Meditation: The Toroidal Field of the Heart

Unknown“Centered attention on the movement and activity of the heart, including stillness, is the foundation of biodynamic (craniosacral) practice, as I teach it.” Michael J. Shea. Unknown-1

In a previous post we introduced the torus as one of the most fundamental shapes in nature. Now we will begin to explore variations on a meditation centered on the toroidal field of energy emanating from and pouring into the human heart, and the ever present stillness that underlies all movement.

This will help begin the awakening of the light body, which we will then integrate with the sound (energy) body in the form of vibration, and the physical or structural body in the form of flesh, bones, water, organs and cells, so the three bodies can function as a whole, in stillness. Stabilizing the light body energy is the next and crucial step in the process of transforming human consciousness.06b3d1b8dea9

Step 1: Find a comfortable position for the meditation. Any sitting posture will do. Feel tall, wide and soft. Relax and drop everything into the breath. Release the breath and let it flow as effortlessly as possible.

Step 2: Bring your attention to your heart. The physical heart will do, although you can also use the heart chakra or the space just behind the physical heart to rest your awareness. imagesGetting in the ballpark is good enough. Feel the energy here. It may be warm, vibrant, expansive, fluid. If the heart feels dark, heavy or unconsciousness, imagine a place in nature, or an experience in your life when your heart felt naturally soft and open. Nurture this feeling. Invite gratitude and loving kindness to arise. Feel that the heart is your center, your true home.

3. Now invite your heart energy to feel that is sits at the center of a torusheart-energy with openings up to the heavens and down into the earth. Imagine your heart energy in the form of love, travels down through the bottom opening, through your root chakra, (the muladhara,) into the earth, dropping and spreading as it unites with all the layers and levels of Mother Earth. Allow your love to embrace all. Feel rooted, grounded and stable. find the stillness of Mother Earth and rest here.

4. Now allow the energies of Mother Earth, in the form of love and nurturing, to rise up into the center of the torus, through your root chakra, to the heart. feel the heart as a lens focusing the earths energies and send these throughout the body circulating around the toroidal field.torus-500x271

5. Now allow your heart to open to Father Sky, the heavens, sending love and well-being up to the moon, sun, stars, galaxies and onward, embracing the whole cosmos. Feel open, spacious and light. Find the heavenly stillness and rest there. Then receive the return of love from the heavenly realms pouring into your heart. Feel your heart full of love and send this on to your organs, cells, fluids and structures. Return to your heart and rest in the stillness there. Feel light, grounded, stable, centered, ready for the day.

Sacred Geometry: Yoga and the Torus

imagesThe torus is a three dimensional figure created by rotating a circle 360 degrees along a line formed by another circle. This is also known as a donut or bagel shape. The hole is one ‘inside’ and the interior of the donut (like the inside of a tire tube) is another ‘inside’.
These are static structures.

We can also imagine a toroidal shaped electromagnetic field generating a torus shapeheart-energy like this heart-centered one from
Asianhealthsecrets.com.
“The Hearts’ torus electromagnetic field is not the only source that emits this type of electromagnetic field. Every atom emits the same torus field. The Earth is also at the center of a torus, so is the solar system and even our galaxy…and all are holographic. Scientists believe there is a good possibility that there is only one universal torus encompassing an infinite number of interacting, holographic tori within its spectrum.”

Here is a larger torus centered on Jupiter and its moon, Io. Unknown-2

” Io’s volcanoes continually expel an enormous amount of particles into space, and these are swept up by Jupiter’s magnetic field at a rate of 1,000 kg/sec. This material becomes ionized in the magnetic field and forms a doughnut-shaped track around Io’s orbit called the Io Plasma Torus.” (planetaryexploration.net)

torus1Here is one with a vesica pisces! Very cool! The original, by artist and planetary healer Pamela Leigh Richards is  quite dynamic. (http://flywithmeproductions.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/torus1.gif.

Another cosmic one appears in the current edition of National Geographic 10i-solar-system-ice-giant-ort-cloud-150(July 2013) in an article on the origins of the solar system. This side oriented torus represents the Oort Cloud’ a collection of trillions of comets and mini planets toroidally spinning around the solar system, seen here in red.

This reminded me of Itzak Bentov’s torus describing his model of the whole cosmos.images This can be found in both “Stalking the Wild Pendulum” and “A Cosmic Book, for those who want to look a bit more deeply into this.

And, for the piece de resistance, I offer the first cell division, where a single cell becomes two cells.
Notice the energy flow and the opening of the toroidal field as the poles (centrioles) separate. For your cosmic homework, as you sit in your favorite pose, Find your heart in the center and visualze the heart’s electro-magnetic field. Find the 1st chakra and open it to the earth’s energy. Find the 7th chakra opening to the heavens. Then allow the heavens to pass through the donut hole into the earth and the earths energies to pass through you to the heavens. Find the balance of stability (sthira) and flow (sukham) as the torus links your atoms to the cosmos and vice versa.

Then explore the energetic shift from one cell to two and then the reverse, from two to one. Develop some flexibility in both directions. Find the torus and the vesica pisces. We will build upon this in upcoming embryology sections.

And most importntly, Smile. Enjoy the show. And, to quote the poet Mary Oliver, ‘Pay attention!, Be astounded! Tell about it!

Minneapolis notes: part 2

Patanjali, in his three sutras on asana, unfolds the whole process of somatic awakening. Although most commentators gloss over these as being just about ‘physical postures’, those of us who deeply inhabit the world of organic intelligence can use them to discover Patanjali’s (and Iyengars’) genius in increasingly amazing ways.

sthira sukham asanam; prayatna shaithiliyananta samaapattibhyaam; tato dvandvaah anabhighaatah: II-46, II -47, II-48

Sthira sukham asanam: stability and mobility in perfect harmony is asana. Sthira is easy; Stable, steady, steadfast. Sukham is a more elusive word; comfortable is the most commonly found translation, but it does not convey the depth of the experience possible or the profundity of Patanjali’s statement. From a cosmic perspective, all forms, at least in their healthiest expressions, from atoms to galaxies and everything in between, from simple to complex, abide in a dynamic state of balance between the poles of stability and mobility.  Without stability, there is chaos and no forms can exist. Without mobility there is stagnation and the forms collapse from degeneration. Patanjali also uses the terms tamas, rajas and sattva in reference to the world of forms; tamas is the tendency to remain the same, Newton’s inertia of rest, which can be stability or stagnation. Rajas is the tendency to change, Newton’s inertia of motion, which can be harmony or chaos. Sattva describes the state of dynamic balance when rajas and tamas communicate with each other openly and freely. This is sthira sukham, the perfect dynamic balance of form and freedom

For the somatically inclined yogi, the ultimate ‘sthira’ is gravity, the bond that holds the whole cosmos together. Gravity does not get tired, does not run down. It is very stable. To be one with gravity is to be fully alive. See Philip Petit in the documentary ‘Man on a Wire’ to get a taste of this. Your tadasana will never be the same. Buddha, upon his enlightenment, was said to have touched the earth, as his witness, acknowledging the infinite bond gravity offered him.

A practical clue for stability in postural balance is to mobilize and stabilize the tarsal bones in the feet, especially the cuboid and navicular bones. The bones of the human foot channel the energy the way all mammals do, like this dog. The energy travels along the metatarsals and out into the toes, like the ballet pointe position. But, we also have to release the heel bones down to allow the whole foot to be grounded. Here the student is transitioning onto the foot while maintaining the core elongation. the weight is over the tarsal bones and they allow the energy to flow both toward the toes and toward the heel.  If and when she straightens the leg, it will come from the inside, using the stability of the foot, not the quads.

II- 47: Prayatna shaithilyaananta samaapattibhyaam; Letting go of effort and dissolving into ananta, Vishnu’s serpent throne, or Vishnu himself, the one who sustains the whole universe. The universe is intelligence manifest. Life is intelligence manifest. When the human mind stops imposing and allows the feminine, the prana shakti,  to emerge in her full glory, magic happens. Flowers bloom, birds sing, creativity flows. The postures are expressions of the infinite, not a preliminary stage on the way to somewhere else. But when we impose willfully, without deep sensitivity, confusion is sustained and we forget. It is a tricky balance, returning to a living dynamic balance from the habits of tension (rajas) and collapse (tamas), as our modern culture, highly dissociated from life, lives in a world of mind/abstraction disconnected from heart wisdom. The poses can be healing if we see how they bring us home, to our inherent wholeness.

II- 48: tato dvandvaah anabhighaatah: Then (with the somatic aliveness of an awakened pose as expressed in the previous two sutras) the dvandvas resolve. Duality resolves. The non-dual wholeness of forms and the formless shines clearly. Purnamadah purnamidam. Many of the Patanjali Yoga Sutras, using the Sankhya metaphysical model, are dualistic in nature, but I – 3 and this one lay the non-dual right out for all to realize. Of course! Emaho!

Continuing the asana sequence from ‘Minneapolis Notes, part one‘, we come to one legged dog, as a continuation of ardha chandrasana. Lengthening the inner back leg from the core of body through the inner heel, simultaneously lengthen from the core through crown chakra to open chakra line from head to tail. Feel the grounding energy of the muladhara or root chakra trifurcating like Shiva’s trident, into the down leg, the up leg and your imaginary tail. This (muladhara extension) becomes the starting point for flipping the dog. Extend in as many directions as possible, through arms and legs, elbows and knees, head and tail. This leads to using the back leg to come up into hand stand. You can try from a front walk-over action to maximize the leg action, or start with hands on floor. Try to utilize the muladhara extension to get up, i.e., lead from your tail, not your head! There is a similar process for head balance in that the feet, legs and tail, the muladhara extension, lead the action.

Back on the floor, a variation of parvrtta parsvakonasana I call the starfish, with the front foot and thigh turned out to 90 degrees (more than this gentleman), allows another multi-vector exploration of

core and limbs. Experiment with differing angles of arms and degrees of torso rotation. Be playful and open. Don’t forget your tail.

Energy often gets stuck in the third chakra/diaphragm region and supported bridge pose is a wonderful way to help create space, width and length here.

Classically, the pose is done with extended legs, but you can also bend the knees and keep the feet on the floor, or place the feet against the wall to engage the Deep Front Line from its roots in the soles of the feet. Trace the energy up through the pelvis into the diaphragm. Try to find the openings in the diaphragm for the aorta and esophagus passing downwards and the inferior vena cava traveling upwards. From these openings, widen the upper chest and relax the shoulders. Release through the throat and into the skull.

To further work on opening neck and throat, check out the action in uttana padasana. As the pubic bones roll into the floor lengthening the front line, feel the skull bone rotating in the opposite direction lengthening the throat. Dynamic arms and legs keep the back muscles from contracting and keep the action in the interior connective tissue structures. For an even more fun way to open the throat, repeat ‘wow’ again and again, feeling the expending and condensing of the mouth extending through the throat.

If you are now ready to be reborn, lie on the floor with your head touching a wall. Keep the knees bent and the feet on the floor. Awakening the DFL with a slight activation of the feet and trace the flow back through the pelvis, diaphragm, throat, through the soft palate, and out through the crown chakra gently pressing the wall. Find the sphenoid – basilar junction at the base of the skull and feel it breathing. Imagine the urge to emerge rippling through your cells as the udana vayu is activated and you re-experience some of the patterns of birthing.

Chakra toning twist: Pick a seated twist of your choice, but before you decide which way to twist, ask your root chakra which way it wants to go, clock-wise or counter-clockwise. Set yourself up accordingly. Relax. As best you can, let the energy do the work. Try not to use the muscles. Let the energy turn the body until there is a natural pause. Invite the opposite rotation of the energy, like a pendulum reverses direction. Let the bones move as if they were floating in an eddy. Repeat. Let the first chakra drive the pose. At some point the two directions balance, the way a bouncing ball eventually settles down to the ground. Pause there, wherever the physical body may be.

Then, go to the sacral chakra, ask it which direction it prefers and let it turn. When it has completed its action invite the opposite. Repeat as above for each of the seven chakras. When complete, either rest in  savasana, or do a short twist in the opposite direction from which you started. Usually, the first round balances all. Now rest in savasana! Feel the open spaciousness, be the open spaciousness. Tada drashtuh svarupe avasthaanam.!