Author: Azur Ekić
During a visit to the Ganden monastery in Tibet, the wife of a Master noticed a monk who was walking very quickly towards a nearby hill, off any path. This astonished her, and she kept wondering why that man was climbing towards the top of the bare hill.
After returning home, she received (in meditation) that he was walking along specific energetic channels. Every elevated area in Tibet represents a peak from which 108 channels descend. One hundred and eight is a sacred number in Buddhism and represents the number of Buddha’s manifestations. When something exists energetically, it is possible to feel that energy, activate it and [utilize it] through an image of the place where it is located, through a drawing of its appearance, by meditating on the desired energy, by requesting the energy and the like, regardless of how far we are from the place where it is located. To walk on an energetic channel, the following request should be said while meditating:
“I am walking on the energy channel in Tibet.”
Walking on the channel causes pressure, pulls our back, straightening us, the knees bend and more. The channels relax, heal, feed with energy, and walking on them represents a small meditation. The walk is very effective in a healing and spiritual sense. It was suggested that we try out the differences in the effects between the lines, the knots, and that we ask the corresponding channel to pass through the organ we wish to heal. The three sacred rivers, the Indus, the Ganges, and the Brahmaputra, whose sources flow from the Himalayas, carry spiritual knowledge, information they have taken over by intersecting these channels, because water is the best material medium. The purpose of this is for the living world to receive useful information by using this water.
The first conqueror of the Himalayas, Edmund Hillary, climbed Mount Everest without an oxygen mask with the help of a Sherpa because that Sherpa guided him through an energy channel.

The energy channels of Tibet









