The Spirit is the reflection of Almighty God,
whereas the Kundalini is the reflection of the power of His Desire
within us. She is the Primordial Mother, known as the Adi Shakti in
the Indian tradition and the Holy Ghost in the Christian tradition.
By crossing the fontanelle bone (the little fountain) on top of our
heads, the Kundalini actualizes Self Realisation, our second birth
or baptism. When that happens, we are distinctly aware of a cool
breeze on the palms of our hands and on top of our heads. This is
the very same wind of the Holy Ghost that Christ's disciples felt at
Pentecost. Before this experience, the Kundalini is dormant, and so
only virtual. Once it is awakened and Self Realisation is
established in us, it enables the breath of God to become reality.
The Greeks referred to this energy as "Pneuma",
Islam speaks of "Rûh", and Christ called it "The Holy Spirit". In
Jewish mysticism it was known as "Shekkina" and long before that,
the Sumerians worshipped the Mother Goddess Inanna, who gives
spiritual birth and the sacred breath. Several thousands of years
ago, "Chaitanya" and "the Self", translated as "Divine Vibrations"
in Sahaja Yoga, were already alluded to in India. Therefore, the
knowledge of the existence of these vibrations is not something new;
it has merely been lost or distorted over the ages.