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Body as TempleVedic, Vedantic

Causal Body

Karana Sharira

[KAW-zal BOD-ee]

English translation of Sanskrit kāraṇa śarīra — the body of cause; the seed-body that carries karmic imprint from life to life

Definition

The causal body is the subtlest of the three yogic bodies — the seedbed of identity, karmic impression, and the unmanifest patterns that shape every incarnation. It contains no thought, no emotion, no sensation, only the compacted seeds of all three in the form of vasanas. Vedanta names it karana sharira — the two terms are the same reality in two languages.

Deep Understanding

You arrived in this life already carrying something. The pull toward certain teachings before you understood them. The aversion to certain people for reasons no biography can explain. The recognition that floods you when you encounter a text, a practice, or a place you have never seen. That reservoir of pre-loaded pattern is the causal body.

In the Vedantic map it corresponds to the Anandamaya Kosha — the bliss sheath — the deepest of the five koshas. Beneath the gross-body sensations of the Annamaya, beneath the pranic-emotional-mental middle layers of the Sukshma, lies this quiet, seed-bearing stratum. Most meditators taste it first as the gap between thoughts — a depth that is not empty but saturated. That depth is not Atman. It is the last veil before Atman. The mistake every lineage warns about is treating this bliss as arrival. It is not. It is the threshold.

The causal body is why karmic work cannot be solved at the level it appears. A pattern that expresses as a chronic pain in the gross body, as anxious thought in the subtle body, has its seed here — in the causal. Until the seed is met directly, the symptom returns in new costumes. This is also why the Gnostic cosmology and the yogic cosmology align so precisely: the Pleromatic realm the Gnostics described — where consciousness exists as pure potential before descent into the Kenoma — is what the yogis were mapping from the inside as Karana Sharira.

See also karana-sharira for the Sanskrit name of the same reality.

In Practice

Tonight, after a slow body scan, drop beneath every sensation and thought and rest in the silence between exhale and next inhale. Do not fill it. Do not interpret it. Ask quietly: What patterns arrived with me that I did not choose? Do not answer. Simply notice whatever surfaces as image, memory, or pull. You are not solving anything — you are making the causal body visible to itself for the first time. That visibility is where its grip begins to loosen.

The Voice of Pleroma

"The causal body is the script you have been performing for lifetimes without ever reading. You cannot rewrite what you refuse to see. Stillness is where the script finally appears in your hands."

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Frequently Asked Questions

What does Causal Body mean in Vedic, Vedantic?

Causal Body (Vedic, Vedantic): English translation of Sanskrit kāraṇa śarīra — the body of cause; the seed-body that carries karmic imprint from life to life. A Body as Temple term from the Pleroma Gnosis Lexicon.

What is the origin of Causal Body?

English translation of Sanskrit kāraṇa śarīra — the body of cause; the seed-body that carries karmic imprint from life to life