TLDR: Dr. Svoboda examines the life of Jnaneshwara, a 13th-century Indian saint whose kundalini awakening became central to his realization of absolute reality. Rather than treating kundalini as a mere energy phenomenon, Svoboda frames Jnaneshwara's experience as a doorway into understanding how the subtle body's activation can lead to direct knowing of what is. This teaching reveals that kundalini awakening is not an end in itself but a means of aligning consciousness with the nature of reality.
Who Was Jnaneshwara and Why Does His Story Matter?
Jnaneshwara (also spelled Dnyanadev) was a 13th-century Marathi saint and one of the most celebrated figures in Hindu mysticism. Born into a brahmin family in Maharashtra, India, his life challenged conventional religious orthodoxy and opened pathways for spiritual realization outside institutional religion. Dr. Svoboda's focus on Jnaneshwara positions him as a living example of what is possible when kundalini energy becomes conscious—when the dormant force traditionally visualized as a coiled serpent at the base of the spine awakens and rises through the energy centers of the subtle body.
What makes Jnaneshwara's story particularly relevant is that he did not simply experience kundalini awakening in isolation. Instead, his awakening became a gateway to what he called direct contact with reality itself. This distinction is crucial: many spiritual practitioners encounter kundalini phenomena—heat, light, spontaneous movements, visions, profound energetic shifts—without necessarily integrating these experiences into a coherent understanding of what reality actually is. Jnaneshwara's path, as Svoboda presents it, demonstrates how kundalini can serve consciousness itself.
What Is Kundalini and How Does It Relate to Spiritual Realization?
Kundalini, in the classical yogic understanding, is the dormant creative energy (shakti) that resides at the base of the spine. When awakened—through practice, grace, or spontaneous opening—this energy rises through the central channel of the subtle body, activating the energy centers known as chakras. Each chakra represents different dimensions of consciousness: survival and physicality at the root, emotion and sexuality at the sacral center, will and power at the navel, love and heart qualities at the heart center, communication and expression at the throat, intuition and inner sight at the third eye, and pure consciousness at the crown.
In Jnaneshwara's case, kundalini awakening was not merely an experience of energetic phenomena but a catalyst for transformation of perception itself. The awakening of kundalini created conditions in which the boundary between the perceiver and the perceived began to dissolve. This is where Dr. Svoboda's teaching becomes especially illuminating: kundalini is not mystical decoration or a supernatural power to be cultivated for its own sake. Rather, it is the mechanism through which the nervous system and subtle body can be purified and refined enough to directly perceive reality as it is, without the filtering screens of habit, fear, and accumulated conditioning.
How Did Jnaneshwara's Kundalini Awakening Influence His Path?
Jnaneshwara's awakening happened in the context of devotional practice and deep philosophical inquiry. He lived during a period in India when the bhakti movement—the path of devotional surrender—was flowering alongside the more abstract non-dual teachings of Advaita Vedanta. Jnaneshwara's particular genius was his ability to honor both: he maintained fierce devotion while simultaneously realizing the ultimate unity of consciousness underlying all apparent separation.
The kundalini awakening provided Jnaneshwara with direct evidence of this teaching. As his subtle energy body activated and refined, he experienced directly what the Upanishads and Advaita Vedanta had always asserted intellectually: that there is one consciousness appearing as the multiplicity of forms. The energy rising through his being showed him that the same force animating his individual existence was the force animating all existence. This is not a belief or philosophy—it became lived knowing.
Central to Jnaneshwara's path was the capacity to remain stable in this realization while continuing to function in the world. Many practitioners with kundalini awakenings become overwhelmed by the intensity of their experiences, lose the thread of practice, or struggle to integrate these states into ordinary life. Jnaneshwara, as Svoboda emphasizes, developed the capacity to live with reality—to move through the world fully awake to what is, without needing to retreat from it or dramatize it.
What Does It Mean to "Live with Reality"?
The phrase "living with reality" that appears in the title of Svoboda's larger teaching series is deceptively simple. It means to be present to what is actually happening, without the constant overlay of interpretation, preference, resistance, or embellishment. Most human consciousness operates in a kind of continuous dream state: we filter direct experience through our beliefs about how things should be, our fears about loss, our cravings for pleasure, our narratives about identity.
For Jnaneshwara, kundalini awakening stripped away enough of these filters that reality itself could be met directly. Not reality as concept, but reality as direct knowing. This is why Svoboda frames kundalini awakening not as something exotic or supernatural, but as a natural refinement of the nervous system's capacity to perceive and process what is. When kundalini rises and the chakras activate, the subtle body essentially upgrades its bandwidth. It can now register dimensions of existence that were previously below the threshold of consciousness.
Living with reality, then, means inhabiting this expanded capacity without contracting back into fear or habit. It means continuing to function—to speak, act, serve, relate—from a place of clear seeing rather than from the fragmented, defended, half-asleep state that characterizes ordinary human consciousness.
Why Is Jnaneshwara's Integration Significant for Modern Practitioners?
In contemporary spiritual contexts, kundalini awakening is sometimes treated as a dramatic or even dangerous event requiring specialized expertise to manage. While kundalini experiences can certainly be intense and do benefit from proper understanding and guidance, Jnaneshwara's example offers something different: a model of natural, integrated kundalini awakening that leads not to special powers or states of bliss to be chased, but to clarity about reality itself.
This distinction is important. A practitioner might have a profound kundalini experience—kundalini rising through the chakras, dissolution of boundaries, overwhelming sense of unity—and then spend years trying to recreate that state, or building an identity around being "kundalini-awakened." Jnaneshwara's path, as Svoboda presents it, suggests that the awakening is valuable precisely to the extent that it clarifies what is real and what is not. Once that clarification happens, the seeking stops. There is only this—the actual reality that is always present.
For modern practitioners working with kundalini—whether through yoga, meditation, breath practices, or grace—Jnaneshwara's life suggests that the goal is not to achieve spectacular states but to allow the awakening to do its actual work: clearing away illusion and establishing consciousness in its natural alignment with what is.
Where to Go From Here
To deepen exploration of Jnaneshwara's teachings and path, seek out the complete episode in Dr. Svoboda's "The Life of a Saint" series, available through the Be Here Now Network. Additionally, explore Jnaneshwara's own writings, particularly his commentary on the Bhagavad Gita, which reflects the integrated understanding that comes from kundalini awakening combined with philosophical wisdom.
If you are working with kundalini energy in your own practice, use Jnaneshwara's life as a reference point: Is your practice moving you toward clearer perception of reality, or toward attachment to experiences and states? Is kundalini awakening in your life serving the dissolution of illusion, or the construction of a more subtle ego? These questions, held gently in meditation and inquiry, can help orient practice toward genuine realization rather than mere phenomena.



