m in, as I can?t really tell where my tongue is specifically. I?ve decided to just follow the energy. It seems like if I focus on shambhavi mudra, my tongue seems to want to just want to continue kechari.

Anyway, what happened was I felt like my tongue went back into a nice secure position, and the tip of my tongue was balancing my shambhavi mudra and breathing. I felt this sort of slow spinning wheel that was rotating to the rhythm of my breathing in the area of shambavi mudra, with the slight effort needed to keep my tongue in place. It was rotating on the tip of my tongue.

I was wondering if anyone can relate. I know people experience meditation phenomenon differently. Just curious to hear!




Z1839
USA
10 Posts

Posted - Dec 27 2019 :  10:27:10 AM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
I?m noticing my frenulum has some white, calcified like stuff developing on it. Is there a way to get rid of it, like scrape it off?

Z1839
USA
10 Posts

Posted - Jan 17 2020 :  09:02:35 AM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
Can anyone recommend a good guide on using a cuticle snipper to snip the frenulum?




Christi
United Kingdom
3682 Posts

Posted - Jan 19 2020 :  09:56:21 AM  Show Profile  Email Poster  Visit Christi's Homepage  Edit Reply  Reply with Quote  View user's IP address  Get a Link to this Reply  Delete Reply
quote:
Originally posted by Z1839

Can anyone recommend a good guide on using a cuticle snipper to snip the frenulum?


Hi z1839,

You can find guidance in this lesson:

Lesson 108 - Kechari Mudra - A Giant Leap for Humankind

Christi
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