In Aghora, the cremation ground is seen as the ultimate temple and "playground". Practitioners meditate on corpses to embrace the reality of death and the impermanence of the ego.
The book explores the "Left-Hand" path, which uses substances and rituals often considered taboo or impure by mainstream society—such as meat, wine, and sexual rites—to reach spiritual transcendence. Vimalananda warns that this path is "violent" and dangerous, offering quick results but carrying a high risk of "catastrophe" or spiritual downfall if attempted without a true guru. Aghora: at the left hand of God
A central narrative thread is the concept of karmic ties that bind people across lifetimes. Vimalananda uses stories to illustrate how past actions shape present circumstances, like a "horse race" where destinies are decided by invisible previous momentum. The "Left-Hand" Path (Vama Marga) In Aghora, the cremation ground is seen as