Kundalini is a biological actuality, a primordial energy in every human
being that is capable of modifying DNA in a single lifetime. It’s
trans-national, trans-cultural, and, most important
trans-denominational. All of which speaks to a unified cosmology of
life, that we are really intertwined in so many ways, in spite of the
self-imposed barriers we erect to separate us from each other and from
the super-consciousness that permeates all of existence.
If individuals are to achieve self-actualization during a single
lifetime, Kundalini will be the gating agent for this evolutionary leap.
Whether it’s practicing ancient methods of meditation or newly
developed methods, Kundalini is the trigger. Meditation may provide the
shortest path, but there are other means of achieving the same results,
including cases where individuals do absolutely nothing, but are still
visited by a spontaneous Kundalini awakening. The one element all these
experiences share across the board is a change in metabolism, induced by
a process known as sexual sublimation, even though, in some instances,
the individuals neither detect nor feel any sexual activity. Some way or
other, the subject’s metabolism produces a distilled form of sexual
energy that gets released into the brain, activating Kundalini, which,
managed correctly, restores health, stimulates creative abilities,
alters negative behavior patterns, retards the aging process, and
expands consciousness.
Normally, human growth proceeds in a linear pattern. However,
disease, environmental factors, biochemical changes can create genetic
mutations, ultimately modifying DNA. Depending on the type of stimulus,
these mutations are either beneficial, harmful, or neutral. Kundalini
awakenings bring about major beneficial mutations in their subjects
which get passed along in DNA code to the next generation.
The Biology of Consciousness examines the idea (for physical
scientists, the hypothesis) that consciousness exists outside the body,
always has and always will. It is the driver of evolution, among other
things, what Gopi Krishna termed “the evolutionary impulse.”