The Siddha Method is a structured approach to working with your own consciousness, drawn from the living tradition of the Himalayan Siddhas.
It is a set of precise, sequential practices that work directly on the human system: body, breath, and attention, creating the conditions in which awareness can stabilise, deepen in recognition
At the foundation of this method lies a simple recognition drawn from the non-dual tradition of Trika Shaivism:
The entire cosmos arose from a single, primordial pulse: Spanda, the first vibration of pure Consciousness moving to know itself. That pulse did not stop. It is still moving. It moves as the galaxies, as the seasons, as the breath in your body at this very moment.
Shiva is the stillness, the unchanging substratum of pure awareness beneath all experience. Shakti is the movement, the dynamic creative intelligence through which awareness expresses itself. You are not separate from either. The body you inhabit is the precise meeting point of both.
The practices are not building something new. They are dissolving what obscures what has always been present.
This method is rooted in the ancient Kulluta Siddha tradition of the Himalayas, one of the oldest and most complete living streams of Yogic and Tantric wisdom.
The Kulluta Siddhas have carried this tradition through the ages, from the Kullu valleys of Himachal Pradesh through Kashmir, Nepal, Bhutan, and into the sacred reaches of Mount Kailash and Mansarovara. For centuries this was the hidden source of Yoga and Tantra practices across the entire Himalayan belt. An unbroken line of masters preserved and transmitted these teachings selectively and in depth, stepping forward in each era when the times called for it.
The living seat of this tradition is the Kaulantak Peeth. Its oral tradition traces an unbroken lineage of masters from Lord Shiva himself to the present day, when Mahasiddha Ishaputra holds the seat of Kaulantak Nath, himself taught by thirty-eight Siddha Gurus collectively known as the Guru Mandala.
What is offered through Siddha Samaj and MyShaktiverse is a small drop from this vast ocean, shared with humility and in the spirit of genuine service to those who are sincerely seeking.
Siddha Dharma is the unbroken guru-shishya (teacher-disciple) tradition of the Himalayan Siddhas. Its source is Lord Shiva, understood in this tradition as the embodiment of all knowledge of this universe and the vital force that sustains it. Because Shiva and Shakti are inseparable, like the dreamer and the dream, Siddha Dharma is inherently a joint path of stillness and dynamic creative energy.
This lineage carries recognition at the deepest levels of the Sanatana Dharma. In the Bhagavad Gita, Shri Krishna names Mahasiddha Kapila among the greatest of the Siddhas, an acknowledgement that places this lineage at the very heart of this tradition.
The Siddhas have historically remained withdrawn from public life. In each era where spiritual understanding has declined, they have stepped forward, as Mahasiddha Matsyendranath and Gorakhnath did, to plant the seeds of this wisdom for the generations that would follow. The knowledge they transmitted encompasses Tantra, Mantra, Yantra, Ayurveda, Rasayana, and the deep inner science of sadhana, each pointing toward the same recognition: the journey of the jeeva (individual) back to Shiva (universal consciousness).
A progressive refinement of the human system, moving from preparation to recognition. Each level is a shift in how awareness functions within you.
Building the capacity to receive
Most seekers begin with an unstable system. The body is restless, the breath is irregular, attention is scattered. Even when moments of clarity arise, they do not remain.
Grahita Shakti prepares the system so that awareness can be received and held without disturbance. Through structured work on posture, breath, and attention, internal friction begins to reduce. The system becomes more aligned, more stable, more sensitive.
When the system is prepared, awareness no longer slips. It begins to stay.
Turning inward
Once the system has developed sufficient receptivity, attention naturally begins to withdraw from its habitual outward fixation.
Nimesha is a gentle inward settling, a gradual withdrawal rather than a suppression. A growing distance develops between awareness and mental activity.
The outer does not disappear, but it loses its hold.
Opening into expanded awareness
The distinction between inner and outer begins to dissolve. What was previously experienced as outside is now seen as arising within the same field of awareness.
Perception becomes less reactive, more continuous, less centred around a fixed identity.
The world is no longer something you move into. It appears within awareness.
Recognition
This is a recognition, not an achievement. Awareness recognises itself, not as an experience but as the constant reality behind all experience.
There is no effort to maintain a state. What remains is simplicity, clarity, and continuity.
Nothing new is attained. Only what was always present is recognised.
The Siddha Method requires regularity, sincerity, and a genuine willingness to work with yourself. The practices will meet you exactly where you are, if you show up consistently.
Progress here is quiet. It shows in the gradual reduction of internal noise, the increasing ability to remain present, and the slow but unmistakable recognition that something in you has always been still.
This is a structured way to work with your own consciousness.
— Siddha Yogi Sanjay · Siddha Samaj
The Siddha Method. A structured path. Guided support throughout.
Connect with fellow seekers, share experiences, and receive daily guidance on WhatsApp
Join WhatsApp Community