Kundalini Yoga
The word Kundalini is a familiar one to all students of
Yoga, as it is well known as the power, in the form of a coiled
serpent, residing in Muladhara Chakra, the first of the seven
Chakras, the other six being Svadhishthana, Manipuraka, A
nahata, Visuddha, Ajna and Sahasrara, in order.
Less is historically known of the Agamas than the Vedas,
because the latter provide descriptive poem-pictures of Vedic
life. The original Agamas are twenty-eight in number. They are
called Saiva Agamas as they focus on establishing a
relationship with and ultimately realizing the Supreme Being
Siva. They carry names like Vira, Hero. Siddha, Perfected and
Swayambhuva, naturally revealed.
The Agamas are divided into four parts called padas,
lessons. The first two padas - Chariya good conduct, and Kriya,
external worship,- include all the details of personal home
life, house planning, town planning, personal worship in
temples, the architectural plans for temples and sculpture as
well as the intricacies of temple puja.
The final two padas - Yoga, internalized worship and union,
and Jnana, enlightened wisdom, – vividly describe the processes
and stages of kundalini yoga, and the Cod-like plateaus of
consciousness reached when Sivahood is attained. In the actual
texts, the padas are ordered with jnana first, yoga second,
then kriya and chariya - unfurling from a God-state to a human
state.
The Agamas contain tens of thousands of verses, much more
prolific than the Vedas. Though the Vedas stayed strictly in
Sanskrit, the Agamas proliferated across India and oilier
countries through many languages.
But they fared poorly over the millennia, particularly the
Yoga and Jnana Padas - so high and powerful. The custodian
Saiva priests neglected them. Many padas of entire Agamas were
lost or destroyed.
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