The Allure of Tantra Perhaps nothing is more
exotic, dramatic and sensational in India’s Yoga traditions than is the
practice of Tantra. No other approach to Yoga has gained such a
fascination for the modern mind and its seeking of the bizarre, the
entertaining and the enigmatic.
Tantra appears to offer both
spiritual and worldly success to a superlative degree. It covers not
only internal yogic experiences of chakras, lokas and deities, but also
has many important healing practices for body and mind. Most notably,
it offers special means of heightening sexual pleasure, making money,
gaining recognition and defeating one’s enemies – with Tantric methods
available for achieving all human desires. There is in Tantra something
for everyone, especially those who may be put off by ascetic or
renunciate approaches to the spiritual life such as seem to dominate
most of the rest of the Yoga tradition.
Yet behind this allure
of Tantra are very deep and profound teachings, including some of the
most vibrant currents and detailed practices in the Yoga tradition of
the last thousand years or more. Though Tantra has much to offer
everyone, we must learn to be discriminating as to what is real versus
what is superficial Tantra or one can easily fall into its distortions,
which are many and much more visible.
Tantra and Wish-Fulfillment  Even in India,
Tantrics are often portrayed as great magicians with special powers to
overcome difficulties and fulfill our desires, using gems, mantras,
yantras and pujas to get the Gods on our side and remove negative
forces and bad karmas that get in the way of our happiness. Such
Tantrics may use well-defined systems of knowledge, particularly Vedic
astrology but also Yoga and Ayurveda and be quite adept in their
practices. But often their claim is more personal, relative to their
own special powers or siddhis and connections with deities, gurus or
even ghosts that can work for us in mysterious ways that circumvent any
outer limitations we may be facing.
Some Tantric gurus are
considered to be so powerful that their touch or glance alone can grant
whatever we wish. They offer us quick and miraculous means to
accomplish what our own efforts, karma and destiny appear to deny us.
Naturally, this Tantric guru image can be easily exploited. Such gurus
can charge a lot for or demand our personal loyalty and devotion in
various ways. Many Indian politicians have routinely employed such
Tantrics, hoping to use their powers to win elections and defeat their
enemies. This magical form of Tantra makes for entertaining stories and
good novels, giving it an additional glamour and grounds for
exaggeration.
Even genuine gurus may be looked upon with such
a vision as being able to grant our desires, though they may not
project any magical Tantric image themselves, so much is the human wish
for Divine intervention to make our lives better and to have them
conform more with what we would like them to be.
This
fascination with Tantra is nothing new in human cultures. Tantra is
another version of the same old attraction to magic, the occult and
ritual that we find to some degree in all cultures and was very
prominent in the ancient world everywhere. Ancient Vedic rituals, much
like modern Tantric rituals, can similarly be employed for all the
goals of human life from kama or enjoyment, to victory in battle, to
moksha or liberation.
Such an effort to bend the cosmic powers
to our human wishes occurs even in monotheistic religions. In western
religions, prayer has been used in the same way to promote worldly or
social well-being, like the Christian evangelicals in America
performing prayers and church services for the reelection of George W.
Bush.
Looking to God – whether in the formless sense, or in
the form of various Gods and Goddesses, or saints and gurus – to
fulfill our human desires is one of the first and most common ways of
human religious seeking. The undeveloped human ego will naturally first
approach God with its own needs, rather than for any real seeking of
knowledge or devotion. Tantra provides one of the most elaborate ways
of doing this and recognizes its value as a first step in getting
people onto the spiritual path. Chanting mantras in order to increase
our prosperity or find a good partner or any other such personal goal
is part of that approach. There is nothing wrong with such practices,
but they don’t represent the higher aspects of Tantra or Yoga.
Kundalini and the Chakras  Other aspects of
Tantra have come to the West and can be found in modern India as well,
but not without distortions either. The chakras are a common New Age
topic, though these are often portrayed quite differently than in
classical Yoga. The chakras, which are originally energy centers in the
subtle body, are often reduced to a physical formula. They are not
looked upon so much as centers of spiritual experience but as places of
physical and emotional healing. Such chakra healing is common in many
New Age approaches, including various forms of massage, body work,
energy work and pranic healing. While these practices may have their
health benefits, they do not unfold the deeper aspects of chakra energy
in Yoga practice, which require intense sadhana, mantra, pranayama and
meditation.
Meanwhile, Kundalini is generally reduced to some
form of sexual energy, leading to strange emotional states and
experiences. Or it is looked upon as some mere natural force to be used
in a technological way. Its true nature as the power of consciousness
is often overlooked.
This combination of New Age fantasies
from the West and an innate Indian need for the magical Yogi has
created much room for illusion and distortion, if not manipulation and
deception. It causes us to miss the fact that Tantra in the broader
sense is a deep, profound, highly spiritual and very aesthetic way of
understanding the conscious universe in which we live. Real Tantra
often gets buried under these glittering allures and exaggerated claims.
Broader Aspects of Tantra Apart from these
distortions, we must recognize that Tantra is a complex tradition, with
many sides and facets going beyond and even contrary to these popular
fantasies. Tantra is interwoven with the spiritual teachings of India
and beyond, going back far into ancient history. The popular
understanding of Tantra represents only a small part of a vast system
of knowledge.
We could compare the state of Tantra with that
of Yoga, with which it is related. Like Tantra, the physical side of
Yoga is emphasized - the practice of yogic postures or asanas - even
though these represent a small part of classical Yoga, whose main
concern is meditation. We live in a materialistic and media age in
which spiritual traditions are recast or scaled down into a physical
and sensationalistic model. This may popularize but it easily
diminishes and distorts.
Such a sensate image of Tantra may
cause some people to want to reject anything Tantric altogether.
Certain spiritual groups East and West like to avoid Tantra for this
reason. This is a mistake of another kind because it causes them to
overlook the positive aspects of Tantra, its wealth of knowledge and
practices about all the subtle aspects of Yoga, the worship of deities
and how to harmonize actions in the human realm with the Divine worlds
above.
The real question then is how to separate the deeper
and higher aspects of Tantra from the outer and superficial views.
Tantra is a precise system of knowledge that provides specific results
and much inner transformation if employed correctly. The application of
mantras, rituals, pranayama and meditation in Tantric teachings is
probably the most elaborate and complete in the entire Yoga tradition.
Tantra also shows us how to employ such systems as Vedic astrology,
Vastu and Ayurveda for deeper levels of protection and healing, as well
as to promote a higher awareness.
Tantra, Mantra and Yantra 
It is in Tantra that
we find the most detailed explication of the power of mantra, with
every syllable of the Sanskrit alphabet precisely defined. It is the
bija mantras of Tantra, the Shakti mantras like Hrim and Shrim, which
are the most powerful of all mantras. Tantra similarly provides the
greatest explanation of the use of yantras or geometrical meditation
devices that are important tools of concentration and meditation. For
example, the worship of Sri Chakra and Sri Yantra, probably the most
important and detailed of all the Yoga teachings, is the most important
Tantric teaching. The entire universe and the subtle body are present
in the Sri Chakra. Its worship integrates the individual with all
existence.
Tantra is a good tool for helping people of all
traditions reclaim the worship of the Goddess and restore appropriate
forms for her worship. As Christianity developed it rejected and
condemned the common pagan worship of the Goddess that had long existed
in the West. Western Tantra has added many other forms of Goddess
worship in Pagan traditions from the Celts to the Greeks, Romans,
Egyptians and Babylonians. Yet in these traditions forms of worship,
both external and internal, have largely been lost. Hindu Tantra helps
restore these methods of worship through its understanding of ritual,
meditation and iconography.
Tantra offers such a wealth of
images as the Dasha Mahavidya or Ten Wisdom Forms of the Goddess, and
the many forms of Kali and Durga. Tantra provides the most detailed
information on the visualization of such deities, their forms,
ornaments and weapons and how to use them. Tantra contains an important
tradition of sacred art, with a deep understanding of symbolism and
precise rules of depiction. Tantra preserves the great festivals of the
Goddess like Navaratri and Durga Puja. Tantric sacred sites from
Kamakhya in Assam to Kamakshi in Tamil Nadu preserve not only a
tradition of Goddess worship but a living connection with the Goddess
in nature. Historical Impact of Tantra Tantra is
perhaps the main current in Indian spirituality of the last thousand
years or more and helps us understand its entire movement. Most of
modern Hinduism and even much of Buddhism and Jainism is Tantric. There
is a strong Tantric element to the Sikh Dharma, if one looks deeply.
Tibetan Buddhism is largely a Tantric form, taken up from Indian
Tantrics in Bengal and Bihar. Such a Buddhism of mantras, mandalas,
deities, yoga and meditation is much closer to Hindu Tantric and Vedic
disciplines than it is to the older Buddhism of Sri Lanka and Thailand.
Traditional Tantra has a strong ascetic and monastic form,
though it has its householder tradition as well. Special Tantric
worship of different forms of the Goddess go on in the major
Shankaracharya Maths in India, using powerful mantras, yantras and
rituals. Shankara himself was not only the most famous Advaitic teacher
but also one of the most important Tantric teachers. His great poem to
the Goddess, Saundarya Lahiri, remains perhaps the most important
Tantric text that is used for Sri Chakra worship.
South Indian
Agamic temple worship is Tantric in this broader sense. The entire
Shakta tradition or worship of the Goddess in India is Tantric. Most of
Shaivism is Tantric. Yet even Tantric elements are there in Vaishnava
and other traditions.
Tantric teachings have been important
for most of the main gurus of modern India since Ramakrishna and
Vivekananda, including Aurobindo, Shivananda, Anandamayi Ma and many
others. Ganapati Muni, the chief disciple of Ramana Maharshi, was
another great Tantric Yogi. Yet this tradition is even older. The main
Yoga gurus over the past thousand years or more have been mainly Nath
Yogis, who are Tantric Shaivites, starting with Goraknath and
Matsyendra Nath. Such Nath Yogis were the founders of the Hatha Yoga
tradition as well as many important approaches to Tantra. Nath Yogis
were honored by Shankara, Jnanadeva, Abhinavagupta, and many other
great Hindu teachers of the medieval period. Even the teachings of
modern Yoga guru, Krishnamacharya, are attributed to tradition stated
by one Natha Muni. This means that without understanding real Tantra it
is hard to understand Yoga.
In fact, the best way to
understand real Tantra is as an expanded form of Raja Yoga. Like the
Yoga Sutras and in more detail Tantra teaches asana, pranayama,
pratyahara, dharana, dhyana and samadhi, but providing many more
specific forms and techniques. It gives the details on mantras and
methods that are only alluded to in the Sutras.
We can also
explain real Tantra as a yogic approach to science and art. In this
regard, there is a cross over between Vedic and Tantric sciences in
such disciplines as Ayurveda, Jyotish and Vastu. Tantra is the basis of
the Rasa Shastra or alchemical side of Ayurveda and much of Ayurveda’s
psychological treatments. Tantra uses the rules of Jyotish for
determining favorable times for ritual, pujas and so on. Tantric
architecture and temple building develops from Vastu. In fact, it is in
Tantra, contrary to modern academicians who fail to see the obvious
connection, that we find the most detailed applications of Vedic
teachings of ritual, mantra, yajna, puja and meditation.
So
whether we like it or not, Tantra is and will remain a dominant force
not only in Indian but in world spirituality. While we can recognize
the place of popular and New Age forms of Tantra as a point of entry
into these teachings, it is important to recognize the broader and
deeper scope of real Tantra which is more than these and may be quite
different from them. Tantra is the practical and energetic application
of all the yogic wisdom of life, time, space and energy. If you
approach it with the right intention, it can offer you much more than
the fulfillment of your desires, it can help you gain the supreme goal
of life of realization of the entire universe within your own
awareness!
Dr. David Frawley is one of the few westerners recognized in India as a Vedacharya or teacher of Vedic wisdom. In 1991 under the auspices of the Indian teacher, Avadhuta Shastri, he was named Vamadeva Shastri,
after the Vedic Rishi Vamadeva. In 1995 he was given the title of
Pandit along with the Brahmachari Vishwanathji award in Mumbai for his
knowledge of the Vedic teaching. Over the years Vamadeva has received
additional awards and honors for his work from throughout India.
Vamadeva (Dr. Frawley) is a unusual western born knowledge-holder in
the Vedic tradition. He carries many special Vedic ways of knowledge
(vidyas), which he passes on to students in India and in the West. In
India, Vamadeva is recognized not only as a Vedacharya (Vedic teacher),
but also as a Vaidya (Ayurvedic doctor), Jyotishi (Vedic astrologer),
Puranic (Vedic historian) and Yogi. He is a visiting professor for the
Vivekananda Yoga Kendra in Bangalore, India, a government approved
deemed university for yogic and Vedic studies and also a teacher with
the Sringeri Shankaracharya Math, the most central of the traditional
Vedantic centers in India.
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