Daylight-out Kundalini Effect
Meditationtime Forum Post
Date: Posted 4 years before May 29, 2018
MiBeloved 4 years ago
Something which I rarely discussed and which rarely happens is the daylight-out state of consciousness which is attained sometimes when doing breath infusion.
This is different to the white-out, the black-out and the gold-out.
In a daylight-out the yogi enters the sattva guna isolated energy. This occurs when kundalini rises into the head and strikes the brahmarandra and then burst downwards like a shower of fireworks which fall from the sky and which illuminates whatever is below it and whatever is near to it in any direction, as it falls.
Since this concerns the sattva guna influence of material nature, even in its purest state, still students might harbor doubts about the value of such a state. However repeatedly going to this place, will cause the yogi to get some understanding (chit feature of consciousness) of the original state of the sense of identity.
What happens is this:
As the student is doing breath infusion practice, the kundalini arises with but with a sattva guna aspect in it. It punctures through the sushumna nadi central passage in the spine and enters the head where it stuns the buddhi intellect orb. When this happens the yogi experiences the core-self as a figment of someone’s imagination, just as if it were just a momentary thought in the mind of another person.
In that state the yogi tries to grasp at existence to return to being who he or she is but there is no ability to retrieve the cultural identity. Instead the student finds that the psyche is filled with light, as in the middle of a cloudless day when the sun is overhead. No glaring sun is seen, just light as during the midday hour on a clear day.
At this time there is just a slight identity being felt. This is like the whiff of a cloud, like a fading sliver of a cloud which has no standing in the sky. The yogi feels like that. That feeling is itself the weight of the sense of identity. It is like it has no weight but it has weight all the same.
The yogi then perceives the light of the sattva guna energy in all directions around and about the core-self. This is omni-vision, or seeing in all directions all at once.