When you feel compassion, where do you feel it in your body?
When you feel loving, where do you feel it in your body?
When you feel kindness, where do you feel it in the body?
When you feel joy, where do you feel it?
For me these are all right in the centre of my chest when I feel them, the energetic, spiritual heart.
Have you ever noticed the tussle between heart and head? Head might be presenting many logical arguments, but heart is calling somewhere else? It is my experience that the heart does not lead you astray, when truly listened to.
Now I love to explore the connections between languages and did you know that the word courage is a cognate with the Latin word for heart, cor, which pops up also in French as coeur. (English takes the word cordial from the same source. To be cordial is to be heart-felt.)
Where do you feel courage in your body?
How much courage does it take to truly listen to and to follow your heart?
Often the call of the heart goes unheeded as it seems crazy. In fact it is difficult to even uncover the heart's true calling as it is so suppressed beneath the weight of thought and logic. So the heart's calling may also be scary. It does take courage to follow it.
How will you know your heart's true calling?
It's call is sweet. It is harmonious. It may be a whisper. How to hear a whisper? Become quiet and listen. Listen with the heart.
In yoga the spiritual, energetic heart is sometimes called Anahata, sometimes Hridaya. Let me explain these terms.
Anahata means "unstruck". It refers to the sound that has no cause, the seed sound of the universe also known as Pra-nava which is the syllable Om. Pra means before, the antecedent and nava sound, shout, exalt, so Pranava means "the first exultant sound"at the creation of the universe, unstruck because there was nothing before it.
Hrdaya is from hrd which is cognate with English "heart", you can see the similarity, and "heart" is exactly what it means.
So listen. You might hear the unstruck.