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Tuesday, October 29, 2013

a friend asked me ... how do you manage? You should write about your experiences ~


who am i …

a friend wrote me  … “how do you manage? You should write and share about your experience.” i wrote by the grace of the guru lineage and the holy siddhas I am approaching 4 years with NO Western Medicine for the 18 year ‘present’ of choosing to take on HIV.
Who am I? This question is a meditation for me currently. When I ask that question to myself out loud, like a mantra, heat explodes within me and my body vibrates … this primal, pure energy, I can only describe as an instant healing effect.
Going to Nepal was a road that was paved with blessing after blessing; Two months and a week. Introducing myself to my Grandfather Tibetan Guru, Kalu Rinpoche, in meditation as I circumabulated around the Stupa at Kopan Monastery. Meeting a High Lama and receiving his darshan, being set on a new mantra for the mother goddess, which, after the two months in the monastery, took me to meet the mother goddess cave at Pashupathinath. The baba caretaker was a ‘white aghori’ as he claimed he did indeed meet the mother goddess who is teaching him, but not by the ordinary Aghori ways.
He told me after he agreed to allow me to meditate in the cave, the day I was leaving, he said, “I’ve been here 10 years doing puja for the Mother Goddess Cave where Durga and MaaKali reside and never have I allowed anyone to meditate in this cave. He still could not understand why this ‘foreigner’ got to sit there. He gave me his personal mala and invited me to return.
One day, while I was in this Aghori Baba’s Cave, sitting in my own little cell with a gate that he kept locked, a strange man appeared all in this Turmeric, Orangish / Yellowish Swami Clothing. A Young man, younger than i. I had never seen these colors before, but they were quite regal and stunning. He opened the cave door and asked to enter. He approached me rather quickly, sitting very close to me and in a hush he claimed that he was sent to give me something that I had wanted for a long time. With that, he put a light to his mouth and curled up his tongue as it reached to the very back of his mouth and up behind his Uvuala. I let out a gasp. Indeed, for more than 2 years I have been working with this meditation practice, part of Hatha Yoga, called Ketchari.
The saying goes, this Khecarī Mudrā, "name of Yogic posture which bestows spiritual attainment and enables one to overcome disease and death."
As he left he bowed and said, “May Gorakshnath be with you always”. I gasped again, this time in a whimper, stopping my tears. Why did those words affect me so much? I did not know immediately.
Later that day I requested to go to the asharm where the Turmeric Clad Swami had come from. Off we went through the Pashupathinath aarti, early evening. About 20 minutes later after all the stairs up, we came across a temple that resembled my Bhagavan Nityananda’s Samadhi Shrine in Ganeshpuri as well as his temple in his first ashram at Kanhangad, South India. I stood still hoping to meet the young swami again. Instead, I was taken inside, the dim candlelight did not shine brightly enough as I was guided to a set of stairs that led to a loft where the kitchen was. We were asked to sit during the aarti. With my head resting on the wall behind me, I had the instant recognition from the pounding of the drums and the tone of the Bell ringing … I was IN Ganeshpuri. This was my Bhagavan Nityananda. I could not explain but had heard that Bhagavan Nityananda was Matchendranath. He was also Krishna and as the ‘story’ goes, Krishna was Jesus. That’s another Note.
My guide and I came down the stairs while the aarti was still going on as he wanted to get back to our camp. As we passed around the Temple watching the Bell ringer, who had matted hair down to his rear, we started off the same way we entered, but something stopped me. I turned around and said, “I can’t leave, my guru is HERE”. He could not understand and I was not able to speak further.
So he sat with me as I gazed off at the temple steeple. After some time, the swami monk from earlier came near. He spoke and I could not hear him with the bells rigning, or with my predisposed amazement at the recognition that this was Really my Bhagavan Nityananda. I motioned something I don’t remember. He smiled and off he went.
When I got home to Ganeshpuri, I was Still in Nepal. I was completely changed and could still see the river I sat by for a week doing my guru gita and staring across at the cliff with the monkeys meandering about doing their own kind of yoga ~
My monk said I met my master in Nepal and his job was done.
I am looking forward to discovering just who this master is. Was he in the Guru Rinpoche cave that I sat in doing my practice for all sentient beings and reaching up to lay my hand where his hand had made an  impression in the rock? Is it Baba Sunil, the white Aghori monk from the Goddess Cave who reminded me so much of Tilopa? Will it be the High Lama on the Tibetan Buddhist side of my lineage? Or was it the old man who was crippled, who landed right in front of the goddess cave. When I fed him and gave him water, he invited me to a place where I could ‘really’ do my 40 days of penance? The monk is not telling me, as usual he plants the seeds and destiny does its own work.
‘Don’t force the mind’, Bhagavan Nityananda’s words, spoken by my monk.
Listen, I am just a simple man who has trampled death and hiv by ONE Simple Trick. ‘Breathing with Intention’.
Through yoga, one can heal Anything ~ That is not MY promise.  That is the truth of the human being. We have infinite abilities ~ Time will reveal and time has already revealed … with sincere hope you will reach out and ask me anything about this gift of yoga that could one day bring you perfect health ~ shaktim
Ps I am still working on the Ketchari Mudra and have no plans to cut my tongue as the Hatha Yoga Pradipika suggests. And the swami who ‘showed’ me this can be done, said he did NOT have to cut his tongue.
I would like to share this link describing Gorakh Nath a little better.
The life of Siddha Guru Gorakhanātha is no less mystical than those of Vedic sages like Vaśiṣṭha, Vyāsa, Śukadeva. Born and brought up from the blessed ash of Śrī Guru Matsyendranātha, he is a Master who represents the dazzling heights of the path to immortality. His writings are also readily available. An example of his creative verse follows:
 “O Devi! No accomplishment can result without travelling through the celebrated path of the realized masters – the suṣumnā. Behold the results of this journey. First, all kinds of ailments are annihilated. Then the grossness of the body elements is destroyed. The moon is harmonized which continues to pour out the celestial ambrosia; and the fire unites with air to purify the grossness in totality; a variety of nāda are heard, the body and skin become supple. Being victorious over the earth element the yogi gains the power to soar across the universe. He becomes omniscient. His body is beautiful and radiant like that of Kāmadeva, and is swift like the wind. He breaks the limits of the three worlds, accomplishes all siddhis. As camphor dissolving into the air/fire is purged of its own grossness; with the ego too being dissolved fully into God, the rigidity of the body is destroyed (thus the consciousness does not remain confined to the body only). A yogi being omniscient, omnipotent, liberated, all encompassing and emancipated from the cycle of life & death remains in the world of his own free will.”
The path shown by Guru Gorakhanātha starts from devotion to one’s Master, which melts the impurities in the mind and the heart and makes them vessels fit enough for the yogic endeavor.
The further stages include entry into the suumnā and hereafter an indescribable, esoteric journey of the aspirant ensues which has been vividly charted in the literature of the Siddha Tradition.

“my path began in 2001 when I called out to the Universe, “Who am I”. within  weeks I met Mark Griffin, my guru above all gurus as he was the one who sparked the awakening of the Kundalini Shakti, the power of the human being to transcend disease and death. A profound journey of healing what was and is supposed to be a fatal disease, I am forever grateful to this divine siddha, Guru Mark and his unending love and grace. Jai Nityananda.” shaktim

Bhagavan Nityananda, Gorakhnath, Matsyendranātha,  Mark Griffin, Kalu Rinpoche, Kopan Monastery, The Monk, Aghori Baba Sunil, Pashupathinath, SuryaGhat, Ketchari Mudra, Hatha Yoga, Healing