katomic
08-28-2005, 08:05 AM
dont laugh but try this when kicking
when close to enlghtenment monks sometimes get a drip from the roof of there mouth some call it nector the pilturaty gland is located just above the roof of the back of your mouth i do belive this is wher our natural opates r made
some non yogies clame of high states when sucking the roof of ther mouth the yogi way is a bit extream for us but i thort i put it in hear
In the yogic traditions there is a mudra or position of the tongue
that is called "Kechari mudra". I would not try to do this mudra
in full without proper training / guidance from an expert / guru.
Little by little the frenulum, or under tendon
of the tongue is cut over a period of time. Until the tongue is
completely
free to move. After this the tongue is slowly pulled and the tissue
is elongated. This will in time allow the tongue to enter through the
soft palette and up into the nasal cavity. This in turn stimulates
the Ajna center and the 3rd ventricle of the brain producing a state
of ananda or bliss. This also closes an energy circuit which is
normally kept open by the mouth/tongue.
To give a specific example of this we can look at nature, more
specifically we can look at frogs. Frogs don't actually hibernate but
they
estivate. Estivate: To pass time in a dormant or torpid state.
Frogs do this naturally by placing there tongue into the nasal cavity,
creating the energetic shift, and this dormant state. There are monks
in
India that have practiced this technique for years and like frogs can
place themselves in a dormant state. To prove this they will bury
themselves
for weeks at a time.
Additionally this mudra can be practiced with benefit without cutting
the
frenulum. By placing the tongue into the soft palette. Depending on
your
particular anatomy, this will decide the difficulty. In time the tongue
will naturally elongate to some degree.
38. The Yogi who sits for a minute turning his tongue upwards, is saved
from
poisons, diseases, death, old age, etc.
39. He who knows the Kechari Mudra is not afflicted with disease,
death,
sloth, sleep, hunger, thirst, and swooning.
40. He who knows the Kechari Mudra, is not troubled by diseases, is not
stained with karmas, and is not snared by time.
41. The Siddhas have devised this Kechari Mudra from the fact that the
mind
and the tongue reach akasa by its practice.
worth a try when kicking?
just shering the knowlidge
when close to enlghtenment monks sometimes get a drip from the roof of there mouth some call it nector the pilturaty gland is located just above the roof of the back of your mouth i do belive this is wher our natural opates r made
some non yogies clame of high states when sucking the roof of ther mouth the yogi way is a bit extream for us but i thort i put it in hear
In the yogic traditions there is a mudra or position of the tongue
that is called "Kechari mudra". I would not try to do this mudra
in full without proper training / guidance from an expert / guru.
Little by little the frenulum, or under tendon
of the tongue is cut over a period of time. Until the tongue is
completely
free to move. After this the tongue is slowly pulled and the tissue
is elongated. This will in time allow the tongue to enter through the
soft palette and up into the nasal cavity. This in turn stimulates
the Ajna center and the 3rd ventricle of the brain producing a state
of ananda or bliss. This also closes an energy circuit which is
normally kept open by the mouth/tongue.
To give a specific example of this we can look at nature, more
specifically we can look at frogs. Frogs don't actually hibernate but
they
estivate. Estivate: To pass time in a dormant or torpid state.
Frogs do this naturally by placing there tongue into the nasal cavity,
creating the energetic shift, and this dormant state. There are monks
in
India that have practiced this technique for years and like frogs can
place themselves in a dormant state. To prove this they will bury
themselves
for weeks at a time.
Additionally this mudra can be practiced with benefit without cutting
the
frenulum. By placing the tongue into the soft palette. Depending on
your
particular anatomy, this will decide the difficulty. In time the tongue
will naturally elongate to some degree.
38. The Yogi who sits for a minute turning his tongue upwards, is saved
from
poisons, diseases, death, old age, etc.
39. He who knows the Kechari Mudra is not afflicted with disease,
death,
sloth, sleep, hunger, thirst, and swooning.
40. He who knows the Kechari Mudra, is not troubled by diseases, is not
stained with karmas, and is not snared by time.
41. The Siddhas have devised this Kechari Mudra from the fact that the
mind
and the tongue reach akasa by its practice.
worth a try when kicking?
just shering the knowlidge