
This kind of insightful esoterica probably filled a need in a pre-literate society for credulous, imprecise thinkers-sort of pre-modern alien abductees. I would assume a reader who is already a Kundalini practitioner, completely seduced by anything Yogi Bhajan-related, and willing to fill in the gaps, would find this work interesting. All the emphasis on drawing useful information out of this book is placed squarely on the reader. It is so prosaic that it doesn't speak directly to you and your problems. Singh Khalsa is a good teacher-I enjoyed him very much when I saw him in 1994 (?) and yet his writing doesn't have the shining magic his speaking does. The ultimate path is to use your power and gifts to draw people into their own highest consciousness, when you use your presence to inspire and elevate.ĭr. Gains require sacrifice and advancement means you have the onus to pay it forward.

yay, I got a bike! Yay I got that job offer!" may be a valid way of being for some people, but that kind of manifestation is of low vibration, and those people who practice this sort of magic without spiritual reimbursement are screwing their path to realization. For people who understand that the structure of our beings is only the slightest expression of who we are, this will give greater insight into what is out of balance in your psyche.Ī side note here: This book does promote responsible spirituality, which is to say, unlike the New Age "spirituality" invoked films and books like "The Secret", which is essentially a spirituality of materialism, it asks for more. Each chapter briefly explores a different Sikh Saint (all male) and then covers a different "body" of the human psyche. These two books together are well edited, well written in an easy, chatty style and nicely published by Radiant Light Press, with lots of air on each page for notes. So the above is all about me and my path. The net result was just more dusty gobbledy-gook taking up shelf space. It asked for too much commitment (too many hours doing kriyas like breath of fire and or drinking cucumber juice-bleech) to a path I wasn't committed to. I gobbled my way through thirty or so Bhajan-related texts in the late 90's-including Numerology and Tantric Numerology by Dr. Sorta like dressing up in Mummy's cast off ball gowns. There were years when I looked to esoteric wisdom to know myself, and it was fun to try on another garb. It asked for too much commitment (too many hours doing kriyas like breath of fire and or drinking cucumber juice-bleech) to a pat That old chestnut goes: know theyself.

