Background
In this discourse, I, Siddha Guru Sanju, take you deep into dense nature — a living field of vitality and peace where negative ions flow through air, soil, and breath. What I share here is not a concept but a lived experience — the sacred merging of Kundalini energy with the frequency of the earth. This teaching blends barefoot grounding, mouth exhalation, and present-moment awareness in a forest filled with wild fruits, turmeric roots, orchids, lilies, bees, and birds.
The intention is simple: to remind you that healing is already available in nature. Negative ions, emitted by wind, trees, and soil, carry the cooling, life-restoring charge that restores your energy body. As I walk through this abundance, I show you how every breath and every step becomes an act of energy exchange.
The Living Field of Negative Ions
This moment unites all practices I have been teaching — grounding, breathing, and feeling nature’s vibration. The forest I am in is a negative ionic zone, abundant with oxygen molecules carrying extra electrons. Wherever I walk, these ions enter my body through breath and skin. I have just finished a thirty-minute barefoot walk, inhaling and exhaling consciously. My entire system feels infused with calm lightness.
When you walk barefoot, negative ions pass through the pores of your feet, harmonizing your inner current with the earth’s field. Continuous walking is important. With every step, your body’s electrical potential balances with the planet’s potential, releasing excess static charge that modern life accumulates.
The Technique of Mouth Exhalation
Now, begin the simple but profound practice of mouth exhalation. Inhale softly through your nose and exhale completely through your mouth. Keep the jaw loose, shoulders open, and exhale until you feel your abdomen gently contract. This exhalation purifies apana — the downward-moving current that carries toxins and mental heaviness.
If you are indoors while reading, sit straight, place your feet on the ground, and continue this rhythm. If outdoors, remove your footwear. Let your soles touch grass or soil. Feel the texture of the earth, the mild moisture, the faint tickle of tiny particles.
As you continue exhaling, your attention will begin to lengthen naturally. The mind becomes still because the exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide in the lungs grows more efficient. Negative ions combine with oxygen molecules to form oxygen-rich prana, a living current that awakens clarity in the brain.
Living the Present Moment
Do not rush to the next moment until this one has been fully lived. Each breath, each rustle of wind is an instruction. The bees around me are busy in a small apiary — nature’s own symbol of organized intelligence. Nearby, tall teak trees stand with silent dignity.
Presence is born from feeling. When you feel deeply, you do not think about time. You simply exist. That is the frequency of now — the same field from which healing arises.
Walking Through the Wild Garden
I walk through an area that looks like a wild garden. Banana trees grow here, their broad leaves glistening. Monkeys sometimes visit to eat the ripe fruit, and their play reminds me of the natural innocence we lose through overthinking. I spot custard apples hanging low, and red hibiscus flowers opening like small suns. A butterfly hovers near one bloom, and I pause to feel the delicate pulse of life around me.
Look at how raw and truthful the jungle is. Wild figs grow thick on branches, and nearby, a lemon tree bends under the weight of its fruits. Everything here vibrates in perfect balance. In such a place, you remember who you are.
The Middle of Nowhere Is the Center of Presence
Standing here, I realize that the middle of nowhere is in fact the center of everywhere. Presence transforms emptiness into fullness. When you stop running, the world expands around you.
Rub a lemon leaf between your fingers and inhale its fragrance — sharp, pure, alive. Continue your mouth exhalation as you observe these sensations. Breath, scent, and touch merge into one awareness.
Sugarcane, Pomegranate, and the Fragrance of Earth
Further along are sugarcane stalks rising tall, alongside young pomegranate shrubs. The air smells earthy, rich, almost edible. The soil beneath my feet feels cool and slightly damp. Every step here recharges my energy body.
Negative ions create a cool sensation on the skin, as if nature itself were exhaling through you. Stay with this coolness. Let it spread from your feet upward through your spine until your head feels light and open. This is how prana circulates when grounded in nature’s field.
Turmeric, Banana, Lilies, and Wild Berries
I continue walking and discover turmeric leaves growing low to the ground, their roots hidden in fertile soil. Banana plants line the path, their fragrance sweet and soft. White lilies rise gracefully near a small patch of standing water. Even mosquitoes hover nearby — a reminder that life here moves as one whole organism.
Clusters of small berries glint green and yellow. They seem ordinary, yet they mirror transformation — the journey from unripe to ripe, from potential to realization.
The Secret of the Orchid
I stop near a patch of flowers and speak to you directly: do you still have any excuse not to live fully? Life is asking you to participate. Wake up early. Step out. Let your breath meet the world.
Here are orchids — some violet, some white. You can identify them by their pattern: five petals forming a crown and one hidden petal deep inside. That hidden petal is the mystery of existence — the inner chamber where energy transforms into awareness. Observe and feel.
Curry Leaves, Flowers, and the Tropical Frequency
Beside the orchids are curry leaf bushes. Crush a leaf and you will sense the awakening fragrance. Curry leaves are medicine for digestion, balancing pitta and aiding assimilation. They belong to tropical South India, but their scent carries across cultures — sharp, cleansing, and grounding.
Further ahead, white flowers bloom in clusters. Their simplicity contrasts the wildness around, teaching that purity does not need display.
The Joy of Play as Meditation
After exploring the forest, I guide my companions to a small mud slope. I ask them to sit, tuck their phones away, and simply slide down. They hesitate, then laugh. One by one, they let gravity take over. I encourage them: “Yes, move your body, trust the earth, slide again.”
Their laughter fills the air — free, childlike, healing. Every shout and giggle is a release of stored tension. Play becomes meditation when done consciously. It resets the nervous system. The earth under them becomes the Guru — teaching surrender through motion.
We then move to a swing hung between two trees. I ask them to sit close, hold each other’s backs, and begin slowly. “Inhale at the top, exhale as you descend,” I say. The swing becomes a rhythm of breath, a dance between gravity and levity. They hold each other’s laughter like sacred sound.
Integration: Returning to Stillness
While they continue swinging, I step aside, walking quietly among the trees. Feeling is everything. When you feel, you exist beyond thought. I wave to them — “Hi, bye!” — and let them continue.
After the play, I call them to sit still. “Close your eyes,” I say. “One palm on your navel, one on your heart. Exhale through the mouth. Let joy settle into silence.”
We sit together for a few minutes. The sound of wind through leaves replaces all inner noise. In that stillness, their breathing deepens, and their eyes soften. Integration happens naturally when we stop interfering.
The Message of the Moment
It is essential to feel life in every moment before moving to the next. Don’t hurry through existence. Every flower, sound, and breeze is part of the same consciousness that breathes through you.
Negative ions, sunlight, soil microbes, and wind together form nature’s healing orchestra. They stabilize your Kundalini, cool the overactive mind, and purify the energy channels. When you surrender to dense nature, your body becomes an antenna that receives the song of the earth.
Walk barefoot whenever you can. Practice mouth exhalation when your mind feels heavy. Observe trees, soil, bees, and wind. Life is not happening to you — it is happening through you. The more you feel, the more alive you become.
When you finish this practice, bow to the ground, thank the elements, and rise slowly. Carry this calm frequency into your day. This is how Kundalini lives — not in isolation, but in participation with all that breathes.