Satan's Crow
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Ramayana
'The reality of the danger of spiritual practices for those who are without are drastic. The texts of Ramana, stated that kundalini awaking can bring "madness and death" upon those who practice such path. Today Hindu swami's will tell you about what happened to the famous ones like Ramakrisna and others, they got to a level where the kundalini energy really started to awaken and ascend and the effects are the serpent energy hit numerous internal blockages and it manifested in sickness and death from such. Others just went insane as well. Within the eastern texts they have what is called "The Final Breath" this when a person literally just dies within the major stage of kundalini activation and ascension, the body due to the internal blockages, lack or internal development, just can't handle this wave of energy and the person exits the body. There are numerous tales of this occurring in the east. Its considered one of the dangers must one undertake to attempt to reach the ascended state.''
Sections
-Bala Kanda (Childhood)
-Ayodhya Kanda (Ayodhya city)
-Aranya Kanda (Forest)
-Kishkindha Kanda (Kishkindha)
-Sundara Kanda (Beautiful)
-Yuddha Kanda (War)
-Uttara Kanda (Son)
It is estimated that the Ramayana epic took its present form of 7 chapters in the 2nd century BC.
The Ramayana (Sanskrit, is., रामामायण, rāmāyaṇa, Turkish "The Development of Rama") is one of the two best known epics in the Indian subcontinent, along with the Mahabbarata.
Subject:
King Dsharatha sends Rama away from the country to fulfill his promise to Bharata's mother, and Bharata is made king. Bharata appears on the stage here and refuses to be king. His father dies of grief.
Rama has already left the country. Then Bharata follows him and tries to persuade Rama to return, but Rama refuses to obey the king. Bharata returns to his country and moves to another place instead of the palace and starts ruling the country until Rama returns.
And the story of Sita's abduction. And now it goes all the way to Ravana, because Rama and Lakshmana are destroying everything in their path. And Ravana comes on the scene and kidnaps Sita.
She becomes a slave to Sita's desires. She pressures her husband to bring the deer in the form of gold and sends Rama to the forest. Then, when they are alone together, she accuses Lakshmana of lack of virtue and sends him away. Rama falls into the trap of Ravana, a Brahmin disguised as a saint, who does not follow any of the rules and approaches him with a pure urge to do good, far from knowledge and all the realities of the world.
The encounter with the monkey army; Hanuman. Great help from the valiant monkey.
While reading, I tried as much as possible not to give Sita any special meaning. The main goal is to save the world from the Ravana demon. A very big and bloody story is told in pages and pages. Various types of ifrit appear before Rama to do battle. Rama and his brother come close to death several times and even die. But they are revived when Hanuman finds and brings healing herbs.
The friendship between Rama and Hanuman, the head of the monkey army, could be another story.
At the end of the battle, Ravana is destroyed. What Ravana leaves behind are the evils that lie behind his rich and ostentatiously beautiful palaces.
In the Ramayana epic, there is a mention of a flying vehicle called "viman". And somewhere Ravana's flying chariot. We know that there was airplane technology imagined thousands of years ago.
After the war, Rama believes that Sita has been contaminated by her months of captivity in the ifrit's Harem, despite her purity, and rejects her.
Sita throws herself into the fire to purify her purity. She is rescued from the fire by the Gods and is brought out pure.
The word Sita is very similar to Lord Set.
The word Rama is similar to the Raum mantra. Raum is a mantra of the sun.
Sundara is a mantra we use. It means 'bliss'.
Sita is saved from the fire by the Gods.
I believe it is a reference to the character Sun Wukong in the great Chinese myth.
The same vehicle called vimana is also mentioned in the epic 'Mahabharata'.
'The reality of the danger of spiritual practices for those who are without are drastic. The texts of Ramana, stated that kundalini awaking can bring "madness and death" upon those who practice such path. Today Hindu swami's will tell you about what happened to the famous ones like Ramakrisna and others, they got to a level where the kundalini energy really started to awaken and ascend and the effects are the serpent energy hit numerous internal blockages and it manifested in sickness and death from such. Others just went insane as well. Within the eastern texts they have what is called "The Final Breath" this when a person literally just dies within the major stage of kundalini activation and ascension, the body due to the internal blockages, lack or internal development, just can't handle this wave of energy and the person exits the body. There are numerous tales of this occurring in the east. Its considered one of the dangers must one undertake to attempt to reach the ascended state.''
The Danger For Those Without
The Danger For Those Without The reality of the danger of spiritual practices for those who are without are drastic. The texts of Ramana, stated that kundalini awaking can bring "madness and death" upon those who practice such path. Today Hindu swami's will tell you about what happened to the...
www.ancient-forums.com
Sections
-Bala Kanda (Childhood)
-Ayodhya Kanda (Ayodhya city)
-Aranya Kanda (Forest)
-Kishkindha Kanda (Kishkindha)
-Sundara Kanda (Beautiful)
-Yuddha Kanda (War)
-Uttara Kanda (Son)
It is estimated that the Ramayana epic took its present form of 7 chapters in the 2nd century BC.
The Ramayana (Sanskrit, is., रामामायण, rāmāyaṇa, Turkish "The Development of Rama") is one of the two best known epics in the Indian subcontinent, along with the Mahabbarata.
Subject:
King Dsharatha sends Rama away from the country to fulfill his promise to Bharata's mother, and Bharata is made king. Bharata appears on the stage here and refuses to be king. His father dies of grief.
Rama has already left the country. Then Bharata follows him and tries to persuade Rama to return, but Rama refuses to obey the king. Bharata returns to his country and moves to another place instead of the palace and starts ruling the country until Rama returns.
And the story of Sita's abduction. And now it goes all the way to Ravana, because Rama and Lakshmana are destroying everything in their path. And Ravana comes on the scene and kidnaps Sita.
She becomes a slave to Sita's desires. She pressures her husband to bring the deer in the form of gold and sends Rama to the forest. Then, when they are alone together, she accuses Lakshmana of lack of virtue and sends him away. Rama falls into the trap of Ravana, a Brahmin disguised as a saint, who does not follow any of the rules and approaches him with a pure urge to do good, far from knowledge and all the realities of the world.
The encounter with the monkey army; Hanuman. Great help from the valiant monkey.
While reading, I tried as much as possible not to give Sita any special meaning. The main goal is to save the world from the Ravana demon. A very big and bloody story is told in pages and pages. Various types of ifrit appear before Rama to do battle. Rama and his brother come close to death several times and even die. But they are revived when Hanuman finds and brings healing herbs.
The friendship between Rama and Hanuman, the head of the monkey army, could be another story.
At the end of the battle, Ravana is destroyed. What Ravana leaves behind are the evils that lie behind his rich and ostentatiously beautiful palaces.
In the Ramayana epic, there is a mention of a flying vehicle called "viman". And somewhere Ravana's flying chariot. We know that there was airplane technology imagined thousands of years ago.
After the war, Rama believes that Sita has been contaminated by her months of captivity in the ifrit's Harem, despite her purity, and rejects her.
Sita throws herself into the fire to purify her purity. She is rescued from the fire by the Gods and is brought out pure.
The word Sita is very similar to Lord Set.
The word Rama is similar to the Raum mantra. Raum is a mantra of the sun.
Sundara is a mantra we use. It means 'bliss'.
Sita is saved from the fire by the Gods.
I believe it is a reference to the character Sun Wukong in the great Chinese myth.
The same vehicle called vimana is also mentioned in the epic 'Mahabharata'.
Ramayana - Wikipedia
en.m.wikipedia.org