Bush Und A
Bush Und A
Bush Und A
Introduction
Because they can fly, birds are able to travel to the heavenly realms and
converse with the gods, and so they have knowledge that is largely hidden
from earth-bound humans. Of all the birds, the Crow (vayasa) is reputed to
know the three greatest secrets. First, he knows the secret of longevity and
so is called “long-lived” (chira jiva, from chira “existing from ancient times”).
Next, because he’s long-lived, he was present at the Creation of the world,
and so he knows the secret of our origin. And finally, because he’s also
traveled to the underworld, he knows the secret of death.
In India certain people study the flight and cawing of Crow in order to
predict the future, which is called the “science of the crow” (vayasa vidya).
These crow-scientists have to be careful though: Crow knows he’s being
watched and listened to, and doesn’t much like being spied on, so he
sometimes flies erratically or makes nonsense noises just to throw the
scientists off.
One such crow is named Bushunda, who’s actually a human that’s assumed
a crow’s form and identity. He lives on the northern slope of Mount Meru,
the holy mountain located at the exact center of the universe, it’s estimated
elevation 84,000 yojanas, or about 350,000 miles. His nest is on a branch of
the Kalpa Tree (kalpa taru), also known as the Wishing Tree. Once upon a
time many eons ago, the Wishing Tree grew on earth. Nobody then had any
property or possessions, or did any hard work for that matter, because
whenever someone wanted something, anything, all she had to do was find
the Wishing Tree–easy enough, since it has gold and silver leaves and jewels
for flowers–and wish for what she wanted. Unfortunately, as people became
more ambitious and acquisitive, the Tree was taken away and planted on
Meru, where now only the gods and their closest allies have access to it.
Now kalpa literally means “rule” or “law,” but it also names a period of time,
estimated at four billion, three hundred and twenty million human years.
This may seem like an eternity to us, but to Brahma, the creator, it’s only
one “day” and “night” in his life. It’s estimated that Brahma’s life span is
36,000 kalpas, which works out to 100 divine years. It’s claimed–though it’s
not clear how anyone knows this–that we’re now living in Brahma’s fiftieth
year. Anyway, every night, just before he goes to bed, Brahma destroys the
universe, an event known as the Dissolution or Re-absorption (pralaya),
then he re-creates it after breakfast the next morning.
As you might have already guessed, Bushunda isn’t your ordinary black bird.
It’s reported that he’s achieved supreme peace and wisdom and lives in a
perpetual state of samadhi. He’s one of the very few chira jivas, which
means–believe it or not–that he’s lived through several kalpas! Because of
this he’s also what’s called a “knower of three times” (trikala jnani), because
knows everything there is to know about the past, present, and future. How
has he accomplished all this? Well, through the practice of pranayama, or as
he says, by always contemplating the natural and effortless movement of
the life-force. Bushunda he spends his days mostly resting happily in his
nest, luxuriating in the bliss of his own true self. He only leaves his nest
when Brahma’s night arrives. While everything and everyone in existence is
being wiped out, he survives because he knows an esoteric pranayama
practice called the Five Concentration Seals (pancha dharana mudra). Each
seal is dedicated to one of the traditional elements (bhuta)–Earth, Water,
Fire, Air, Ether or Space–that make up the world. So, for example, when the
dozen sons of the First Goddess, called Unbounded (aditi), scorch the earth
with their burning rays, Bhushunda protects himself by bathing in the Water
Concentration Seal. When hurricane winds uproot even the mountains and
blow them away like dust, Bhushunda is steady as a rock in the Earth
Concentration Seal. When the universal flood submerges everything,
Bhushunda floats lightly on the surface of the water with the Air
Concentration Seal. And when Brahma finally closes his eyes and the world
winks out, Bhushunda falls into dreamless sleep at the foot of the god’s bed.
In the morning, Brahma awakes and begins fashioning the universe anew.
Bhushunda too stirs, stretches, and yawns, and using only his amazing will
power, re-creates his nest on the branch of the Kalpa Tree on Mount Meru.
Then he returns home until it’s time to leave again when the next Brahma
night falls, in four billion, three hundred and twenty million years.
Adapted from Swami Sivananda, The Science of Pranayama, 106-107, and
Swami Venkatesananda (translator), The Concise Yoga Vashishtha, 279-280
From the Akasha emanated the air; from air came the fire; from fire–water;
and from water came earth. Shiva Samhita 1.71
When the fivefold perception of Yoga, arising from (concentrating the mind
on) earth, water, light, air and ether, have appeared to the Yogin, then he
has become possessed of a body made of the fire of Yoga, and he will not be
touched by disease, old age or death. Shvetasvatara Upanishad 2.12
The five concentrations upon the elements [respectively have the power of]
stopping, inundating, burning, destabilizing, and dessicating. ... The Yogin
who is intelligent [in the use of these techniques] is released from all
suffering. Goraksha Paddhati 2.59-60 (translation by Georg Feuerstein)
Introduction
When we think of “seals” (mudra), what usually comes to mind are the
various bodily positions (e.g., inverting the body), pressings (e.g., with the
tongue against the palate), and contractions (e.g., of the belly), or a
multitude of hand gestures (called hasta mudra). But in traditional Hatha
Yoga there are also concentration or awareness seals, five in number, which
consist of fixing both consciousness and breath, in turn, in five ascending
body regions or energy centers (chakra).
Originally these practices were kept secret, but now the cat’s out of the bag
and we can learn them for ourselves, if not to survive the next pralaya, then
at least to improve our chances of making it through the next week. The
outline of the teaching is found in the third chapter of Gheranda’s Collection
(Gheranda Samhita, and hereafter abbreviated GS), a late-seventeenth
century Hatha Yoga manual. We can fill in the technical details from other
sources, both traditional and modern.
Each energy center is marked with a particular geometric symbol and color,
which together represent a corresponding traditional element, each of which
is a “crystalization” of various frequencies of subtle vital energy (prana). For
example, the lowest center is marked with a yellow square, which represents
the Earth element, the densest of the five. Along with symbols and colors,
each center also has a particular “seed” syllable (bija) or mantra, and a
presiding (male) deity (deva).
It’s possible then to work with these centers in two ways. We can, first,
create and experience different states or qualities of consciousness, just as
Bushunda did to protect himself during the last pralaya. So for example, if
the apocalyptic hurricane huffs and puffs at your door–maybe in the form of
some unsettling news–and threatens to blow you down, you might work with
the Earth center to establish solidity in the face of uncertainty. This is
practice 1 below, which we’ll call Bushunda’s Practice.
The traditional elements are listed below in their order of density, beginning
with the densest (Earth), and ending with the most subtle (Ether or Space).
I own several translations of Gheranda, and they don’t all locate the energy
centers in the same areas of the body, so I’ve included two possible
sequences for your practice. You might want to try both of them to test their
effects, to see if one suits you better than the other, or if both serve a need.
■
2. Water Concentration Seal (ambhasi dharana mudra) (GS 3.60)
• Color: White (as a jasmine flower, or the moon or a conch)
• Symbol: Half-moon (water = contraction)
• Seed syllable: Vam (va, a name of Varuna, means “ocean, water”)
• Presiding deities: Vishnu (from vish, “to pervade”)/Rakini
• Body region: Throat or center between pubis and navel (Own-Base
Wheel)
• Benefits: Removes “unbearable suffering and sins.” It’s also noted that
the Yogi who masters this seal “never meets death even in frightful
deepest water.”
⋓
The Moon, as the presiding deity of the watery element, rules over the
tides of the sea. The sphere of the Moon is the reservoir of rain water.
... The subtle beings, coming from the heavenly worlds, have to cross
the sphere of the moon, and they come down to earth with rain water.
... Being the place whence the wandering souls come to earth, the
moon is considered the dwelling place of the migrating souls ... (Alain
Danielou, The Gods of India, 99).
▼
4. Air Concentration Seal (vayavi dharana mudra) (GS 3.62)
• Color: Black (it resembles a mass of lampblack, which is used as
unguent for the eyes), sometimes grey-blue or smokey because
surrounded by vapor
• Symbol: Circle (1), or a hexagon made of six dots (2) or a pair of
locked triangles (3) (air = movement)
The interlocking triangles symbolize “union in duality” (J. Tresidder,
ed., The Complete Dictionary of Symbols, 237).
• Seed syllable: Yam
• Presiding deities: Ishvara (or Isha, “lord”)/Kakini
• Body region: Between the eyebrows or heart center (Unstruck [Sound]
Wheel)
• Benefits: Brings about the “ability to move through space.” It’s also
noted that this seal “conquers old age and death,” and that the Yogi
who masters it “need not fear death from any aerial accidents.”
● ✡
(1)
(2)
5. Space (or Ether) Concentration Seal (akashi dharana mudra) (GS 3.63)
• Color: Colorless or clear like water (1); also said to be smoky violet in
color (2)
• Symbol: None or a circle (1 and 2) (ether = space)
• Seed syllable: Ham (ha, name of a form of Shiva, also: “cipher;
meditation, auspiciousness, sky, heaven; blood, dying, fear;
knowledge; moon; war; pride; cause, motive”)
Presiding deities: Sada-shiva (or Ardha narishvara), who’s
androgynous: its right half is male, its left half is female, the goddess
Uma (also called Parvati and Durga)/Shakini
The goddess was born with the name Aparna. She and her two sisters
performed great austerities. Her mother Mena was worried about her
daughter, and begged her “u ma,” which means “Oh [child], don’t
[practice austerities].”
• Body region: Crown (brahma randhra, “brahma aperture”) or throat
center (Pure Wheel)
• Benefits: Breaks down the “doorway to liberation.” It’s also noted that
the Yogi who practices this seal is untouched by “old age and death.”
● (2)
(1)
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Practice 1: Bushunda’s Practice
PRELIMINARY
Sit in any comfortable Yoga seat. You might want to start by physically
looking at the colored geometric shape or shapes that you’ll be
visualizing during practice. For example, if you’ll be working with the
first center, spend a few minutes gazing at the yellow square.
PRACTICE
Then close your eyes and run your awareness through your entire
body, just to get a feel for your “inner space.” After a minute or so,
concentrate your awareness in the first (lowest) center, whether the
sacrum or heart. Technically, Gheranda says to “fix” the breath in this
center, by which he no doubt means retain the breath there
(kumbhaka). I think it’s probably best to just simply imagine that
you’re breathing into and out of the center. Visualize the yellow square
with its accompanying feelings of heaviness and solidity, and repeat
silently to yourself (or whisper) the seed lam. Depending on available
time and your inclination, you can work with just one center for your
entire practice, or climb the ladder of centers from lowest to highest.
PRACTICE
Follow the directions for practice 1 up to the point where you repeat
the seed mantra for the lowest center. Then raise your awareness to
the Water center and, while you visualize its attributes and repeat its
mantra, imagine dissolving the solidity of Earth into the fluidity of
Water. Continue in this fashion: Water then dissolves in Fire, Fire in
Air, and Air in Ether, and finally Ether is dissolves in the self. Finally,
as one text instructs (Maha Nirvana Tantra 5. 105), repeat the mantra
so’ham, which means “I am It (or He or She)”; in other words, I
(aham) or this individual self (atman) is the same as It (sah), the
cosmic self (brahman).
PRACTICE ARTICLE
1. PRELIMINARY (morning)
a. Dedicate the work of the coming day to Self
b. Make intention (sankalpa) to do right (say: I know what’s
right and yet won’t do it, I know what’s wrong and yet won’t
give it up)
The body dedicated to god, who is deposited into and then dwells in
every part. Just as temple is consecrated before it become sacred
place, so the body (the true temple) is dedicated before god is
invoked. The body is suffused with divine power.
Two stages:
a. Hand Casting (kara nyasa): install the deity in the fingers to
sanctify the hands:
Finger Mantra
Thumb (angushtha) OM
Index (tarjana, “threatening finger”) Being
Middle (madhyama) Awareness
Ring (anamika) One
Little (kanishtha, “smallest”) Self
Palms (karatala) and back of hands (prishtha) Happy
b. Limb Casting (anga nyasa): consecrate six “limbs”:
Place Mantra
Crown OM
Forehead Being (sat)
Throat Awareness (chit)
Heart One (eka)
Navel Self (atma)
Spread out Happy (shiva)
7. FAREWELL (visarjana)