tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2894514913516471357.post2342834415725550793..comments2023-07-13T05:01:01.343-07:00Comments on Holistic Recovery from Schizophrenia: A Kundalini explanationAnonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06700295858497275586noreply@blogger.comBlogger6125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2894514913516471357.post-5351941481291103792012-02-06T02:51:05.370-08:002012-02-06T02:51:05.370-08:00There's no hurry! But thankyou.There's no hurry! But thankyou.Jasonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10172073587383859800noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2894514913516471357.post-309073787471982642012-02-05T14:13:22.761-08:002012-02-05T14:13:22.761-08:00Hi, Jason.
I'm lying in bed with my laptop, so...Hi, Jason.<br />I'm lying in bed with my laptop, so will review your comment and the link tomorrow, and see if I can come up with some observations. Without knowing what the link is about, I can assure you, after going through what I've gone through, nothing is too weird to contemplate. <br />Best, Rossa<br />No problem with lightbulbs or electricity in our house.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06700295858497275586noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2894514913516471357.post-39747251462940308232012-02-05T08:35:32.242-08:002012-02-05T08:35:32.242-08:00That's so interesting ... Thanks for the quick...That's so interesting ... Thanks for the quick reply. The "conception ping" is unusual and cool. The results you got from transforming to a positive outlook are heartening.<br /><br />I'm acquainted with both kundalini and the "spiritual emergency/intiatory illness" that surrounds it from experience. There are ways to handle it that pretty much obviate the debilitating side, but unfortunately they often don't seem to make it into the hands of those that would benefit. (Of course it does mean a spiritual practice and the patience that implies.) Mind you it doesn't always go smoothly and people still do get 'ch'i sickness' as it's known in the places I hang out. The vomiting and purging stuff often does seem a necessary phase.<br /><br />Definitely plausible from my experience that you'd have been "pulled in" via the energetic broadcasting that your son was doing -- in fact that would be expected. Those effects can be consciously directed as well with practice, you may know something about that. Stuff like qigong is all about that.<br /><br />BTW have you ever had difficulties with electronics or light bulbs in your house? Although the energy isn't just electromagnetic, it can interact with machines in funny ways -- even mechanical ones, now I think of it. Just a long shot there. :)<br /><br />I hesitate to give you this link -- I just posted something on kundalini and schizophrenia but differently angled, in which the birth experience is a big part of the trigger, and the mother may be... not as open as you. :)<br /><br />I still do differentiate kundalini from schizophrenia, which I see as a PTSD-style illness that comes from continued denial of the transpersonal aspects -- that took my post to some places that aren't so pleasant but I'd love to have your opinion -- <a href="http://lightningoak.wordpress.com/2012/02/04/the-divine-weirdness/" rel="nofollow">here it is</a> if interested.<br /><br />It came out of combining my interests in the esoteric angles with the 'family therapy' approach. I didn't address the positive side so much in this particular post but tried to account for the negative sympotms... based on your thoughts would want to widen what I wrote I'd say...<br /><br />Either way, many thanks for a great blog. /JasonJasonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10172073587383859800noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2894514913516471357.post-74740356949066376592012-02-05T05:38:06.719-08:002012-02-05T05:38:06.719-08:00Hi, Jason,
I can't say I had a kundalini expe...Hi, Jason,<br /><br />I can't say I had a kundalini experience in giving birth, although the events leading up to the birth are, to me, interesting. I actually heard the "ping" of conception, and then Chris was eerily quiet in the womb for the rest of the pregnancy. He was 27 days overdue. Nothing unusual about the actual birth except it was long and drawn out. If you type "shamanic initiatory illness" into the search bar of my blog, I write about why I believe I was pulled into it through my son's "illness." Here's a quote from within that post:<br /><br />"A shamanic initiatory illness is a transformative ordeal that either comes on unexpectedly with no known precipitating event or can be activated on purpose by spiritual practice. It shows up as an odd amalgam of mental and physical symptoms, as mentioned above; is typically very debilitating; and takes the individual to very odd and dark mental and physical places. Interestingly, the illness seems to create a field that affects family and friends around the sufferer, who sometimes go through their own tough times in parallel."<br /><br />Best regards,<br />RossaAnonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06700295858497275586noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2894514913516471357.post-77997388065228960232012-02-05T04:48:19.518-08:002012-02-05T04:48:19.518-08:00Nice post. I need little convincing of kundalini a...Nice post. I need little convincing of kundalini and transpersonal aspects of schizophrenia, but I have a question -- have you yourself ever had kundalini experiences, perhaps in giving birth? I ask because I'm trying to see if there is a pattern of definite kundalini awakening experiences in a family context associated with schizophrenia... thanks for reading.Jasonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10172073587383859800noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2894514913516471357.post-42418243443305880592010-11-04T04:03:38.926-07:002010-11-04T04:03:38.926-07:00"They had never heard of intense head pain as..."They had never heard of intense head pain as a symptom of schizophrenia."<br /><br />They should have. Several times during crisis I experienced thundering headaches that came like a bolt from the blue, and vanished just as quickly again. I'd only experienced tension headaches in the back of my head a few times up to then. These "crisis headaches" were located in the front of my head. At first, they made me a bit nervous, then I realized they occurred each time I had what you might call a major insight, succeeding in connecting "symptoms" with my life story, recognizing the meaning with the "symptoms", understanding what had happened in my life. Some time later, I read in a book by a Norwegian shrink, Svein Haugsgjerd, about one or the other western psychiatrist/analyst (one of the more known ones, but I can't remember the name), who'd observed that sometimes his "psychotic" clients experienced sudden, violent headaches in their foreheads (location of which makes us conscious beings, and also of "the third eye") when "pieces fell into place". But, of course, this is a psychoanalytic explanation, and psychoanalysis is about just as "out" as eastern philosophy in biopsychiatric circles.Marianhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16273435151682585281noreply@blogger.com