Chakra Meditation - Bhuta Shuddhi
Bhuta Shuddi is an ancient Chakra Meditation
of Yoga and Tantra practice through which
the five elements (bhutas) are balanced or purified (shuddhi). Bhuta
refers to the past, and shuddhi refers to purifying that past, or the
samskaras that operate in conjunction with the five elements. This is a very useful practice, whether you think
of it as preparation for Kundalini awakening , or simply as a practice
for feeling balanced, centered, or tranquil, etc. (One of
the two foundations of Yoga is Abhyasa, practices seeking of
tranquility;
For the Chakra Meditation of Bhuta
Shuddhi, it is necessary to understand how the five elements relate to
the chakras. The five bhutas are the five elements of earth,
water, fire, air, and space, and they operate in conjunction with the
lower five chakras (at subtle level they are called tanmatras, which are
part of tattvas, or subtle constituents). The sixth
chakra is of mind, and is beyond or prior to the bursting forth of
space, air, fire, water, and finally earth. Consciousness itself (or
whatever you want to call it) is prior to, or the source of
manifestation of mind, and is the seventh chakra (surely there are other
chakras, including between sixth and seventh, but the bhuta shuddhi
practice itself need not focus directly on these).
Alignment
of the five Elements
The five elements align with, and
operate from the five lower chakras, along with the ten indriyas and a seed mantra for each. In systematic Chakra Meditation, you
progressively move attention through the chakras, along with
awareness of the nature of each chakra.
Method
of practicing Chakra Meditation - Bhuta Shuddhi
There may be many methods of purifying
the five elements, ranging from meditative practices (including YOGA NIDRA) to various forms of
ritualistic practices. With some reflection it makes sense how it is
that many practices might have such an effect. The Chakra Meditation method
presented below (Bhuta Shuddhi) works directly with attention on the chakras, balancing
the subtle forces of the five elements through the use of the bija
(seed) mantras of the chakras.
Before doing the Chakra Meditation - Bhuta Shuddhi practice
itself, it is useful to do some some stretches or hatha asanas
(postures) followed by some form of physical relaxation exercise, such as a complete relaxation. This helps prepare the mind to be able to focus on the
chakras.
Chakra Meditation - Bhuta Shuddhi:
Sequentially move through the chakras in the following sequence.
As you read this, please keep in mind that reading about the
practice is more difficult than doing the practice. The
descriptions are lengthy, but the practices actually
straightforward and simple.
Muladhara Chakra Meditation:
Svadhistana Chakra Meditation:
Manipura Chakra Meditation:
Anahata Chakra Meditation:
Visshuda Chakra Meditation:
Bring your attention to the space at the throat, the fifth chakra, which
is the point of emergence of space (which allows air, fire, water, and
earth to then emerge). In that space, be aware of the nature of space
itself, allowing the mantra Ham to arise and repeat itself,
reverberating many times through the seemingly empty space in the inner
world (a space that is really not empty, but is of potential). Awareness
of the karmendriya of speech (actually, communication of any subtle
form) is allowed to be there, experiencing how that vibrates through
space. The jnanendriya of hearing is allowed to come, also seeing how it
naturally aligns with space, speech, and the vibration of mantra.
Notice the fine, subtle feelings, which come with the experience. Colors
or sounds are allowed to come and go, if they happen to arise.
Ajna
Chakra Meditation:
Sahasrara Chakra Meditation:
Allow
attention to move to the crown chakra, which has no element (bhutas), no
cognitive sense (jnanendriyas), no active means of expression
(karmendriyas), as it is the doorway to pure consciousness itself.
Experience how this is the source out of which mind emerges, after which
emerge the five elements, the five cognitive senses, and the five means
of expression. The “mantra” (in its subtler, silent form) is that
silence (not mere quiet) out of which the rest have emerged. It is
experienced as the silence after a single OM, merging into objectless,
sense-less awareness. Allow attention to rest in that pure stillness,
the emptiness that is not empty, which contains, and is, the pure
potential for manifestion, which has not manifested.Ajna Chakra
Meditation: Briefly bring your attention back to the sixth chakra,
allowing the vibration of OM to return, which starts the journey of
attention back into the body and world. A few seconds, 30 seconds, or
maybe a minute should be comfortable, though it may be longer if you
wish.
Visshuda Chakra Meditation:
Bring your attention down to the fifth
chakra, the throat, remembering Ham, as you enter into the realm of
space, hearing, and speaking. Again, a few seconds or a minute is
good.
Anahata Chakra Meditation:
Transition to the fourth chakra, the
heart, as you allow the mantra Yam to arise, remembering the element of
air. Awareness of holding and touching may or may not arise.Manipura
Chakra Meditation: Be aware of the third chakra, the navel center, and
the vibration of Ram, along with the element of fire, with awareness of
motion and seeing coming or not coming.
Svadhistana Chakra Meditation:
Bring your attention to the second chakra, and allow the vibration of
the mantra Vam to arise and repeat itself, remembering the element of
water, with awareness of procreation and tasting coming or not
coming.
Muladhara Chakra Meditation:
Transition attention back to the
first chakra, at the perineum, allowing the mantra Lam to come.When
first practicing Chakra Meditation of Bhuta Shuddhi, it can seem
confusing to keep track of mantras, elements, senses, and actions. To
make this Chakra Meditation easy, the two keys to emphasize initially
are: 1) keeping attention in the space, and 2) remembering the vibration
in the mantra (it won't take very long to memorize which mantra goes
with which chakra). Then allow the rest to gradually come in time. Both
the balancing of the elements (and chakras) and the many insights will
come over time, with practice.After the Practice: After the Chakra
Meditation - Bhuta Shuddhi practice itself, it is best to then do some
more meditation practice (since mind is now quite prepared). One good
thing to do first is to practice spinal breath, where you bring your
attention upwards to the crown with inhalation, and then follow the
stream of the subtle spine down to the first chakra with exhalation.
This is nicely done with soham mantra, where you inhale up with Soooo
and exhale down with Hummm. This can then be followed by your regular
meditation and prayer finally .
Complete
practice based on Chakra Meditation
The Chakra Meditation - Bhuta Shuddhi practice can be
practiced alone or as a part of a complete meditation practice. Here is
one way to do this, which can be adapted to match personal inclinations.
This example is a 60-minute practice.
-
15 minutes of Hatha: Practice some hatha Yoga postures (asanas) or simple stretches, along with some breathing practices (pranayama). Obviously the times can be much longer, or might even be less. You might want to also experiment with doing some more vigorous physical exercise before doing the postures and breathing, such as walking, jogging, swimming, bicycling, or working out with some exercise routine.
-
30 minutes of Chakra Meditation: If you move upwards through the seven chakras, allowing 3-4 minutes for each chakra, and then downwards through the seven chakras, allowing about 30 seconds each (to bring you back to being grounded), the total Bhuta Shuddhi practice itself will be about 30 minutes.
-
15 minutes of Meditation: Then do your regular meditation practice, whatever that may be, such as bringing your attention deeply into the space between the breasts (anahata chakra) or the space between the eyebrows (ajna chakra), with or without mantra or your regular object of meditation.
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