Sahaja Soma offers a nondual Tantric approach to plant medicine preparation and integration.
Sahaja Soma aims to:
Offer an alternative approach to preparing for, navigating and integrating plant medicines (Ayahuasca, Soma) in a way that draws on the wisdom of the nondual Tantric traditions of Vajrayana Buddhism and Shaiva Shakta Tantra yet is approachable and relevant for a modern, secular person who has no background in meditation.
Articulate an approach to plant medicine, meditation and awakening that offers both a clear science of the mind and a rich appreciation of art and aesthetics.
Make the esoteric accessible by conveying the value of the arts, images and symbols for inquiring into the nature of consciousness and understanding how plant medicines (Ayahuasca, Soma) transform us.
Elevate the non monastic, yogic traditions that emphasize an approach to meditation and awakening focused on integration into daily life for householders.
Offer greater resources for those committed to Dharma and yoga practitioners who are interested in more in depth conversations and writings on these nondual Tantric traditions, meditation, yoga, awakening and related topics.
Designed for an audience interested in Nonduality, Tantra, Dharma, meditation & psychedelics.
People open to working with psychedelics and meditation as complementary practices that inform one another.
Dharma, meditation & yoga practitioners explicitly interested in conversations and writings centered around these nondual Tantric traditions.
Artists, creatives & others who wish to approach meditation & plant medicine in a way that embraces and celebrates creativity, art and beauty.
Those interested in exploring the esoteric, symbols and art in order to recognize universal truths about the nature of consciousness.
Drawn from:
Please read more about the lineages behind these traditions to understand the origins of these teachings. It is very important to acknowledge the source of these teachings and to honor my own teachers and the cultures that birthed and nurtured this wisdom over time.
Anything of value on this platform comes from the wisdom of these traditions and from the cultures that birthed and nurtured these teachings, from India to all of the Buddhist countries of the Himalayas.
“This is what spirituality is all about–finding out that we are whole, that we have always been whole…
The esoteric, inner spiritual disciplines of all traditions are means of bringing about this awakening or of opening one to awakening.”
Adyashanti