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In depth
Close your eyes. Bring attention to the point between the eyebrows. Hold it there. Within seconds, the mind rebels — a half-finished email, a fragment of yesterday's conversation. You notice the drift and return. That return is the entire practice.
Third eye meditation is a concentration technique rooted in yogic tradition, where practitioners direct sustained attention to the Ajna chakra — an energy center at the brow. As a meditation for intuition and sharpened perception, it spans Hindu, Buddhist, and Taoist lineages. Contemporary interest has also linked it to the pineal gland, though the science behind pineal gland meditation claims is thinner than popular accounts imply.
What Is Third Eye Meditation?
Strip away the esoteric language, and you're left with a focused-attention exercise. Rather than tracking breath at the nostrils or scanning the body, you park awareness at a single internal point — the space between and slightly above the eyebrows.
The Ajna Chakra
Yogic anatomy maps seven principal energy hubs along the spine. Ajna is the sixth, and its Sanskrit name carries a telling double meaning — it can be read as both "to direct" and "to see clearly." The 16th-century tantric manual Sat-Cakra-Nirupana positions this center at the crossing point of two lateral subtle-body currents (ida and pingala) with the central vertical axis (sushumna). Because two opposing streams of energy converge at this junction, traditional commentators treat Ajna as a place of resolution — where...
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