Category: Personal Growth

Sadhguru Nov 12, 2021

Why You Should be Wary of Energy Healing

The following piece originally appeared on a previous blog and is republished here as a prelude to a chapter of my book Mindfulness Meditation and the Art of Reiki, which explores the same topic in greater depth. It is a subject that genuinely deserves debate within the energy healing community. In the following video, Indian mystic, Sadhguru warns against the practice of energy healing. As a Reiki Master of 25 years, who has taught hundreds of students in different countries, I fully endorse what Sadhguru is saying. If you’re exploring whether Reiki itself is harmful or destabilising, I address that question directly in detail in this guide to whether Reiki is harmful. “Why would someone involved in energy healing, agree that energy healing is bad?” First, here is what Sadhguru had to say: If you are a Reiki practitioner or a Reiki Master, no doubt your hackles are up. They shouldn’t be. Sadhguru doesn’t say anything that contradicts the philosophy and tenets of the Reiki system. When I teach a Reiki class, I always make it clear to my students, that what I’m NOT doing is teaching them to be healers. They may well end up facilitating many healings, but they themselves won’t be healing anybody. I’ve facilitated many healings in the 25 years since I learned Reiki; physical healings, mental and emotional healings, and even environmental healings. But I’m not a healer and have no desire to be one. In the video, Sadhguru said: “All chronic illnesses are an indicator of a deeper problem that exists. If you erase the indicator it will find expression in some other way.” As an energy healer, you have no way of knowing what that deeper problem may be, or where it is located within the energetic matrix or physical body of the human being. Some believe that they can access this information and target the original cause. Mostly this is an expression of the ego because they can’t. The information pinpointing the original cause is certainly out there in the universal energy field (UEF) and within the energetic matrix of the human being. This information, however, when accessed by the energy healer, is filtered through the human mind and is subject to various influences: the perceptions of the ego, obscurations caused by our own imperfections, sensory data filtering as well as cultural, religious and time-specific influences. This all renders the originally pure information as potentially inaccurate or entirely wrong. Most people, most energy healers, do not have the spiritual connectivity, or spiritual awareness to read this information accurately, to know that it is being corrupted by themselves. Consequently, energy is manipulated, eradicated, replaced, basically fucked about with, by people who simply do not know what they are doing. In Reiki Jin Kei Do, there is an acknowledgment that the energy of Reiki is essentially an intelligent energetic life force. It knows, better than we do, what is required in a healing context. As a practitioner, therefore, it is important to allow this energy to do what is required without our limited conscious mind having any input because we simply do not know what is required to effect successful healing. So we ‘step the mind back’ out of the healing process. By engaging in meditation practice, called The Six Point Meditation we relinquish any conscious engagement in the healing process, and allow the energy to do whatever is required. The more we can remove our conscious intention to do this or do that in terms of healing, the more we allow the energy to do what is necessary. One of the problems we have as human beings is that we think we understand the nature of healing: There is a problem, let’s remove the problem, and healing is achieved. This is not always the case. We need to broaden our conception of what we mean by healing. Sometimes healing is not about removing the problem but allowing the problem to unfold. To allow it to teach us whatever is to be learned from the experience. Sometimes healing is about learning to lead a meaningful and happy, productive existence within the context of the problem. If we can do this, then the problem ceases to be a problem, and becomes a trigger for positive growth, for beneficial outcomes to manifest. So in Reiki, we don’t rip out the negative energy and replace it with positive energy. We encourage the transformation of this so-called negative energy, this health issue, to transform and take on a more positive aspect, by stepping our conscious minds out of the way and allowing to be, what is meant to be. To assume we understand what healing means; to assume we know how to fix a problem at its deepest pre-manifestation state is naive and childish. This is why Reiki is so dominant in the energy healing field. It has a much more sophisticated understanding of health and healing than other energy healing practices. If you want to heal the world, you start by being. You limit your amount of doing. Just being is very powerful. At its highest level, there is no contradiction between the words of Sadhguru, and the practice of Reiki when it is carried out correctly and in accordance with the foundations of the practice. Postscript: The original videos from which I quoted Sadhguru have been deleted from YouTube (unfortunately they are also referenced in my upcoming book). The video here presents some of the opinions that Sadhguru voiced in relation to the practice of energy healing, but not all.

The chakra system illustration Oct 12, 2021

The Ultimate Guide to the Chakra System

In some of my classes when the subject of the development of intuition within a spiritual practice comes up, I tell a story of when I was giving someone a Reiki/Buddho treatment and upon opening my eyes I could see all seven chakras spinning over the body of my client in the conventionally accepted colours that they are associated with. The question that arises from this experience is, why was I perceiving the chakras in this way, and why was I seeing specifically seven chakras and not some other number? I have no cultural or religious history to inform my understanding or perception of the human energy field. So where did this perception come from? My guess is that it was the product of spending too many years bumming around the New Age where I was picking up spiritual concepts based on the flotsam and jetsam that the New Age throws out after its finished raiding various spiritual traditions for their treasures. Sadly, the commonly known New Age version of the chakra system has very little to do with the original Hindu conception of them. The well-known seven chakra system is so pervasive now that even those who are not even that spiritually inclined, seem to have heard of it. It has developed over the years a fixed set of associations such as certain colours, crystals, attributes, even scents, and the Islamic names of God. It’s not meant to be this way. There are other ways of relating to the bio-field without recourse to thinking about chakras at all but even within the realm of the chakra-orientated, there needs to be a re-assessment of what it is we are actually dealing with here. The commonly understood version of the chakras in the West is based on the concepts of kundalini yoga and was first discussed in a 1919 book called The Serpent Power by the Englishman Arthur Avalon. Avalon’s books contained his own understandings of tantra, kundalini, and the chakras based on his translations of older Hindu texts. It is not very accurate in many of its details. Chakras or ‘channel wheels’ or ‘energy wheels’ as they are sometimes called, have associations with different parts of the body and are the interface between the physical and non-physical aspects of the human anatomy. Chakras play an important role in Tibetan Buddhism as well as in Hinduism. In the Tibetan Buddhist understanding of the chakra system, there are some major differences between the Buddhist and Hindu orientations to them. A Tibetan Buddhist would not commit himself to a static number of chakras as if they are inherently fixed and immutable. In the Tibetan system, depending on the practice you are engaged in, there could be four, five, seven, or ten chakras. Three of these chakras appear in all versions of the system, whilst the others tend to appear only when the practitioner is engaged in higher yogic practices such as Tummo (the practice of generating the inner furnace) or Completion Stage practices (where the subtle winds of the body are brought into the central channel to realise the state of the clear light of bliss and emptiness which ultimately leads to the realisation of enlightenment). The chakras are junction points for the three main energy channels that run along the spine: the central channel and the left and right channels which connect up the 72,000 nadis (streams of energy), allowing for a free flow of vital life-force through them. The classic five-chakra system in Buddhism was explained by HE Zasep Rinpoche whilst discussing the importance of the subtle body in healing practices: “We have crown chakra, we have throat chakra, heart chakra, navel chakra, and secret chakra. Five main chakras. These chakras all have different names. Crown chakra is called the ‘chakra of divine bliss.’ Throat chakra is the ‘chakra of enjoyment.’ Heart chakra is the ‘chakra of Dharma’ — or understanding. Navel chakra is the ‘chakra of manifestation’ or emanation. The secret chakra is the ‘chakra of holding bliss.” The three most important chakras are the crown, throat, and heart which are touched in devotional practices to the Buddha. The secret chakra is mostly limited to practices of Highest Yoga Tantra and the other two (or five, depending on the system) only referenced in very specialised practices. Reginald Ray had this to say in relation to the chakra system: “According to tantra, Enlightenment is fundamentally and originally present in the body. By putting one’s awareness in the body you find that the further down you go the more primordial, unconditioned, and unmanifest is the energy you encounter. The chakras begin at the perineum, which is the most primordial level of awareness, and as you go upwards they are more connected with expression. At the navel there is a sense of the earth, stability, and equanimity; at the heart is a feeling of warmth and compassion; the throat is about communication, expression, and connection; and the head is less a conceptual centre than a place where the energy reaches a crescendo. So the different chakras have very different feels.” The first three chakras are important as they relate to the body, speech, and mind. The crown chakra has a relationship to the body and is associated with activity in the physical world. The throat chakra is related to speech and more subtle activity such as in dreams. The heart chakra relates to the mind, centred on the heart (not the head where the brain sits). Working with the energy of these chakras is not something that is generally taught to outsiders within the Buddhist tradition because of the lack of understanding of their true nature and the inability of most to be able to relate to the chakras in a much more naked way than they would normally be used to. When working with the chakras we are essentially removing the coverings of our energy system to meet that powerful energy in a very direct way. When the ego is stripped
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Sep 20, 2021

What Have Spirit Guides got to do with Reiki?

The following piece is a reworking of an article I wrote for the Winter 2018 issue of Resonance, the UK Reiki Federation magazine. The issue presented here is still very relevant and possibly more so as Reiki makes inroads into other countries with other cultural and religious perspectives. Recently I checked out a piece in the UK Reiki Federation magazine and noticed mention of something called a Reiki Guide. I’ve come across references to such things before, but if you haven’t, you might think that a Reiki Guide is some sort of manual or book to help you with your practice. It’s not. It’s an invisible spirit helper that is there to guide you in your Reiki practice. Feel free to roll your eyes. It might be worth going back to basics with this one, to the origins of the system itself. The genius of Mikao Usui, the founder of the Reiki method, was that in distilling a set of practices and philosophies into what we now know of as Reiki, he created a personal development system that is deeply spiritual in nature, with healing capabilities. The system that he developed was completely secular in every sense. There were no Gods, no ascended masters (disembodied beings of dubious spiritual superiority to normal human beings that pontificate and spread their wisdom to those who can perceive their existence), no angels (beings that exist in the three Abrahamic religions of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam), no spirit guides (the same as Reiki Guides) and no other, other-dimensional beings of any kind. That’s how the system was in its early days in Japan before it came to the West. My Reiki teacher, Gordon Bell once told me that when you are teaching Reiki, in a sense what you are passing on to your students is a pure essence, like a clear glass of water, unpolluted by your own beliefs and religious or spiritual concepts. I hold that concept dear and always endeavour to do just that in my classes. Once you give someone as pure and as clear a spiritual essence as you can, they are then free to add their own flavour to it, whatever that might be. I have taught Christians who added Christianity to it. Muslims who added Islam to it. Buddhists who added Buddhism to it. Pagans who added paganism to it. Even people with no beliefs of any kind who added nothing to it. If that pure essence is, however, already polluted with your own spiritual concepts and beliefs, your students can’t add anything to it. At best, when they try, they end up with an even murkier mixture of spiritual flotsam and jetsam than they had to begin with. This is the road to ruin for the system of Reiki and one of the reasons it is, in some quarters, in such a dire condition now and so often ridiculed. Such a pity when we see how magical the pure system that Usui created was in its early days. It might not be a popular position to take in today’s Western Reiki Community, soaked as it is in a Judeo-Christian/New Age mythos, but the teaching of Reiki with the concept of Reiki Guides or spirit guides embedded in it is a profound corruption of the pure essence that Usui created. Not only are such beings not a part of the system, but they also have no useful function within it. In fact, when viewed from a certain perspective, their addition to the system can be seen as entirely and profoundly negative. In the West, there is an acceptance amongst some that Reiki Guides are a part of the system and that it is okay to teach about them in a class. As a personal practice, working with Reiki Guides (or reciting verses from the Bible or the Quran, the Rig Veda or the Heart Sutra, or channeling some other-worldly beings, or using crystals and pendulums and including psychic readings) might be your thing. But it isn’t a part of Usui’s system. There is a difference between your personal practice and orientation to Reiki and what you pass off as being an intrinsic part of Reiki when you teach it to others. One is acceptable, the other is not. The problem is that the West’s numerous distortions of Usui’s pure essence has slammed the door to exploring the Reiki method in the face of many people outside of the West. The Western-centric worldview is one that needs to be challenged. Not everyone in the world is on board with such concepts as spirit guides and ascended masters etc. I have been teaching Reiki for many years in different countries. In some of them, like Egypt, Sudan, Saudi Arabia, and Jordan, I have found myself having to defend the practice and reassure students because of what they read on the internet about spirit guides in Reiki. I have to make it very clear to them that the system of Reiki has absolutely nothing whatsoever to do with spirit guides and that this is a modern New Age Western bolt on to the system. Spirit guides, in these countries, are not necessarily seen as the benevolent beings that they are generally assumed to be in the West. Certainly, in Egypt, where the majority of my students are Muslim, the idea of spirit guides has sometimes raised genuine fear. Some have conflated these beings with the Muslim conception of the Djinn (also a part of Coptic Christian belief). The Djinn, according to Islamic lore, are responsible for human possession and are shapeshifters. They can influence your dreams and create nightmares. Not all Djinn are bad, however, but like human beings, they can be selfish, manipulative, egotistical, and power-crazed. There is the potential for harm. If the beings that Westerners refer to as spirit guides are not Djinn, then from the Arabian cultural context, it is assumed that this must be a reference to demonic forces of some kind. Again, something that
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