What does it really mean to understand Kuṇḍalinī — beyond the myths, the misconceptions, and the mass-market awakenings?
Is it a spontaneous physiological event, an irreversible shift in consciousness, or something far more subtle, rare, and demanding than modern spiritual culture acknowledges?
In this wide-ranging conversation, Jacob Kyle sits down with Igor Kufayev to explore Kuṇḍalinī as the living power of self-recognition within Kashmir Śaivism. Drawing from Igor’s decades of study, practice, and his newly released book Kundalini: The Goddess as the Power of Self-Recognition in Tantric Śaivism, the discussion moves through the philosophy of the goddess, the subtle anatomy of rising, and the radical difference between heightened pranic activity and genuine Kundalini awakening.
Together, they examine the three Kuṇḍalinīs — Parā, Cit, and Prāṇa — the six nāḍīs through which Kuṇḍalinī may ascend, and why true awakening involves an irreversible dismantling of the individual sense of self. The conversation also explores the legacy of Lillian Silburn’s Kuṇḍalinī: The Energy of the Depths, the esoteric dilemma of disseminating sacred knowledge, the painful rising of Ganapati Muni, and why the Shaiva approach differs fundamentally from the warrior-like methods of Hatha yoga.
At its core, this episode treats Kuṇḍalinī not as a trending awakening experience, but as the very power of consciousness itself — the goddess who both conceals and reveals, and whose movement toward liberation unfolds on her own terms, in her own time.
Discussed in This Episode:
Why genuine Kuṇḍalinī awakening is far rarer than modern culture suggests
The difference between heightened prāṇic activity (prāṇa-śakti) and true Kuṇḍalinī rising
What irreversible synaptic rewiring really means in the context of awakening
The three Kuṇḍalinīs: Parā, Chit (Śakti), and Prāṇa Kuṇḍalinī
The six nāḍīs of ascent — and why only three are considered safe and appropriate
The case of Ganapati Muni and the danger of unprepared or misdirected rising
Why Lillian Silburn’s Kuṇḍalinī: Energy of the Depths is both indispensable and potentially harmful
The tension between scholarly dissemination and the tradition of esoteric gatekeeping
How Kashmir Śaivism differs from Haṭha yoga in its approach to Kuṇḍalinī
The role of adhikāra (readiness) and the autonomous nature of Śakti’s grace
Abhinavagupta’s aesthetic vision and the philosophy of wonder (camatkāra)
Creativity, consciousness, and why the natural state is inherently creative
The myth of churning the cosmic ocean — nectar, poison, and collective liberation
Kuṇḍalinī as inseparable from the question of what it means to be fully human
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