Chakras & Meditation

Chakra colours, seeds mantra and Sanskrit names

What is a chakra?

The Sanskrit word chakra means a disk or wheel. Referring to spinning energy centres that correspond to certain organs or nerve plexuses

The 7 major chakras,

While there are thousands of chakras in the body and in the auric field, there are 7 main chakras that are located along centre of the body. Please see diagram above & below for a brief description and enjoy the balancing your chakra meditation with sound bowls attached for your practice.

Chakra Meditation & Journaling

Sit with your spine lengthened but not rigid. Feel the chakras lining up, one over the other.

Place your hands on your body where you feel drawn to.

Practice A

Enjoy the meditation above, journal your experience and notice if each time you do the meditation, how your experiences may differ?

or maybe

Practice B

maybe close your eyes or look at the diagram above for visual reference

Feel and notice whatever comes up. Where do you feel it?

Does it have a colour? Strong, bold or dull, faded, sketchy? Look for words that work for you.

What sensations are present? Once you have noticed or described its presence, has it shifted in any way?

Write down your findings

When else do those feelings arise? Can you relate them to other things that happen in your day or weeks?

Maybe next time that same feeling arises you can simply tune in, by using visualisations or using your hands to touch that feeling in your body or just focus on your breath or related chakra, see what you discover.

How do they relate to the chakras? Their colours? Is there a link between the colour you feel and the representing chakra?

Remember the chakras are a system, they work together, influencing each other.

Use this as a guide to see where maybe you have excessive energy or decreased energy and where you may need support.

Enjoy the process of discovery

love Sue

❤️🌷🙏🏼

Sue Dawson

About Sue Dawson

Founder of Sense Greater Peace, Sue Dawson embodies over 30 years of dedicated practice in nurturing embodied movement, energy practices, and soulful inquiry. Drawing on extensive experience in yoga, Pilates, sound healing, and kinesiology—alongside a heartfelt passion for Eastern practices—Sue creates pathways that nurturer inner clarity and resilient well-being.

Her work honours both personal insight and collective connection. In each class, retreat, and one-to-one session, she gently weaves together practices that support the inner landscape, nurture shared wisdom, and invite practical tools for daily life.

Situated in Woolacombe, North Devon, her upcoming studio, Sense Greater Peace Shala, is envisioned as a sanctuary where personal growth and community support come together.

Sue is committed to empowering every individual on a journey toward authentic self-discovery, inviting a balanced engagement with both inner awareness and external possibilities.

https://www.sensegreaterpeace.co.uk
Previous
Previous

Soul FULL Yin

Next
Next

Building in healthy habits