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Concentration Dictionary

A Wisdom Archive on Concentration Dictionary

Concentration Dictionary

A selection of articles related to Concentration Dictionary

We recommend this article: Concentration Dictionary - 1, and also this: Concentration Dictionary - 2.
Concentration Dictionary

ARTICLES RELATED TO Concentration Dictionary

Concentration Dictionary: Hinduism Sanskrit Dictionary IV on Samadhana

Samadhana:

Samadhana: equal fixing; proper concentration.

 

(See also: Samadhana , Hinduism, Hinduism Dictionary, Sanskrit Dictionary, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Concentration Dictionary: Spiritual Yoga Dictionary I on Manana

Manana - Reflection or concentration.

 

(See also: Manana ,Yoga, Yoga Dictionary)

 

Concentration Dictionary: Spiritual Yoga Dictionary I on Dharana

Dharana - Concentration.

 

(See also: Dharana ,Yoga, Yoga Dictionary)

 

Concentration Dictionary: Hinduism Sanskrit Dictionary IV on Vikshepa

Vikshepa:

Vikshepa: the tossing of the mind which  obstructs concentration.

 

(See also: Vikshepa , Hinduism, Hinduism Dictionary, Sanskrit Dictionary, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Concentration Dictionary: Sanskrit Hinduism Dictionary III on avadhana (avadhaana)

avadhana:

avadhana (avadhaana). Concentration.

 

(See also: avadhana , Hinduism, Hinduism Dictionary, Sanskrit Dictionary, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Concentration Dictionary: Spiritual Theosophical Dictionary on Kundalini Sakti

Kundalini Sakti (Sanskrit). The power of life; one of the Forces of Nature; that power that generates a certain light in those who sit for spiritual and clairvoyant development. It is a power known only to those who practise concentration and Yoga.

 

(See also: Kundalini Sakti , Theosophy, Spirituality, Body mind and Soul, Spiritual Dictionary,)

 

Concentration Dictionary: Pagan Paganism Dictionary II on Astral Planes

Astral Planes:

Subjectively real “places” where some astral projectors perceive themselves as traveling; said to be multiple “levels” of (a) material density in the same space, and/or (b) awareness and concentration.

 

(See also: Astral Planes , Pagan, Paganism, Pagan Dictionary)

 

Concentration Dictionary: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Telepathy

Telepathy [from Greek tele far off, at a distance + pathos feeling]

 

The transference of thought or feeling from mind to mind independently of ordinary modes of communication. This very interesting and common fact may be noted as not only existing between human beings, and humans and animals, but likewise between animals and insects -- the last being one of the commonest phenomena of natural history -- and in the plant kingdom. People have always known that they talk to each other through the air, or through air vibrations, and that these strike the ear and are conveyed to the brain. The notion of transference from one mind to another across a distance is a physical conception, and its applicability to minds is questionable. Mind can hardly be regarded as physical, and though our brains are physical and separated by distances, the mind is not synonymous with the brain, for if it were telepathy would be impossible because brain does not physically touch brain in the transference of thought, therefore it is not brains which send and receive except as instruments, but it is minds which touch or interpenetrate along the inner planes.

 

We live in a common mental atmosphere, taking in and giving out thoughts and feelings, which must often pass from mind to mind, though we may not be aware of the fact. The undoubted fact of our having separate minds does not mean that these minds are closed systems, and not mutually penetrable. The experiments which are made to prove thought transference defeat their object to a great extent, because the mind of the transmitter is not concentrated on the idea to be transmitted, so much as on the idea that he is trying to transfer it. The most conclusive proofs, and curiously enough the most common, are unpremeditated, and actually are daily occurrences.

 

A thought entertained by one person may pass inwardly through planes of consciousness until it reaches a point where minds are no longer separate, and from thence it may travel outwardly to the brain of another person. It may even be said that what we require is not so much an explanation of thought transference as an explanation of why thoughts are so seldom transferred -- why our minds are so separate; and the explanation is the concentration of each individual's normal daily consciousness upon affairs immediately concerning himself. This clothes the individual in a mental shell of interests, around which rush the radiatory influences emanating from the thinker. Universality of sympathy therefore is the key to successful telepathic communication.

 

(See also: Telepathy , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Body mind and Soul)

 

Concentration Dictionary: Sai Baba Dictionary on Astanga yoga

Astanga yoga:

 Astanga yoga: Eight aspects of yoga described by Patanjali as follows: yama (restraints on behavior), niyama (spiritual observances), asana (seat, posture, practice of postures), pranayama (expansion of vital energy through control of breath), pratyahara ( withdrawal of the senses), dharana (concentration), dhyana (meditation), samadhi (complete absorption)

 

(See also: Astanga yoga , Hinduism, Hinduism Dictionary, Sanskrit Dictionary, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Concentration Dictionary: Sanskrit Dictionary on Samadhi

Samadhi:

Ecstasy, trance, complete concentration, communion with God.

 

(See also: Samadhi , Sanskrit Dictionary, Body Mind and Soul)

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V X Y Z

 

Concentration Dictionary: Sanskrit Hinduism Dictionary II on dharana

dharana:

yogic concentration or attention

 

(See also: dharana , Hinduism, Hinduism Dictionary, Sanskrit Dictionary, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Concentration Dictionary: Hindu Sanskrit Dictionary II on Dharana

Dharana: yogic concentration or attention

 

(See also: Dharana , Hinduism, Hinduism Dictionary, Sanskrit Dictionary, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Concentration Dictionary: Dictionary on Dreams Meaning from; Diving to Drinking

Dictionary on Dreams Meaning including the meaning of dreams about: Ditch, Dividend, Diving, Divining Rods, Divorce, Docks, Doctor, Dogs, Dolphin, Dome, Dominoes, Donkey, Doomsday, Door, Door Bell, Doves, Dowry, Dragon, Drama, Dram-drinking, Draw-knife, Dressing, Drinking, Driving, Dromedary.

 

Dream Dictionary Index including links to 10.000 dream interpretations: Dream Dictionary Index

For more dream interpretation, see: Meaning of Dreams or Dream Dictionary

For articles about dreams, see: Dreams

 

Concentration Dictionary: Dream Interpretation Dictionary - Work

 

Work

  • To dream that you are hard at work, denotes that you will win merited success by concentration of energy.
  • To see others at work, denotes that hopeful conditions will surround you.
  • To look for work, means that you will be benefited by some unaccountable occurrence.

 

 

Source: 10 000 Dream Interpretations, by Gustavus Hindman Miller

 

(See also: Dream Archives, Meaning of Dreams, Dream Interpretation, Dream Dictionary, Dream Dictionary - Work , Meaning of Dreams about Work , Dream Interpretation Work )

 

Concentration Dictionary: Siddha Yoga Dictionary on Mala

Mala:

A string of beads used to facilitate a state of concentration while repeating a mantra.

 

(See also: Mala , Yoga, Yoga Dictionary, Siddha Yoga, Siddha Yoga Dictionary)

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V X Y Z

 

Concentration Dictionary: Spiritual Sanskrit Dictionary on Samyama

Samyama: is simply a convenient technical term which describes the three-fold process by which the true nature of an object is known: concentration, meditation and absorption.

 

(See also: Samyama , Hinduism, Yoga, Sanskrit Dictionary, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Concentration Dictionary: A Spiritual Dictionary on Raja yoga

Raja yoga:

Literally "Royal Yoga". The path of concentration, meditation, of detachment.

 

(See also: Raja yoga , Body Mind and Soul)

 

Concentration Dictionary: Mysticism Magick Dictionary on 666

666

Many have been the designators of this apocalyptic finger, from Nero to the Popes, to Mohammed, to Ronald Wilson Reagan. But only through careful numerological analysis can we be certain of its true meaning. In The Dimensions of Paradise, John Mitchell shows clearly how this "number of the beast" is actually the Gnostic designation for Jesus Christ and the Crucifiction foisted on the world by the corrupt Church. Christ as an historical figure instead of a spiritual force was repugnant to the Gnostics. Decadent Babylon and the New Jerusalem are one and the same City of God, symbolizing the death rattle for the perverted religion and the birth of a new understanding. In Revelation, 666 refers to the phrase kai ho arithmos Chi-Xi-Sigma and stands for Jesus Christ as the idol on the cross rather than the Gnostic idea of the new Christ spirit, "the son of man," present in all men (much like our own "New Aeon" feeling). The New Jerusalem numbers are 3168, 1080, 1224 and 1764, but especially 864 and 666 (all of these, by the way, reduce to 9). New Jerusalem itself is 961 (seven), as is "the number of the leaves of the Tree of Life which are for the healing of nations."

 

A similar attribution can be found in Kenneth Grant's work (Outside the Circles of Time). For him, as for the writer of Revelation, the number has special apocalyptic meanings: "The Christians misunderstood the Unspeakable Name (IHVH) and supposed that by causing a rift between the Old Ones and the life-wave on earth they could 'save' mankind, and incidentally [of course!] gain total mastery of the planet." In order to do this, they inserted the Hebrew letter Shin (Grant calls this the letter of "Spirit," others associate it with "fire") between IH and VH, the Sh of Spirit. Thus we derive the name Yeheshuah or Johoshuah (IHShVH), which in Latin we call Jesus. The Xtians proceeded from there to identify this mythological name with a real person who, as Gerald Massey demonstrated, could only have been -- in an historic sense -- Jesus ben Pandira, an Egyptian who lived a century earlier. This wizard's mother was named Mary Magdalene, and he was stoned to death for sorcery. But the letter Shin, Grant tells us, "represents the triple-tongued flame of the Great Old Ones, whose supreme concentration -- Choronzon -- exhibits the triple Firetongue in the number 333." The latter is "mirrored in the final Heh of Tetragrammaton, the daughter-letter, whose number becomes the trebled Hex and the Unholy Act of Earth's destruction, under the rule of the Son of Typhon who is Set/Satan and the Anti-Christ."

 

Thus, to this very day, the idol that the entire "Christian" world bows down to is not the Christos spirit at all, but the Anti-Christ. The washed faces, the white gloves, the alb and pale lilies of Sunday worship cannot dispel the blood of ages. Average Galileans are unable to display love of any kind for their fellow-man. Instead, they constantly evoke the images of sin, corruption, misery and damnation. All "holy books" contain contradictions, lies and false teachings, but the Xtian Bible is a monument of fabrications and contradictions, second only to the Koran.

 

(See also: 666 , Magick, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Body Mind and Soul,)

 

Concentration Dictionary: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Yama

Yama (Sanskrit) [from the verbal root yam to subdue, control]

 

A curb, rein, bridle; hence the act of curbing, suppression, self-control. Especially prominent in yoga as self-restraint: it is the first of the eight angas or means of attaining mental concentration.

 

As a proper name, the deity who rules over the shades of the dead in the Rig-Veda, corresponding to the Greek Hades or Roman Pluto. Hence Yama is the personification of the third root-race, because these were the first to taste death -- the first self-consciously intellectual humans who died and departed after death to devachan. Hence also the ascription in Hindu mythology to Yama as the ruler of the pitris. In the Mahabharata, he is described as dressed in blood-red garments, with a glittering form, a crown on his head, glowing eyes and, like Varuna, he holds a noose with which he binds the spirit after drawing it from the body after death.

 

"Yama is represented as the son of Vivaswat (the Sun). He had a twin-sister named Yami, who was ever urging him, according to another hymn, to take her for his wife, in order to perpetuate the species" (TG 375-6). Yama and his twin sister is a distinct reference to the androgynous character of the human race from the middle of the third root-race forward.

 

The Rig-Veda "nowhere shows Yama 'as having anything to do with the punishment of the wicked.' As king and judge of the dead, a Pluto in short, Yama is a far later creation. One has to study the true character of Yama-Yami throughout more than one hymn and epic poem, and collect the various accounts scattered in dozens of ancient works, and then he will obtain a consensus of allegorical statements which will be found to corroborate and justify the Esoteric teaching, that Yama-Yami is the symbol of the dual Manas, in one of its mystical meanings.

 

For instance, Yama-Yami is always represented of a green colour and clothed with red, and as dwelling in a palace of copper and iron. Students of Occultism know to which of the human 'principles' the green and the red colours, and by correspondence the iron and copper, are to be applied. The 'twofold-ruler' -- the epithet of Yama-Yami -- is regarded in the exoteric teachings of the Chino-Buddhists as both judge and criminal, the restrainer of his own evil doings and the evil-doer himself. In the Hindu epic poems Yama-Yami is the twin-child of the Sun (the deity) by Sanjna (spiritual consciousness); but while Yama is the Aryan 'lord of the day,' appearing as the symbol of spirit in the East, Yami is the queen of the night (darkness, ignorance) 'who opens to mortals the path to the West' -- the emblem of evil and matter. In the Puranas Yama has many wives (many Yamis) who force him to dwell in the lower world (Patala, Myalba, etc., etc.); and an allegory represents him with his foot lifted, to kick Chhaya, the handmaiden of his father (the astral body of his mother, Sanjna, a metaphysical aspect of Buddhi or Alaya).

 

As stated in the Hindu Scriptures, a soul when it quits its mortal frame, repairs to its abode in the lower regions (Kamaloka or Hades). Once there, the Recorder, the Karmic messenger called Chitragupta (hidden or concealed brightness), reads out his account from the Great Register, wherein during the life of the human being, every deed and thought are indelibly impressed -- and, according to the sentence pronounced, the 'soul' either ascends to the abode of the Pitris (Devachan), descends to a 'hell' (Kamaloka), or is reborn on earth in another human form" (TG 376).

 

(See also: Yama , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Body mind and Soul)

 

Concentration Dictionary: Ayurveda Ayurvedic Dictionary on Characteristics of PITTA

Characteristics of PITTA

A moderately well developed physique with mascular limbs and a purposeful, stable gait of medium speed. With a loud, strong voice and precise, convincing speech. The skin is fair, soft, lusterous, warm, and tends to burn easily in the sun – has freckles, many moles, and a tendency to rashes. And the bodies are hot and sweaty. Characterised by fine and soft, either fair or reddish hair that tends to gray soon. Face is heart-shaped, often with a pointed chin. While the neck is proportionate and of average size. A neat, pointed, and average sized nose matches the average sized eyes that are either light blue, light gray or hazel in color, with an intense luster which get red in summer or after bathing. The mouth being medium, with average lips and medium-sized, yellowish teeth.

 

Ambition * Concentration * Confidence * Courage * Enthusiasm for knowledge * Happiness * Intelligence

 

Pittas have an intellectual and precise disposition due to a very alert, focussed mind. Sharp and knife-like in anger, they are irritable, jealous and aggressive by nature. Discriminating and judgemental, they are articulate, learned and proud. With a developed sense of responsibility, they can take decisions and organise affairs well. Argumentative, but with a sense of humour, their selectively excellent memory makes them fast learners. Moderately passionate in their sexual pursuits, they spend moderately, usually on luxuries.

 

Food

Warm to cool rather than steaming hot.Sweet ,bitter and astringent tastes.

 

Oil Massage

With cooling oils such as chandanbala Laxadi oil

 

Exercise

Moderate exercise which may include jogging, swimming, Yoga, cycling and weight lifting

 

Herbal Dietary supplements

Haritaki, Bhumiamla, Chyavanprash, surakta, sitopladi churan,pitta Tea.

 

 

Factors that increase pitta

1.    Exposure to heat, eating too much red meat, salt, spicy or sour foods.

2.    Indigestion and irregularity of meals. Exercising at midday, Drugs especially antibiotics.

  1. Too much intellectual work/thinking. Alcohol, Fatigue.Anger,Hate fear, emotion.

 

(See also: PITTA , Ayurveda, Ayurvedic Dictionary, Alternative Health, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Concentration Dictionary: Sanskrit Hinduism Dictionary on dharana

dharana:

concentration of mental energy on one point.

 

(See also: dharana , Hinduism, Hinduism Dictionary, Sanskrit Dictionary, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Concentration Dictionary: Pali Buddhist Buddhism Dictionary on Abhinna

abhinna (abhi~n~naa): Intuitive powers that come from the practice of concentration: the ability to display psychic powers, clairvoyance, clairaudience, the ability to know the thoughts of others, recollection of past lifetimes, and the knowledge that does away with mental effluents (see asava).

 

 (See also: Abhinna , Buddhism, Body Mind and Soul)

 

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