I’ve been looking into these descriptions of mysticism and ancient Yogis, and it’s a lot different from the typical peaceful meditation stuff you usually hear about.

In this clip sathguru talks about "Karmic Mavericks" who basically broke the rules of reality and could manifest or disappear as fire. He describes them as chaotic forces that don't follow the normal laws of physics or karma.

It made me think about how we talk about "the phenomenon" or interdimensional stuff today. It seems like these traditions were documenting the same glitches or anomalies, they just used different words for it.



by shankaranpillayi

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4 Comments

  1. BensenJensen on

    This guy is a guru for rich people. I cannot listen to a man that claims to have ascended the mortal realm, to the point that Mara is hunting him down with monks that defy physics, yet charges $40 dollars on his website for a picture of him praying in front of a mountain. You’ve ascended our plane of existence in every facet…except for the age-old desire to make yourself a ton of money?

    I have no doubt that there are practitioners out there that have experienced things far beyond our comprehension. I doubt that those people feel the need to brag about themselves and their mastery of a belief system on a YouTube video. They are teaching those that want to learn, not selling tickets to speaking events for $1000+.

  2. Supernormal by Dean Radin. Not quite this extreme. They are called the siddhis or iddhis in yoga or Buddhism. Spiritual enlightment or ascension being all sunshine, rainbows, and unicorns is a misnomer.