Until reaching Sahasral, everything was a detour.

2023-01-31 記
Topic: :スピリチュアル: 瞑想録

Now, it seems that way. In reality, reaching Sahasrara is impossible without the intermediate paths, and those intermediate paths are, of course, necessary. I think I am on a winding path, approaching Sahasrara.

In the world of yoga and Kundalini, Sahasrara is said to be a (temporary) destination. Now, it is starting to open slightly, and I can naturally understand what that means.

Probably, even though it is called Sahasrara, there are several of them due to differences in dimensions. There is Sahasrara as energy close to the physical body, and there is also a higher Sahasrara.

Normally, when Ida and Pingala awaken and ascend along the spine in the middle, which is the so-called ordinary, physical-body-related Kundalini energy, it can reach Sahasrara. Alternatively, it may reach Anahata, which is just before Sahasrara, and experience some ability or bliss, or a state of tranquility.

On the other hand, the Kundalini that rises again after being purified and connecting with the higher self, which is a unified state from Anahata, can be called Kundalini in a sense, but it includes the energy of the higher self in addition to the physical-body-related Kundalini energy.

That Kundalini energy, which is a mixture of the higher self, reaches Sahasrara, and the Kundalini and the higher self merge there, or connect to a higher world, and move to a new stage.

It is not simply raising Kundalini to Sahasrara, nor is it "communicating" with the higher self. Rather, it is as if the consciousness dimension rises in a state where the physical Kundalini is the foundation and the higher self is unified. The physical body does not disappear, but it remains as is, but it is not wrong to say that the consciousness dimension rises.

Even in the dimension of the higher self in Anahata, which was a relatively high dimension, the consciousness of creation, destruction, and maintenance was working. Now that it has become relatively stable and filled up to Sahasrara, I am beginning to understand the true meaning of what great saints have said in the past.

Sahasrara is not yet stable, and even with just a slight awareness of this state, I know that there is still more to go. Nevertheless, I think this is probably the boundary between human consciousness and divine consciousness, and perhaps "I" will cease to exist.