top of page
Search

The Source of Youth – Healing and Reversing Time through Siddha Knowledge

Many people view spirituality as something separate from the body, yet rarely do they possess deep knowledge of the body that arises from within. True spirituality is rooted in self-born knowledge — wisdom that does not come from books or teachers but from direct inner experience. It emerges when a question arises within one’s consciousness and the answer naturally reveals itself through contemplation.

We often perceive the body as something apart from nature. Yet nature is made of all elements — and we are one of them. However, our awareness is no longer united with nature, no longer lives in harmony with it. As a result, we often oppose nature instead of flowing with it.

If we consider the microscopic elements — pathogens, microbes, bacteria, viruses — why do we fear them? We have been taught to divide things into “positive” and “negative,” to reject the negative and cultivate only the positive. Yet wise beings neither reject nor cultivate anything — they simply return to their natural state of being. Harmony with nature does not mean labeling things as good or bad. It means living within the flow.

When we live in the natural flow, we observe whatever comes without interpretation. The moment we begin to analyze and mix our perceptions with fear and emotion, we create illusions from what is originally neutral and natural phenomena.

The same applies to health. We view the body as something isolated. People fear germs and viruses — especially today — yet they forget that these microorganisms have existed for millions of years, long before humans. They have always had a purpose: to assist in the decomposition of what is already decaying. They do not “attack”; they simply participate in the natural process of dissolution.

Those who fall ill frequently are often already inflamed within. Viruses and bacteria thrive only where decomposition has begun. Modern humans live in a slow process of internal decay — mistaking it for life. Much of what we consume is artificial and toxic. The more the body accumulates toxins, the more inflamed it becomes, weakening both physical and spiritual immunity.

Even positive thoughts cannot protect a body that is already unwell. The mind can influence the body, but a weakened body can also dominate the mind. An inflamed body makes a person restless, anxious, and fatigued because it constantly struggles to cleanse itself of excess toxicity. The body, like an overheated machine, strains when pushed beyond its limits.

An impure mind leads to impure choices — unhealthy food, harmful habits, and a polluted consciousness. Even if one eats well, a mind full of attachment, overactivity, and tension will harm the body.

When someone tries to control life, they become angry each time something escapes that control. This continuous stress and emotional confusion directly affect the body. Prolonged tension, guilt, or shame lead to organ dysfunction, for every emotion leaves an imprint in the body, which stores information from the subtler energetic layers of the self.

Most people do not perceive these subtle dimensions of being. Their understanding of health is confined to the physical realm. Many practice yoga or exercise, yet without inner integration — turning sacred disciplines into mere physical workouts.

Bacteria and viruses, in truth, remind us of our imbalance. When the body becomes sick often, it means something is stagnant — that toxins are present. Ancient wisdom such as Ayurveda teaches that disease penetrates through layers of the body: saliva, blood, muscles, bones. The deeper it goes, the harder it becomes to heal, for it affects deeper layers of consciousness. When disease reaches the blood, its causes usually lie in diet or lifestyle. With proper food, rest, and a clear mind, balance can be restored. But if the disturbance goes deeper, spiritual purification is needed.

When the body becomes saturated with negative energy, bacteria and viruses are not enemies — they are part of the cleansing process. Our modern way of life, filled with artificial foods, stress, and emotional toxicity, has made us fertile ground for disease. Most foods on store shelves are loaded with sugar and chemicals, turning nourishment into addiction. This dulls the body, the mind, and our perception of life. And then fear dominates — fear of illness, fear of the unknown.

Bacteria and viruses are part of existence. They constantly surround us but cannot harm us unless we provide the right soil for them. When consciousness is pure and strong, the body generates its own electromagnetic shield — a subtle radiation that protects it. Even negative energy can be seen as both wave and particle; in that sense, a virus is a materialization of negative energy. It appears only where imbalance already exists.

The purpose of life is not to accumulate positive or negative energy, but to return to a neutral state — to the natural flow. Within this flow, life cannot be logically explained; it simply is. Yet we have created artificial flows — systems of thought, control, and separation — and now we seek truth within illusion. We isolate humans from nature and then try to “heal” them, though true healing can only exist in unity.

Awakening occurs when the light of awareness illuminates what was unconscious. If we lived within the natural flow, illness would not exist.

Natural spirituality does not belong to dogmas or institutions. It requires no belief, for it is direct experience. Knowledge arises from the flow of life. The more one flows, the deeper the understanding becomes. Awareness deepens naturally, without analysis or judgment, through pure perception.

As long as we remain divided from nature, we cannot truly know ourselves. We create the very “opposing forces” we fear and believe the world is against us — yet in truth, we ourselves provide the ground for them to grow. Only by cleansing both body and mind — detoxifying thoughts, emotions, and habits — can we return to our natural state of being.

Animals live this way. They do not need hospitals or theories. They sense nature and know intuitively how to heal with plants or rest. Indigenous peoples once lived the same way before being separated from their lands and natural wisdom.

For thousands of years, humanity has drifted away from this natural state, and our current world is the result of that disconnection. Yet we can evolve again — by awakening awareness, refining perception, and returning to simplicity.

To live naturally does not mean to withdraw from life, but to exist without effort — simply to be. Within this state of being lies healing, restoration, and balance.

ree

 
 
 

Comments

Rated 0 out of 5 stars.
No ratings yet

Add a rating

I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy.

bottom of page