Pṛthivī (पृथ्वी) – Earth

- Gunas (Qualities): Heavy, dull, static, dense, hard, gross. The Gunas describe the basic characteristics of an element.
- Karmas (Actions/Principles): Karmas are the fundamental modes of action or movement patterns of the element. For earth it is gravitation, downward attraction.
- Jñānendriya (Sensory Faculty): Jñānendriya denotes the sense organ through which we perceive the world. For the Earth element, this is the Smell. Sensory organs are therefore the nose.
- Karmendriya (Faculty of Action): The Karmendriya is the organ through which we actively act. For Earth, this is Excretion and the motor of organ is the excretory organs.
- Tanmātra (Subtle Essence): Tanmātra denotes the subtle essence from which sensory perception arises. For Earth, this is sound, touch, form, taste and especially odor (or smell).
Why does the Earth element encompass all the essences which are experienced by all the senses and what does this mean for us?
In Vedic philosophy, the Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam describes the five elements as a progressive framework of perception.
The first element, Ether (Sky), carries only the experience of sound. With Air comes the sense of touch, with Fire the perception of form, and with Water, taste is added. Only the Earth element unites all five senses – sound, touch, form, taste, and smell.


„Walk as if you are kissing the earth with your feet.“
Thich Nhat Hanh
In his book “Healing with form, energy and light” Tenzin Wangyal Rinpoche states that a balanced earth element make us feel stable, grounded and confident. We are neither too heavy nor too airy. We are rooted in our experience, not easily knocked off balance nor do we lose touch with what is important. Faith is steady and the intentions do not easily get sweptaside by impulse and our efforts are consistent. The higher dimension is to be grounded in pure being.
“…people who are predominantly fire and air will quickly have spiritual experiences but they will also quickly lose them. People who are predominantly Earth and Water may be slower to have the experiences but, when they do, they are able to sustain and develop them and ultimately will develop faster.” Tenzin Wangyal in “Healing with Form Energy and Light”.
A simple and effective exercise to become more grounded, for example, when we have many mental discourses or racing thoughts that create inner restlessness, or when we feel literally flooded by various emotions—is to focus on the contact between our feet and the ground. Ideally, we are in a natural environment, but it can be done anywhere.
We can also imagine being rooted in the earth like a strong tree (Humans and trees are connected through a shared biological heritage, reflected in some common genes – interesting isn´t it?).




„Earth, water, fire, air, ether, mind, intellect and ego—these constitute My separated material energy. “
Krishna/ Quelle: Bhagavad Gita, Kapitel 7, Vers 4
„Before enlightenment, chop wood, carry water. After enlightenment, chop wood, carry water. “
Saying from Zen Buddhism
