New Age Svadhishthana

2nd, Sacral Chakra

A vibrant digital graphic of the Svadhishthana Sacral Chakra yantra glowing with bright orange and gold illumination. The central design features a large, stylized white Sanskrit character representing the seed syllable Vam, enclosed within a bright white crescent moon symbol. This core is surrounded by concentric red and gold circular borders radiating points of light, all nested inside an open six-petaled orange lotus flower. The entire mandala is set against a warm orange gradient background framed by a simple gold geometric t-shaped border layout.
The geometric matrix of the Svadhishthana (Sacral) Chakra, featuring the white crescent moon of the water element and the central beeja mantra ‘Vam’.

Modern Svadishthana At a Glance

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Symbol / Color 6 Petal Lotus / Orange
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Element / Sense Water / Taste
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Location Sacrum / Reproductive Organs
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Physical Glands Ovaries & Testes
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Bija Mantra VAM (Vum)
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Musical Note Note D
Frequency 432Hz (Universal Harmony)
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Meaning “One’s Own Abode”

Flow with Intention

2nd Chakra Healing Tips:

Self-care. One of the main reasons this chakra gets block is because of the tendency to focus on helping everyone else except ourselves, leading to burnout and feeling cranky. It is Ok to say ‘no’ instead of yes, and focus on taking care of yourself. Make it a daily habit to do things that make you happy, and look after your own needs as well as looking after others. You can’t take care of others unless you take care of yourself first.

Affirmations boost self-esteem and overall good feelings. Positive affirmations are a good place to start with healing a sacral imbalance. Some examples include “I am worthy of my own self-love” and “I am perfect just as I am.”

Balance isn’t just about acknowledging the positives within us; it’s about acknowledging the shadows—fear, envy, and doubt. Within the waters of the Sacral Chakra is the place to wash them clean. Here you will find modern tools to help you navigate your emotional tides with clarity and grace.

The Svadhisthana Chakra is primarily associated with:

  • Svadhishthana is the seat of our desires, feelings and emotions.
  • Emotions: particularly pleasure, joy, sorrow, fear, anger.
  • Creativity: artistic expression, imagination, innovation.
  • Sexuality and Sensuality: reproductive functions, desire, intimacy.
  • Relationships: connection to others, care, emotional bonds.
  • Flow and Change: adaptability, movement, dissolution.
  • ​Feelings of guilt and shame: When we are working with Svadhisthana chakra we work with suppressed emotions and feelings of guilt and shame. We have to face and accept our flaws.​
  • It is concerned with flow and flexibility of body and mind
  • ​​Svadhisthana Chakra is about movement and change.
  • The colour orange represents enthusiasm, fascination, happiness, creativity, attraction, success, encouragement, emotion, and stimulation. The sunrise and sunset.

Sacral Chakra Healing Tips:

Overactive Sacral Chakra symptoms: Emotional volatility, excessive attachment, or feeling “ruled” by your desires and moods.

Underactive Sacral Chakra symptoms: Lack of creativity, emotional numbness, fear of intimacy, or feeling “stuck” and resistant to change.

Affirmations for Flow: Use affirmations that celebrate your right to feel and create. Examples include: “I flow with the tides of life,” “I allow myself to feel my emotions,” and “Creativity flows through me effortlessly.”

Embrace Pleasure: One of the main reasons this chakra gets blocked is guilt. Focus on activities that bring you genuine joy and sensory pleasure—like a warm bath, listening to music, or creative hobbies—without feeling like you have to “earn” the right to enjoy them.

Saraswati: The Muse of the Inner Flow

While the ancient maps give us the structures of the soul, our modern journey requires a guide who speaks the language of inspiration and healing. Welcome to the domain of Goddess Saraswati.

In this space, we move beyond the mechanical and into the magical. Saraswati arrives at the Sacral center not just as a deity, but as the “Flowing One”—the divine frequency that transforms our raw, roiling emotions into the refined music of the soul. Saraswati is the radiant light reflecting off the surface of our emotional ocean, guiding us to turn our inner “poisons” into the vibrant plumage of a creative life.

Invite her in when you are ready to turn your life’s tides into art.
A classical Indian painting of Goddess Saraswati seated gracefully atop a large white swan floating in a serene, lotus-filled river. She is dressed in a traditional white saree with a golden border, wearing fine jewelry and a golden crown beneath a luminous green and gold halo. In her four hands, she holds a wooden veena across her lap, a sacred scriptural book, and a strand of rudraksha mala prayer beads while her fourth hand is raised in a gesture of blessing. A vibrant blue male peacock stands on the mossy riverbank to the left, displaying its brilliant green feathered tail. The background features rolling green hills under a soft sunset sky, enclosed within an ornate, hand-carved wooden frame featuring white swans in each corner.

Saraswati inspires through knowledge, learning, wisdom, and fine arts. Saraswati is refined, intelligent and graceful, the goddess of poetry, music and science. She provides the energy to bring Brahma’s cosmic vision into being. Her name means “to flow,” she is connected to the very life force of water and reflects the ability to go with the flow of life with wisdom. She can also be called up on as a divine physician for healing body, mind and soul. Symbols: Depicted with four arms holding a veena (music), a book (knowledge), mala beads (meditation), and a pot of sacred water (purification).

Her reciprocal relationship with Brahma emphasizes that creation requires both abstract consciousness (Brahma) and tangible knowledge/action (Saraswati). Both Brahma and Saraswati ride Hamsa the swan, symbolizing calmness of mind, purity of the soul, truth, and wisdom. The peacock is her companion. Its colourful feathers symbolize the beauty of dance, music, and the arts and also serve as a reminder not to become vain of one’s beauty and talents. A peacock is said to be able to devour snakes symbolizing the ability to take the poisons of negative emotions (like jealousy or anger) and transform them into the “radiant plumage of enlightenment”.

Ways of Working with Svadhishthana Chakra

Gemstones Pearl: Often considered a powerful stone for the sacral chakra, particularly a natural pearl, and is associated with the Moon, emotions, and creativity.
Carnelian: A type of agate that promotes creativity, courage, and individuality.
Sunstone: Believed to help balance emotional energies.
Tiger’s Eye: Used to encourage emotional depth and resilience.
Amber: Another orange stone associated with the sacral chakra.
Citrine: Associated with creativity and personal power.

Herbs and Spices: cinnamon, ginger, vanilla, and hibiscus, often used in teas or cooking to support creativity, pleasure, and emotional balance. Other beneficial herbs and spices are fennel, licorice, mint, carob, and damiana, as well as cardamom and chili powder.

Essential oils Uplifting & Creative: Sweet Orange, Bergamot, Tangerine Promotes joy, optimism, and encourages the flow of creative energy.
Sensual & Passionate: Ylang Ylang, Jasmine, Rose Enhances sensuality, passion, emotional release, and intimacy.
Grounding & Balancing: Sandalwood, Patchouli, Clary Sage Calms emotional intensity, provides grounding, and supports intuition and stability.

Chandrabhedan Pranayam

Left nostril breathing or Chandra Nadi balances the Svadhisthana chakra. It is best practiced before meditation or asana practice.

An instructional yoga infographic demonstrating Chandra Bhedana Pranayama. A young woman sits cross-legged in a lotus posture on a dark red yoga mat against a light grey wall covered in subtle yoga pose silhouettes. She has her eyes closed, using her right hand to gently close her right nostril while maintaining a perfectly straight spine. Clear dark red text callouts with arrows point to key alignment and technique steps: 'Close right nostril', 'Inhale through left nostril', 'Spine straight', 'Straight', and 'Cross legs'. The top of the image features the bold heading 'CHANDRA BHEDANA' with the subheader 'How To Do'.
A step-by-step technical breakdown of Chandra Bhedana (Moon Piercing) pranayama, emphasizing precise finger placement and structural alignment to activate the cooling Ida Nadi.

“Moon-piercing breath”. This practice is believed to activate the Ida Nadi, associated with the moon and cooling qualities, promoting calmness and relaxation.
Left nostril breathing stimulates the right brain which takes us beyond words and logic into intuition, higher emotion and creativity.

  • Take 3 deep breaths in and out to prepare.
  • Close the right nostril: Use your thumb to gently close the right nostril.
  • Inhale through the left nostril: Inhaling slowly and deeply through the left nostril, allow your lungs to fill with air.
  • Hold the breath for a few seconds, or as comfortably as you can.
  • Exhale through the right nostril, closing the left nostril with your fingers, exhale slowly through the right nostril.
  • Inhale through the left nostril, pause, exhale through the right nostril.
  • Repeat about 10 times.

This is not nadi shodahna (alternate nostril breathing) as the inhalation is repeated through the left nostril and the exhale through the right nostril.

Svadhishthana: Flow Like Water Yoga Sequence

(Only attempt what is accessible for you)

Begin with Anjali Mudra: This is a gesture of offering. It means we are honouring and celebrating this moment and the potential for an intention to progress toward our greatest spiritual awakening.

Seated & Warm-up: The Stirring of the Tides

  • Seated Flowing Movements: Gentle torso circles and swaying to awaken the sacral bowl.
  • Bitilasana Marjaryasana: Cat/Cow Pose (Focusing on a fluid, wave-like motion).
  • Bhujangasana Flow: Flowing Cobra (Inhaling up, exhaling down like a gentle tide).
  • Makarasana: Crocodile Pose (Resting and breathing into the lower abdomen).

Standing & Lunar Flows: The Rhythm of the Moon

  • Chandra Namaskar: Moon Salutation (Honoring the cooling, lunar energy).
  • Anjaneyasana with Circles: Lunges with big, sweeping arm circles to open the hips.
  • Utkata Konasana: Goddess Pose with arm circles (Embodying creative power).
  • Virabhadrasana Sequence: Warrior Flow (Moving between Warrior I, II, and Reverse).
  • Garudasana: Eagle Pose (Binding and releasing to stimulate energy flow).

Deep Hip Openers & Balance: The Depth of the Sea

  • Eka Pada Rajakapotasana: Pigeon Pose (Releasing stored emotions in the hips).
  • Eka Pada Rajakapotasana Variation: Mermaid Pose (Graceful, fluid flexibility).
  • Navasana: Boat Pose (Finding stability within the fluid center).
  • Malasana: Garland Pose (Deep squat to ground the sacral energy).

Seated Finishing Poses: Still Waters

  • Baddha Konasana: Butterfly Pose (Stirring the “nectar” of the hips).
  • Upavista Konasana: Seated Wide-Angle Pose (Opening the inner lines of the legs).
  • Jathara Parivartanasana: Seated Twists (Wringing out tension and balancing).

Closing: The Ocean of Peace

  • Savasana: Corpse Pose (Final relaxation—visualizing a calm, silver sea).
A wide, panoramic landscape photograph capturing a dramatic sunrise over a calm ocean shore. The sky is filled with intense orange, deep red, and purple hues as the sun breaks over the ocean horizon in the center, casting a brilliant, linear golden reflection across the wet, glassy sand in the foreground. Low, flat islands sit quietly on the far left and right horizons under a soft layer of clouds, while the wide beach mirrors the intense color of the sky.
The vast expanse of the morning sun reflecting on the ocean tides, symbolizing the radiant activation of solar vitality and clear vision.