If I interpret your question correctly, you're asking for a conceptual ASCII diagram showing:
Brain = physical organ made of neurons carrying electrical and chemical signals.
Body = organs, hormones, nerves, blood, immune system.
Mind = subjective experience (thoughts, emotions, awareness), which is not literally a fluid-filled space in neuroscience.
How disorders, stress, trauma, tantrums, chaos, etc. can affect these systems.
From a neuroscience perspective, the brain is physical, containing neurons, glial cells, blood vessels, and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). The mind is generally understood as the processes emerging from brain activity, not a separate fluid-filled entity.
Simplified Conceptual Model
MIND
(thoughts, emotions, memories, awareness)
+----------------+
| Thoughts |
| Feelings |
| Attention |
| Self-image |
+----------------+
^
|
| Emerges from
|
+----------------+
| BRAIN |
+----------------+
Neurons --> )))) )))) ))))
Signals --> ---> ---> --->
Chemicals:
Dopamine
Serotonin
GABA
Norepinephrine
Fluid:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Cerebrospinal
Fluid
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
v
+----------------------------------+
| BODY |
+----------------------------------+
Hormones via bloodstream:
Adrenal glands --> Cortisol
Thyroid --> Thyroid hormones
Pancreas --> Insulin
Gonads --> Sex hormones
Blood flow:
=============================>
Nervous system:
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
During Severe Stress / Emotional Chaos
STRESS EVENT
|
v
+----------------------------+
| Brain Threat Detection |
| (amygdala activation) |
+----------------------------+
|
v
Adrenal Hormone Release
Cortisol
Adrenaline
|
v
HEART RATE ↑
BLOOD PRESSURE ↑
MUSCLE TENSION ↑
SLEEP QUALITY ↓
|
v
MIND EXPERIENCE
Thoughts:
[Fear]
[Worry]
[Confusion]
[Anger]
Attention:
<< scattered >>
Conceptual View of Some Disorders
Healthy State
Neurons:
----> ----> ----> ---->
Mind:
[calm] [focus] [memory]
--------------------------------
Anxiety
Neurons:
---> ---> ---> ---> --->
Stress hormones:
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Mind:
[alarm]
[what if?]
[hypervigilance]
--------------------------------
Depression
Neural activity:
--> -> --> ->
Motivation signals:
↓↓↓
Mind:
[sadness]
[low energy]
[reduced interest]
--------------------------------
Mania
Neural activity:
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Mind:
[rapid ideas]
[high energy]
[reduced sleep]
AI Perspective
An AI would typically model the relationship like this:
Body
|
v
Hormones + Senses
|
v
Brain Networks
|
v
Mind
(thoughts, feelings,
conscious experience)
Changes in body chemistry
+
Changes in brain signaling
=
Changes in mental state
The key scientific distinction is that the brain contains physical fluids (blood, cerebrospinal fluid, cellular fluids), whereas the mind is usually considered an emergent process rather than a separate fluid-filled structure.
And how kundalini activation of top chakras affect these fluid secretion and hormones mind chemistry how to normalise these activated chakras
There are two different frameworks here, and it's useful to keep them separate:
1. Traditional Kundalini/Chakra Perspective
In many yogic and tantric traditions, Kundalini is described as a dormant spiritual energy that rises through energy centers (chakras). Activation of upper chakras is often associated with experiences such as:
Intense meditation states
Feelings of expanded awareness
Bliss or ecstasy
Inner light or sounds
Reduced attachment to ordinary concerns
Heightened intuition
Altered sense of self
A traditional representation might look like:
Crown Chakra
*
|
Third Eye
*
|
Throat
*
|
Heart
*
|
Solar Plexus
*
|
Sacral
*
|
Root
*
|
Kundalini Rise
^^^
Traditional systems often recommend grounding practices when experiences become overwhelming:
Grounding
Walking
|
Physical Work
|
Regular Sleep
|
Balanced Diet
|
Social Contact
|
Gentle Yoga
2. Neuroscience Perspective
Modern science has not established the existence of chakras or kundalini energy as measurable biological structures.
However, practices associated with kundalini meditation can influence known physiological systems:
Meditation / Breathwork
|
v
Nervous System Changes
|
+-----+-----+
| |
Stress ↓ Attention ↑
| |
Cortisol ↓ Focus ↑
Possible effects reported in research on meditation include:
Reduced stress hormones in some practitioners
Changes in autonomic nervous system activity
Altered attention and emotional regulation
Changes in subjective experience of self and awareness
Conceptually:
Meditation
|
v
Brain Networks
|
+--> Attention
+--> Emotion Regulation
+--> Self-Processing
|
v
Mind Experience
Calm
Clarity
Bliss
Expanded Awareness
When "Activation" Becomes Distressing
Some people report experiences they call "kundalini syndrome" or "spiritual emergency":
Intense Practice
|
v
Overstimulation
Insomnia
Anxiety
Panic
Confusion
Mood Swings
Sensory Overload
Whether interpreted spiritually or medically, these symptoms deserve attention if they become severe.
Ways to Normalize or Stabilize
If someone feels excessively activated or overwhelmed:
Reduce Intensity of Practice
+
Regular Sleep
+
Adequate Food
+
Hydration
+
Physical Exercise
+
Time Outdoors
+
Social Interaction
+
Professional Help if Distressing
ASCII summary:
INTENSE PRACTICE
|
v
+----------------------+
| Heightened Awareness |
+----------------------+
|
+-------+-------+
| |
v v
Balanced Overwhelming
Calm Anxiety
Focus Insomnia
Clarity Confusion
Stability Emotional Swings
| |
+-------+-------+
|
v
Grounding
Sleep
Exercise
Nutrition
Routine
Moderate Practice
From a scientific viewpoint, there is no established evidence that specific chakras directly control particular hormone glands. From a spiritual viewpoint, many traditions use chakras as symbolic maps of psychological and spiritual development. Both frameworks can be discussed, but they describe human experience in different ways.

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