Whenever I come in contact with westerners, they get
fascinated with the bindi I have on my forehead. They ask about its
significance and many of them get it as gift from me and they happily wear it
too.
On the other hand, many Indian girls and ladies have stopped
wearing bindis. I am curious about the reason for this and whenever I get an
opportunity, I ask.
‘Oh, aunty, bindi doesn’t go well with the western dresses
that we wear.’ May be… Or am I getting old fashioned?
Bindi is old fashioned for Indian ladies
Then I started seeing Indian dames in Indian dresses sans
bindi. May be wearing bindi is now outdated. And why am I even bothered whether
bindis are seen on their foreheads?
Intuitively, I have always felt that bindi had some
connection with preserving energy. This is the sequence that happens in my
life. First I sense things and I do it in my life. But if I have to ask others
to do, I have to provide a logical reason. This is true even in my professional
life as an Endodontist.
Energy leakage
The other day, after my morning meditation, I got the
guidance to check the leakage of energy from the ajna chakra (third eye area) with
and without the bindi. Both my husband and I are good at dowsing. I went to my
husband with a pendulum and bindi and asked him to check my ajna chakra. He was
working on the computer at the time. Just turning his chair towards me, he
checked. Then, he stood up, ‘Oh oh, let me check again. This is making a
tremendous difference.’
‘We will wear it now’
Yesterday (7-3-2016) two young girls came to me for Reiki
healing. It was Shivratri and both were wearing Indian dresses, but no bindis. One
girl’s (she looked like a skeleton) problem was constant tiredness, lack of
energy and continuous head ache. For the last three weeks she was taking pain
killer daily. When I checked her energy level, the pendulum showed no movement
on any of the chakras, which explained her lack of energy. I gave her a Reiki
healing and she got relief from her head ache.
Then I said to them, ‘Let me show you something,’ and
brought a pendulum and bindi. I showed the difference in pendulum movement with
and without bindi.
‘Already you are having shortage of energy, and whatever is
there, is continuously leaking since you are not wearing a bindi.’
Both the girls said in unison, ‘From now on, we will wear
the bindi. We never knew its significance.’
The health aspect
From a health point of view, the Bindi is worn between the
eyebrows where the pineal gland lies. This is an important nerve center and
applying sandalwood or ash keeps the nerves cool and so keeps you cool and
conserves energy. In the past the Bindi was made from the yellow and red
sandalwood, red and yellow turmeric, saffron, various flowers, ash, zinc oxide.
All these had cooling properties in nature.
Traditionally, the area between the eyebrows (where the
bindi is placed) is said to be the sixth chakra, ajna, the seat of "concealed
wisdom". The bindi is said to retain energy and strengthen concentration.
The pineal gland is a light sensitive gland that produces
the hormone melatonin which regulates sleep and waking up, and is also
postulated to be the production site of the psychedelic dimethyltryptamine, the
only known hallucinogen endogenous to the human body. Ajna's key issues involve
balancing the higher and lower selves and trusting inner guidance. Ajna's inner
aspect relates to the access of intuition. Mentally, Ajna deals with visual
consciousness. Emotionally, Ajna deals with clarity on an intuitive level.
In South Asia , bindi is
worn by women of all religious dispositions and is not restricted to religion
or region.
A much deeper significance
From Vedic times, the bindi was created as a means to
worship one's intellect. Therefore, it was used by both men and women. Worship
of the intellect was to ensure that thoughts, speech, actions, habits and
ultimately one's character becomes pure. A strong intellect can help one to
make noble decisions in life, be able to stand up to challenges in life with
courage, and recognize and welcome good thoughts in life. The belief was that
on this a strong individual, a strong family and strong society can be formed. Red
represents honor, love and prosperity; hence it was worn to symbolize these
aspects.