Chakra Meditation
by Ganga White
from his forthcoming book
The chakras are not a ladder you climb up or awaken step by step, rather we find it possible to give attention to all these levels at once or in any combination.
Meditate on the earth
 On which we live
 Who is home and mother
 Ground and root of our being
 The foundation of manifestation of our energy
Meditate on waters
 Flowing with rains, rivers, oceans, lakes
 The formless and shaped by structure
 Water, form filling and formless
Express gratitude for fire which powers our lives
 Digests our food
 Is the doorway from form to formless
 The sexual fire of birth
 The cremation fire of death and ending
 Fire, both moving and still
 Tangible and intangible. 
Meditate on air and wind
 Bringing cloud, rain and pollen
 Hosting the flight of birds, bees and all things
 Wind fills and empties our lungs
 Bringing spirit in and out 
 Inspiration and expiration
 Expansion and contraction
Meditate on Sound
 The vibrations of communication  
 And connection among beings
The carrier wave of information
 Meditate on light
 Energy waves condensing into matter
 Holder and transmitter 
 Of immense information and perception
 Insight, observation, seeing
 Container and essence 
 of all that is
Meditate on cosmic intelligence
 On stars and galaxies, 
 Waves of light and impulse
 Measurable, Immeasurable
 Finite and infinite
 Universes and multiverses
 Eternity and alternity
Meditate on silence
 Wherein all of these levels reside
 Silence unknowable, unnamable, and indescribable
 Silence that is being and source of being. 
Note: The Sanskrit word chakra (chuhk-ruh) translates to the English word wheel. As some Sanskrit makes its way into our lexicon, the word is often mispronounced. In the language of Sanskrit, the letter h following a consonant denotes a hard sound to the proceeding letter. The first syllable of this word sounds close to the name Chuck, followed by a softer sounding syllable similar to the word rah. At the least, when speaking this word, think of the ch sound of pronouncing chocolate, and not the sh sound used in the word, shawl.
 
           
           
             
            