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Pingala

Yoga PindasanaPingala nadi

Pingala nadi
one of the main energy channels running on the right side of the spine from the mooladhara (base) chakra to the ajna chakra in the head by intersecting various chakras on the way.
Plavini pranayama ...

 


o Pingala / Solar or Right Swara - The breath through right nostril
o Pingala Nadi located on the right side of spinal Cord
o It represents Sun / Male Shiva(consciousness) principle ...

Pingala The nadi, or channel of prana, that ends at the right nostril. It brings in the stimulating, energizing, heating energy of the sun.

Pingala nadi
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major pranic channel in the body which conducts the dynamic force manifesting as prana shakti ...

Pingala-nadi ("reddish conduit"): the prana current or arc ascending on the right side of the central channel (sushumna-nadi) and associated with the sympathetic nervous system and having an energizing effect on the mind when activated; cf.

Pingala
The Pingala Nadi starts and ends to the right of Sushumna. It is the carrier of solar, male energy, adding vitality, physical strength and efficiency. It is also purifying like Ida Nadi, but cleansing like fire.


PINGALA - nadi that runs along the right symphathetic connected to the right nostril

PITRALOKA - the world of ancestors ...

Ida, pingala and sushumna
A merely philosophical definition of yoga is not enough. Yoga proper is a technical subject. It talks about the body and mind in anatomical and psychological terms.

Ida and Pingala
There are the two nerve-currents one on either side of the spinal column. The left one is called Ida and the right is known as Pingala. These are Nadis.

Ida And Pingala Nadis
Ida and Pingala Nadis are not the gross sympathetic chains. These are the subtle Nadis that carry the Sukshma Prana. In the physical body these tentatively correspond to the right and left sympathetic chains.

Pingala - The Nadi that runs on the right side of Sushumna Nadi.
Poorna - Full.
Prakriti - Primordial Nature, which in association with Purusha, creates the universe.

Pingala
nadi connected with the right nostril conducting active vital energy; the solar aspect; the dynamic aspect
Pitta ...

of the two nadis ida and pingala.
It is the spring equinox
when the breath is in the muladhara,
and it is the autumn equinox
when the breath is in the head.
And prana, like the sun,
travels through the signs of the zodiac;
each time you inhale, ...

have been identified with the following plexuses commencing from the lowest, the Muladhara; the sacrococcygeal plexus, the sacral plexus, the solar plexus, (which forms the great junction of the right and left sympathetic chains Ida and Pingala with ...

pingalanadi: the psychic nerve current which terminates in the right nostril
pitta: one of the doshas (humours) of Ayurveda, meaning “fire'
prakriti: nature, causal matter
pralaya: dissolution, complete merging ...

Another description is that Kundalini is awakened through the uniting of the energies of the two channels of ida and pingala.

The three main nadis in the body are the ida, pingala and sushumna, which all start at the base of the spine and travel upwards to the head.

In Yoga, the three main channels of prana are the Ida, the Pingala and the Sushumna.

By balancing two streams, often known as ida (mental) and pingala (bodily) currents, the sushumna nadi (current of the Self) is said to rise, opening various chakras (cosmic power points within the body, ...

Energy (prana) is said to flow in the human body through three main channels (nadis), namely, Susumna, Pingala and Ida. Susumna is situated inside the spinal column.

The left nostril is the path of the Nadi called Ida and the right nostril is the path of the Nadi called Pingala.

Pingala, on the right side, is associated with prana, heat, activity, and the sun.

For the nadis to become purified, the aspirant not only had to have the experience of intense visualization of the Ada, pingala, sushumna, and all of the chakras, but also needed to know if the flow of prana had become obstructed and if so, ...

Closing the mouth, inhale with control and concentration through ida and pingala, so that the breath is felt from the throat to the heart and produces a sonorous sound.
Do kumbhaka as before and exhale through ida.

It is just below the Kanda and the junction where Ida, Pingala and Sushumna Nadis meet. Two fingers above the anus and about two fingers below the genitals, four fingers in width is the space where the Muladhara Chakra is situated.

This calculation is applicable to those who have already purified their yogic channels of Ida, Pingala and Sushumna. Their breath has been brought to controllable levels.

It is said that energy paSes through ida (chandra) nadi on the inhalation and through pingala or surya nadi on the exhalation. These are larger nadis that hold the balance of magnetism and energy created by the sun and moon.

On the other side of the canal are two additional energy channels, one called "Ida" corresponding to the male, and the other the "Pingala" corresponding to the female. Ida is at the right of the base of the spine and the pingala is at the left side.

Pingala: a channel on the right side of the spine through which prana moves
Prana: soul of the universe
Pranayama: breathing exercises
Raja Yoga: it focuses on the control of the intellect in order to obtain enlightenment ...

The channels of the body and the nadi's most associated with the kundalni are common within the HYP, namely Ida, Pingala, and Sushumna. The Bhandas or chakra locks common to kundalini yoga appear within the HYP (69-77).

A Two for correct reading and reciting. 1. S'iksha, the science of correct articulation and pronunciation.
2. Chandas: metres (as represented by Pingalanâga or Pingalâcârya).
B Two for the correct understanding of the vedic texts.

Our bodies are described in Kundalini Yoga as having subtle currents or nadis - the left side being ida, (moon, cool, receptive), the right side being pingala (warm, sun, active).

The shape, color, beauty, and bliss of the fish swimming in the three central rivers, ida, pingala, and sushumna, were superior to those of the fish swimming in the other rivers flowing through the body.

Esoterically, ha and tha, respectively, indicate the microcosmic sun (ha) and moon (tha), which symbolize the masculine current, pingala nadi, and feminine current, ida nadi, in the human body. (See Yoga Styles) ...

See also: Body, Ida, Yoga, Prana, Mind