Kundalini: The Mother of the Universe (The Mystery of Piercing the Six Chakras) - Illustrated pictures and Annotated Religions link to Kundalini and Yoga and When Kundalini is Rising
Book Details
Author(s)Rishi Singh Gherwal
ISBN / ASINB007W34MLG
ISBN-13978B007W34ML0
Sales Rank691,856
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
Kundalini: The Mother of the Universe (The Mystery of Piercing the Six Chakras) by Rishi Singh Gherwal
**This eBook is special to include the Illustrated pictures and Annotated Religions link to Kundalini and Yoga and When Kundalini is Rising
**This E-Book has all graphics of a high quality and eligible as good format.
**All Texts are completely digitally edited and properly formatted for easy reading.
**Interactive of Table Content linkage for easy navigation.
Kundalini is mainly associated with Hinduism. However, Kundalini as a spiritual experience is thought to have parallels in many of the mystical and gnostic traditions of the world's great religions.
Many factors point to the universality of the phenomenon. The early Christians might have referred to the concept as 'pneuma', and there are some recent parallels in contemporary Christian Charismatic 'Holy Ghost' phenomena. Religious studies also note parallels in Quakerism, Shakerism, Judaic Shuckling (torso-rocking prayer), the swaying zikr and whirling dervish of Islam, the quiverings of the Eastern Orthodox hesychast, the flowing movements of tai chi, the ecstatic shamanic dance, the ntum trance dance of the Bushman, Tibetan Buddhist tummo heat as practised by Milarepa, and the Indically-derived Andalusian flamenco (Sovatsky, 1998). Kundalini practice is centerfold in Japan's Aum Shinrikyo group and Kundalini-yoga is also one of the stages the practitioner is able to achieve.
**This eBook is special to include the Illustrated pictures and Annotated Religions link to Kundalini and Yoga and When Kundalini is Rising
**This E-Book has all graphics of a high quality and eligible as good format.
**All Texts are completely digitally edited and properly formatted for easy reading.
**Interactive of Table Content linkage for easy navigation.
Kundalini is mainly associated with Hinduism. However, Kundalini as a spiritual experience is thought to have parallels in many of the mystical and gnostic traditions of the world's great religions.
Many factors point to the universality of the phenomenon. The early Christians might have referred to the concept as 'pneuma', and there are some recent parallels in contemporary Christian Charismatic 'Holy Ghost' phenomena. Religious studies also note parallels in Quakerism, Shakerism, Judaic Shuckling (torso-rocking prayer), the swaying zikr and whirling dervish of Islam, the quiverings of the Eastern Orthodox hesychast, the flowing movements of tai chi, the ecstatic shamanic dance, the ntum trance dance of the Bushman, Tibetan Buddhist tummo heat as practised by Milarepa, and the Indically-derived Andalusian flamenco (Sovatsky, 1998). Kundalini practice is centerfold in Japan's Aum Shinrikyo group and Kundalini-yoga is also one of the stages the practitioner is able to achieve.

