The Chakras and the Nadis System
The Nadis: According to the yogic teachings, there
are 72,000 Nadis, or channels, in the subtle ethereal anatomy of humans.
The Nadis are the drivers of the lifeblood of vibrational therapy.
Among the 14 major Nadis, three are of fundamental importance: Sushumna,
Ida, and Pingala. All the Nadis are subordinate to the central
channel, Sushumna, which runs from the base chakra to the crown chakra.
This central channel seems to cut across the spine which circulates the
cerebrospinal fluid. In Eastern teaching, the Nadis of the physical body
or coarse Nadis are the veins, arteries, and nerves.
Although our three-dimensional condition of life is linked to seven
major chakras, there are thousands of chakras inside of our energetic
system. Each of them has a valuable function and serves several
different purposes.
As a rule of thumb, the chakras are the translators of our preterit
memories. They act as inter-dimensional portals that allow us to have
access to the necessary energy to live our life experiences in
plenitude. They function as organs and through their surfaces they
metabolize vital energy coming from our subtle bodies. Inside of each of
the chakras, the energy is harmonized and distributed to the rest of
the physical body through the various endocrine glands. The free flow of
energy through the chakras ensures a smooth flow of vital energy to the
rest of our system, providing health and vitality to the physical body.
The chakras can alter our moods and behaviors by hormonal influences
since they are closely linked to our cellular structure and our
endocrine system. The capture of the energies from the chakras is made
through the network of fine channels of the subtle energy field, called
Nadis by the yogis. It forms what we know as the etheric double that
gives the entire system the appearance of a colored grid.
While we cannot completely assimilate all three-dimensional
experience in one existence, we go through the process to take upon
successive embodiments, transforming the energy constantly through the
game of materializing and dematerializing.
Physical life and death differ only in the exterior presentation form
of energy. It is said that the spirit leaves the field leaving the body
to die, but that is to say, that the energy of matter is transformed
into energy of mind again; returning to accomplish the task of raising
consciousness after it has assimilated the experience of physical life.
While a soul does not exhaust all the programmed learning system into
which it is inserted, it will return again by his will, or the power of
attraction to the physical plane. That is, the spirit –consciousness
“substance” becomes dense once again.
The
universal energy is densified through the chakras system: when it
descends into our physical bodies, using the Nadis as the living energy
grid to spread itself broadly, moving through the points referred in
acupuncture as the meridians. In this way, all imbalances in the
physical body can be somatized and detected through the chakras system
before they even begin to exist, or manifest physically, by therapists
who work with subtle energy.
Nadis—energy pathways throughout the body—were detailed
thousands of years ago as part of traditional Indian medicine. Nadis
transport
prana, the energy equivalent of qi. These channels
emanate from the chakras and gradually become thinner the further they
extend outward. This configuration is similar to the
nervous system in that the chakras correlate to the central nervous
system and the nadi pathways correspond to the peripheral nervous
system. Although comparable to meridians, nadi pathways are more
numerous as there are thought to be over 72,000 points of stimulation
along these routes compared with the 361 acupuncture points listed by
WHO. On the other hand, there are three primary nadis whereas there are
fourteen principal meridians.
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