by Beth
The first time I experienced wonder was during a family vacation in Maine. I was twelve years old. We were hiking with friends on Mt Megunticook. When we got to the top and looked out over the inspiring landscape, I was in awe and lost all sense of time, space, mind, and my twelve-year old ego-I. I have never forgotten it. I’d like to think that that moment planted the wisdom seed that my yoga journey has watered and nourished, opening me up to receive those “ah-ha!” moments of intuitive wisdom that inform and direct our lives in positive and productive ways.
The element connected to Ajna Chakra is light and/or a subtle sense of space. The organs related to this chakra are the eyes and the pineal and pituitary glands. This chakra is located between the eyebrows and is often referred to as the ‘third eye.’ So it’s not surprising that the meaning of Ajna is ‘to perceive,’ and the central issues are intuition, self-reflection, and insight, which lead to deep self-knowledge and wisdom. Here we take the information and lessons learned from the lower five chakras and move our consciousness forward to recognize our inherent wholeness.
We do this by witnessing our lives—all of it—the good and the bad, the beautiful and the ugly—with compassion and without judgment (see Waking the Witness). When we set an intention to tap into the deeper dimensions of the mind, we can uncover the reasons for our core beliefs, habits, and interactions with the outside world. What a wonder!
However, this cannot be forced. It must be invited and encouraged. In Eastern Body, Western Mind, Anodea Judith says, “Intuition is a leap toward wholeness from fragmentation. Intuition is the unconscious recognition of pattern.”This will require surrender, something that many of us who deal heavily in logic and rationality may find difficult. But there is good reason to begin and continue the journey. As we ‘see’ and understand ourselves more clearly, we’ll be able to ‘see’ others and the world we live in more clearly and find ourselves responding to what we encounter appropriately and productively.One tool recommended for this stage on our journey through the chakras is meditation. You can read more about the what’s, why’s and how’s of meditation in Nina’s excellent post Meditation and Equanimity. My suggestions for practice include movement, concentration, and mudra.Movement: Shaking MeditationRuth Dennison, my first, and most significant meditation teacher, taught that movement before sitting meditation is helpful. On many mornings, I do an asana practice and on others, I shake. Shaking Meditation is typically done standing, but it can also be easily done seated in a chair. It will energize the body, increase oxygen levels in the bloodstream, activate the parasympathetic nervous system (the rest and digest side of your nervous system), and help with mental focus.
- Stand with your feet about shoulders-width apart.
- Bend your knees slightly and begin to shake your legs.
- Move the vibration up into your torso.
- Next shake your wrists and then move the shaking up your arms to your shoulders.
- Invite your head to join the party if that feels comfortable.
- Feel free to raise your arms or bend forward or backward.
- Shake your body for three – five minutes (or more).
- When done, simply stand, or sit, quietly.
- Feel the effects of shaking your body and shifting your energy.
Concentration: Ajapa JapaThe formal name for this ancient yoga meditation, Ajapa Japa, means, ‘constant awareness.’ This technique has many stages. This is stage one.
- Sit with your spine comfortably aligned.
- Soften your chest and shoulders.
- Close your eyes or keep them slightly open with your gaze toward the floor.
- Start deep, rhythmic breathing with an awareness of the incoming and outgoing breath.
- Begin visualizing your incoming breath moving upward from your navel to your throat, and the outgoing breath moving downward from your throat to your navel.
- When your mind wanders, bring it back to the breath and the visualization.
- Practice for as long as you are comfortable.
- As you breathe in, imagine that an elevator is rising up from your belly to your throat.
- As you breathe out, imagine the elevator dropping back to your belly.
- When your mind wanders, bring it back to the image of the elevator, rising and falling as you breathe in and out.
- Practice for as long as you are comfortable.
- Touch the tips of the index fingers to the tips of the thumbs of each hand.
- The thumbs and the index fingers form a round open circle.
- Extend the little, ring and middle fingers straight out.
- Rest the back of the hands onto the knees or thighs.
- Relax the shoulders back and down, with the spine naturally aligned.
- Hold the mudra for 5-10 breaths working up to five minutes if and only when you are completely comfortable.
“Your vision will become clear only when you can look into your own heart. Who looks outside, dreams; who looks inside, awakes.”
Beth's self-awareness newsletter is published six times a year. It features informative, inspiring and entertaining tips for finding clarity, contentment, and resilience in a complicated world. For more information and to sign up for the newsletter go to www.bethgibbs.com.
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