TL;DR: The Adi Mantra—"Ong Namo Guru Dev Namo"—is the foundational tune-in mantra chanted three times at the beginning of every Kundalini Yoga class. It translates to "I bow to the Creative Wisdom, I bow to the Divine Teacher within" and activates 84 meridian points on the roof of the mouth to trigger physiological responses including bliss, expansion, and connection to the lineage of kundalini teachings. The practice is simple but requires specific attention to breath, hand position, and inner intention to align with its full effect.
What Does the Adi Mantra Mean?
The Adi Mantra, meaning "the beginning mantra," is composed of two Sanskrit phrases that encode the philosophy of Kundalini Yoga practice. The mantra reads: "Ong Namo Guru Dev Namo."
Breaking this down:
- Ong Namo translates to "I bow to the Creative Consciousness" or "I bow to the Creative Wisdom"—acknowledging the universal creative force that animates all existence.
- Guru Dev Namo means "I bow to the Divine Teacher" or "I bow to the Beloved Teacher"—referring to the divine wisdom within you, as well as the external lineage of teachers.
When chanted together, the mantra serves as a direct invocation: you are bowing to both the universal creative consciousness and to the inner teacher within yourself. This act of bowing is not submissive in nature but rather an act of alignment—tuning your individual consciousness to the larger wisdom available to you.
Why Is It Called "Tuning In"?
The Adi Mantra functions as a "tune-in" because it connects you to what is called the golden chain—the lineage of Kundalini Yoga masters and teachers stretching back through history. When you chant this mantra, you are literally calling upon all the master teachers who came before you to help hold space for your practice. Rather than approaching yoga as an isolated individual effort, you are opening yourself to receive support and wisdom from the accumulated knowledge of the tradition.
This is not mystical thinking but practical: by consciously acknowledging the lineage, you align your nervous system and intention with the frequency of the practice itself. You become a channel for something larger than your own mind.
The Physical Mechanics: The Roof of the Mouth
The Adi Mantra works partly through conscious intention and partly through precise physical mechanics. When you chant "Ong," the sound vibrates the roof of your mouth—specifically activating 84 meridian points located there.
According to yogic physiology, when you vibrate these meridian points through the chanting of "Ong," they send chemical messages directly to the hypothalamus and midbrain. These are critical regions of the brain responsible for regulating hormone balance, emotional state, and the overall sense of well-being. The activation of these points via the vibration of sound initiates a cascade of neurological and chemical responses that activate what feels like bliss and expansion—the direct experience of consciousness expanding beyond the boundaries of ordinary thought.
This is why the chant must be practiced correctly: the sound itself, when properly articulated, becomes medicine for the nervous system.
How to Practice the Adi Mantra
The Adi Mantra is chanted three times at the beginning of a Kundalini Yoga class. Here is the step-by-step practice:
Setup (approximately 1:05 in the video):
- Bring your hands together at your heart center, palms facing inward.
- Rub your palms together gently to generate energy and presence.
- Root down through your sit bones—feel your connection to the earth.
- Close your eyes.
- Feel yourself as a channel for the divine.
Breathing and Chanting:
- Inhale deeply and fully.
- As you exhale, begin chanting "Ong Namo Guru Dev Namo" at a measured, resonant pace.
- Focus on vibrating the roof of your mouth with the "Ong" sound.
- Repeat the full mantra three times total, one per exhale.
Closing:
- After the third repetition, pause your breath and hold the silence.
- Feel the inner calling—the calling to the divine teacher within.
- Tune into your own subtlety and wisdom.
- Then exhale slowly.
If you are new to the practice, it is perfectly fine to simply listen or hum along. Your familiarity with the rhythm and melody will naturally develop, and you will "soon start to get the swing" of it.
Why Chant It Three Times?
The number three appears throughout yogic and spiritual traditions. Three repetitions of the mantra allow the nervous system to settle into the frequency of the practice, creating coherence and stability. By the third chant, you are not merely reciting words—you are embodying the state they point toward.
The Adi Mantra as Foundation
The Adi Mantra is called "the beginning mantra" because it is literally the beginning of every Kundalini Yoga class. It sets the tone, establishes intention, and physiologically prepares your nervous system for the work ahead. Without this tuning in, the rest of the practice may remain surface-level—a series of physical postures and breathing techniques. With the Adi Mantra, you are declaring your commitment to access the deeper dimensions of yoga: the union of individual consciousness with universal consciousness.
Where to Go From Here
If you are new to Kundalini Yoga, the Adi Mantra is your entry point. Practice it daily, ideally as the opening to any yoga session. Over time, you will notice that your relationship to the practice deepens—not because the mantra changes, but because your sensitivity to its effects increases. The "bliss and expansion" described above is not abstract; it is a tangible shift in your neurological and emotional state that becomes more pronounced with consistent practice. To deepen your understanding further, explore full-length Kundalini Yoga classes that begin with and build upon this foundational mantra.



