The ancient Vedic teachers taught Nada Brahma, the universe is vibration. The word Nada means sound or vibration. The vibratory field is at the root of all true spiritual experiences and scientific investigations. It is the same field of energy that saints, Buddhas, yogis, mystics, priests, shamans, and seers have observed by looking within themselves. It has been called Akasha, the Primordial Om, .. and a thousand other names throughout history...... In the ancient traditions of the East, it has been understood for thousands of years that all is vibration....You never see anything in its totality because it is made up of layer upon layer of vibration and it is constantly changing, exchanging information with Akasha.... everything is connected to the one vibratory source.
So why come along and put us through this game, starting practices that we become addicted to and tend to hold on to for life, only to come along later in life and have us lose our hold on them? A man seeking spiritual elevation and emancipation would first have to begin to work on dissolving his past Karma, which is an attachment, unknown to us until the Siddhas reveal it to us. He then has to build positive merits and virtues to free himself from the grip of the gross and slowly bring his vibration to a state of purity, subtleness, and fineness.
Annie Besant, in her talks on "The Laws of the Higher Life", Theosophical Publishing House, 1903, draws two distinct divisions of people and their brains.
"The coarser vibrations of the lower world and those adapted to it are one. The others are those who are in the front of evolution and of a subtler nature..."
She explains further that,
"The brain has to be changed, refined, improved, its connecting links fashioned and manufactured for the purposes of the expression of the higher consciousness... Here we see a consciousness that shapes bodies according to its needs, gradually refining them and bringing them under the control of the higher."
Annie Besant writes,
"You must begin to purify the body before you attempt to practice any yoga worthy of the name. For real yoga is as dangerous to an impure and undisciplined body as a match to a cask of gunpowder. Here we see a consciousness that shapes bodies according to its needs, gradually refining them and bringing them under the control of the higher. Here, in the jungle, they meditated making the brain tense and refined by the concentration of the mind, and restraint of lower faculties, fixed in rapt attention on the higher, with the consciousness working from above playing on the physical brain and tuning it to respond safely to the higher vibrations. Then it strove to draw the lower upwards (as Tavayogi says of our efforts that are only till the first two initial stages, Muladhara and Svadisthana, whence the Siddhas shall come to give a hand) until it answered no longer to the stimuli of the outer world. This is a state of yoga - complete withdrawal of the consciousness from the Indriyas. Now making the mind steady, holding quiet the powers of the mind, the mind ceases to vibrate, and it becomes still - able to answer the vibrations coming from above."
She writes in "Avatara-s", The Theosophical Publishing House, 2002,
"... in as much as the body is an instrument we have to use, a certain treatment of the body is necessary so that we may turn our footsteps in the direction of the Path. The body alone will never take us to the heights we aspire to, yet to neglect it will make it impossible for us to attempt those heights at all. ... The body needs to be refined, to be improved, to be moulded into such a form and made of such constituents as may best fit it to be the instrument on the physical plane for man's highest purposes. ... the purification of the dense body then, consists in a process of deliberate selection of the particles permitted to compose it; the man will take into it the way of food the purest constituents he can obtain, rejecting the impure and the gross."
She allays the fear and regret at having sent in gross impure food, telling us that,
"... by natural change the particles built into it in the days of his careless living will gradually pass away, at least within seven years - although the process may be considerably hastened."
If Annie Besant wrote that one has to prepare both the brain and body well ahead before engaging in Yoga, Agathiyar, Patanjali, Kagabunjandar, and Bhrigu guided me through the Aasi Nadi readings beginning in 2005, on diets to prepare my body to receive Tavayogi's Yogic practice in 2007. Tavayogi set the ball rolling by giving me what Agathiyar calls a treasure in the form of certain Yogic Asanas and Pranayama techniques. Even before I received them, Agathiyar mysteriously passed on a Vasudeva mantra in 2001, which I came to learn later was supposed to break and clear the existing knots within the body. It was only after I was confronted by the energies that arose beginning in 2007, as a result of these practices, some three years later, in 2010, that I was made aware of the extent and potential of these practices and diets. Agathiyar came to purge my body of toxins accumulated over the years, over the next few years. In 2022, he had given me a taste of how the body would lie dead upon a pyre or in a coffin. He gave me insights into the workings of the Kundalini, which, according to Patanjali, was activated way back in 2007. My Kundalini awakening came to pass lightly, unlike what is written about it, since I was blessed to come under the wings, shadow, and care of the Siddhas from day one. They gifted me the practice and saw through its results and the flowering.
Just as Agathiyar told my daughter that he would change whatever meat her daughter was fed, Agathiyar told Jnana Jothiamma that it would be tough and long, though not impossible to bring the change within her, as she had consumed meat for all those years. I was spared as I had been a vegetarian for some 28 years now. Just as we are emptied of the past diet, we are emptied of our past and present, and are being prepared to become vessels to contain that which the divine has to offer us.
I have come to realize that existence is all about creating spaces and containing the life forces that are inherent all around, and defining the undefinable with languages and words. Beginning with civilized man building a home for himself and later places of worship and learning, etc., it is all about protecting himself from nature's forces in the first case, to creating spaces to pull in and contain nature's forces in the second, and dispersing his knowledge to the masses in the last case. The human body, too, serves a similar purpose. The Siddha path that is pointed out by a guru brings us to explore these forces in nature. Otherwise, we would be mere existences living in the world of Siva, keeping faithful to Sariyai. Soon, we explore the rituals in Kriyai that bring down these energies into our homes, and we stand witness to explosive moments and encounters with them. In exploring Yogam, these energies are now experienced within our bodies. While one can be shown and brought to Sariyai and Bakti by one's parents, shown and brought to perform Kriya by one's guru, Yogam is a disciplined practice that has to be undertaken by oneself after learning face-to-face with one's guru. Gnanam shall then surface when he awakens the sleeping and dormant creative energy that resides in him after bringing on his creation and existence. Henceforth, the guru helps him break all the bunds and bring down the walls for this energy to travel further. This energy will clear the part and remove blockages and consume the poisons, bringing the flowering to take place at the Sahasrara. Finally, in bringing oneself to sit quietly, these energies are transformed even further from the gross to the astral and finally the subtle. It is in stillness that God speaks. It is the stillness that is the ultimate goal. Anything else and everything else that relies on a medium, be it a sacred text, a holy priest, a saintly guru, is but an illusion or Maya expounding to us. Seek the truth within each of us, for our soul or Atma, shall not lie to us. Gnanam or divine revelations dawn from within. We will come to know what we are not. In dropping all this, what remains is Sivam. Dropping all the sheath, he comes to realize he is Sivam. Maya and all its creations dissolve right before our eyes, that instant of realization. This is what Agathiyar mentions that after knowing him, one has to know the Atma and Sivam. Know that they are all One. We come to understand and realize that we are one and that we are the one. Everything settles down as we rest in peace. We can exist amid the turmoil. Unperturbed, we stand watch as the guardian and witness. We become Jeevan Muktas until the final calling comes to leave the gross behind and merge in the subtle.