Friends, recently watched an Iranian film named Gaav, the Cow, which is available on ‘Old Films Revival Project’ named channel on YouTube. In it, a man named Hasan falls so deeply in love with the cow that after its death, he first starts seeing her in its shed, and then he starts behaving completely like that cow. This appears like Kundalini Yoga in theory. ‘Kund’ means dark well which arose as a depression due to the death of a cow. ‘Kundalini’ means mental picture of a cow. It was repeatedly attacking his Sahasrara chakra rising up from the darkness of his Muladhar and making him look like a mad Baba. The literal meaning of Kund is well or pit. The pit is always dark. Kundalini means a mental image in its limited or contracted form like the coil of a snake. The whole mind is widespread, which reaches till the infinity of God. But its single image is very limited. Meaning that just as a long snake coils and shrinks itself, the infinitely vast mind is compressed to the size of a lonely mental image, during the concentrated meditation. That is also called meditation image. Now there are many such things which shrink their expanded form, then why only the example of snake was given. There are two main reasons for this. Firstly, that image gets awakened by passing through the Sushumna Nadi that’s likened to a hooded snake. Secondly, it is meditated in a dark environment of loneliness or solitude or absence i.e. likened to a pit just like a white dot is best visible on dark background. The extreme solitude of the crematorium is also like a pit, where Lord Shiva meditates. The pit is the form of Muladhar. That is why it is described at many places in the scriptures that a certain demon or a yogi worshiped and meditated on the favorite deity or guru in a certain pit. The image meditated in the same crater-like Muladhar has been given the scientific and short name ‘Kundalini’. This single word describes Yoga in detail. Now in the said film, that cow lover named Hasan was probably not able to give enough strength to his cow form Kundalini, hence he became like a madman in the eyes of the world. However, he had become completely identified with the mental picture of the cow and hence behaved like it. This is like a Samadhi, but it must reach awakening. I don’t know if this is a real story filmed, or just pure fiction, but the topic is interesting. The real problem is how to reach the end. Until the meditation picture awakens in a person’s mind, he needs maximum solitude and sufficient energy, so that the common people do not think of him otherwise or as a joke. After awakening, everything is understood and one becomes satisfied. Even if you keep playing drums in front of him, he doesn’t care much. After awakening, Dhyanachitra aka meditation image gradually calms down and leaves the man behind. First, it sticks to the man’s mind like a leech and keeps sucking his energy. Many people go crazy remembering their dead relatives. Some devotees deliberately meditates on his beloved deceased Guru and after reaching the end, they awaken him. Even if many people are not able to awaken it, they take many benefits from it by keeping it under control, and hoist the flag of their material and spiritual progress in the world. The same knife gives different results when used in different ways and for different purposes.