Manipura or solar plexus chakra

Von Marlene Smits

You can find Manipura chakra, the third or solar plexus chakra, somewhere between the navel and the base of the sternum, a couple of fingers above the belly button. You may like to visualise it in the centre of the body, rather than at the front. 

In Sanskrit this chakra is called Manipura meaning city of jewels. Together with the first (the root) and second chakra (the sacral) these energy centres are often referred to as the lower triangle. These energies are the most clear and easy to understand. 

The components of Manipura chakra

Element:

The solar plexus chakra governs the fire element inside of you. It is your strength, your vitality, your ego, your willpower, your stamina, your inner power.  It’s the centre where you get things done and your sense of self.

Physical Body:

Manipura chakra relates to the digestive system, gall bladder, pancreas, adrenals and liver.

Emotional Body:

The Manipura chakra is also all about being able to deal with things, it’s how you ‘digest’ your life. Can you stand up for yourself? Are you strong and courageous, worthy of love and respect? Do you feel strong in your body and in the world? Fire is action and transformation. Allowing yourself to grow and become a better version of yourself means taking action and leaving behind what no longer works for you. 

Mental Body:

Being free to choose your path in any situation, being proud of your achievements and being the master of your own destiny. To know where you're going and how to get there. To understand you have the strength to achieve your goals. 

Imbalances

Due to stress in any layer of the body (physical, mental, emotional and energetic) you can slow down, stagnate or completely go into overdrive. When life gets too overwhelming and you've experienced a couple of significant experiences one after the other, it can be difficult to process. So we might feel our fire is not burning as strongly, we need time to ‘digest’ what has happened. Therefore, it may be hard to get out there and deal with everyday situations, because you are simply already full. 

Getting to know your body and its different layers and learning about the chakras can give you valuable insight into where you have imbalances and stagnation. 

Checklist for the Manipura chakra

  • Do you feel you can do anything you set your mind to?
  • Do you digest your food easily? Or do you suffer from indigestion and an upset stomach?
  • Is your energy stable and do you wake up in the morning eager to start the new day?
  • Is there enough spice in your life? Things that make you feel excited and want to do things.
  • Do you feel your life has too many toxic elements in it?
  • Do you always feel tired?
  • Do you get snappy easily?
  • Do you feel like a victim of the world?

Coming into balance

There are many things you can do on and off the mat to balance the third chakra. 

Yoga poses for solar plexus chakra:

I find that the most effective way to balance your energy centres is to do targeted yoga poses. These poses all target the Manipura chakra: 

Meditation suggestions:

Mudra for third chakra:

Hakini Mudra. Sit in an easy cross-legged position and sit up tall. Bring your hands to the height of your solar plexus, palms facing each other. Now touch the fingertips of both hands together and leave space in between the palms. The thumbs are pointing to your solar plexus and the rest of the fingers are radiating out, middle finger straightforward.

Meditate on the fire inside of you

Visualise a transformational fire, all things no longer needed burning away to ashes. Fire is needed for any aspect that involves movement in your life. Movement of the bowels, movement of the body, movement in your life. We want to maintain our inner fires, strongly burning, but not burning out. Fire is burning each day to transform our food into fuel for our bodies, to move through the day, and burning away whatever is no longer needed, no longer of service, no longer who we are. When our fire is strong, we dare to live our dreams and be out there in the world doing what we believe in, living in alignment with who we are.

And your mantra could reflect this - vibrating mentally or out loud - I AM STRONG or I AM CONFIDENT (or something that reflects a concept that you feel comfortable with).

Yellow is the colour for this solar plexus chakra, so use it in during your relaxation or meditation.  A nice and powerful visualisation is making your centre radiate like the sun. 

Singing mantras or sound vibrations. RAM is the vedic bija mantra. By chanting RAM like you would OM, but more continuously, works on the same vibrational frequency.

You can chant or recite Humee Hum Brahm Hum from the Kundalini tradition. It means ‘We are We. We are God”. It may sound a bit grand, but it’s meant to connect us to the ultimate reality of non-duality. And in that sense there is no separation between us and the creator. 

Try this class - Ignite your fire - practice for third chakra

Great for anyone who needs a little help to get going - be it your digestive system or life! you can ask yourself - are there things you want to do, goals you have set, but can't seem to get started on? Does your digestive system feel clogged up? If so, this is the class for you. 

Read more about the Chakras

Marlene Smits
Marlene Smits

Marlene is a non-dogmatic yoga and meditation teacher, and founder of the Amsterdam-based clothing brand, Urban Goddess. Marlene combines many different teachings from all over the world to create a bridge between modern urban reality and ancient wisdom.

Catherine04.04.2016
<p>Hello Marlene, I have been practicing the root chakra yoga practice a few times and have started the second chakra practice today. I really love those practices. From what I read in the articles about chakras, the first, second and third chakra seem to be the three chakras I would need to practice for the moment. But I was wondering in what order and how long I should practice on each one ? Is it better to do like several sessions (several days or weeks) just on one chakra then go onto the second one after having practiced a lot the first one ? Or is it possible (or even advisable) to practice on those different ckakras at the same time (I mean in the same period) ? Second question : even if I seem to &quot;need&quot; to practice more on the fist three chakras is it still advisable to also practice on the others to keep balance between the chakras ? Thank you in advance for your advice (and sorry for the &quot;frenchised&quot; vocabulary for some terms, I hope my questions are clear !). Catherine</p>
Catherine12.04.2016
Thank you Marlene for your very precise reply and advice Namaste Catherine
Marlene08.04.2016
Hi Catherine, Thank you so much! And great question. My answer would be, if you feel an imbalance more strongly in one center, work on that one for a while and then start alternating between the other two. So for example: 1 root, 1 sacral, 1 root, 1 solar plexus. At a certain point the 'effectiveness' weakens and that's the time where you can move on, to either work on all 3 equally and then incorporate the entire body. The focus on certain parts is only to create balance and done only for a period of time. There is of course nothing wrong with doing a general hatha or vinyasa in between these practices. Bottom line, you will know what you need, when you need it, just keep paying attention to your body and your intuition. Love, Marlene
Lilla18.05.2017
<p>Thanks for these lovely classes. Am enjoying exploring them with my classes.</p>
David18.03.2016
<p>Thank you :)</p>
Marlene18.03.2016
Very welcome :)
Mia20.03.2016
<p>I will really benefit from focusing on my third chakra. Thank you for this article and all the guidelines :) Mia</p>
Marlene21.03.2016
Thank you Mia and Namaste! &lt;3
Linda23.02.2018
<p>Fascinating! thank you xxxx</p>