Friday, 7 July 2017

Vital Life Force

Prana:
Prana is the main force that makes humans live. It travells all over Suzhimuna, Ida and Pingala Nerve forces. It is produced at the top end of Suzhimuna Nerve Force and travells through the chithira naadi with the sound of 'chim' and when it reaches in mooladhara it gets the sound of 'ohm'. Then it gets the sound of 'Ah' when it reaches the navel, travells around the skull and gets out through the nose.

Abanan:
It stays between the penis and anus. This force pulls out the urine, semen, and faeces

Uthanan:
It controls the intestine moments for digestion

Samanan:
It stays in the skull and controls all other forces and balances the body 

Vyana:
 It stays in the neck region and helps for food intake and to spit it out

Naga:
It controls the eyesight

Koorma:
It controls the mind power

Kirukara:
It acts on nose and tongue and makes to sneeze.




Devadhatha:
It drives the anger and laziness.

Dhanenjeya:
It stays in the head and makes the body decay after the death and leaves the body after three days

Thursday, 6 July 2017

Vital Nerve Force

Idakalai (Left Channel):

It starts from the thumb of the right leg and ends in the left nostrils of the nose

 Pinkalai (Right Channel):
It starts from the thumb of the left leg and ends in the right nostrils of the nose

Sulumunai or Suzhimunai (Center Channel):
It starts from the bottom of the spine (mooladhara) and ends at the top of the spine (sahasrarah)

Siguvai:
It is present in the Uvula

Purudan:
It is present in the right eye

Kanthari:
It is present in the left eye

Atthi:
It is present in the right ear

Allampudai:
It is present in the left ear

Sanguni:
It is present in the penis

Gugu:
It is present in the anus

among these  Idakalai, Pinkalai and Sulumunai are most important and powerful vital forces

Tuesday, 4 July 2017

Intellectual Faculties

Mind:
Collection of thoughts is termed as mind
it is the element of a person that enables them to be aware of the world and their experiences, to think, and to feel; the faculty of consciousness and thought.

The function of mind is Imagination.
  
Intellect: 
 The faculty of reasoning and understanding objectively, especially with regard to abstract matters.

Subconscious mind: 
 Underneath the layers of critical-thought functions of the conscious mind lay a powerful awareness that he called the subconscious mind. 

Ego: 
A person's sense of self-esteem or self-importance 

Thursday, 4 June 2015

Motor Organs – 5 (Karma Inthriya)

1. Hands
2. Legs
3. Mouth
4. Rectum
5. Sex Organs


Perception Of Senses – 5 (Karma Inthriya Vishayam)

1. Smell
2. Taste
3. Sight
4. Touch
5. Hearing



Sunday, 26 April 2015

Functions Of Sense Organs – 5 (Jnana Inthriya Vishayam)
It is defined as the functions which can be done by the sense organs

1. Vision
2. Hearing
3. Smell
4. Taste
5. Touch

Sight (Vision)

The eye is the organ of vision. It has a complex structure consisting of a transparent lens that focuses light on the retina. The retina is covered with two basic types of light-sensitive cells-rods and cones. The cone cells are sensitive to color and are located in the part of the retina called the fovea, where the light is focused by the lens. The rod cells are not sensitive to color, but have greater sensitivity to light than the cone cells. These cells are located around the fovea and are responsible for peripheral vision and night vision. The eye is connected to the brain through the optic nerve. The point of this connection is called the "blind spot" because it is insensitive to light. Experiments have shown that the back of the brain maps the visual input from the eyes.
The brain combines the input of our two eyes into a single three-dimensional image. In addition, even though the image on the retina is upside-down because of the focusing action of the lens, the brain compensates and provides the right-side-up perception. Experiments have been done with subjects fitted with prisms that invert the images. The subjects go through an initial period of great confusion, but subsequently they perceive the images as right side up.
The range of perception of the eye is phenomenal. In the dark, a substance produced by the rod cells increases the sensitivity of the eye so that it is possible to detect very dim light. In strong light, the iris contracts reducing the size of the aperture that admits light into the eye and a protective obscure substance reduces the exposure of the light-sensitive cells. The spectrum of light to which the eye is sensitive varies from the red to the violet. Lower electromagnetic frequencies in the infrared are sensed as heat, but cannot be seen. Higher frequencies in the ultraviolet and beyond cannot be seen either, but can be sensed as tingling of the skin or eyes depending on the frequency. The human eye is not sensitive to the polarization of light, i.e., light that oscillates on a specific plane. Bees, on the other hand, are sensitive to polarized light, and have a visual range that extends into the ultraviolet. Some kinds of snakes have special infrared sensors that enable them to hunt in absolute darkness using only the heat emitted by their prey. Birds have a higher density of light-sensing cells than humans do in their retinas, and therefore, higher visual acuity.

Hearing.

The ear is the organ of hearing. The outer ear protrudes away from the head and is shaped like a cup to direct sounds toward the tympanic membrane, which transmits vibrations to the inner ear through a series of small bones in the middle ear called the malleusincus and stapes. The inner ear, or cochlea, is a spiral-shaped chamber covered internally by nerve fibers that react to the vibrations and transmit impulses to the brain via the auditory nerve. The brain combines the input of our two ears to determine the direction and distance of sounds.
The inner ear has a vestibular system formed by three semicircular canals that are approximately at right angles to each other and which are responsible for the sense of balance and spatial orientation. The inner ear has chambers filled with a viscous fluid and small particles (otoliths) containing calcium carbonate. The movement of these particles over small hair cells in the inner ear sends signals to the brain that are interpreted as motion and acceleration.
The human ear can perceive frequencies from 16 cycles per second, which is a very deep bass, to 28,000 cycles per second, which is a very high pitch. Bats and dolphins can detect frequencies higher than 100,000 cycles per second. The human ear can detect pitch changes as small as 3 hundredths of one percent of the original frequency in some frequency ranges. Some people have "perfect pitch", which is the ability to map a tone precisely on the musical scale without reference to an external standard. It is estimated that less than one in ten thousand people have perfect pitch, but speakers of tonal languages like Vietnamese and Mandarin show remarkably precise absolute pitch in reading out lists of words because pitch is an essential feature in conveying the meaning of words in tone languages. The Eguchi Method teaches perfect pitch to children starting before they are 4 years old. After age 7, the ability to recognize notes does not improve much.

Smell.

The nose is the organ responsible for the sense of smell. The cavity of the nose is lined with mucous membranes that have smell receptors connected to the olfactory nerve. The smells themselves consist of vapors of various substances. The smell receptors interact with the molecules of these vapors and transmit the sensations to the brain. The nose also has a structure called the vomeronasal organ whose function has not been determined, but which is suspected of being sensitive to pheromones that influence the reproductive cycle. The smell receptors are sensitive to seven types of sensations that can be characterized as camphor, musk, flower, mint, ether, acrid, or putrid. The sense of smell is sometimes temporarily lost when a person has a cold. Dogs have a sense of smell that is many times more sensitive than man's.

Taste.

The receptors for taste, called taste buds, are situated chiefly in the tongue, but they are also located in the roof of the mouth and near the pharynx. They are able to detect four basic tastes: salty, sweet, bitter, and sour. The tongue also can detect a sensation called "umami" from taste receptors sensitive to amino acids. Generally, the taste buds close to the tip of the tongue are sensitive to sweet tastes, whereas those in the back of the tongue are sensitive to bitter tastes. The taste buds on top and on the side of the tongue are sensitive to salty and sour tastes. At the base of each taste bud there is a nerve that sends the sensations to the brain. The sense of taste functions in coordination with the sense of smell. The number of taste buds varies substantially from individual to individual, but greater numbers increase sensitivity. Women, in general, have a greater number of taste buds than men. As in the case of color blindness, some people are insensitive to some tastes.

Touch.

The sense of touch is distributed throughout the body. Nerve endings in the skin and other parts of the body transmit sensations to the brain. Some parts of the body have a larger number of nerve endings and, therefore, are more sensitive. Four kinds of touch sensations can be identified: cold, heat, contact, and pain. Hairs on the skin magnify the sensitivity and act as an early warning system for the body. The fingertips and the sexual organs have the greatest concentration of nerve endings. The sexual organs have "erogenous zones" that when stimulated start a series of endocrine reactions and motor responses resulting in orgasm.

Saturday, 4 April 2015

Sense Organs – 5 (Jnana Inthriya)
The medium which helps the human beings to communicate with nature.

1. Eye
2. Ear
3. Nose
4. Tongue
5. Skin


With these one can have in Good way or in bad way
We must develop the potential to control these organs with our mind. then only we can achieve the peace and one can practice yoga

For a bewildered person in the materialistic way of life, the body, the mind and the senses, which are engaged in sense gratification, are the cause of bondage to repeated birth, death, old age and disease. But for one who is advanced in spiritual knowledge, the same body, senses and mind are the cause of liberation. This is confirmed in the Katha Upanishad (1.3.3-4,9) as follows:
manah pragraham eva ca
vishayams teshu gocaran
so 'dhvanah param apnoti
tad vishnoh paramam padam

Transcendentalists who are advanced in knowledge compare the body, which is made by the order of the Supreme Personality of Godhead, to a chariot. The senses are like the horses; the mind, the master of the senses, is like the reins; the objects of the senses are the destinations; intelligence is the chariot driver; and consciousness, which spreads throughout the body, is the cause of bondage in this material world.

Monday, 16 March 2015

Elements – 5 (Pancha Bootha)

Pancha Bootha is the five elements in the Nature they are

1. Earth
2. Water
3. Fire
4. Air
5. Space


These five elements has connection in our body each element is connected to each chackras in our body and in each chakras the flow of energy causes a specific sound

Each elements linkage to chakra and its consequent sound is given below

Earth    =     Swadhishtana Chakra    =   'Na'
Water   =     Manipooraka                   =    'Ma'
Fire       =     Anagatha                        =    'Si'
Air         =     Visudhi                           =    'Vaa'
Space   =     Agnai                              =    'Ya'