DHYANA
During meditation, the meditator strives for maximum awareness.
In due course, it perceives many new sensory lights, sounds and smells, which for it, did not exist earlier. These serve as indicators of progress. The mind now knows that there is nothing known as soundless. That in fact, the absence of noise which we call silence, alone leads to anahata, the eternal reasonance, vibrating the universal hum. Similarly, that, which we have known as darkness, is actually permeated by lights. So, meditation, in fact begins to sharpen our senses, and they discover newer dimensions, get hooked on to hitherto unknown frequencies.
Then, the meditator becomes conscious of an energy formation that rises slowly, up the spine. This is a higher awareness and the arrangement is being made for the mind to meet the Self, through (within) the meditator. The steadily rising energy reaches the brain and explodes into permeation. This one moment of culmination is spontaneous, and the mind meets with, knows, and fuses into the Self, all at once. This is the highest awareness. There is nothing more to be seen, heard or smelled; only a knowingness. This knowingness is known by itself.
~ From the book 'The Yogi and the snake' by Shail Gulhati: Shiva and Mysticism.
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