Video details
Enter into the Atma Gyana through Love
The Anāhata Chakra is the center of the self and divine love. Kundalini awakening is the awakening of wisdom, happiness, contentment, and bliss, not physical symptoms which indicate psychic problems. This energy supports the ascent through the chakras. The Atma is the universal Self, already liberated and beyond karma. The individual soul, a shadow of the Atma, carries the karma of many lives. Liberation is for this soul to dissolve its bad karma and become one with the universal Atma. Self-realization means realizing your Self is one with the universal one; then karma cannot attack you as the individual is gone. Achieve this by avoiding negative thoughts, seeing all beings as your Self, and transforming negativity into divinity through love. The Anahata Chakra, when open, awakens limitless artistic intuition beyond the senses. This opening requires Bhakti, or devotion, gained only through holy company, which colors the heart with the color of God.
"Awakening of the Kuṇḍalinī means awakening of the wisdom, the knowledge. When the knowledge appears, then the happiness appears."
"Ātmā is itself liberated. Ātmā is above the karma, beyond the destiny, and no one can close the Ātmā."
Filming location: Umag, Croatia
DVD 336
This text is transcribed and grammar corrected by AI. If in doubt what was actually said in the recording, use the transcript to double click the desired cue. This will position the recording in most cases just before the sentence is uttered.
The text contains hyperlinks in bold to three authoritative books on yoga, written by humans, to clarify the context of the lecture:
- Yoga in Daily Life - The System
Paramhans Swami Maheshwarananda. Ibera Verlag, Vienna, 2000. ISBN 978-3-85052-000-3 - The Hidden Power in Humans - Chakras and Kundalini
Paramhans Swami Maheshwarananda. Ibera Verlag, Vienna, 2004. ISBN 978-3-85052-197-0 - Lila Amrit - The Divine Life of Sri Mahaprabhuji
Paramhans Swami Madhavananda. Int. Sri Deep Madhavananda Ashram Fellowship, Vienna, 1998. ISBN 3-85052-104-4
