Professional Documents
Culture Documents
September 5,
2015
In the Chakras system, every human being is capable of fully developing their potential and achieving a wise life
through the process of allowing the chakras to be gradually opened. This process involves overcoming certain
existential challenges and therein gaining an increased level of maturity, detachment, generosity and open-
mindedness. The existential challenges represent specific psychological obstacles that block each chakra, as
follows:
According to Eastern spiritual tradition, the practice of regular meditation focusing on each obstacle is the best
way to unblock the energy of the chakras, in order to progressively eliminate the harmful influence that these
obstacles have on the mind.
The first three chakras operate on the personal level. The personal level involves an inner work focused on
discovering and accepting oneself.
The last three chakras belong to the transpersonal level. The transpersonal level involves abandoning oneself,
or more precisely, detaching oneself from the self-image the ego and the illusion that one is actually
separated from the all other beings. In doing so, one achieves a rising awareness of the unity and
interconnectedness existing among all beings. The transpersonal level aims at a mystical kind of awareness,
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which only will be true if one has first worked deeply on the personal and transitional level.
The forth chakra, the heart chakra, is the bridge between the personal and transpersonal levels. It corresponds
to the transitional level. Represented by the heart chakra, the transitional level bridges the other two
evolutionary levels. The transitional level involves, on the one hand, overcoming obstacles on the personal level
(fear, guilt, shame), and a deep understanding and loving acceptance of oneself. On the other hand, it implies a
willingness or sincere intention to minimize the importance of self-image, the ego, in order to progressively
experience love for all beings and an intuitive wisdom that are qualities of the transpersonal level.
The evolutionary map presented by the Enneagram is surprisingly linked to the seven chakras. Beyond our own
personality type and instinctual subtype, the Enneagram invites everyone to know oneself and fully develop their
own potential through the seven levels of the inner work that correspond to the seven chakras with each chakra
pointing to specific vital aspects:
Social Instinct / 3rd Chakra: Self-esteem, social image and personal achievements.
The Enneatype identification is only the first step. But mere knowledge (or identification) of a typological tag is
insufficient. After identifying ones type and instinctual subtype, we have at the same time a double challenge
to continue knowing our self and, above all, to develop those aspects of the personality that are less developed.
Personal Level
This is the evolutionary level specially that can guide us toward greater self-knowledge. So, despite our
dominant instinctual subtype, we should ask ourselves questions such as:
How am I addressing my self-care, e.g. my physical health, body care, eating, sleeping, and hygiene? How am I
managing my money? What do I need to change on these areas?
What about my significant relationships? Am I caring for them properly? Where and how am I not paying
adequate attention to my emotional relationships? How am I interacting with my partner and closest friends? On
which activities do I expend my biggest energy and creativity? What might I improve on these areas?
Do I accept myself as I am, including my faults? Am I patient in facing my mistakes? Do I tend to be too rigid or
too lenient with myself? How much importance do I give to what others think of me? Does my self-worth depend
on my achievements and failures? Do I distinguish what I am from what I accomplish? or do I feel I am my
accomplishments?
Transitional Level
At the second evolutionary level, we will work on the dominant passions. Usually, they operate as deep,
unconscious motivations. Here, we focus on the heart chakra, the fourth chakra. According to ancient traditions
of both Eastern and Western wisdom, the heart is the passions seat, which man must know and master to not
be dominated by them. This is the time for people to work on their dominant passion. And such work certainly
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takes many years as one explores self-observation and self-reform.
As we said, the heart chakra is the bridge to the higher evolutionary level of consciousness. It corresponds to
the transpersonal level. But the human heart must face its own passions. We all have within us, potentially active
and operative, the nine passions noted in the Enneagram system: (1) Anger, (2) Pride, (3) Vanity, (4) Envy, (5)
Greed, (6) Cowardice, (7) Gluttony, (8) Lust, and (9) Laziness.
One of these is necessarily our own dominant passion, our Achilles heel. It is essential to work extensively with
the passions with both our dominant passion and the others, before we can move to the next evolutionary level.
At this point, we might ask ourselves:
Do I know and accept my dominant passion? What passion is next for me in terms of intensity? Can I distinguish
on a day-by-day basis when my dominant passion is working me (even if other people do not notice it)? Can I
identify how and how much my dominant passion has affected my life and relationships? On a scale from 1 to 10,
how much am I attached to my dominant passion, as if it were the core of my own personal identity? What am I
doing to make that my dominant passion have less of a harmful influence on my life?
Transpersonal Level
Third, after working deeply and steadily with the passions, we can move to work over other spiritual aspects
such as our fixations, virtues, and the holy or transcendent ideas. The virtues and the transcendent ideas
operate on the level of Essence or Being, as opposed to the level of Ego, including its passions and cognitive-
fixations. (Note: While the fixations strictly relate to the Egos level, traditionally the fixations have being worked
jointly with the transcendent ideas, since the latter are the antidotes for the fixations. This is the reason why in
this case the cognitive-fixations are placed in the first transpersonal-level footstep, at the 5th chakra).
The 5th Chakra is related to authentic self-expression. While the Ego is a false self, which we have identified
with during the formation of our personality, behind the ego, behind the mask that is our personality type (from
the Latin, persona = mask), is our Essence, our authentic self, our essential self.
From the Enneagram spiritual-perspective, the virtues are Essential qualities. So, they are not the result of
human effort to become oneself virtuous, but they manifest themselves spontaneously in a persons life
while their internal barriers being removed. That is, while a person is becoming more and more self-conscious,
working to be less and less dominated by the passions, one becomes more able to love all beings without
distinction.
The virtues operate as profound spiritual, altruistic motivations rooted in universal love. They are opposed to the
deficiency-motivation that are the passions, whose roots are fear, ignorance and attachment.
Working on the 5th chakra involves removing the obstacles (passions) that prevent the expression of our
Essential qualities, the 9 virtues; namely,
1. Serenity (as opposed to Anger) Anger is not necessary; I accept things as they are.
2. Humility (as opposed to Pride) I have needs too, and I need help.
3. Authenticity (as opposed to Vanity) I am as just I am, with virtues and defects.
4. Equanimity (as opposed to Envy) Let it flow; everything comes and goes, and I accept it.
5. Generosity (as opposed to Greed) I give and receive; I share what I have and what I am.
6. Courage (as opposed to Cowardice) I can do it!; I trust myself, and I trust the universe.
7. Temperance (as opposed to Gluttony) I enjoy everything, every moment; I live in the present.
8. Compassion (as opposed to Lust) There is more strength in resisting than in attacking; I forgive you.
9. Diligence (as opposed to laziness) I do not evade myself in the inertia; I am aware and loving, here and
now.
The 6th Chakra is related to the minds functioning both conscious and unconscious including intuition. So to
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achieve a clear mind and an objective view of things, it is necessary to purify the mind as far as we can from
prejudices and cognitive-mistakes. The Enneagram refers to cognitive-fixations rather than specific implicit-
cognitive-mistakes. Cognitive-fixations necessarily correlate to the passions. (Note: There is no consensus about
the name of cognitive-fixations, even some authors point to several fixations correspond to each passion). To wit:
1. Criticism Always there is a mistake in anything. I know how things should be done.
2. Seduction I can give you what you need. You need me.
3. Deception I am what I accomplish. I am what I look like. I am the best one.
4. Dissatisfaction Only it matters the worst from the present and the best from the absent.
5. Stinginess I dont have enough. Dont ask me so much. So many demands bother me.
6. Doubt I cannot trust anyone nor anything. There is a danger anywhere.
7. Planning There is always a plan B. Why settle for what has already been done?.
8. Revenge Eye for eye, tooth for tooth. Showing weakness is unacceptable.
9. Indolence Ok, its all good. By adapting myself, I avoid conflicts.
The fixations can be worked in two ways: directly, from self-observation, by sharpening the eyes to see the
fixations acting daily in life, almost autonomously, i.e., when we work through them without a conscious propose.
In fact, the fixations attachment to the passions operate from our automatic pilot, i.e., they work like
emotional-cognitive patterns on which we rarely put attention, but they are underlying our usual thinking, feeling,
acting and reacting to daily events. Moreover, some people propose to work on the fixations indirectly, i.e.,
through meditation practice, focusing on the transcendent ideas, the antidotes for the fixations.
The 7th Chakra is the gateway to connect our self with the transcendental level of essence, with the universe
as a transcendental whole. The transcendent ideas (also called holy ideas) are precisely that. They work in the
human mind as different approaches to the universe in its ultimate unity, integrating the whole diversity in the
unity. So whoever fully opens the 7th Chakra also achieves a transcendent perspective from the holy ideas, and
perceives the illusory nature of the both separation and disconnectedness, which are the typical ways the ego
sees itself and everything.
In other words, the ego has a fundamental illusion believing that all things are separate from one another; that
every person, everything is something discrete, separate from everything else. Hence, the egos basic
orientation is Every man for himself. That is exactly the meaning we give to the term egoism, the idea that
everyone should look out for himself and worse, that individual actions have no impact on the other people, nor
on everything else. Everyone the ego thinks must do what one wants, as if this doesnt have
consequences, as if each ego is an isolated entity having an own universe. But its not, we all are in the same
universe. The actions of each one impacts one or another, visibly or imperceptibly, at all times. But this is very
difficult to perceive unless we have a mind detached from any kind of selfishness.
In short, the nine holy ideas are objective perspectives on the transcendent unity of the universe. We could
synthesize them as follows:
Knowledge of our instinctive subtype, identifying and working on the predominant one among them.
Identifying our dominant passion and working on its influence in our decisions and actions.
All of these healthy actions fit, as we saw, in the gradual unblocking of the seven Chakras that leads us to the
goal of a waking, generous, wise and loving consciousness.
Marcelo Aguirre
www.marceloaguirre.com
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