EASTERN INVASION Continued
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Cynthia Pawl, January 30, 2016: RESTORED 4/25/22
Just a few of the reasons why yoga cannot be separated from its occultic origins are:
(1) The mantra meditation lowers mental barriers and opens one up to the demonic realm (though it often doesn’t “feel” demonic at first…it feels “good” and “spiritual”…..even holy);
(2) The yoga positions themselves are all prayer postures designed to honor one of the millions of hindu gods;
(3) The yoga positions themselves are not only for the purpose of honoring and worshiping Hindu gods, but they are done in a very specific order for the purpose of aligning and opening up the”chakra” system. It is believed that this alignment will not only enable one to meditate more deeply, but will also awaken something called “kundalini,” also known as “serpent power.” In the yoga tradition, it is believed that a “serpent” lies coiled and sleeping at the base of the spine until it is “awakened” and begins to uncoil, slowly moving its way up the spine, and allowing the practitioner deeper meditation and union with “Brahman.”
Brahman is supposed to be this infinite, transcendent reality from which all things came – including the millions of Hindu gods. The aim of yoga is to get to Brahman……basically, the ultimate purpose of yoga is to prepare its practitioners for death.
However, the response I often hear from Christians is this: “But as a Christian, I can ‘do’ yoga unto the Lord!” My question would be: How is that any different from the golden calf incident, recorded in Exodus 32:1-6, in which Aaron tried to claim that they were honoring the Lord with their syncretized religious worship?
God is quite clear on how we are to worship and approach him – and it is not through blending our worship of him with pagan practices. I recognize that it is very hip and cool and popular in today’s global, syncretized culture to meld different things together. We are most certainly an experience-driven culture, always seeking the fresh, exciting, “new” thing. And we also like our smorgasbord religions, with a little of this, a little of that. But we have clear mandates from Scripture about how we are to worship and approach God. We are to be set apart from the world – not syncretized with it – so that’s God’s truth will shine like a beacon in the darkness.
Source: http://www.donotbesurprised.com/2010…tian-yoga.html
The Continuing Deception of “Christian” Yoga
- “Rethink Yoga,”
The article titled “Rethink Yoga” was published in John Brown University’s student-run paper, The Threefold Advocate. The author, Deborah Dana, is listed on the JBU website as a math specialist and a tutor coordinator, according to NWA.
Dana wrote:
“This column is not a theological exegesis, but rather a heartfelt cry. I understand that yoga has become an accepted part of the American culture. The National Institute of Health promotes it vigorously and much of the Church has accepted it as harmless. I have to disagree.
As I have been thinking of all the arguments and reasons why yoga is not as beneficial as we’ve been led to believe, it all keeps coming back to the fact that yoga has its roots in the worship of demonic Hindu gods.
I believe that while yoga may offer some benefits, those benefits have hidden, demonic strings attached. I spoke to one of our chapel speakers years ago about this. He was a Dalit “untouchable” from India who had become a Christian. His view is that yoga is the beautiful face that the very ugly religion of Hinduism uses to sell itself to Americans.”
Why Christians Should Avoid Yoga
Source: REVELATION CO
The problem with yoga is that it has entirely pagan origins, and it is still riddled with verbiage and ideas that propagate pagan practices/Eastern religious thought. It was created by, practiced by, and propagated by mostly Hindus and Buddhists, and it has direct spiritual applications for today.
To illustrate this, here is an excerpt from a yoga site I found after a quick search online.
Is yoga a religion?
“This is a common misconception. While the practice and study of yoga is Eastern in origin, its use and acceptance is worldwide. The introspective process that is experienced through the asanas (postures), and stillness of the mind, strengthen each individual’s internal-awareness to the present moment. Deepening one’s internal-awareness helps to reveal our true nature of love, kindness, strength , and contentment through clear presence of mind.”
In the statement above, the yoga instructor does a great job of making yoga seem like an innocent series of exercises and techniques. However, notice the verbiage he or she uses:
- “introspective,” which means to look inside yourself for the solutions to life. The Bible says we need to look to Christ and His word for the solutions to life. In fact, Jesus said that without Him we can do nothing: “”I am the vine, ye are the branches: He that abideth in me, and I in him, the same bringeth forth much fruit: for without me ye can do nothing” (John 15:5; emphasis mine).
- “stillness of the mind,” which means to meditate in an attempt to achieve altered consciousness, which can allow you to have new “insights.” The Bible says to bring every thought captive and make it obedient to Christ (2 Corinthians 10:5). Only with a blank mind can Buddhists/Yoga practitioners begin to indoctrinate you to their religious ideas of “being in the now.”
- “internal-awareness:” again, looking to oneself and discovering the ‘god within.’
- “present moment:” new age books are riddled with the phrase to “live in the now” or “live in the moment.” This language is embedded in numerous false religions, and the main idea is to keep the focus off God and onto yourself and the “Brahman.
- and worst of all, the last sentence: “Deepening one’s internal-awareness helps to reveal our true nature of love, kindness, strength, and contentment through a clear presence of mind.” Really? God’s word doesn’t say we have a “true nature of love.” The Bible makes clear we are children of wrath (Ephesians 2:3), and that we’re born with a nature of sin (Romans 3:10). We are in dire need of a savior, and that savior is Christ Jesus.
All of the points above lead me to a very important point that I want all Christians to understand: When you begin to learn yoga, every book, DVD, or session you attend is going to be filled with New Age/Occult/Pagan teachings and language! In other words, you’re essentially reading or listening to a Buddhist or Hindu sermon, just by attending a yoga session or reading a book!
The very clever word choices the yoga author made reflect Eastern religion in almost every sentence. Most people won’t catch it unless they’ve read a lot of the Eastern writings or teachings. It’s a great way for Satan to spread ideas of false religions to the masses while they are completely unaware of it. After a few yoga sessions, followers may start using the very same language that Buddhists use such as “living in the now,” or “increased consciousness,” and so forth.
“for what partnership have righteousness and lawlessness, or what fellowship has light with darkness? Or what harmony has Christ with Belial, or what has a believer in common with an unbeliever? Or what agreement has the temple of God with idols?” (2 Corinthians 6: 14-16)
Baby Dynamics Yoga Video – ARE YOU KIDDING ME??
CENSORED ON YOUTUBE/REPOSTED ON DAILYMOTION
CLICK THE TITLE LINK BELOW TO WATCH THE VIDEO
I like to often post images and videos of things that are healthy for our kids and occasionally I’ll post something that is so unhealthy that everyone needs to see it to either (A) never ever do it or (B) try and do something to stop it from happening. In this instance I would have to say this Baby Dynamics Yoga Video is probably the most disturbing thing I’ve ever seen and I hope people realize just how dangerous this is to an infant.
Babies don’t need yoga and especially not this horrific kind of “yoga” in this video. And really, how can you call this yoga anyways. It’s more like torture and you can hear the cry from the infant that pretty much verifies that.
This baby yoga video is disturbing. Please use caution when viewing and do not let little ones view it. And please also promise me you will promptly call authorities if you see anyone actually doing this.
BEWARE!!
The Truth About Yoga & Baby Yoga – Its Satanic!
Ministry of Truth – The spiritual deception of Yoga
Because Yoga is referred to (by those who teach and support the practice) as only an exercise many people are blindly participating in it. The spiritual darkness behind the false practice of Yoga has been veiled by the word ‘exercise’. Regular calisthenics (the exercise used most often in Western society) was not designed with a spiritual purpose in mind. Unlike Yoga! People who practice Yoga do not understand, or even consider the negative spiritual affect it is having on them. They may reap some physical benefits but they are also reaping spiritual darkness, which cannot be separated from this practice. In Yoga the spine is the spiritual point of emphasis and each physical pose has been designed for one purpose – spiritual awakening. When a person participates in the physical aspect of Yoga they are also participating in its false spiritual aspect. The two cannot be separated. Unless you can physically function without using your spine – which is an impossible feat! The spine has what they refer to in Yoga as ‘chakras’, and each chakra is connected to, and has, false spiritual meaning.
The following information taken from Time Magazine (April 23, 2001 edition; page 61) shows the Eastern view of yoga and its true spiritual meaning:
“THE MYSTICAL”
“Enlightenment and good health require the free flow of the life force (prana) and the proper balance between the seven major energy hubs (chakras). (An eighth chakra, or aura, surrounds the body and encompasses the other seven.) The three lower chakras serve the body’s physical needs, while the five upper chakras are associated with the spiritual realm”.
1. In Yoga the first chakra is referred to as the “root chakra; earth, the lower limbs”.
2. The second chakra is the “sacral chakra; water, sexual energy”.
3. The third chakra is the “navel chakra; fire, personal power, storage of the life force”.
4. The fourth chakra is the “heart chakra; air, compassion, love of others”.
5. The fifth chakra is the “throat chakra; the ether, self expression, energy, endurance”.
6. The sixth chakra is the “brow chakra; senses, intuition, telepathy, meditation”.
7. The seventh chakra is the “crown chakra; intuition, spirituality”.
As you can see the Eastern ‘origin’ of the physical movements in yoga is spiritual – and according to the second chakra, also sexual. It does not matter what a person’s thinks yoga is, because it’s meaning and purpose is centered on the false religion of Hinduism. Each physical posture and stretch was designed specifically for the spiritual awakening of what is referred to in yoga as spinal chakras. Whether, or not, you believe this false practice is spiritual does not change the fact that it is. Yoga has different levels and one in particular, Tantric Yoga, coincides with the second chakra. The second chakra is the one which stores “sexual energy” that lies dormant until awakened through yoga or controlled breathing. When the physical postures in yoga (any form) are practiced the second chakra becomes a virtual nesting place for the evil incubus and succubus sexual spirits. The evil sexual influence becomes more intense when yoga is continually practiced. The public school system is introducing our children the basics of yoga, which is mostly being done without parental knowledge or consent. Once they are taught the basics they can easily be drawn into more advanced methods of yoga (such as tantric yoga) later in life. Satan was just waiting for the introduction! Tantric yoga, Tantric Hinduism, refers to the spinal chakras as having both male and female bodies (sources of energy). Kundalini [the female energy or coiled snake] rises up the spine to awaken what is referred to as Shiva [the masculine]. This male and female energy is actually the incubus and succubus evil sexual spirits. This is why it is so dangerous for our children to participate in any form of yoga; or any other false religious practice! Our children do not need to have sexual energy awakened through Yoga or by any other means. Yet, the false Hindu religion of yoga continues to infiltrate our schools through physical education class, and health and wellness class – when religion of any kind is not even supposed to be allowed or taught in school. Wellness is a New-age (false religious) term.
Yoga with itsphysical movements, breathing technique, and meditation, center around what is referred to in yoga as “life force (or prana); and the proper balance between the seven major energy hubs (or spinal chakras)”. Quotation taken from Time Magazine (April 23, 2001 edition; page 61). What many parents do not know is that in the false religious practice of yoga the purpose of one of these so-called energy hubs or chakras is to stimulate (or awaken) sexual energy – which is something that our children do not need help with! Do not be deceived by the word exercise when it comes to any type of yoga! The school system is teaching our children beginner’s yoga and is setting the stage for them to practice other forms of yoga later in life. All forms of yoga are spiritually dangerous and misleading. However, one form in particular is both spiritually and sexually dangerous. Though intended for adults Tantric Yoga is a sexually stimulating form of yoga that suggests a person has within their body both feminine and masculine energy which needs to be awakened. And we wonder why there is so much homosexuality and bisexuality today! Do not be deceived by any type of yoga. All yoga is extremely dangerous, and it is not only Tantric Yoga that sexually stimulates a person. In yoga the second chakra awakens a person’s sexual energy – and all forms of yoga touch the second chakra. Through the practice of yoga people are being spiritually introduced to the incubus and succubus evil sexual spirits! These sexual spirits can oppress, and eventually possess a person through many different avenues, even convincing the person they were born the wrong gender – which is a lie. More on this subject in my document on ‘gender confusion and cross dressing’
In school, wellness is a class that is taught in addition to physical education class. Wellness is a mandatory class that has been added to the school curriculum. Through this class the school system is slowly introducing our children to new-age methods and techniques that are rooted in false religion. Wellness class is teaching the Hindu method of controlled breathing and meditation which is designed to bring one’s body under subjection. God designed our body to work in a certain way, and with normalcalisthenics (i.e. pushups, sit-ups, running, and jumping jacks) our breathing rate automatically adjusts itself to keep our body functioning naturally. However, through this false eastern technique people (including children) are being taught to control their breathing in an effort to make their body respond. This is very dangerous, not just physically, but spiritually, because our breath is very important. Genesis 2:7: And the LORD God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul.
Teaching someone controlled breathing techniques will cause them to experience a false sense of peace and tranquility, even creating a feeling of lightheadedness. The more they do it the more dangerous it becomes because they will begin to experience the sensation of being absent from their body (astral projection). An extremely dangerous practice! These false religious techniques involve visualization, clearing of the mind, or concentration on certain sounds; including even the sound of one’s own breathing. With some the more they practice it the more they desire to continue. In their attempt to rise above their own fleshly body it causes them to go deeper and deeper into a false spiritual realm. People, including Christians, are becoming more and more dependent on breathing and meditation techniques that derive from false Eastern religion. People, especially Christians, should not depend on anything, or anyone, other than Jesus Christ. They must meditate on God’s Word for help to rise above their circumstances, and to help them find peace. Using meditation and breathing techniques will not give them true peace that will last. Only Jesus Christ can bring true peace when we give our life and our circumstances completely over to Him. John 14:27: Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you; not as the world giveth, give I unto you. Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid. Though scripture tells us to depend on Jesus Christ many Christians are depending on false religious, and worldly, methods and techniques in an effort to try to gain peace. Jesus tells us that in this world we will have tribulation, but He also tells us not to fear, because he has overcome the world, along with its problems – and through Him we can overcome too. John 16:33: These things I have spoken unto you, that in me ye might have peace. In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world.
The school system (public, private, and Christian) may believe they are helping children by using eastern transcendental meditation and breathing techniques but they are doing more harm than good. Parents, we had better beware of the techniques that are being taught to our children – disguised as health and exercise. What parents do not realize is that in transcendental meditation the journey their children are going on is referred to as “out of body” or “astral projection” – and it is extremely dangerous mentally, physically, and spiritually!
People in the world (including Christians) just accept any false spiritual practice (and teach it to children) without even knowing the truth about the evil spiritual realm that is behind the practice(s). What affect do these false spiritual practices have on children, especially on their mind? More important – what about their eternal soul/spirit? Matthew 16:25-26: For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? The physical movements in Yoga are a part of Hindu religion. The series of movements in Yoga called “Salutations to the Sun” are designed as greetings to nature; “sun worship”. Deuteronomy 4:19: And lest thou lift up thine eyes unto heaven, and when thou seest the sun, and the moon, and the stars, even all the host of heaven, shouldest be driven to worship them…Deuteronomy 17:2-3: If there be found among you, within any of thy gates which the LORD thy God giveth thee, man or woman, that hath wrought wickedness in the sight of the LORD thy God, in transgressing his covenant. And hath gone and served other gods, and worshipped them, either the sun, or moon, or any of the host of heaven, which I have not commanded. Sun or nature worship is forbidden by God! They may call Yoga ‘exercise’, but the movements themselves still pay respect to the sun god! The word Yoga means to ‘yoke’ with – and this word cannot be separated from its true Sanskrit meaning, even if the western world tries to call it only an exercise. Look up its Sanskrit meaning. In Shamanism they believe uniting (yoking) with the souls of God’s creations (animals/creatures/nature) is a way to interact with the spirit realm. Romans 1:25: Who changed the truth of God into a lie, and worshipped and served the creature more than the Creator, who is blessed for ever. Amen. The Greek word for ‘creature’ in Romans 1:25 is “ktisis, ktis’-is; …creation, creature”. Our children are being taught to believe the lies of false religion, and are being asked to participate in them. These lies are being taught in our schools as exercise.
What parents may not know is some physical education classes in our public schools are teaching children to assume the characteristics of an animal through the false religious practice of ‘Yoga’. Most children will naturally pretend to be an animal; but having a teacher instruct a child how to pretend to be an animal through religious methods is another thing entirely! Some of the physical postures in Yoga are animal positions: the cobra, the eagle, the upward facing dog, the downward facing dog, etc. The Sanskrit word ‘Yoga’ means ‘to yoke’. Yoga is a practice of Hindu religion. Hindu religion is nature worship, and they are not supposed to be teaching or practicing any type of religion in our public schools, and certainly not Yoga. Educators claim to have taken the spiritual part out; however, this is an impossible feat because the physical postures, called asanas, in Yoga are themselves a form of nature worship! The series of physical postures in Yoga called ‘salutations to the sun’ are being taught to our children by the school system in physical education class, P.E. Participating in these yoga postures is spiritually yoking our children with Hindu nature worship. The schools are using yoga and Pilates videos, and their use is growing in popularity. Originally called Contrology, Pilates uses controlled breathing and is usually combined with yoga; it is hard to find a Pilates video that does not contain some yoga postures. They are teaching our children Eastern transcendental meditation and breathing techniques in Health and Wellness classes (Wellness being a New-age term). Because some schools are teaching meditation and breathing techniques separately, in separate classrooms, from the Yoga (postures or asanas) they think this makes teaching Yoga acceptable, but it does not! Each technique is spiritually dangerous just by itself. Teaching yoga, without its breathing and meditation, is still teaching false religious postures that were developed by Hindu religion. And we have already discussed the dangers of the breathing and meditation techniques! Though these methods are being taught in separate classes they are still teaching our children the entire practice of the Eastern Hindu religion called Yoga, and the end result is spiritual separation from God.
In false Eastern and New-Age religion people are taught to believe that they themselves are little gods (or little christ’s). This is a counterfeit concept to the true Christian belief that Jesus Christ is living in the heart and life of those who accept Him as their Savior. False religious doctrines and practices are especially deceiving when they use Christian words and phrases. One example is the word meditation. Many Christians cannot tell the difference between Biblical meditation and false eastern meditation. Because the word meditation is in the Bible they think it is harmless to practice any form of meditation – even the Eastern method of meditation – but they are deceived. The Bible tells us to meditate on the word of God, not to clear our minds. Christians do not know the difference because they do not know what the scriptures say. They have not adhered to the following scriptures. Psalm 119:15: I will meditate in thy precepts, and have respect unto thy ways; 23…but thy servant did meditate in thy statutes; 48 My hands also will I lift up unto thy commandments, which I have loved; and I will meditate in thy statues; 78…but I will meditate in thy precepts; 97: O how love I thy law! It is my meditation all the day; 148…that I may meditate in thy word. Psalm 1:2: But his delight is in the law of the Lord; and in his law doth he meditate day and night. Clearing the mind, or even imagining being in another place with the help of tranquility (relaxation) music or sounds, is not the meditation that the Bible refers to.
Some people teach that to pray you clear your mind and wait for the spirit to speak to you – this is wrong! This is nothing more than a form of eastern transcendental meditation that will take you on a spiritual journey of deception. This method will give you false visions and thoughts that do not come from God, and the origin is evil. The practice of transcendental meditation is very popular in the Hindu religion of Yoga, and Christians should NOT take part in these Hindu practices. The Bible speaks of meditation, but says nothing about clearing our mind. Joshua 1:8: This book of the law shall not depart out of thy mouth but thou shalt meditate therein day and night, that thou mayest observe to do according to all that is written therein: for then thou shalt make thy way prosperous and then thou shalt have good success. Psalm 1:2: But his delight is in the law of the Lord; and in his law doth he meditate day and night. Psalm 119:148: Mine eyes prevent the night watches, that I might meditate in thy word. We are to hide God’s Word, the Bible, in our heart and meditate on it – not clear our mind. Psalm 119:11: Thy word have I hid in mine heart, that I might not sin against thee. What I am saying is, if you follow the Eastern religious practice of meditation (the Hindu way to salvation) you will not know which spirit is speaking to you – it certainly will not be the Spirit of the One True and Living God!
If you participate in any form of yoga you are in essence yoking your body (your Christian temple) with what this false Hindu religion represents, including its nature worship. The physical postures/asanas in yoga are salutations to the sun god. As Christians, we are Spiritually yoked to Jesus Christ so why would we want to participate in, or associate ourselves with anything that is yoked to a false religion. Matthew 11:29-30: Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart: and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light. Galatians 5:1: STAND fast therefore in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made us free, and be not entangled again with the yoke of bondage. And what communion hath light with darkness? Galatians 4:8-9: Howbeit then, when ye knew not God, ye did service unto them which by nature are no gods. But now, after that ye have known God, or rather are known of God, how turn ye again to the weak and beggarly elements, whereunto ye desire again to be in bondage? II Corinthians 6:14: Be ye not unequally yoked together with unbelievers: for what fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness? The Greek word for ‘yoke’ in Matthew 11:29-30 and Galatians 5:1 is “zugos, dzoo-gos’; a coupling, servitude through a law or obligation”. The Greek word for ‘yoked’ in II Corinthians 6:14 is “heterozugeo, het-er-od-zoog-eh’-o; to yoke up differently, to associate discordantly – unequally yoke together with”.
People may think the false Eastern technique of controlled breathing is just a simple or healthy breathing exercise; however, focusing (or concentrating) on the sound or timing of one’s breath will cause their body to respond unnaturally – it will confuse their mind and emotions, which are a part of the soul. Some school systems, and even the medical community, are trying this (and other false religious methods) in an effort to try and alleviate increasingemotional problems among the young and old. They are teaching people to use false religious methods to try and solve their problems. They think if they can teach people to just blank out their mind or to visualize a happy place in their mind that their life will be better. The problem with this theory is that people cannot just ignore, meditate, or even medicate their problems in an effort to try and overcome them. Ecclesiastes 3:1-8: To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven: A time to be born, and a time to die; a time to plant, and a time to pluck up that which is planted; A time to kill, and a time to heal; a time to break down, and a time to build up; A time to weep, and a time to laugh; a time to mourn, and a time to dance; A time to cast away stones, and a time to gather stones together; a time to embrace, and a time to refrain from embracing; A time to get, and a time to lose; a time to keep, and a time to cast away; A time to rend, and a time to sew; a time to keep silence, and a time to speak; A time to love, and a time to hate; a time of war, and a time of peace. Problems are going to affect us all at one time or another and only Jesus Christ can help us completely overcome these problems. John 16:33: These things I have spoken unto you, that in me ye might have peace. In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have over come the world. We must teach our children (using God’s Word) to face the problems in this world; not to jump into the yoga position and meditate every time they run into some difficulty. Teaching a generation of children false religious techniques will take them on a false spiritual journey that will end in disaster. This is not a game! With practice and training these false techniques will induce an out of body experience, and/or will show our children false visions that come from an evil spiritual realm. Note: It is not just the public school system teaching these false religious methods, but even Christian schools are teaching them. And these methods have also made there way into – and are being taught inside the church! Anyone who would choose to turn to the false religious methods of yoga, meditation, or controlled breathing is making a very dangerous and spiritually eternal mistake – however when the school systems make it a mandatory part of their curriculum they are leading themselves and our nation right into God’s judgment. The government allows false religious methods to be taught to our kids, requiring them to participate; yet they will not allow the Bible to be taught, or Jesus Christ to even be mentioned in school. Mark 10:14: But when Jesus saw it; he was much displeased, and said unto them, suffer the little children to come unto me, and forbid them not: for of such is the kingdom of God. Luke 18:16: But Jesus called them unto him, and said, Suffer little children to come unto me, and forbid them not: for of such is the kingdom of God. Matthew 18:6: But whoso shall offend one of these little ones which believe in me, it were better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and that he were drowned in the depth of the sea. Luke 17:2: It were better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck and he cast into the sea, than that he should offend one of these little ones.
Important note: Another serious and dangerous side effect is that yoga could be linked to spontaneous human combustion. Yoga can increase a person’s core temperature due to the rise of what they refer to in yoga as kundalini [a coiled energy they call serpent fire]. This could be one explanation of why some people have fallen victim to spontaneous human combustion. Just a theory, or is it! Considering that the physical postures in yoga pay reverence to the sun god this would only make sense that fire would be associated with this false practice. Yoga places emphasis on the core of a man. In scripture the core is referred to as our ‘inner-man’. We are supposed to be strengthening our inner-man with God’s Word and His Spirit – not with methods that derive from false religion. Ephesians 3:16-17: That he would grant you, according to the riches of his glory, to be strengthened with might by his Spirit in the inner man; That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith; that ye, being rooted and grounded in love. One of the chakras in Yoga is called the ‘root’ chakra. The root of yoga is Hinduism and we, as God’s people, should not root our self in anything other than God’s Son Jesus Christ – or we will be in spiritual danger. Though physically some may appear to benefit from practicing yoga – the physical aspects of yoga do not out weigh its spiritual danger! No matter what anyone tells you the physical and spiritual in yoga cannot be separated.
(If you have participated in yoga please see my document on ‘unholy cords’ and pray the prayer at the end, putting yoga in the blank. Yoga is a cord, or tie, to the false religion of Hinduism!)
Potential Psychological Dangers of Meditation – Especially Relevant for Those with PTSD
There are 84,000 Buddhist meditation techniques*, and there are many non-Buddhist meditation techniques as well. There are sitting meditation techniques that use the repetition of mantras and guided meditation techniques that use visualization and imagination. There are short meditations and extended meditation retreats in which one may meditate for 10 full days. Each kind of meditation has its own origins, philosophy, teachings, objectives and goals. (*reference)
I was surprised to discover that some meditation practices could potentially cause psychological challenges and even harm. People with PTSD are more psychologically vulnerable and may experience even worse difficulties than others with these types of meditation.
1. Dangers of Destabilizing Effects of Prolonged Meditation (Retreats, Long-term Daily Practice)
Can meditation, especially for very long periods, induce such profound altered states and psychological changes as to destabilize the person meditating? Can meditation open him or her up to a plethora of disorienting and confusing internal experiences and even in some cases lead to a mental breakdown or psychotic break of some kind?
Brown University neuroscience researcher Willougbhy Britton has been researching exactly this.
Quoting from the article BuddhistGeeks Podcast 232: The Dark Night Project (which I can no longer find but there is a different article here and the podcast here):
“We’re joined again this week by Brown University neuroscience researcher Willougbhy Britton. Willougbhy begins this episode by going into further depth into some of the typical experiences that have been reported during her research into the difficult stages of the contemplative path. She lists out typical changes in cognition, affect (emotion), perception, and other psychological material.“
Following is an outline of some of the main issues her research has uncovered. Serious contemplative practice can cause:
- Heightened Sensory Sensitivity. “…increase in sensory clarity and sensory threshold.”
- Perceptual changes. “…along with this faster sampling rate there also seems to be I don’t know if I would call them hallucinations but experiences in every sensory modality especially visual lights.”
- Physical sensations. “…general musculoskeletal body pain, headaches, and very strange sensations” (long list including sensation of electricity and vibrations)
- Changes in Sense of Self. “…change in the way people experience their sense of self” “…this can be (1) “an attenuation in self” or it can be (2) “a complete dropping away of a sense of self” (3) “a lack of a feeling like there’s anybody controlling” (like you are not in control but just acting) (4) “temporal disintegration. …So the sense of time can fall apart, along with that your sense of a narrative self over time. …don’t have that kind of sense of past and future …waking up in a new reality every several minutes”
- Fear. “…one of the most common symptoms is fear. And the lost of the sense of self I think is very tied in with this fear. And people can have really phenomenal levels of fear. I mean really just existential primal fear… And then along with fear spectrum you also anxiety and agitation and panic and paranoia. “
- Emotional ups and downs. “Your emotions can get really high in both direction both manic manifestations, euphoria, sometimes grandiosity and also the worst depression, meaninglessness, nihilism the other end of things can also happen.”
- Numbness. “In addition to that, people can also just lose all affect all together.”
- Roto-rooter, bringing things up to the surface. “…a de-repression of the psychological material.”
Willougbhy Britton is using her research to help individuals who have embarked on a journey of contemplative practice and are coming up against some experiences and phenomena that are causing confusion, fear, disorientation and even causing them to believe they are going crazy. Her work hopefully will help them through these phases so they can gain the benefits that are possible through the practices they have chosen.
Victoria Maxwell, a speaker who does presentations on topics related to living with mental illness (she has bipolar disorder), experienced a mental breakdown firsthand during a long meditation retreat.
“Things went from bad to worse when she signed up for a weekend meditation retreat. For 48 hours, she sat utterly still on a hard floor, repeating a silent mantra that could be expressed as “Who am I?” By Sunday night, Victoria felt she was experiencing a mystical and spiritual awakening that was later to be diagnosed as a psychotic break and the beginnings of her bipolar disorder. ‘I had auditory hallucinations, like 1930s warplanes were rumbling overhead,’ she says.” (article)
There are actually two issues going on here:
The first issue is the lack of education about the normal and expected psychological effects of long-term contemplative practice. Willougbhy explained that many of the unusual perceptions, sensations, and altered states are a normal result of meditation. Here is an article that goes into detail explaining how these experiences are part and parcel of the spiritual path of meditation: The Map: Understanding the States and Stages of Enlightenment, Part 4. The problem is that nobody has ever informed the meditators that this is what they are getting themselves into, and they become justifiably confused, frightened, and disoriented when they begin having these experiences. It is the responsibility of the meditation teacher to explain all of these phases and phenomena to the student and give them the tools to handle each one as it arises, and obviously teachers are not fulfilling this responsibility well at the moment.
The second issue is that for some people, the cumulative effect of all these normal results of meditation can be so overwhelming to their system it does cause a mental breakdown, or a psychotic break, or a kind of break from reality. This could happen to anyone, but it would be especially troublesome for someone with an undiagnosed (or diagnosed) mental illness. For example, if someone is already psychologically vulnerable all these bizarre experiences can open up or set off symptoms that were perhaps in the background or under tenuous control. This is likely why there are reports of people needing to be taken to a psychiatric hospital during or after a meditation retreat.
Someone with PTSD, for example, is already experiencing an overwhelming and confusing array of emotions, sensations, perceptual changes, issues with sleep and nightmares and flashbacks. Try to imagine what would happen if you were to add all the above altered states of consciousness to this person’s life. I can definitely see how an emotional and mental meltdown could occur and the person could end up in the hospital.
Also, with regards to the long meditation retreats, I’m thinking that is probably not the best kind of meditation for an individual with PTSD. First, it removes them from their regular routine. Now going out and doing new things is great, but in this case, the length of time away from home and the degree of how different the setting and schedule is from one’s normal routine could well be destabilizing and shocking to the system. The setting is probably also not set up to handle someone who may get triggered, have nightmares, insomnia, immobility, terrors, etc. It might well turn into a disaster. Actually now that I think of it I did attend a three day retreat with PTSD and it was definitely a mistake, but that whole thing is another blog post!
2. Dangers of Detachment and the Path of the Renunciate
Can meditation, in some cases, make us too detached from our emotions and the outside world, even causing us to lose skills needed to interact with people and take care of life?
Michael Eigen’s book The Psychoanalytic Mystic is referenced in an article for the Vancouver Sun (Meditation: The darker side of a good thing). The article also references writings and statements made by Ken Wilbur. Some common issues or pathologies that develop in meditators are:
- Isolation, lack of human contact, especially putting up walls and not allowing people in. “Focusing on their inner lives, neither Owen nor Jessie allowed themselves to be ‘transformed’ by others. …he became insensitive to women and others. Eigen says Jesse really needed to control people, because they threatened him.”
- Increased narcissistic and self-centered tendencies. “The meditator felt himself better than others, including his students, and often privately denigrated them. …Wilber believes many middle-aged baby-boomers who meditate bring to it an over-simplified commitment to pluralism and relativism and the notion that, ‘You do your thing and I’ll do mine.’”
- Lack of integration of the “shadow” emotions and experiences of life.“The meditators did not integrate life’s inevitable suffering and limitations into their own being, says Eigen. ” ” Buddhism instructed him not to hold onto such idealized maternal feelings, but to “detach” from them”
- They became too detached from themselves – their own viewpoints, opinions, convictions. “The Eastern teaching that people should have “no ego,” an idea espoused by Vancouver-based spiritual teacher Eckhart Tolle and many others, encourages meditators to try to be “empty,” to have no viewpoint, says Wilber. The trouble is many meditators believe that means having no viewpoints at all, even on important issues. As Wilber says, many meditators don’t believe in anything.”
This article further clarifies the problem with the teaching of “detachment.”
“Acclaimed Scottish poet John Burnside says, ‘To imagine that one can simply withdraw, and somehow achieve peace, or wisdom, or detachment, is a mistake. It is also, in most cases, inappropriate, selfish and even cowardly. With a few exceptions, the only valid withdrawal is a temporary one…’”
This misunderstanding about detachment is eloquently explained in an article by Lorin Roche about the two paths of contemplative practice, the Renunciate and the Householder. Only certain people were supposed to isolate themselves from the world; these were called Renunciates. If your life lessons are best met via interaction with the world you are a Householder, and your practice is meant to give meaning to a life completely immersed in the world. Indeed, “householders live in the world and evolve through working and playing with it.”
It’s quite a long, and good, article, so I will just quote some paragraphs here and if interested you can hop on over there and read the entire thing.
“When householders practice meditations designed for renunciates, they inadvertently damage the psychic and energetic structures they need to make their way in the material world. Meditation works, and it works on you on a deep level. If you go into meditation with the idea that you have to detach from the world, you may get more than you bargained for – you may find yourself gradually getting dissociated, removed, alienated, and depersonalized. It is always easier to destroy than to create, and detachment means to cut off or separate. It can take years to rebuild connections that you have severed through mistakenly practicing detachment.”
“The recluse path that nuns and monks take is as magical in its way as that of Knights, Princes and Elves. So what if it necessitates maintaining some anti-life or antibiotic attitudes. It is as if recluses continually take antibiotics to cure them of the disease of having desires and individuality. This is the sacrifice, a sublimated blood sacrifice. Any desire other than the desire to bow down and obey has to be suppressed. The only good nun is a docile, compliant nun. All this murder of impulses is healthy for recluses, part of their way of being. They call it detachment, and it is a primary attitude of the recluse. Detachment is necessary and healthy for recluses. When it works, we get these radiant, loving, fearless people who are great servants of humanity. By giving up their personal life, they become universal.”
“People who have families, jobs, pay rent or mortgages, and live in the real world, have very different needs in meditation. Recluses call us householders. Householders do not need to constantly kill off their natural impulses. As a matter of fact, the last thing they need is to weaken their desires, instincts and intuition. The path of the householder involves working with attachment. It is very daring to be attached. Tolerating the experience of attachment takes courage. Personal bonds are attachments. Loving someone is an attachment. Householders, when they meditate, should savor every sexual impulse, cherish every desire, honor and listen to all their instincts, and cultivate their general enthusiasm for life.”
“When householders practice meditation in the style of a recluse, and practice detaching from their desires, they often find that over time their instincts become weaker, their intuition becomes flawed, they become confused about their desires, and they start looking for an external authority to dominate them and tell them what to do.”
“What happens to people in ashrams and spiritual groups often recapitulates the best and worst aspects of early childhood. The best aspects include the fantasy of being around an all-knowing, all-loving, all-wise father figure/guru. The worst aspects are scapegoating and sexual abuse.”
“Over the past 40 years, I have met innumerable meditators who have been drained and devitalized by the anti-life attitudes they have internalized and practiced. … There are people all across the United States who were involved with meditation in the past, and now find that their training is interfering with their ability to bond with a mate, stay in love, find their life’s work, make money, and express their individuality.”
“The problem we have in the West, currently, as of 2004, is that almost all meditation teachers active in the field have been trained by recluses or have been deeply influenced by them. The language everyone uses is polluted by recluse terminology. ”
“Out of the ten million or so people in the United States who are practicing meditation, an unknown percentage of them are internalizing negative attitudes and damaging their ego structure and instincts. Some of these people become prey for dominating, authoritarian personalities who pretend to be enlightened and demand to be worshipped.”
“For a householder, practicing detachment is indistinguishable from practicing depression. The symptoms defining depression include: loss of interest in most or all activities, significant change in weight or appetite, sleep disturbance, slowed behavior, loss of energy, feelings of worthlessness, and suicidal thoughts.“
Here is a list of all damages that can occur if a householder tries to practice renunciate practices and follow renunciate life philosophies:
- unhealthy level of isolation and lack of human contact; unhealthy detachment from relationships with friends, family and intimate partners
- promotion of narcissism
- lack of integration of the “shadow”
- people become too detached from themselves, their viewpoint, opinion, position, independent thought, emotions; damages personal desires and personal will; produces confusion in relation personal desires
- develop symptoms of dissociation and depersonalization.
- damage their ego structure
- damage to one’s sense of personal boundaries
- devaluation of the individual will can make people act cowardly towards life
- damages the psychic and energetic structures they need to make their way in the material world; lack of ability to function and perform basic life tasks (can include not developing skills as well as regression, loss of previously developed skills).
- their instincts become weaker; damage can occur to natural human instincts
- intuition becomes flawed
- being internally confused and unstable, they start looking for an external authority to dominate them and tell them what to do
- they can become drained and devitalized by the anti-life attitudes they have internalized and practiced
- in householders heavy involvement in detachment can promotes the symptoms of depression: loss of interest in most or all activities, significant change in weight or appetite, sleep disturbance, slowed behavior, loss of energy, feelings of worthlessness, and suicidal thoughts.
Detachment and PTSD. This teaching of detachment could harm just about any normal human being, but it could be particularly damaging to someone with PTSD. If you consider that some major hurdles people with PTSD have to overcome are: avoidance of people, places and things; emotional numbness; tendencies to go into immobility and “play dead” internally and experiencing apathy, energy drain, and all the symptoms of depression listed above, the last thing someone recovering from PTSD needs is a practice that reinforces and increases all these symptoms!
Danger of Escapism and Addiction. Detachment, because it is a kind of avoidance, could actually be very tempting for someone with PTSD. PTSD is like a frozen lake over an unseen volcano of turmoil. People who have some emotional trauma inside might think they are doing something spiritual by doing meditation, but really may be finding another way to escape feeling all the messages the body and emotions have to convey. Spiritual practice of detachment could even be used in ways similar to drugs or other addictions, to escape from the frightening and troubling emotions of PTSD, which would prevent actually healing the PTSD.
Actually there are 31 Topics (!) under “Dangers of Meditation” on Lorin Roche’s website. This is a must-read for anyone trying to decide which kind of meditation to practice. He has an interesting synopsis of the main dangers:
“The Dangers of Meditation Itself
The challenge of finding the right kind of meditation.
The challenge of learning to face every thought and emotion.
Dangers of doing the wrong type of meditation for your body and personality.
Dangers of over-meditating.
Predictable crises in the life of a meditator.
Dangers of abandoning meditation because you are in a crisis.
Dangers of opening the chakras.
Enchantments and beguilements from opening the senses.
Dangers of stress release.”
And I would just add to this: Dangers of succumbing to various kinds of manipulation on the part of the teacher, Danger of it being a cult, Danger of there being psychologically damaging elements of the philosophical aspects of the teaching.
3. Dangers of Attention & The Prerequisite of Self-regulation
I mentioned this issue in the article summarizing the light and dark sides of Byron Katie. #12 in harmful results of The Work states, “for PTSD, inquiry should only be done after all the trauma-related issues have been processed to a level such that the person is able to reach and maintain inner stability reliably.” (aka self-regulation)
Basically, there are a lot of different spiritual practices that pretty much require one to be able to self-regulate one’s own emotions BEFORE embarking on the practice.
Byron Katie’s “Inquiry” can be destabilizing because someone is asking repetitive questions, emotions that arise are not being dealt with by the technique itself and are just ignored, and it could cause dissociation, emotional repression, or emotional triggering.
With regards to mindfulness, placing focused unwavering awareness on one’s body could amplify physical pain and placing focused unwavering awareness on one’s inner world could amplify certain painful emotions. And this is a danger for someone with PTSD, because PTSD renders an individual very vulnerable and unstable and this amplification can be overwhelming and unsettling.
Jim Hopper explains this in detail on the Mindfulness section of his website:
Scroll down to the Caution: Mindfulness Includes Pain, and Requires Readiness section. Again, a long article, so I will quote his main points here:
1. Attention Magnifies Pain. “We’ve all learned that ignoring (or attempting to ignore) pain can reduce our experience of it, and that focusing on experiences of pain can amplify them.”
2. Thoughts Increase Emotional Pain. “An important difference between emotional and physical pain makes emotional pain more capable of being altered by attention: emotional pain usually involves an interweaving of feelings and thoughts…And like attention, thoughts can increase emotional pain. ”
3. Attention Plus Certain Kinds of Thoughts Cause The Greatest Amplification in Human Suffering. “The greatest amplification of suffering comes from focusing one’s attention on the pain while thinking thoughts that escalate the pain. Such thoughts can take many forms, including interpretations, judgments, and memories. ”
4. Mindfulness Practice Benefits Come from Clear Observation. “…mindfulness can help, by allowing you to catch these cycles of suffering early on,… The present-focused, non-judgmental attention of mindfulness allows one to directly observe the separateness of feelings and thoughts, to attend to feelings without running off into associated memories, stories, etc.”
5. But Mindfulness Will Not Work Without a Foundation of Self-Regulation. “Only a solid foundation of self-regulation skills, and disciplined practice, will enable one to attend to emotional pain with a sustained mindfulness that does not bring escalation – as opposed to having one’s attention grabbed, dragged, and swept away in escalating cycles of suffering.”
6. He lists 4 Signs that Indicate an Individual may not be Ready:
- “Tendencies to become overwhelmed and “flooded” by painful feelings and memories”
- “Tendencies to “dissociate””
- “Tendencies to get “lost in your own world” and withdraw from relating to others”
- “Tendencies to hear voices in one’s head that sound like those of real other people, or to become convinced of ideas that are extremely unlikely or clearly untrue to other people.” (I think this one is referring to people who are at risk of disconnecting from reality due to the impact of their traumatic experiences, which is completely understandable, but they should be treated and stabilized before a mindfulness practice is attempted)
About Attention, Pain and PTSD. A person with PTSD may perceive physical pain sensations differently after PTSD than before. For me, it’s difficult to analyze amidst all the confusion but I believe I experience an amplification of some perceptions of pain and a total numbing out of others. Pain that happens to be a trigger related to a past trauma can overwhelm the system with fear, because it’s like a signal that the body is under a much greater threat than the body is actually under.
Remember the body and reptilian brain speak in “symbols” not in English. A pain that is a reminder of pain when one believed one was dying may act like a symbol of a legitimate death threat. This is what I refer to as problems with the “Danger Scale.” If the True Danger is a 5, a person with PTSD might think its a 90 on a scale of 100. The pain may seem exaggerated because the threat is exaggerated and everything seems exaggerated.
At the same time, some pain may be totally numbed out due to the “numbing” aspect of PTSD. I have a very high pain tolerance. I never get anesthetic even if getting a crown done at the dentist’s office. Which is strange because the slightest thing that triggers a memory of a trauma can cause a full on emotional meltdown, even with no pain at all. Could it be that, having endured so much physical pain in my life, as long as the pain is not a trigger I have learned how to use my mind to “go somewhere else” and escape pain? It’s pretty easy for me to do when I’m calm, so I think that is just part of the “numbing” part of PTSD.
With the kind of dysregulation and confusion happening in the system that results from PTSD, using the power of our attention may backfire. As Hopper said, attention is very powerful. The cultivated attention of mindfulness practice can be the doorway into an overwhelming state of immobility and terror, or a liberation from repetitive cycles of thought and emotion. The difference is in whether or not the individual has taken the time to develop the skill of self-regulation.
Self-regulation is a pre-requisite to many things in life, not just mindfulness meditation. Any moment in which one is triggered, it’s self-regulation that is the key to calming oneself down and returning to the normal state of consciousness referred to as “calm alert.” Thus, the first priority is to put some effort into learning self-regulation and restoring stability, balance, and calmness to the body and overall nervous system and slowly building a sense of self-confidence around being able to handle one’s self if one is going off the deep end. All of Peter Levine’s exercises build self-regulation; pretty much any one of his trauma books can help one develop self-regulation and I highly recommend them.
Conclusion…
Certain types of mindfulness training can help people overcome PTSD, but unfortunately it appears some kinds of meditation can cause serious harm. If you have PTSD, it is important to pick the right kind of meditation to experiment with and to pick the right time in your recovery to try it out. Long retreats, intense long-term meditation, meditation that is part of a philosophy of detachment or the path of the “renunciate”, and the use of strong focusing of attention all have potential pitfalls for people with PTSD. If at all possible, try to figure out if the mindfulness meditation can be used reliably as another way to build self-regulation. If the technique is having the effect inside you of increasing your symptoms, making you feel dizzy, unstable, dissociated, confused, falling apart, or bringing up intense emotions that you can’t process, stop the practice and choose another one.
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Buddhism Exposed: Secret Ties to Demons, Dragons and Mystery Babylon – censored
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Demons and the Demonic in Buddhism
- LAST MODIFIED: 22 APRIL 2013
- DOI: 10.1093/OBO/9780195393521-0171
Introduction
It may come as a surprise to those who equate Buddhism solely with its intellectual and mystical traditions to learn that demons are a central aspect of its history. In contrast to Western representations of the demonic, the “demons” of Asia are primarily the powerful, ancient spirits of nature, who require recognition and appeasement. Buddhism was more successful than any of the other missionary religions in making peace with the indigenous spirits it confronted in its progress through Asia. Monastics either turned a blind eye to existent demon-deity cults (as in Southeast Asia), allowing them to flourish in tandem with Buddhism, or (as in Tibet) Buddhist miracle workers like Padmasambhava forcefully tamed the demons and turned them into dharma protectors and fierce guardians of the new faith of Buddhism. In fact, we might say that in Buddhist understanding, there really are no such things as “demons.” There are only powers, energies, and deities (exactly how the bible describes spiritual enemies.) to be worked with; the skillfulness, compassion, and attainment of the practitioner determine the outcome of the encounter. Those who are found lacking in these attributes have far more to fear from demons than those who, like the Buddha in his triumph over the ultimate demon Māra, have pacified their own inner demons of greed, aversion, and ignorance. Since there is no notion of absolute evil in Buddhism (or indeed in any Asian religion), and all classes of beings, including beings of the lower realms such as demons, animals, and ghosts, may improve their karmic lot by attaining a higher birth in the human or divine realms, demons are not always and forever demons. They are troublesome but not catastrophic. They are obstacles to be overcome through ritual action, offerings of appeasement, and meditative detachment. Nevertheless, in normative Buddhist texts, the suffering of demons in the hell realms is invoked negatively to warn practitioners to be more diligent in their spiritual efforts—in part to avoid rebirth among these unfortunate beings. As representations of natural bounty, mystery, and fertility, demons threaten to exceed and overturn the human order. They must be controlled, and yet they must be respected, since they are an inevitable feature of that oscillating order.
General Overviews (the viewpoint of this article is pagan. They claim that Bible believers are misguided. However, the demons they join themselves with have blinded their minds to truth.)
Buddhist moral systems grow out of a realization of the truth of the interdependence of all beings and all phenomena. (that is a lie from the pit of hell. “For what fellowship have righteousness and iniquity? or what communion hath light with darkness?” 2 Cor 6:14) While that realization gives rise to a strong commitment to virtue and compassion (since we are all deeply connected), the understanding that supports it is that there can be no absolute good or evil, precisely because of the interdependence and impermanence of all. Still, the construction of cosmologies that reflect different kinds of karma has occupied Buddhist writers for centuries. Matsunaga and Matsunaga 1972 broadly divide these cosmological writings into “two streams,” Abhidharma (drawn principally from Vasubandhu’s Abhidharmakośa) and Mahayana (based primarily on the Flower Garland Sutra and the Larger Sukhāvati-vyūha). They summarily state that Mahayana views “changed Buddhism from a philosophy to a religion” by constructing a distinct mythology and pantheon that give expression to abstract discussions of karma. In this context, different hells entail different punishments and demons who administer them. Sadakata 1997 provides a clear analysis of the metaphysical context of these mythological elaborations. And, as Southwold 1985 points out, Western scholars of religion who see images of unqualified evil in the various demonologies of Buddhism are misguided, because such moral absolutes are probably only truly applicable to monotheistic religions. (People who believe in the Only Living Creator.)
For More Information See My Articles: Complicit in Our Own Destruction
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