Yoga &"bindu&" and Hadit
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I've thought about this concept for awhile due to the nature of what I've read regarding Hadit and knowledge of the yoga bindu which is really only hearsay as I've never experienced this.
There literally is a stage of Yoga Meditation in which all experiences collapse, so to speak, into a point from which all experiences arose in the first place. The Bindu is near the end of the subtlest aspect of mind itself, after which one travels beyond or transcends the mind and its contents. It is near the end of time, space, and causation, and is the doorway to the Absolute.
To me this is not only a doorway but a turnstile, we enter and exit through this point. Bindu literally means "mustard seed" but is supposed to be much smaller...the smallest point imaginable. I wonder if the Bindu is equivalent to Hadit? which appears to me as the union of the hemispheres of the brain. The wings each hemisphere and the disk the Eye.
Any thoughts?
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@PainMeridian said
"I've thought about this concept for awhile due to the nature of what I've read regarding Hadit and knowledge of the yoga bindu which is really only hearsay as I've never experienced this.
"There literally is a stage of Yoga Meditation in which all experiences collapse, so to speak, into a point from which all experiences arose in the first place. The Bindu is near the end of the subtlest aspect of mind itself, after which one travels beyond or transcends the mind and its contents. It is near the end of time, space, and causation, and is the doorway to the Absolute."
To me this is not only a doorway but a turnstile, we enter and exit through this point. Bindu literally means "mustard seed" but is supposed to be much smaller...the smallest point imaginable. I wonder if the Bindu is equivalent to Hadit? which appears to me as the union of the hemispheres of the brain. The wings each hemisphere and the disk the Eye.
Any thoughts?
93"The Hindu deity is known to be coterminous with ones true self (Atman is Brahman). This is called by infinite names under infinite guises: Brahman, Bhagavan, bindu, amrita, etc. The symbol is essentially the 2 uniting into 1, which your brain is also a symbol of. But they also acknowledge that their Deity is smaller and more subtle than a mustard seed and greater than the whole night sky. The point is that He is both Vast and Minute. That sounds familiar...
Liber LXV III:33. "Come thou, O beloved One, O Lord God of the Universe, O Vast One, O Minute One! I am Thy beloved"
IAO131