Who is a Siddha?
A Siddha सिद्ध in Sanskrit means "one who is accomplished" and refers to perfected masters who, according to Hindu belief, have transcended the ahamkara (ego or I-maker), have subdued their minds to be subservient to their Awareness, and have transformed their bodies (composed mainly of dense Rajo-tama gunas) into a different kind of body dominated by sattva. This is usually accomplished only by persistent meditation.
A siddha has also been defined to refer to one who has attained a siddhi. The siddhis as paranormal abilities are considered emergent abilities of an individual that is on the path to siddhahood, and do not define a siddha, who is established in the Pranav or Aum – the spiritual substrate of creation. The siddhi in its pure form means "the attainment of flawless identity with Reality (Brahman); perfection of Spirit."
Siddha also refers to a Siddha Guru who can by way of Shaktipat initiate disciples into Yoga.
This section is dedicated to those gurus who attained Mukthi, by enlsiting there biographies a little step moving forward to know more about them.
Guru Sloka
Guru Brahma, Guru Vishnu, Guru Devo Maheshwara. Guru Sakshath Parambrahma, Tasmai Shri Gurave Namaha.
Famous Guru's
- Shirdi Saibaba
- Maha Avathar Babaji
- Agasthiya Maharishi
- Adi Shankaracharya
- Paramahamsa Yogananda
- Bogar Siddhar
- Pathanjali Siddhar
- Ramana Maharishi
- Pambatti Siddhar
- Lahiri Mahasaya
- Thirumoolar
- Trailanga Swamy
aathmaalayam
Sayings About Guru
In the presence of the satguru; Knowledge flourishes (Gyana raksha); Sorrow diminishes (Dukha kshaya); Joy wells up without any reason (Sukha aavirbhava); Abundance dawns (Samriddhi); All talents manifest (Sarva samvardhan).
Guru is Shiva without his three eyes,
Vishnu without his four arms
Brahma without his four heads.
He is parama Shiva himself in human form