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Mudras: Tools, Tuning Forks, and Just Plain Handy

Mudras are often used in meditations, but their potential is so much more.
My first experience with mudras was interesting and unexpected. I didn't even find out about mudras as such and yoga mudra until much later.

We were studying using our sixth sense (or "inner sense", however you want to call it) to tell things apart. It was a simple exercise and I'll share it later on in the page. For now, let's just say that it had a big impact.

You see mudras every day.

Ironically, many people use them already and don't even know it. The "prayer" pose, where you put your hands together palm-to-palm, pointed upwards? That's called the Anjali mudra.

How about when you look at someone who is a deep thinker in the movies or on TV. You'll see them looking into the distance with their palms apart, touching their fingertips together. That's called the hakini mudra.

One more on the "common, every day" category:  When someone has their hands clasped together. Their index fingers aren't folded in, however. Instead, they're sticking straight up and are held together. The net effect is that it looks kind of like a steeple. That's the kali mudra. There are others, too and they don't always involve hand gestures. One mudra I use every time I settle down to meditate is called the mandala mudra. That's just the beginning. There are others that don't even rely on hand positions.

As a quick preview, here's one exercise/tool I learned from  Higher Balance:
  • Touch the tip of your index finger to the tip of your thumb on both hands. Leave the other fingers extended and keep your palms up.
  • Breathe in energy (prana), paying attention to how you feel. Pay special attention to how you feel in the center of your chest.
  • Breathe out.
  • Extend your index fingers and touch your middle fingers to the thumb instead.
  • Repeat the breathing exercise, paying attention to the differences.
  • Continue with the ring and pinky fingers.
  • After the pinky, switch back to the ring and repeat. Then the middle finger, then the index finger.
  • You're done! You're probably in a better mental position than you were before, if not in a shifted state of consciousness.
This exercise is extremely useful for many reasons. To me, one of the best is that it trains your senses to appreciate subtle shifts in energy. For more, I would recommend checking out Higher Balance here.

So to return to the abominable pun I made in the headline at the top, mudras are very (hehe) handy. They can be used to dial in your spiritual senses. They can be used to give you a boost when you're trying to get your mind and body to work together. They can even help with day-to-day mental focus. Why not try them out?

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