Siddha Mahayoga FAQ
Version 2.0, May 1996
Copyright Kurt Keutzer, 1996 (keutzer@eecs.berkeley.edu)
The author grants the right to copy and distribute this file,
provided it remains unmodified and original authorship and copyright is
retained.The author retains both the right and intention to modify and extend
this document.
This FAQ gives an overview of Siddha Mahayoga. The Kundalini
Yoga FAQ:
Kundalini FAQ
is introductory material that is good to read before reading
this FAQ.
Two other articles are strongly related:
Kundalini Yogas FAQ
The Siddha Mahayoga Tradition of Swami Shivom Tirth
I remember with gratitude those teachers who by their mere
intention, glance, word or touch can accomplish what is otherwise obtained only
with great effort and difficulty.
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
What is kundalini?
``Kundalini'' literally means coiling, like a snake. In the
classical literature of hatha yoga kundalini is described as a coiled serpent at
the base of the spine. The image of coiling, like a spring, conveys the sense of
untapped potential energy. Perhaps more meaningfully kundalini can be described
as a great reservoir of creative energy at the base of the spine. It's not
useful to sit with our consciousness fixed in our head and think of kundalini as
a foreign force running up and down our spine. Unfortunately the serpent image
may serve to accentuate this alien nature of the image. It's more useful to
think of kundalini energy as the very foundation of our consciousness so when
kundalini moves through the sushumna and through our chakras our consciousness
necessarily changes with it.
The concept of kundalini can also be examined from a strictly
psychological perspective. From this perspective kundalini can be thought of as
a rich source of psychic or libidinous energy in our unconscious.
In the classical literature of Kashmir Shaivism kundalini is
described in three different manifestations. The first of these is as the
universal energy or para-kundalini. The second of these is as the
energizing function of the body-mind complex or prana-kundalini. The
third of these is as consciousness or shakti-kundalini which
simultaneously subsumes and intermediates between these two. Ultimately these
three forms are the same but understanding these three different forms will help
to understand the different manifestations of kundalini.
Return to table of contents
What does kundalini have to do with spiritual enlightenment?
What is the goal of kundalini yoga?
First we need a few concepts: In yogic anatomy the sushumna
is the central channel and conduit for the kundalini energy that runs along our
spine and up to the crown of our head. Along this channel are placed additional
channel networks called chakras. These chakras are associated with major aspects
of our anatomy - for example our throat, heart, solar plexus, and in turn these
aspects of our anatomy are related to aspects of our human nature. According to
the literature of kundalini yoga our experience of these centers is limited due
to knots which restrict the flow of energy into these centers. Three knots are
particuarly important. The knot of Brahma which restricts the center at
the base of the spine. The knot of Vishnu which restricts the heart
center and the knot of Rudra which restricts the center between the
eyebrows. These knots form an important framework in yogic thinking and the
stages toward enlightenment are articulated in terms of breaking through these
knots in the yogic classic the Hatha Yoga Pradipika as well as in some of
the yoga upanishads. Specifically, four stages of progress are described:
arambha,
ghata,
parichaya and
nishpatti.
Arambha is associated with breaking the knot of
Brahma and the awakening of kundalini. Ghata is associated with
breaking the knot of Vishnu and and with internal absorption.
Parichaya the absorption deepens and in nishpatti the knot of
Rudra is pierced and the kundalini may ascend to the center at the crown of
the head. In this state transcendence is integrated and, according to the yogic
liteature, the yogi has nothing more to attain.
Putting these elaborate physiological descriptions aside, the
goal of kundalini yoga is the same as the goal of any legitimate spiritual
practice: To be liberated from the limited bounds of the self-centered and
alienated ego. In kundalini yoga this is associated with internal manifestations
of the kundalini but the external manifestations should be similar to any other
legitimate spiritual practice. .
Putting these elaborate physiological descriptions aside, the
goal of kundalini yoga is the same as the goal of any legitimate spiritual
practice: To be liberated from the limited bounds of the self-centered and
alienated ego. In kundalini yoga this is associated with internal manifestations
of the kundalini but the external manifestations should be similar to any other
legitimate spiritual practice.
Return to table of contents
So how do I awaken kundalini?
Indirectly kundalini can be awakened by devotion, by selfless
service, or by intellectual enquiry.
Broadly speaking there are two radically different direct
approaches to awakening kundalini. One approach requires initiation by a guru
and relies upon a technique called shaktipat, or ``descent of shakti.'' It is
variously called: Siddha Mahayoga, Kundalini Mahayoga or Sahaja Yoga
(Spontaneous Yoga). These approaches are treated in the
Siddha Mahayoga FAQ. The other approach uses
intentional yogic techniques . The styles using intentional techniques include
Mantra Yoga, Hatha Yoga, Laya Yoga or Kriya Yoga. These approaches are treated
in the Kundalini Yogas FAQ .
Fundamentally the approach of Siddha Mahayoga and the
Kundalini Yogas are different. In Siddha Mahayoga the guru awakens the kundalini
and after that the core of the practice is the inactive and non-willful
surrender to kundalini. In Kundalini Yogas the will is used to awaken the
kundalini and to guide its progress. Clearly these are different approaches.
Nevertheless, elements of the each approach occur in the practices of the other.
Siddha Mahayogins may use asanas, pranayamas and other hatha yoga practices. On
the other hand gurus in Kundalini Yoga may give infusions of shakti to their
students to help them at particular points in their practice.
Return to table of contents
What is shaktipat?
``Shakti'' is another word for kundalini and ``pat'' means to
descend. Shaktipat is a method by which an individual's kundalini is awakened by
the direct intervention of a guru. There are several varieties of shaktipat
depending on the facility of the guru and the receptiveness of the disciple.
It is probably not useful to try to resurrect the nine or
more classifications of shaktipat used in the classical literature here.
Practically speaking shaktipat is known by its results: the awakening of of the
student's kundalini.
There are also a variety of mechanisms for conveying
shaktipat. These include: by glance, by word or mantra, by touch or simply by
intention.
Return to table of contents
How does shaktipat work? If kundalini awakening is so
important how can someone else do it for you? How could a guru overcome my
karma?
There is a rich literature exploring this point but a couple
analogies may help more. In the classical literature, such as the works of
tantric scholar Abhinavagupta, shaktipat is seen as able to occur when one's
positive and negative karmas reach a sort of equilibrium.
Regarding the question as to how a guru is able to overcome
the karma of a disciple, the Indian scholar Abhinavagupta argues that the
ability to receive shaktipat is the result of something of a neutralization of
positive and negative karmas. He also investigates the common phenomena that
some individuals experience shaktipat more deeply than others. One might
naturally further ask: ``If shaktipat is a manifestation of grace then why would
anyone person experience shaktipat more deeply than another?''
These questions deserve deeper enquiry but I personally find
a couple analogies helpful. Ordinarily it takes a long time to create a fire by
rubbing sticks together but if someone else already has a fire then that fire
can be used to ignite another fire. Similarly to make a magnet naturally may
require thousands of years but if one already has a magnet then a metal can
easily be magnetized using the magnet.
Return to table of contents
Who can give shaktipat?
To continue the analogy, in theory ``anyone on fire'' can
give shaktipat, i.e. anyone who's kundalini is already awakened. The more
relevant question is: ``Who should give shaktipat?'' There are many
opinions on this but at the very least the conveyer of shaktipat should be aware
of the movements of shakti in his own body and in the body of the disciple.
Giving shaktipat is a science and it is helpful, if not essential, to be
instructed in that science. The classical works of Abhinavagupta and the living
oral tradition of contemporary masters, such as Swami Shivom Tirth, both
indicate that improperly practiced shaktipat initiation can be dangerous both to
the disciple to the guru and to the disciple. Using the analogy again, it is
easier to light a fire than to light it in such a way that it has a carefully
managed burning.
Therefore, it is desirable that the guru be empowered to give
shaktipat by his own guru and has been trained in an unbroken lineage back to a
great master who was fully aware of the science of shaktipat. In this way some
quality control is maintained.
Return to table of contents
Who can receive shaktipat?
There are even more opinions on this. Some gurus take an
attitude of: ``Initiate them all and let shakti sort them out.'' Traditionally
teachers were quite selective about who received shaktipat. Sometimes shaktipat
was only given to one or two disciples in a generation. Among gurus these days
you can see these two extremes of opinion and many other gradations in between.
What is clear that some people who have received shaktipat from well-known gurus
have apparently only manifested greater neuroses and unhappiness in their lives
as a result. See the questions regarding kriyas below (What
are kriyas?).
Return to table of contents
Are all shaktipat initiations the same?
There are many ways of classifying shaktipat initiations but
a method used by Swami Vishnu Tirth is very simple and clear. In shaktopaya
initiations the kundalini shakti of the disciple is awakened by the guru. In
shambhavopaya initiations the kundalini shakti of the disciple is awakened
and led up through the bodies energy centers bringing a glimpse of the highest
realization. Due to the current state of disciples, and contemporary gurus,
almost all initiations can be termed shaktopaya initiations.
Some contemporary yoga teachers and gurus lump a wide variety
of phenomenon under the term ``shaktipat.'' For example, I have seen teachers of
Kriya Yoga infuse their students with their shakti at various stages of the
student's practice with the purpose of eliminating blocks in the student's
channels. These teachers called this practice ``shaktipat initiation.''
According to the tradition of Siddha Mahayoga such infusions are not considered
``shaktipat initiations'' because neither their aim or their result is to awaken
kundalini. Moreover, the resulting practices are not Siddha Mahayoga because
after these infusions of shakti the student returns to their original practice,
such as Kriya Yoga.
Return to table of contents
Can one receive shaktipat just by being in the presence of
those with awakened shakti?
There is no doubt that shakti is contagious. The mere
presence of a single being whose shakti is strongly active can awaken the shakti
of those around him. Similarly being in the presence of many people whose shakti
is awakened to some degree can awaken one's own shakti.
Return to table of contents
So what happens after shaktipat? What's the practice of
Siddha Mahayoga?
The unique perspective of Siddha Mahayoga is that because
kundalini is an intelligent force it will, upon awakening, naturally direct the
practice of the student. All that is required is that the student completely
surrender to this force. As a result of kundalini's unfoldment spontaneous
purifying movements, called kriyas will occur. In addition the practices
of Hatha, Laya and Raja Yoga will naturally manifest. Because all other yogas
naturally manifest as a result of kundalini awakening this yoga is called ``Mahayoga''
or ``great yoga.'' Because the kundalini awakening is induced by a perfected
individual or ``Siddha'' this yoga is called ``Siddha Mahayoga.'' Because all
other yogas and their results occur spontaneously (``sahaja'') and without
effort this yoga is also called ``Sahaja Yoga.''
Even to reach the point of simply surrendering to shakti
takes some practice for people. Some aids in cultivating surrender are chanting
and selfless service. These practices open the heart and make one more
susceptible to the influence of shakti.
Return to table of contents
What are kriyas?
Kriyas, literally ``activities'', are spontaneous movements
that occur after kundalini awakening. These include bodily activities such as
trembling, shaking and spontaneous yoga postures; vocal activities such as
yelling, or spontaneous chanting and mental activities such as visions. These
kriyas eliminate the blocks to kundalini rising within the spine or central
channel.
Return to table of contents
How do kriyas purify one's consciousness?
Blocks, known as samskaras or impressions, do not just
obstruct kundalini, but they embody attachments, conceptions and other mental
afflictions that limit the freedom of our consciousness. Left unattended these
attachments lead to actions which only reinforce the attachment. For example if
we have impressions of anger then we will manifest anger in our activities which
only reinforce our impressions. As kundalini rises it will purify the anger and
as a result of the purification process the kriyas will occur. Speaking of
kundalini as an intelligent force which manifests its intelligence in particular
activities, such as spontaneous yoga postures, to purify the blocks to its
progress may sound a little mystical but there is a less mystical way of
understanding what that means.
In our common language there are many colloquial phrases
which allude to the natural state of our body-mind as being ``straight'' or
``upright'' and the unnatural state being ``kinky'' or ``entangled.'' We say
positively: ``He's an upright individual.'' ``She's as straight as an arrow.''
We say negatively: ``He's too kinky. He's all tangled up in himself.'' ``She's
tangled up in knots.'' There seems to be some subtle awareness of the value of
straightness. So it seems to be a good metaphor to view our mind-body continuum
as a garden hose and the kundalini as water running through it. If you have a
moderately tangled garden house a simple way of making it straight is to
increase the pressure of water through it. As you do so the hose will naturally
flip around to straighten itself. To an observer it might seem as though the
hose itself were intelligent in the way it straightens itself and in fact
because the motion of the hose is governed by physical laws it does reflect a
deep intelligence.
In the same way we don't need to think of the kundalini as an
independent autonomous force cogitating as to what asana, pranayama or verbal
activity might purify a block inside us. It seems more useful to think of
kundalini as a natural intelligent force whose natural movement untangles the
knots which limit its expression.
The garden hose analogy makes another point clear as well.
Imagine what happens if the hose is very tangled. Turning up the water pressure
may be a very dramatic and perhaps even counter-productive process. This seems
to be what is happening in a number of cases where individuals, after receiving
shaktipat, may have severe mental breakdowns. Thus it does seem to be important
for individuals to have a certain level of stability and preparation before
receiving shaktipat initiation.
Return to table of contents
Are these kriyas some sort of self-hypnosis or some sort of
New Age phenomenon?
This yoga is at least 1000 years old and is documented in the
Kularnava Tantra and in the works of the great Tantric scholar Abhinvagupta and
particular forms of kriyas can be found there. Some popular yogis and scholars
have doubted the authenticity of this path but none who have done so show any
familiarity with the classical literature of this tradition. This approach has
gone under many names such as siddha yoga, sahaja yoga, mahayoga or siddha
mahayoga. Similar phenomena to kriyas also occur among some Qi Gong students.
Spontaneous trembling, shaking, verbal noises, and body movements are common
there as well.
Nevertheless gatherings of siddha mahayoga practitioners
share many of the same characteristics of any other group gathering. Some people
will try to fit in by emulating the behavior of those around them. There is no
doubt that some people may feel the need to affect kriyas and others will
accentuate kriyas that they have. This may not even be conscious behavior. Gurus
of this yoga must try to maintain a balance between interfering with the
activity of the kundalini as manifested in the kriyas and encouraging the
affectation of kriyas because kriyas are seen as ``progress.'' Ultimately the
validity of any spiritual tradition rests in its ability to transform the beings
of its followers. The real value of siddha mahayoga is in transforming the minds
of those who practice it.
Return to table of contents
Haven't a number of well-known teachers criticized kriyas?
Don't they say that kundalini is a force that needs control?
Some teachers do speak that way. For example the well known
kundalini yoga teacher, Yogi Bhajan, apparently called the process of
experiencing kriyas ``jerk yoga.'' Tibetan practitioners of gTummo yoga, Indian
practitioners of kriya yoga and other noted authorities on the kundalini yoga
process have clearly emphasized to me the importance of carefully controlling
the kundalini process and not allowing the kundalini to act uncontrollably.
Their sincere words cast doubt on my practice for many years.
So why do these teachers say these things? To be an adept of
kundalini yoga practices does not imply that you are omniscient. All the
information that people like Yogi Bhajan are really conveying is that in their
experience in their style of practicing kundalini yoga the kundalini is
controlled. I do not believe that they have special insight into other
alternative ways of approaching the practice of kundalini yoga. Some people have
quite frightening movements in meditation and without prior experience of kriyas
the natural reaction is that such a person will almost certainly become
physically or mentally unstable. Experienced masters of Siddha Mahayoga, such as
Swami Shivom Tirth, have seen it all before and their simple counsel is: ``Do
not resist kriyas in any way.''
For the individual who does surrender to the kriyas of
kundalini shakti the perspective is radically different from the view espoused
by teachers such as Yogi Bhajan. For the individual who spontaneously and
effortlessly performs kriyas such as intricate pranayamas, asanas and bandhas
during their meditation the intentional exercises of the Hatha yogin are a
merely a clumsy mockery of the subtle activity of kundalini. In fact some claim
that the entire corpus of Hatha yoga, as well as many of the Qi Gong exercises
are simply imitations and classifications of the spontaneous movements of the
Siddha Mahayogin.
Return to table of contents
16. What is the philosophy of Siddha Mahayoga?
Perhaps its best to say that contemporary forms of Siddha
Mahayoga have a core of underlying tenets but not a philosophy. These tenets
include: the central role of kundalini in the manifestation of the universe and
the evolution of the individual and the culmination of the evolution of the
individual in a state of complete unity.
Different teachers have exposited Siddha Mahayoga in
different ways. Swami Muktananda drew on a wide variety of Indian literature but
principally relied upon the Shiva Sutras, the Spanda Karikas and other
literature of the Trika school of Shaivism. Swami Shivom Tirth has also relied
up on the Shiva Sutras to define the different stages of evolution. Both Swami
Shivom Tirth and Swami Kriplavananda have used Patanjali's Yoga Sutras for their
elucidation of the states of samadhi. All of these teachers are quick to note
that the use of these scriptures does not imply that Siddha Mahayoga is a form
of Hinduism. Instead the emphasis is that each of us has the force of kundalini
within us and having awakened the kundalini our life and religious practice will
be enriched.
There are really only a few tenets of the practice of siddha
mahayoga. The first is that the process begins with shaktipat initiation by the
guru. This initiation may begin with a formal request from the disciple and
culminate with a formal initiation ceremony or it may occur informally through a
impromptu manifestation of the guru's grace in intention, glance, word or touch.
Through the initiation the kundalini shakti is awakened and begins to move in
the disciple's body. The practice then consists of deeply surrendering to the
spontaneous manifestations of kundalini shakti, as described above.
Return to table of contents
What is the precise role of the guru in Siddha Mahayoga?
The role of the guru is laid out in the text the Shiva Sutras
where it says ``gururupaya''; the guru is the means. Because it is the guru who
awakens your kundalini the guru is given great reverence in this tradition. The
awakening of kundalini that many people struggle, with effort and danger, to
accomplish in a lifetime a true guru can accomplish in a few seconds.
Nevertheless the role of a guru is to awaken the kundalini within you; then the
practice takes place between you and your kundalini. The guru is a facilitator
in the process of awakening kundalini not an ongoing intermediary between the
disciple and kundalini.
With respect to the guru the classical Shaivist literature
takes an especially pragmatic attitude. Classical literature of Shaivism, such
as the Shiva Purana, states that if after one year the disciple has not arrived
at some direct inner experience through the agency of the guru then there is no
fault in seeking another guru. What I read from this is that this path is not
one of years of wondering : ``Is something happening?'' but a practical approach
in which one should, through the grace of the guru, be brought into direct
experience of kundalini.
Return to table of contents
Is Transcendental Meditation a kind of Siddha Yoga?
In Transcendental Meditation practice individuals are given a
mantra. If one believes that this mantra, through the preliminary puja,
is``awakened'' or infused with consciousness then this technique is precisely
the same method that is used by some teachers to initiate their studentsinto the
practice of kundalini yoga. The idea as exposited by these kundalini yoga
teachers is that the consciousness of the mantra resonates with the the
slumbering kundalini and awakens her. This is not the same as the exposition of
the Transcendental Meditation practice nor is it straightforward to resolve
these two models of mantra meditation.
In practice many TM practitioners experience kundalini
awakening. Some experience it quite violently. Survey books on kundalini
experience, such as Sannella's _The Kundalini Experience_ contain many such case
histories although these case histories are not comprehensive enough to indicate
what other factors might have led to the kundalini awakening. Through checking
notes and Teacher Training Courses TM checkers and teachers are minimally
prepared for the possibility of kundalini awakening. So while not entirely
outside the range of TM practice one would assume that a strong kundalini
awakening is not central to TM practice or a high probability result.
In the use of the flying sutra in the TM Sidhis program it is
much more the norm to have kundalini related experiences. Many, perhaps most,
Sidhas will experience a wide range of activities, technically know as kriyas
during the practice. The mechanism by which the flying sutra actually awakens
the kundalini is unknown to me. I'd be interested to hear any explanations.
Return to table of contents
20. Who gives shaktipat initiation?
The technique of Siddha Mahayoga is taught in a number of
ashrams and centers in India, the United States and around the world. The
following is a list of known centers in the United States and each of these
serves as one of the principal seats of the teacher . Not every teacher who
employs shaktipat in their teaching is listed here; this list is limited to
those who teach the practice of Siddha Mahayoga as outlined in this FAQ.
Although I am no expert or authority on any of these
teachers, where I have some first-hand information I thought it would be useful
to add it - it may be a bit anecdotal for some tastes. If anyone finds any of
the information below is inaccurate PLEASE INFORM ME and I will update it. Good
luck!
Swami Shivom Tirth/Swami Shiv Mangal Tirth
Swami Shivom Tirth Ashram
26 High Road
Pond Eddy, NY 12770
email: sstirth@hotmail.com
Swami Shivom Tirth Web Page
Swami Shivom Tirth is the successor to Swami Vishnu Tirth who
wrote the well known reference on Siddha Mahayoga entitled Devatma Shakti.
First brought to the United States by the well known Qi Gong teacher Bruce Kumar
Frantzis, Swami Shivom Tirth discretely visited the United States for over
twenty years. Those who met him were introduced to him by other students or were
already his students in India.
The majority of Swami Shivom Tirth's students are Indians,
either living in the United States or in India, but there is a good percentage
of Westerners as well. Swami Shivom Tirth is now going into retirement to
meditate and write. He will no longer give initiations. He has left a few
ashrams in India and his named successor, Swami Shiv Mangal Tirth, runs a small
ashram in Sparrow Bush, NY where he gives shaktipat to qualified students. The
lineage of these teachers, extending now into its sixth generation is perhaps
the longest lived of any of the contemporary teachers of Siddha Mahayoga. I have
had the good fortune to spend a few weeks with these teachers over the last four
years and have been personally impressed by the great spiritual purity, the high
level of integrity and great depth of practical knowledge of these teachers.
Perhaps because of the relative maturity of their lineage these teachers seem to
have the fullest understanding of the path of Siddha Mahayoga among contemporary
teachers.
Anandi Ma is the named successor to Shri Dhyanyogi
Madhusudhanandaji. Shri Dhyanyogi's precise lineage in unknown to me. He was
initiated by a mysterious yogi in Mt. Abu in Rajasthan state by the name of Shri
Yogiraj Parameshwardasji. The predecessors of Parameshwardasji are unknown to
me. Anandi Ma lives in Antioch, CA with her husband Dileepji who was also a
student of Shri Dhyanyogi. Meeting Shri Dhyanyogi at a very young age Anandi Ma
passed very quickly into advanced states of samadhi. Shri Dhyanyogi subsequently
began to train her to become a teacher in her own right. Anandi Ma gives
shaktipat initation in various locations around the Bay Area and the rest of the
country. Personally, I have only attended one of Anandi Ma's lectures but I have
a few friends who have known her since she was a child and vouch for her
genuineness and integrity. The Dhyanyoga Center's web site gives an excellent
overview of their teachers and programs.
Swami Chidvilasananda
Siddha Yoga Dham of America
1107 Stanford Ave.
Oakland, CA 94608
(510) 655-8677
or
SYDA Foundation
371 Brickman Rd.
PO Box 600
South Fallsburg, NY 12770-0600
(914) 434-2000
Swami Muktananda is the man responsible for the great level
of awareness of siddha mahayoga that there is today. Muktananda tapped into a
vast storehouse of shakti to give shaktipat to dozens of people at a time. In
1974 I sat cross legged in a retreat house in Indiananpolis, Indiana with a few
new students and a number of disciples from around the world. As Swami
Muktananda walked by he stroked my forehead a few times. As he did a blue light
streamed down from my forehead and an energy was awakened within me that
immediately set my body trembling. In this simple but direct way my kundalini
was unmistakably and irresistibly awakened and I joined the thousands of people
who were thus introduced to siddha mahayoga by Swami Muktananda. Because of his
nearly unrivalled ability to deeply and directly awaken other's kundalini Swami
Muktananda's world movement rapidly grew. In particular the Siddha Yoga Dham of
America (SYDA) grew quickly around the United States with major ashrams in South
Fallsburg, New York and Oakland, California. Thousands of people are currently
involved in SYDA today and many people from all walks of life are always happy
to confirm the value that siddha yoga, as taught within SYDA, has brought to
their life. Nevertheless, there is another side to the history of this
organization.
A young woman known as Shri Yogini Malti Devi served as Swami
Muktananda's translator for many years and shortly before his death in October
1982 Swami Muktananda passed on his lineage to Yogini Malti Devi (who became a
renunciant under the name Swami Chidvilasananda) and her brother Swami
Nityananda (see below). Unfortunately much controversy hung over this movement
from Swami Muktananda's last days and a very critical article was published in
CoEvolution Quarterly in Winter 1983, one year after Swami Muktananda's death.
After Swami Muktananda was succeeded by Swami Nityananda and Swami
Chidvilasananda controversy continued and Swami Nityananda admitted to conduct
that was inappropriate for a Swami and spiritual leader. On November 3, 1985 in
a public ceremony Swami Nityananda formally renounced his status as a renunciant
and was removed from his position within SYDA. Later in the press (The
Illustrated Weekly of India, March 16-22, 1986) Swami Nityananda contended that
his abdication was due to his own concern that resistance to Swami
Chidvilasananda's wishes might cause further dissension and even bloodshed. More
recently in a New Yorker article of November 14, 1994, Liz Harris wrote an
investigative article that was very critical of SYDA.
Currently the brother and sister now run independent groups.
Swami Chidvilasananda runs the prospering SYDA and Swami Nityananda runs a small
center in Pine Bush, New York. Personally I have never been able to reconcile
the many problems and controversies surrounding these teachers and SYDA with my
own direct experience of Swami Muktananda. All I know is that Swami Muktananda
gave me a great gift and I am grateful. Pressed to form my own opinon regarding
such a diversity of different perspectives and information, I can only compare
Swami Muktananda to a natural phenomenon or to nature itself. Every day in
nature we see the full range of creation, maintenance and dissolution around us.
We can judge nature, but that neither diminishes her power nor enriches our
experience of her.
Swami Nityananda
Shanti Mandir
Pine Bush, NY
(914)-744-6462
http://www.shantimandir.com/guruji.htm
I do not know at what time Swami Nityananda began to teach
again but he now has a center in Pine Bush and he gives intensives around the
country.
Swami Chetanananda
Nityananda Ashram
P. O. Box 13310
Portland, OR 97213
(503) 231-0383
http://http://www.europa.com/~ni/
Swami Rudrananda (born Albert Rudolph) was an American
disciple of the south Indian Avadhuta known as Bhagavan Nityananda. Swami
Rudrananda also received sannyas diksa (initiation as a swami) from Swami
Muktananda. The American Swami later broke with Muktananda.
Swami Chetanananda (born Michael Shoemaker) was the closest
disciple of Rudrananda and ran his ashram in Bloomington, Indiana. Swami
Rudrananda died unexpectedly in an airplane crash in late 1973 and Michael
Shoemaker began to consolidate Swami Rudrananda's various ashrams. Michael
Shoemaker received sannyas diksha in the Saraswati order of the Danda sannyasis
from Swami Muktananda and was named Swami Chetanananda. Swami Chetanananda moved
his prospering ashram first from Bloomington, Indiana to Boston, Massachusetts
and most recently to Portland, Oregon.
I only had the opportunity to attend one lecture by Swami
Rudrananda but found him to be a man of immense power and although I have only
met Swami Chetanananda a few times I can personally attest to the fact that
Swami Chetanananda carries the same power and intensity of his teacher. Swami
Chetanananda has worked hard to express the practical down-to-earth wisdom of
Swami Rudrananda within the vast theoretical framework of the philosophy of
Trika Shaivism.
Recently I had the opportunity to visit Swami Chetanananda's
Portland Ashram. The Ashram is a beautiful and powerful tribute to Swamiji's
commitment to maintaining the tradition of his lineage. Earlier I had been
unclear on Swamiji's precise approach to his teaching. In particular I was
unclear about the role of effort and his attitude toward kriyas but on this
visit Swamiji was kind enough to clarify that his approach to practice is
precisely that of Siddha Mahayoga.
Swami Shankarananada
Shiva Ashram
27 Tower Road
Mount Eliza, Victoria 3930
Australia
phone: (613) 9775-2568;
fax (613) 9775-2591;
email swamiji@ibm.net
Swami Shanakarananda was one of the sannyasis initiatied by
Swami Muktananda before Swami Muktanananda's death and was at one time an
influential individual within Swami Muktananda's organization, the Siddha Yoga
Dham of America (SYDA). Unfortunately I have not had the opportunity to meet him
but I have enjoyed an electronic correspondance with him.The following is a
distillation of my electronic conversations with Swami Shankarananda and his
students.
Swami Shankarananda left SYDA in 1986 and he subsequently ran
the Shiva Insitute in Santa Monica for four years. The Swami ran the Melbourne
ashram for SYDA for three years in the early '80's and in 1990 he was invited by
a group of Australian devotees to do a tour. It was so successful and they were
so happy to see him again that they invited him to return permanently. In 1991
they organised an association called Shiva Meditation Centre and Swamiji was
granted residency. The Shiva Centre is residential, 5 to 7 people at any given
time. Swamiji runs courses and holds satsang on Saturday evenings.
Swamiji teaches a form of self-inquiry he calls the Shiva
Process which is an assimilation of everything he learned from Baba Muktananda
with an emphasis on the relationship between thought, feeling and the shakti. He
does private meditation sessions and runs Shiva Process groups 3-4 times a week.
The Shiva Process works with the contraction and expansion of energy in the
chakras. Thoughts and feelings which show up in the chakras are. By using
awareness to investigate which thoughts create an expansion and which thoughts
create contractions insight into the various unconscious negative tendencies
that we carry within us can be gained. The Shiva Process is powerful and
non-dogmatic. It focuses on the individual's experience of themselves and their
relationship to the shakti within them.
Like Swami Chetanananda, Swami Shambhavananda was originally
a student of Swami Rudrananda's who subsequently received initiation into the
renunciate order by Swami Muktananda. Swami Shambhavananda began teaching for
Swami Rudrananda in 1972 and was subsequently empowered to give shaktipat
initiation by Swami Muktananda after their meeting in 1983. Swami Shambhavanada
operates a residential ashram in Eldorado Springs, Colorado and a rural retreat
center, called Shoshoni Yoga Retreat Center, up in the mountains near
Rollinsville, Colorado.
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21. Where can I learn more?
Good introductory survey:
White, John (Editor) (1990). Kundalini - Evolution and
Enlightenment. New York: Paragon House.
Selected works by the teachers mentioned. These are available
from the respective centers. (I am aware that each of these teachers has
published numerous works):
Chetanananda, S. (1991). Dynamic Stillness. Cambridge,
Massachusetts: Rudra Press.
Madhusudanasji, Dhyangyogi (1978). Light on Meditation.
Muktananda, Swami (1989b). From the Finite to the Infinite
(First ed.). Volumes I &II, South Fallsburg, NY: Siddha Yoga Dham of America
Foundation.
Tirtha, Swami Vishnu (1980b). Devatma Shakti (Fifth ed.).
Rishikesh: Yoga Shri Peeth Trust.
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