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When Siddhis Take Over: A Forgotten Truth of Spiritual Power

“Siddhi is not a blessing if you forget the path that gave it to you.”

 Case Study: The Village That Feared a Deity

Years ago, in a quiet village, a man began deep sadhana (spiritual practice) of a powerful deity. As a result, he received a siddhi—a divine energy granted for spiritual tasks. But instead of elevation, it led to his destruction.

He lost control over his mind and body. He abandoned his family, lost all his wealth, and eventually, even forgot who he was.

This terrified the villagers. They believed the deity was too powerful and declared that only worship, not sadhana, should be done. Over time, sadhana of that deity was silently banned.

Rise of the Pitras: Ancestors as Protectors

To manage spiritual issues, families began offering regular bhog to their pitras (ancestral energies). The pitras started communicating solutions by entering the body of one family member.

Over the next 25 years, pitras became so active and powerful that they were worshipped like deities. Every family in the village performed pitra rituals without a break. The village ran under the guidance of these pitra forces.

The Child Who Chose the Forbidden Path

Then, a child was born into this lineage. Deep within, he felt a strong pull toward the same deity that the village feared.

Despite being warned by family, he began secret sadhana. The deity appeared to him and encouraged him to stay on the path.

The pitras tried to stop him—possessing family members and warning:

“We will not protect him if he continues this.”

But the child didn’t waver. Slowly, with the deity’s grace, he received:

The tarang (spiritual current)

The tattva (divine essence)
of that very deity.

Eventually, he surpassed the power of the pitras and discovered the truth:

“People failed not because of the deity, but because they didn’t know how to handle the siddhi.”

With the deity’s blessings, this child liberated all pitras of the family to Kalyan Lok.

That child is Parikshit Bhaiya. And it was Guru Tattva who guided him through this intense spiritual journey.

What Are Siddhis?

A siddhi is a divine energy given for a specific spiritual task. It’s not the deity itself—it’s like a power or assistant energy meant to help the sadhak.

But the real problem starts when:

People get obsessed with the siddhi.

They forget the Guru or the path that gave them the siddhi.

They begin worshipping the siddhi instead of the deity or Guru.

When Siddhis Take Over the Mind

If a person keeps focusing only on their siddhi, slowly, their body and mind get possessed by it. The siddhi:

Feeds on the person’s cosmos energy.

Begins to control the person’s thoughts and actions.

Makes the person behave like the nature of that siddhi.

Imagine someone who receives a siddhi from Hanumanji Maharaj. But instead of focusing on their Guru and learning how to use that siddhi properly, they get caught up only in the siddhi itself. Since Hanumanji’s siddhis come from his monkey army, this person starts acting like a monkey—full of energy, restless, loud, and quick to react.

For example, they might become impatient, jump from one thing to another, or speak without thinking. Their mind becomes confused because the siddhi is controlling them, not their own soul or the Guru’s guidance.

This shows us that without staying connected to the Guru and following their teachings, siddhis can lead us away from our true self. So, whenever we receive siddhis, it’s important to always stay grounded in the Guru’s path.

What If There Are Multiple Siddhis?

Handling one siddhi is already challenging. But if a person gains multiple siddhis of different deities and doesn’t know how to manage them, they get pulled in different directions.

“He cannot understand what is true or false, right or wrong—because he is now listening to many voices inside him.

Final Wisdom: Walk With the Guru, Not the Siddhi

“Siddhis are servants of the spiritual path—not masters.”

When people forget the Guru Tattva and begin chasing or obeying their siddhi, they fall. But when they stay aligned with Guru’s path, siddhis become powerful tools for transformation and seva.

In Ashaeiynn, we are guided to:

“Use siddhi, don’t worship it. Listen to Guru, not the noise inside.”

The one who loses their sankalp shakti (mental resolve) gets ruled by the very siddhi they received.

Siddhis Reflect Your Character – The Secret Power Behind Ashaeiynn Siddhis

Siddhis (spiritual abilities) are not just powers – they are reflections of your inner character.

Let’s say an aspirant has 20 siddhis. These 20 siddhis aren’t just random energies floating around. They become a team of 20 energies that work exactly how the person behaves. If this aspirant stays on the same spiritual path and holds on to the same positive character through which they received the siddhis, these powers will support him fully.

But here’s the catch – if the person changes, the siddhis change too.

Your Mind Becomes Their Mind

If the aspirant chants their initiated mantra, all 20 siddhis also begin to chant that same mantra. Imagine 20 voices echoing your mantra – that’s mantra multiplied 20 times! This makes the aspirant incredibly powerful, with 20 energetic allies working in his favor.

But if the person becomes angry, greedy, or egoistic, these same siddhis start reflecting that behavior too. If someone has 20 siddhis and is filled with anger, then that anger is magnified 20 times. The same goes for lust (kaam), attachment (moh), pride (mad), and jealousy (matsar).

“Power can impress, but only purity can uplift. Worship guided by the Guru reaches the divine—everything else is just a distraction.”

Only the Guru Padhti—the path guided by the awakened Guru—can show the right way. The Guru ensures your offerings reach the real source. Under the Guru’s guidance, the pret-tattva cannot intercept or misdirect your devotion. They are forced to align with the divine order.

Without this alignment, seekers often fall into a cycle of wrong worship, misdirected energy, and blocked spiritual growth.

Why Siddhis Behave Differently for Different People

Even if two people have the same type of siddhi, the way it works will be different. Why? Because the siddhi behaves according to the character and mindset of the person. That’s why Ashaeiynn insists on strong inner discipline before any siddhi is given.

The Role of Guru Tattva and Sankalp Shakti

Siddhi Isn’t the Problem — Handling It Is

Spiritual power, or siddhi, isn’t dangerous by itself. The real danger lies in the one who holds it.

There’s a story of a village once shaken by destruction—not because a deity was angry, but because a sadhak couldn’t control the siddhi he had received. His intention (sankalp) wasn’t strong enough. His mind wasn’t stable. That’s when power turns into chaos.

In Ashaeiynn, things are different.

Here, Guru Tattva never grants siddhis casually. It’s not a gift to show off — it’s a responsibility. Before any aspirant receives spiritual power, they are tested deeply:

Can they sit in stillness with Asan Siddhi?

 Can they hold high cosmic energy without getting shaken?
Can they remain humble, detached, and balanced — even when power flows through them?

Only when these qualities are proven does the siddhi come — and even then, it’s not permanent. It stays only for as long as it’s needed for seva (selfless service), and then it returns back to the cosmos.

That’s why in Ashaeiynn, we never chase siddhis. We prepare ourselves. We strengthen our sankalp shakti, purify our intent, and let the Guru decide when we’re ready. When the foundation is strong, the power flows right — not for ego, but for divine purpose.

The Golden Rule: Stay True to the Path

So, if you have a siddhi or are walking towards it, protect your character like treasure. Because your siddhi doesn’t just follow your words — it follows your thoughts, your habits, your mindset. It amplifies whatever you are.

Be kind, be focused, stay grounded — and your siddhis will walk the same path with you.

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