Chulen
Chulen
http://www.siddhienergetics.com/products/chulen
I know these pills are connected with specific practices. Can people take these pills for health/energy reasons alone, without doing them in conjunction with any specific practice or initiation?
Kavin
I know these pills are connected with specific practices. Can people take these pills for health/energy reasons alone, without doing them in conjunction with any specific practice or initiation?
Kavin
Re: Chulen
Virgo wrote:http://www.siddhienergetics.com/products/chulen
I know these pills are connected with specific practices. Can people take these pills for health/energy reasons alone, without doing them in conjunction with any specific practice or initiation?
Kavin
You can, but that is missing the point, a bit.
Re: Chulen
Can a nonpractitioner take these pills?
If so, what are the highest quality chulen pills on the market?
If so, what are the highest quality chulen pills on the market?
Re: Chulen
If you are looking for mundane rasāyana, then taking Chavyanaprasha regularly is your best bet.alwayson wrote:Can a nonpractitioner take these pills?
If so, what are the highest quality chulen pills on the market?
N
Re: Chulen
Thank you very much.Namdrol wrote:If you are looking for mundane rasāyana, then taking Chavyanaprasha regularly is your best bet.alwayson wrote:Can a nonpractitioner take these pills?
If so, what are the highest quality chulen pills on the market?
N
Kevin
Re: Chulen
Definitely.Epistemes wrote:Could this replace a daily multivitamin?
Re: Chulen
is the idea of rasāyana that we are eating more of things like chulen or Chavyanaprasha and less normal food?
Re: Chulen
rai wrote:is the idea of rasāyana that we are eating more of things like chulen or Chavyanaprasha and less normal food?
The Ayruvedic/Tibetan medical idea of rasayāna is that one does a week long cleanse; then one relies on a very pure diet combined with a rasayāna preparation like Chavayanaprash.
There is also a more "religious" idea of chulen, where one, having done a similar cleanse, relies on a practice such as White Tara, Amitayus, or Mandarava combined with special chulen pills.
Finally, there are yogic chulens that depend mainly on prāṇāyama exercises.
One can consider these outer, inner and secret rasāyanas. The use of these depends on one's health and needs.
N
Re: Chulen
Can Chyavanprash be taken alongside Vimala?Namdrol wrote:
If you are looking for mundane rasāyana, then taking Chavyanaprasha regularly is your best bet.
Cantankerous Buddha
Re: Chulen
Epistemes wrote:Can Chyavanprash be taken alongside Vimala?Namdrol wrote:
If you are looking for mundane rasāyana, then taking Chavyanaprasha regularly is your best bet.
yes
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Re: Chulen
Namdrol, do there exist Tibetan texts, which would deal exclusively with Chulen?Namdrol wrote:rai wrote:is the idea of rasāyana that we are eating more of things like chulen or Chavyanaprasha and less normal food?
The Ayruvedic/Tibetan medical idea of rasayāna is that one does a week long cleanse; then one relies on a very pure diet combined with a rasayāna preparation like Chavayanaprash.
There is also a more "religious" idea of chulen, where one, having done a similar cleanse, relies on a practice such as White Tara, Amitayus, or Mandarava combined with special chulen pills.
Finally, there are yogic chulens that depend mainly on prāṇāyama exercises.
One can consider these outer, inner and secret rasāyanas. The use of these depends on one's health and needs.
N
In what way does the "religious" chulen differ from a yogic one? And how does a medical one differ from those two just mentioned?
Are the differences just in the substances employed or are there also some other factors at play?
A. Fulgens
Re: Chulen
As for question one:AilurusFulgens wrote:
Namdrol, do there exist Tibetan texts, which would deal exclusively with Chulen?
In what way does the "religious" chulen differ from a yogic one? And how does a medical one differ from those two just mentioned?
Are the differences just in the substances employed or are there also some other factors at play?
A. Fulgens
Yes, many.
Long life practice combined with using blessed pills, without the benefit of the medical approach, is a kind of religious chulen.
Yogic chulen means working with prāṇāyāma.
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- Posts: 59
- Joined: Sat Sep 03, 2011 4:11 pm
Re: Chulen
Could you please quote a few of these texts - I mean the titles? Are any of them translated in any Western language? Have also any scholarly studies or Ph.D. dissertations been done on these texts?Namdrol wrote:As for question one:AilurusFulgens wrote:
Namdrol, do there exist Tibetan texts, which would deal exclusively with Chulen?
In what way does the "religious" chulen differ from a yogic one? And how does a medical one differ from those two just mentioned?
Are the differences just in the substances employed or are there also some other factors at play?
A. Fulgens
Yes, many.
Long life practice combined with using blessed pills, without the benefit of the medical approach, is a kind of religious chulen.
Yogic chulen means working with prāṇāyāma.
I know that Juergen Aschoff has written a book on one of the aspects of Chulen.
A. Fulgens