Composing…
Composing…
मणिपूर
CHAKRA #3 OF 7City of jewels · Navel / solar plexus
Bīja
रं (Ram)
Element
Tejas (fire)
Color
Yellow
Petals
10
Deity
Rudra (with Lakini as Shakti)
Yantra
Inverted triangle
Vāhana / Animal
Ram
Endocrine
Pancreas, adrenals
डं ढं णं तं थं दं धं नं पं फं (ḍaṃ ḍhaṃ ṇaṃ taṃ thaṃ daṃ dhaṃ naṃ paṃ phaṃ)
Each petal of the cakra is inscribed with a Sanskrit phoneme — these are the mātṛkā-syllables, the sound-energies that compose the cakra’s field.
The seven cakras are mapped to the suṣumnā nāḍī — the central channel of subtle energy along the spine. Below each cakra is its granthi (knot), and at certain transition points the energy must break through major resistance: the Brahma-granthi at Mūlādhāra, Viṣṇu-granthi at Anāhata, Rudra-granthi at Ājñā. These knots correspond to the great existential identifications — body, relationship, and ego — that yoga progressively dissolves.
Manipura (#3 of 7) holds the tejas (fire) element and is the field of willpower, self-confidence, and personal power. Imbalance here typically shows as the conditions listed above. The bīja रं (Ram) is the seed-syllable for cakra-meditation: silently or audibly repeat it while attending to the cakra’s location, often coordinated with the breath.
The classical sources for cakra theory are the Ṣaṭ-cakra-nirūpaṇa (Pūrṇānanda Yati, 16th century), the Sat-cakra-nirūpaṇa, the Haṭha Yoga Pradīpikā, and the Goraksha Śatakam. Modern renderings differ — the seven-cakra system as taught in global yoga is a synthesis with substantial reinterpretation. For traditional instruction, study under a teacher in the haṭha-yoga or kuṇḍalinī-yoga lineage.
Sources: Ṣaṭ-cakra-nirūpaṇa (Pūrṇānanda) · Haṭha Yoga Pradīpikā · Goraksha Śatakam. Awaiting scholar verification.