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How do you feel when Kundalini awakens?

In 2026, Kundalini search volume has increased by 45 percent, moving ahead of traditional meditation. This signals a shift from chasing a quiet mind toward regulating the nervous system and releasing stress from the body. Search behavior reflects this change. Queries linking Kundalini to the vagus nerve and cortisol now exceed chakra-focused searches, showing a move toward a biological understanding of the practice. Active Kundalini practices generate 3 times more engagement than static ones. Movement is replacing stillness, with a focus on releasing stress through the body.

Instagram data totally confirms the trend. The hashtag #kundalini has passed 1.5 million posts, and shaking reels reach twice as many people as static content. The core audience, 69% female aged 25 to 44, favors practical use, with saves for Kundalini Awakening guides up by 40%.

I’ve seen this trend grow on Instagram, but I’ve also noticed another shift, a dilution of the original meaning of Kundalini, without using the term in a negative sense. There are still clear markers of Kundalini energy rising that differ from a simple nervous system discharge, a fascial release, or a neurogenic tremor.

Some of these symptoms I experienced by myself and I would be happy to share w you here.

To understand an authentic Kundalini awakening, one must look past modern “spiritualized” descriptions and ground the experience in Shastra (sacred texts) and the biological reality documented by experts. True awakening is not a mental concept; it is a physiological reorganization.

Here are the most authentic symptoms, cross-referenced between ancient scriptures and modern expert insights:

Physical Manifestations: Kriyas and Tapas

In the Hatha Yoga Pradipika and various Tantric texts, awakening is described as Prana entering the Sushumna Nadi (the central channel).

  • Kriyas (Spontaneous Movements): The most undeniable sign is involuntary shaking, jerking, or the body moving into complex asanas and mudras without conscious effort. Expert Gopi Krishna described this as a “biological evolution” of the nervous system.

  • Tapas (Intense Heat): Scriptures describe Kundalini as “brilliant as ten thousand suns.” Authenticated experiences often involve intense heat rising up the spine, sometimes physically raising the skin temperature.

Sensory Perceptions: Nada and Jyoti

  • Nada (The Inner Sound): The Shiva Samhita and Hatha Yoga Pradipika detail the Nada Anu Sandhana (the yoga of sound). Authentic symptoms include hearing internal sounds like bells, flutes, or a constant “om” hum that does not originate from the external environment.

  • Jyoti (Inner Light): Practitioners and transpersonal psychologists like Bonnie Greenwell report sudden flashes of white or golden light within the “third eye” or the skull, often referred to in scriptures as the “vision of the inner sun.”

The “Somatic Discharge” & Psychological Purge

  • Involuntary Bliss (Ananda): Ananda isn’t just “feeling good.” It is a cellular ecstasy described in the Upanishads as a state where the duality between the observer and the observed dissolves.

  • Biological Crisis: Expert Joan Shivarpita Harrigan notes that if the nervous system isn’t prepared, the awakening can feel like a “nervous breakdown.” This is actually the Nadis (energy channels) clearing blockages—a process of purging old trauma that can cause insomnia, sensitivity to light, or sudden emotional releases.

 

Source Key Symptom Expert Interpretation
Yoga Kundalini Upanishad Shat-Chakra-Bhedana The physical “piercing” of blockages via vibration/shaking.
Shiva Samhita Vayu-Siddhi Gaining control over autonomic functions (breath/heart rate).
Gopi Krishna (Practitioner) “Evolutionary Leap” The brain transforming to handle a higher voltage of electricity.
Tantra Texts (Abhinavagupta) Vibhuti The emergence of heightened intuition or “siddhis.”

 

My first Kundalini awakening happened at 14, and it was difficult. I experienced lucid dreaming and sharp shifts in my state, from high to deep low. I could feel energy moving up my spine toward my forehead, but I had no understanding of how to work with it.

My system was not ready, and I went through a period of depression and anxiety that lasted a few years. Over time, I built stability. I began practicing Kundalini yoga from a book I found in an old bookstore. Gradually, my state became more consistent. I learned to open the sushumna nadi without dropping into lows, using the techniques I found and strong grounding practices.

Pause for a moment and place this in context. I was 14 at the beginning, then 23 when these experiences deepened. I turn 41 next month. At that time in Eastern Europe, and in much of the world, access to information was limited, almost nonexistent. Each of us connects, in some way, to a wider field of intelligence. We are also here to ground those expanded states into the body and into daily life.

Another strong and credible book on Kundalini came back to my attention about 10 to 12 years ago. I saw it again on the reading list of a controversial millionaire whose story sparked a global scandal. Regardless of that context, the material stands on its own. The methods described by John Mumford work, and I had already practiced some of them.  The methods are based on energy work, drawing from yogic and tantric practices taught directly by Eastern masters he encountered on his path.
They range from tattwa based elemental work to postures, meditation, and yoga nidra, methods that are difficult to find gathered in one place.

Some groups within occult traditions are believed to work with Kundalini in ways that focus on control or personal power. Interpretations differ widely, and the same energy can be approached in very different ways depending on intent and discipline. Kundalini represents pure potential. Potential itself is neutral, and how it unfolds depends on the person’s values and discipline.

These experiences stood out:

    • 1st. During Kundalini awakening, there are moments of extended immobility. The body becomes still for minutes or longer. It feels as if the system pauses so the energy can settle. This is not universally experienced, but in my case I felt this few times;
    • 2nd. There is a clear perception of inner light. It appears as an ascending current, sometimes multicolored, sometimes white or silver, moving upward like a fountain.
    • 3rd. The states of ecstasy are distinct. They are difficult to describe, yet they bring a sense of happiness that feels beyond ordinary experience.
    • 4th. The sound is real, the “nada.” I could hear it inwardly, as a clear internal tone. When I stayed with it, it expanded until it filled everything. I was 23, going through this on my own. At times, it felt as if I was being absorbed into the sound. At certain stages of the practice, I did not know whether I was disappearing or not.
    • 5th. The Shake. The body gives direct feedback. You may experience spasms or movements that arise from within, like a serpentine current moving through the system and searching for a path. Many people feel fear at this stage, yet there is no need for panic. It is the system releasing and the energy moving upward.

My clients report the same involuntary movements, often described as neurogenic responses. They relate to autonomic nervous system activity, and in this context also align with the opening of the sushumna nadi, the central channel.

 

Struggling with Kundalini awakening? 

Adrian Băjenaru

Adrian Băjenaru

Somatic Shaking™ Founder, Nervous System Regulation • Somatic Shaking™ Founder • Neurogenic, Dynamic & Kundalini

Articles: 35

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