The Vrittis of Manipura

A high-contrast, luminescent digital illustration of the Manipura Solar Plexus Chakra yantra burning with intense golden-orange flames against a dark background. A large ten-petaled lotus wheel made of pure fire is inscribed with glowing Sanskrit syllables on each petal. At the glowing core, a fiery triangle frames a powerful, multi-armed warrior deity with a beard and horns, holding a trident and discus. Below him, a chariot team of horses charges forward through the flames, while an radiant energy point at the bottom base sends glowing, root-like tendrils downward.
A brilliant visual manifestation of the Manipura (Solar Plexus) center, capturing the dynamic expansion of the ten vrittis and the absolute transformative heat of the internal fire.

Vritti means Whirlpool. Chakras are wheels, the petals are constantly spinning around the centre, like a vortex. When the vrittis become still, the chakras become still, and our minds become still. All the thoughts and emotions stop whirling around. This action of Nirodha leads to clear perception or bliss, known as Samadhi.

The Manipura Chakra is the Agni, Fire centre. While the lower two chakras deal with survival and messy emotions, Manipura is about willpower and individuality.

The Bija Mantra: The central seed sound is RAM.

Each of these symbols corresponds to what could be called a vice, although it might more accurately be called a distraction or stumbling block.

1. ḍaṁ (डं), Lajja: Shame, shyness. Shame is an uncomfortable feeling that you have when you know that you have done something wrong or embarrassing, or when someone close to you has.

2. ḍhaṁ (ढं), Pishunata: Backbiting, slandering, treachery. Gossiping about someone who is not present.

3. ṇaṁ (णं), Irsha: Envy, jealousy. Feeling or showing an envious resentment of someone or their achievements, possessions, or perceived advantages.

4. taṁ (तं), Sushupti: Sleepiness, lethargy, laziness, dullness. In Manipura, sleepiness is spiritual stupor. It is the tendency to choose the easy path of least resistance instead of the fiery path of transformation.

5. thaṁ (थं), Visada: Sadness, melancholia, despair, mental pain. The wise student looks at the three kinds of pain – mental, physical, and environmental – and uses that awareness to detach from worldly distractions, eventually finding peace and liberation.

6. daṁ (दं), Kashaya: Passion. Passion is the cause of karmic bondage. It is ‘the ash that covers the fire’. By reacting without passion and staying tranquil, one can break the cycle of karma. The four Kashayas are anger (Krodha), greed (Lobha), ego (Mana) and deceit (Maya)

The 4 Kashayas & Their Antidotes

In the Manipura, these are the “ashes” that dim our inner fire. To digest them, we apply the specific antidote:

🔥 Anger (Krodha): This is the heat that burns but does not illuminate. It destroys peace and creates karmic debt.
The Antidote: Forgiveness (Kshama). To dissolve Krodha, practice the active release of resentment.
💰 Greed (Lobha): The insatiable hunger for more—whether it is food, power, or attention. It is a fire that can never be satisfied.
The Antidote: Contentment/Charity (Shaucha/Dana). Practising the art of giving away what we feel we “need” to own.
🎭 Ego/Pride (Mana): This is the “I-ness” that seeks to be superior to others. It makes the heart rigid and the mind closed.
The Antidote: Humility (Mardava). Realising that the same Divine Fire burns in everyone equally.
🌑 Deceit (Maya): This is “mask-wearing” and self-deception. In the Manipura, it often manifests as lying to ourselves about our true motives.
The Antidote: Honesty (Arjava). Being transparent in thought, word, and action.

7. dhaṁ (धं), Trsna: Thirst, craving or desire. The craving to hold on to pleasurable experiences. This type of desire is contrasted to wholesome types of desire such as the desire to benefit others.

8. naṁ (नं), Moha: Attachment to objects, ignorance, delusion. Attachment gives rise to deceit and greed. If we try to get or eat more than we need, we feel Moha (attachment/greed).

9. paṁ (पं), Ghrna: Aversion, hatred, revulsion, disgust. The desire to be separated from painful or unpleasant experiences. The Manipura is where we “digest” life; if we can’t digest an experience, we feel Ghrna.

10. phaṁ (फं), Bhaya: Fear. Fear is often the most paralysing vritti in the Manipura system, it can freeze our inner fire entirely. It can manifest as fear of failure, fear of being judged or ridiculed, or the fear of losing security. When it manifests as a “comfort zone” we feel safe but we are in a cage that stops us from stepping out to fulfil our life’s purpose. Stepping out requires us to trust our inner sun and fiery resolve. True courage isn’t the absence of fear; it is the fiery resolve to move forward even when the breath is tight and the mind is uncertain. The sound Phum (like a forceful “puff” of air) represents the power to blow away the fog of fear.

The Bija Raṁ

Transform the vrittis of anger, greed and hatred into constructive, courageous and brave actions.

A atmospheric, photorealistic still life arrangement on a textured crimson and gold altar cloth. On the left stands a detailed, dark grey ornamental statue of a ram with large, spiraling golden horns and a jeweled red saddle, exhaling a subtle wisp of flame from its nostrils. In the center foreground sits a metallic, dark gold cube inscribed with a glowing Sanskrit 'Ram' seed syllable. To the right, a steaming ceramic mug of dark coffee sits next to a rustic piece of wood holding dark chocolate squares and raw almonds. In the background, two small brass oil lamps flicker with warm light against a softly blurred stone temple corridor at dusk.
An evocative contemporary study of the Manipura center’s core symbols, balancing the solar, metabolic vitality of the ram vehicle with the grounded focus of the ‘Ram’ beeja mantra.

In Vedic tradition, Repha (the letter R) is the seed sound of fire itself. The “R” sound in Sanskrit requires the tongue to vibrate against the roof of the mouth. This vibration acts like a striking a match to ignite the digestive fire (Agni) of the solar plexus.

The 10 sounds represent the “scattering” of our vital energy into various emotional states, while Raṁ represents the “collection” and transformation of that energy into pure willpower. Think of the 10 petals as different aspects of fire. Some are smoky and dim (Lethargy), others are flickering and unstable (Fear), and some are sharp and scorching (Envy). When you chant Raṁ, you are performing an internal alchemy.

As you sound the “R” of Raṁ, you are symbolically gathering all those outward-facing emotions—the shame, the thirst, the delusion and absorbing them into the center. The 10 sounds are the fluctuations of the power, Raṁ is the source of the power.

The Bindu: The “ṁ” (the dot above the letter) represents the nasalized ‘m’ where the 10 divided sounds resolve into a single, pointed vibration that rises upward toward the heart.

When you chant the central bīja, you aren’t just making a sound; you are “cooking” the 10 emotions. You are taking the “Hard” biting emotions and the “Soft” internal states and burning away the impurities until only the golden light of self-assuredness remains.

Visualizations

The Heat Treatment: Since Manipura is Fire, when you feel Bhaya (fear) or Lajja (shame), visualize the fire in your navel becoming brighter. Imagine the “ash” (the negative emotion) being burned away, leaving only pure, glowing heat.

The “Sun” Visualization: for Manipura, imagine a Golden Sun at your navel. If you feel Visada (sadness), imagine that sun burning off the “fog” of despair. Use the golden sun for healing pain in your body. Imagine its warming rays reaching to where you need it your body, healing your cells.

To see how these mental whirlpools compare to the petals of the lower chakras, visit the Vrittis in the Chakras Summary page.

Pronunciation

In Sanskrit, the difference between a “D” sound and a “Dh” sound is huge. The Manipura covers three specific groups of letters.

A detailed instructional diagram illustrating the Manipura Solar Plexus Chakra transformation. On the left, a large, glowing ten-petaled golden lotus displays the ten negative emotional tendencies or vrittis with their transliterated Sanskrit sounds and English labels: ḍaṁ (Shame), dhaṁ (Slander), ṇaṁ (Envy), taṁ (Lethargy), thaṁ (Sadness), daṁ (Passion), dhaṁ (Craving), naṁ (Delusion), paṁ (Hatred), and phaṁ (Fear), surrounding a central burning 'Ram' seed syllable. On the right, a woman sits in deep cross-legged meditation with her eyes closed against a blurred sunset temple backdrop. Vibrant streams of light containing glowing Sanskrit characters flow from the outer lotus and converge directly into a matching glowing lotus wheel over her solar plexus center. The bottom of the image features clean golden typography reading 'MANIPŪRA CHAKRA: 10 SOUNDS CONVERGE INTO RAJ'.
An advanced meditative schema charting how the ten distinct mental modifications or emotional ripples (vrittis) of the solar plexus center are drawn inward and purified into unified vital force.

Maṇipūra: The Alchemy of Sound

How the 10 Petals Resolve into the Central Fire (Raṁ)

Articulation Petal (Bīja) Vritti (Mental State) Pronunciation Secret English Sound
The Retroflexes
(Hard / Biting)
डं ḍaṁ Shame (Lajjā) Dum: Tongue curls back to the palate. Done
ढं ḍhaṁ Slander (Piśunatā) Dhum: Heavy, breathy retroflex “D”. Adhere
णं ṇaṁ Envy (Irṣā) Num: Nasal “N” with tongue curled back. Under
The Dentals
(Soft / Internal)
तं taṁ Lethargy (Suṣupti) Tum: Soft “T” with tongue against teeth. Table
थं thaṁ Sadness (Viṣāda) Thum: Soft “T” + a puff of air. Thailand
दं daṁ Passion (Kaṣāya) Dum: Soft “D” with tongue against teeth. The
धं dhaṁ Craving (Tṛṣṇā) Dhum: Soft “D” + heavy puff of air. Mud-hut
नं naṁ Delusion (Moha) Num: Standard dental “N”. Now
The Labials
(Lips / Outward)
पं paṁ Hatred (Ghṛṇā) Pum: Lips meet and release. Pump
फं phaṁ Fear (Bhaya) Phum: Lips release with a burst of air. Puff
THE CENTER रं Raṁ TRANSFORMATION R-r-rum: The vibrating ‘R’ that ignites all petals. Run / Rum
Practice: Chant the 10 petals to acknowledge the mental fluctuations, then resolve them into the central Raṁ to burn away impurities and claim your power.

A Sound Mediation – Mantra

You can perform this in a few ways:
A. The General Balancing (Central Mantra): Chant the seed mantra RAM (pronounced like “rum” with a rolling ‘r’).
• As you chant, feel the vibration starting at the navel and moving outward.
• Focus on the feeling of internal strength and the dissolution of fear (Bhaya).

B. The Specific Purification (Petal Chanting): If you feel a specific vritti is particularly strong (e.g., you are struggling with Irshya/Jealousy or Ghrina/Aversion), you can chant the specific Bija for that petal 108 times.

C: Alternatively, you can “cycle” through all ten to harmonize the entire center:
The Sequence: > ḍaṁ — ḍhaṁ — ṇaṁ — taṁ — thaṁ — daṁ — dhaṁ — naṁ — paṁ — phaṁ
• Inhale: Visualize the yellow light expanding.
• Exhale: Chant the sequence of 10 sounds slowly, imagining each petal vibrating and turning from a dull colour to a brilliant, shining gold.

A deep mediation to still the fire of Manipura

Deepen Your Journey into Manipura

Continue exploring the Fire Center through these connected paths: