05-24-2018, 08:45 AM
Usually one’s red ray chakra is not blocked. It’s rarely blocked. Most people have blockages at the orange and yellow chakras. The clearance of the lower triad of chakras is recommended before moving into the realm of the higher chakras: green, blue, and indigo.
A solution that I’ve been inspired by is the practice of analytical meditations and the recalling of all of the life’s memories. Uncovering, observing, accepting will free up any blocked energy in our psyche. For example, we may have had unreasonable expectations, irrational emotional responses, fears from early life that we had totally forgotten about. Those distortions are still there, they’re just in the subconscious (influencing the conscious mind in ways we may be unaware of). So bringing to the surface of that which has been forgotten can free up our minds considerably.
I learned this from an Israel Regardie and he recommends that one undergo at least 6-12 months of these analytical meditations.
In the Buddhist system of the East, these meditations are called Sammasati. These “consist in a cultivation and rigid examination of the memory. The idea involved here is not that these recollections in themselves are worth anything, but that raising them up to the surface releases a great deal of tension associated with other early experiences. There is often a tying up of nervous energy in childhood experiences, in trivial events which are allowed to be forgotten and to sink into unconsciousness. But this forgetfulness does not overcome the shock of nervous exhaustion connected with them. On the contrary, they set up what are called resistances—resistances to the flow of life and vitality from the primitive and vital layers of the Unconscious level.”
A solution that I’ve been inspired by is the practice of analytical meditations and the recalling of all of the life’s memories. Uncovering, observing, accepting will free up any blocked energy in our psyche. For example, we may have had unreasonable expectations, irrational emotional responses, fears from early life that we had totally forgotten about. Those distortions are still there, they’re just in the subconscious (influencing the conscious mind in ways we may be unaware of). So bringing to the surface of that which has been forgotten can free up our minds considerably.
I learned this from an Israel Regardie and he recommends that one undergo at least 6-12 months of these analytical meditations.
In the Buddhist system of the East, these meditations are called Sammasati. These “consist in a cultivation and rigid examination of the memory. The idea involved here is not that these recollections in themselves are worth anything, but that raising them up to the surface releases a great deal of tension associated with other early experiences. There is often a tying up of nervous energy in childhood experiences, in trivial events which are allowed to be forgotten and to sink into unconsciousness. But this forgetfulness does not overcome the shock of nervous exhaustion connected with them. On the contrary, they set up what are called resistances—resistances to the flow of life and vitality from the primitive and vital layers of the Unconscious level.”