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Deciphering the Golden Flower One Secret at a Time

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A Guide to One of the World's Greatest Books


For the first time ever, a book dares to reveal the secrets of the world's most influential meditation method, a method originally compiled in the 9th. Century masterpiece of Chinese alchemy, The Secret of the Golden Flower.


Deciphering the Golden Flower One Secret at a Time is an interpretive companion piece to The Secret of the Golden Flower. The author, JJ Semple shares his many years of first-hand practice with the sacred book's meditation system. One-by-one, he reveals the techniques behind the book's secrets, providing clear instructions on how to use them. Not even Richard Wilhelm, the translator, or Carl Gustav Jung, the famous psychologist, who wrote the original commentary to The Secret of the Golden Flower, were able to plumb the depths of this method.


JJ Semple doesn't just wake up one day and say to himself, "I'm going to crack the coded mysteries in The Secret of the Golden Flower." He starts life in the protected upper echelons of the Eastern Brahmin establishment. When a childhood accident robs him of his most precious talents music and mathematics both of which he is particularly gifted in, he succumbs to a long period of misadventure. In 1972, a stranger gives him a copy of The Secret of the Golden Flower. After reading the book, he realizes that through serendipitous happenstance he has stumbled across the one true way of correcting the detrimental effects of his childhood accident. Deciphering the Golden Flower One Secret at a Time is an extraordinary statement about the inevitability of karma and the obstacles one must overcome in the quest for self-realization.


Up to now, the most complete first-hand account of Life Force science is Gopi Krishna's, Kundalini: The Evolutionary Energy in Man (1971). Deciphering the Golden Flower One Secret at a Time takes the subject further. It provides extensive detail on the meditation procedures in The Secret of the Golden Flower, including the mysterious backward-flowing method, believed by many, including Carl Gustav Jung, to be the real Secret of Life. A procedure so powerful, so secret the ancients swore an oath never to reveal it.
This book not only reveals the secrets behind Golden Flower Meditation, it provides a thorough look into the method's amazing restorative powers. Deciphering the Golden Flower One Secret at a Time describes the Life Force activation process in detail; it's the first book to offer evidence that the Life Force is capable of correcting physical defects, restoring health, and counteracting the effects of aging. In effect, Golden Flower Meditation takes the practitioner to a whole new realm of consciousness.

212 pages, Kindle Edition

First published December 1, 2007

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About the author

J.J. Semple

12 books20 followers
JJ Semple is the author of six books on paranormal non-fiction, kundalini, meditation, consciousness, alchemy, mindfulness, and human evolution. Deciphering the Golden Flower One Secret at a Time is his best selling auto-biographical memoir. Tales of the Tinkertoy is his first novel.

JJ Semple's formal education includes studying English Literature at the University of Pennsylvania and George Washington University, and a master’s degree in marketing from Hauts Etudes de Commerce in Paris. His personal education involves yogic and paranormal practices and exploration inspired by a wide variety of teachers, writers and philosophers, including Gopi Krishna, Milarepa, Carl Gustav Jung, Leo Tolstoy, Arundhati Roy, Theodore Dreiser, Aldous Huxley, and Lao Tse.

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Dennis Littrell.
1,081 reviews57 followers
August 29, 2019
Henry Miller meets Gopi Krishna

I'm not familiar with The Secret of the Golden Flower, which is the book that initiates Semple into meditation, but I did read one of Gopi Krishna's books some years ago. It was either Kundalini: The Evolutionary Energy in Man originally published in 1971 or Kundalini: The Secret of Yoga published in 1972.

Gopi Krishna wrote about the awakening of Kundalini as a powerful force that almost killed him. Semple's experience is in some ways similar. Indeed in some ways it seems patterned after Gopi Krishna's experience, especially in how powerful and scary the awakening was and how long it went on.

I have practiced yoga for 34 years and have spent many hours in kundalini meditation. I have never had anything but agreeable experiences during that time. But that is not surprising. Gopi Krishna's and Semple's experiences are highly unusual. I would not give up kundalini meditation for fear that something untoward might happened to me.

But putting kundalini aside, and some of the other things that Semple concerns himself with in this narrative, such as Intelligent Design versus biological evolution or the nature of prana or the distinction he makes between what he calls material science and empirical science, let me say that this is a superbly written memoir. Semple's narrative command might invoke the envy of a best-selling novelist. And his facility with the language, his ability to effortlessly (or so it seems, without effort) to find just the right word or expression to make his story vivid and engaging for the reader is highly admirable. Furthermore the prose is polished and very nicely edited. The book is pleasure to read and it reads fast.

Even though the book is obviously a memoir or an autobiography with some names changed I felt very strongly that this was an excellent work of fiction. I am not disputing Semple's story in any way; rather I am in admiration of the way he develops the first-person, present-tense narrative, the way he picks and selects details, adventures, and significant others so that the tension is maintained throughout the story. He begins with himself as a child who is accidentally impaled with a three inch long and somewhat thick splinter in his foot. For a reason that remains inexplicable to the very end of the book, Semple does not tell his parents or the doctors about the splinter still in his foot. He suffers a lot of pain. He goes on to believe that the splinter destroyed the symmetry of his body and caused him to lose his math and musical ability. It is only with the beginning of his meditative practice and the awakening of kundalini that Semple starts to regain his symmetry and his sense of body wholeness. The reader however may come to believe that Semple's problems had nothing to do with the splinter, rather more to do with his propensity for self-indulgence, particularly as he enters his twenties. As a teen he is an indifferent student in private boarding schools, a privileged child who doesn't even bother to get "gentleman's B's" while blaming his lack of academic achievement on what the splinter did to him. As a young adult he is given to sex, jazz, alcohol and drugs. The crucial moment in his life comes when he gives up all his bad habits, rents a house in a small French town and alone reaches a climax with what he sees as the life force (or kundalini: he uses both terms interchangeably). However while kundalini seems to be racking his body and mind, the reader may suspect that it is the 15 days of fasting, ten of which contained sleepless nights, that brought about his anguish.

The glimpses we get of the women in his life are very interesting. I especially liked Margo and Martine. Semple has the novelist's gift for dialogue and quick description through which these women come to life. Curiously the last two women, Gloria and Donna, are not characterized at all. Well, Gloria is a waitress who is apparently very good in bed, but that's it. Donna, he tells us in passing, he married; and then later in passing, he mentions that he has a son. Nothing more is said about them.

This inconsistency of focus is necessary in a book that covers so many years of a man's life. However Semple maintained what I thought was a beautiful and perfectly balanced pace up until Chapter "14--Relapse." Suddenly the temporal pace becomes inconsistent. Some indefinite time has gone by, and on page 125 he says he has a wife (apparently Martine and not Donna, who comes later) and a successful business. The reader wonders when all this happened.

One other curious thing I must note. Semple includes two charts showing a "Comparison between Interrupted and Uninterrupted Growth" by age from his birth to age 63. The "interruption" occurs at age seven when he gets the splinter. The interrupted growth continues lagging behind a hypothesized normal growth until age 63 when he goes on a raw food diet and becomes "the being" he was "destined to become."

In today's book marketplace it is not easy to say whether a certain story should be told as a memoir or as a work of fiction. This is an excellent memoir, but I think, strangely enough, that it might have been more powerful as a work of fiction. Many readers will be skeptical (as Gopi Krishna learned!) to the idea of a prolonged and anguished "kundalini rising" taken as objective fact. However if presented as a fiction the possible distraction caused by the reader's skepticism disappears and the story gains in psychological power. Fiction is a way of conveying human psychological truths that sometimes cannot be expressed in a nonfictional way. As I used to say to my students, "What could be truer than fiction?"

--Dennis Littrell, author of “Yoga: Sacred and Profane (Beyond Hatha Yoga)”
Profile Image for EMMANUEL.
631 reviews
May 21, 2021
This book is very interesting. I was very hesitant to read this book initially. Reason was because, I didn't really understand the approach in regards to what the book was intending to provide insight of.

Once I was able to be immersed into the context of the book, I was able to generate the visuals of Kundalini. The visuals of kundalini was very much a buddhist concept that I was very much appalled in of.

I was appalled because of the ability in which the concept and skill of kundalini provides for a person. This provision. So the speak. For the best way to describe the spiritual service. Is in regards to the reality of feeling what is believed to be true. But. Most importantly. The ability to understand why oneself believes ones own intuition, and trust's the intuition and secure their mind in of the intuitive belief... and engages in uncovering the insight of the intuitive sight of the enlightenment the person is provide. All because of the blessing of Kundalini.

Basically. The secret to the understanding of the Golden Flower. Is the revolving understanding and reality of the Kundalini realm. This book is very much secured in the reality of delving into the lessons, insights, informations, and coherent visuals (intellectual, pictures, or auditory feelings) of the insights in of which is of the person's world. In of the person's own divine Kundalini responsibility.

In summary. To decipher the Golden Flower. The one Secret that is to be uncovered. Especially described in this book. Because. The concept of Kundalini is always exact in of its realm divine concepts. But. Nonetheless. And. Anyway. The method to decipher the Golden Flower. Is in of one conceptual rationalization. Marriage. The only kundalini force.

If you were to really secure your mind in of how all or any of the concepts in the book. You'll realize that Kundalini is revolved in of the ideological life divine divinity and spiritual life of the Sacrament of Marriage.

The Golden Flower. Is the Golden Anniversary. There is no other life factor that instates the divine Blessing of Spiritual Kundalini. The knowing of whom is in your life. And. What your life is responsible in of. OR. About.
1 review
September 2, 2018
Good introduction to kundalini

The book gives perspective on a mans experience with kundalini. The author gives us his account going through the process of awakening kundalini and what followed.
Profile Image for Steven.
62 reviews5 followers
April 5, 2019
Author does a useful job is describing how he came to understand a transpersonal experience. Yes Kundalini is real. No words can never describe its reality for a third party.

I know from personal experience.
Profile Image for Gary.
8 reviews1 follower
September 3, 2019
I enjoyed the first third but it started to get pretty boring and lacked substance in the story. I understand it was autobiographical and the guy obviously had one hell of an experience and I liked the fact that the free audiobooks was read by the author.
1 review
July 16, 2015
Huh?

I thought I was buying a manual to decipher the golden. flower. A good autobiography but if your looking for deciphered secrets, move on. He had an interesting life but no shared secrets here. I feel duped.
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