Masterfulness: From Remembrance to Living Presence
Masterfulness is not the act of remembering the Master as a thought or an imagination. It is the direct experience of the Master’s Energy in the heart region.
This energy, once awakened, remains permanently available in the seeker’s heart region. At any time, when the seeker gently places the palm on the heart region, the Master’s Energy can be experienced as warmth, vibration, calmness, or deep inner stillness.
How Master’s Energy Gets Stored in the Heart Region?
When a seeker remembers the Master again and again, the Master’s Energy flows into the heart region. Over time, it gets stored in the heart region. This stored Master’s Energy is what is truly called Masterfulness. It is not imagination or belief. It is accumulated Master’s Energy that remains within the seeker and works silently.
Example: Just like a rechargeable battery, each time you connect it to power, it gets charged a little more. After being sufficiently charged, it starts to function. Similarly, each remembrance of the Master charges the heart region with his Energy. After sufficient storage, the heart region itself becomes a source of that Energy.
Effect of Master’s Energy on the Mind
The stored Master’s Energy gradually removes negativity from the mind, such as anger, fear, restlessness, anxiety, negative tendencies, and so on. This does not happen by force or mental control. The Energy itself transforms the mind naturally from negative to positive.
Example: When sunlight enters a dark room, darkness does not need to be pushed out; it disappears automatically. In the same way, when Master’s Energy fills the heart region, negativity in the mind fades on its own.
Is Constant Remembrance Possible?
Constant remembrance of the Master is not practically possible when the mind is engaged in work, family responsibilities, thinking, speaking, and decision-making. This is natural and should not create guilt or frustration. However, intermittent remembrance during the day is more than sufficient.
Example: Rain may not fall continuously, but repeated showers fill a lake completely. Likewise, intermittent remembrance fills the heart region permanently with Master’s Energy.
Permanent Establishment of Masterfulness
Even if remembrance is not continuous, intermittent remembrance, regular Silentation practice, and touching the heart region and feeling the Master’s presence help the Energy settle permanently in the heart region.
Once established, Masterfulness works even without active remembrance, protects the seeker from negativity, and keeps the mind inclined toward positivity and stillness.
Human Mind and the Pure Spirit
Human beings possess two layers of mind. The first is the negative mind. This mind is a combination of good and bad. It constantly oscillates between attraction and aversion, pleasure and pain, success and failure. This mind is shaped by fear, desire, ego, comparison, and survival instincts. It is useful for worldly functioning, yet it is also the source of conflict, suffering, and instability. The second is the fully positive mind, which exists beneath these fluctuations. This mind is pure, stable, and untouched by negativity. It does not react with hatred, jealousy, anger, or fear. In spiritual terminology, this fully positive mind is known as the Pure Spirit or Sudha Atman. It is the original state of human consciousness before it became clouded by conditioning.
The goal of Chivality is to transform the human being into a divine being by dissolving the negative mind and restoring the original fully positive mind. In other words, Chivality seeks to remove dualities so that the Pure Spirit can function naturally through the individual.
However, in today’s intensely materialistic world, a question naturally arises: Who wants a purely positive mind?
Modern society thrives on competition, ambition, comparison, and constant stimulation. These depend heavily on the negative mind. Anger drives achievement, fear fuels security, desire sustains consumption, and ego maintains identity. In such an environment, living with only positive qualities such as compassion, silence, humility, and inner contentment appears impractical or even weak.
A Pure Spirit does not manipulate, exploit, or dominate. It does not harbor negativity, revenge, or greed. Therefore, to a materialistic mindset, the fully positive mind may seem unsuitable for survival in the modern world.
This is precisely where Chivality offers a transformative approach. Chivality does not ask materialistic people to abandon the world. Instead, it shows them how inner purification enhances outer effectiveness. A person functioning from the Pure Spirit is not passive or inactive; rather, such a person acts with clarity, balance, and efficiency, free from emotional turbulence and always experiences peace.
For example, a businessperson guided by the Pure Spirit makes decisions without greed or fear, leading to sustainable success and trust. A leader with a fully positive mind inspiresothers naturally, without control or manipulation.
Chivality reaches materialistic individuals by addressing their real, unspoken suffering,such as stress, anxiety, dissatisfaction, loneliness, and mental fatigue. While material success may bring comfort, it does not bring inner stability. Chivality offers this missing dimension.
Moreover, Chivality does not demand instant perfection. It presents a gradual inner evolution, where negativity weakens naturally through practices such as silence, self observation, discipline, and ethical living. As negativity dissolves, the Pure Spirit begins to express itself effortlessly.
In this way, Chivality becomes relevant even in a materialistic world. It does not oppose material life; it purifies the consciousness that lives within it. When people experience even a small taste of inner silence and positivity, they recognize its value beyond material pleasure.
Ultimately, while the world may not consciously seek the positive mind, the soul silently longs for it. Chivality answers this longing by guiding human beings back to their original state, the Sudha Atman, the Pure Spirit, where life is lived without inner conflict, even amidst the complexities of the modern world.
Silentation: Entering Chivam Through Inner Silence
The Chivality system is a method to experience the all-pervading energy called Chivam through sound, silence, and inner observation.
The system begins with the chanting of “Namachivaayam.” From a scientific point of view, sound is a form of vibration and energy. Chanting creates specific sound frequencies that influence the surrounding environment and the human nervous system. These vibrations help stabilize the mind, regulate breathing, and create a calm and focused state suitable for inner practices such as Silentation.
Silentation is the practice of deep inner silence. Neurologically, the human mind constantly produces thoughts due to sensory input, memory, and emotional conditioning. Silentation reduces external stimulation and gradually slows mental activity. When attention no longer feeds thoughts, their intensity decreases.
Silence has measurable effects on the brain, and as it deepens, brain activity shifts from high-frequency beta waves (associated with stress and active thinking) to alpha and theta waves, which are linked to relaxation, clarity, and deep awareness. In this process, silence penetrates the “noise” of thoughts and reduces their dominance.
With regular and continuous practice, negative mental patterns such as fear, anxiety, worry, and stress lose their neurological reinforcement. This leads to a state of mental blankness or emptiness, where thoughts temporarily cease. Scientifically, this is a condition of minimal cognitive activity, often described as pure awareness without mental content. Spiritually, this corresponds to Atman or Brahman.
As silence deepens further, the practitioner experiences darkness not as an absence, but as the absence of mental projections. In this state, the sense of individuality weakens, and awareness feels expansive and boundary-less.This experiential state is referred to in Chivality as Chivam, the all-pervading energy.
During this inward process, suppressed emotions and conditioned responses dissolve naturally, without effort. The nervous system returns to balance, and the mind becomes free from negativity.
At the final stage, the practitioner no longer experiences a separation between the observer and the observed. The realization arises that one’s own awareness is not separate from the all-pervading field of energy.
The question “Who am I?” is answered not intellectually, but experientially. This state is known as Self-Realization, where identity shifts from the thinking mind to pure awareness.
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