Kundalini Sakti
Kundalini Sakti is the dormant spiritual energy believed to reside at the base of the spine in Hindu tantric traditions. When awakened through yogic practices, it is said to ascend through the chakras, leading to profound spiritual experiences and enlightenment. This primal force is often depicted as a coiled serpent.
Where the word comes from
The term derives from the Sanskrit word "kundala," meaning "coiled" or "ring-shaped," alluding to the serpent imagery. "Sakti" signifies power or divine energy. The concept is central to Tantra and Yoga, with its roots tracing back to ancient Indian spiritual texts, appearing in Upanishads and later elaborations of yogic philosophy.
In depth
The power of life ; one of the Forces of Nature; that pow(n* that generates a certain light in tho.se who sit for spiritual and clairvoyant develojiment. It is a power known only to those who practise concentration and Yoga.
How different paths see it
What it means today
The awakening of Kundalini Sakti, as described in Hindu tantric traditions, offers a compelling metaphor for the process of spiritual maturation. Blavatsky's observation that it "generates a certain light" points to the experiential, luminous quality of this energy's ascent. This is not a passive unfolding but an active, disciplined engagement with one's own inner cosmos, a practice deeply explored in yogic disciplines. Mircea Eliade, in his seminal works on yoga and shamanism, recognized the cross-cultural resonance of such ecstatic states, often linked to the activation of profound inner energies.
Carl Jung, in his exploration of archetypes and the collective unconscious, might have seen Kundalini as a potent manifestation of the Self, the archetype of wholeness, coiled within the psyche, awaiting integration. The serpent imagery, ancient and pervasive across cultures, signifies transformation, renewal, and the hidden wisdom that lies coiled in the depths of being. The ascent through the chakras, energy centers described in yogic texts, can be understood as a psychosomatic journey, a purification and refinement of consciousness from gross, material awareness to subtler, spiritual perception.
This is a force that demands respect and careful cultivation, not a mere esoteric curiosity. The practice of yoga, particularly pranayama (breath control) and dhyana (meditation), are the traditional vehicles for this awakening. It suggests that the divine is not an external entity to be sought but an inherent power to be realized within the very structure of our being. The ultimate aim is not just altered states but a fundamental shift in one's perception of reality, a dissolution of ego boundaries and an experience of unified consciousness. The coiled serpent, therefore, represents not only potential power but also the profound mystery of the sacred dormant within the ordinary.
RELATED_TERMS: Chakras, Shakti, Yoga, Tantra, Muladhara Chakra, Spiritual energy, Enlightenment, Prana
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