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READING 281-30
(Q) Please discuss more fully the relation of colors to the seven major glandular centers. Do the colors vary for each center with different individuals, or may definite colors be associated with each center?
(A) Both. For to each - remember, to study each of these in the light not only of what has just been given but that as is a practical experience in the material world; as is known, vibration is the essence or the basis of color. As color and vibration then become to the consciousness along the various centers in an individual's experience in meditation made aware, they come to mean definite experiences. Just as anger is red, or as something depressing is blue; yet in their shades, their tones, their activities, to each they begin with the use of same in the experience to mean those various stages. For instance, while red is anger, rosy to most souls means delight and joy - yet to others, as they are formed in their transmission from center to center, come to mean or to express what MANNER of joy; whether that as would arise from a material, a mental or a spiritual experience. Just as may be seen in the common interpretation of white, but with all manner of rays from same begins or comes to mean that above the aura of all in its vibration from the body and from the activity of the mental experience when the various centers are vibrating to color.
(Q) If so, give color for: (1) Gonads (2) Lyden (3) Solar Plexus (4) Thymus (5) Thyroid (6) Pineal (7) Pituitary.
(A) These come from the leaden, going on through to the highest - to that as is the halo. To each they become the various forces as active throughout, and will go in the regular order of the prism.
(Q) What is the significance of the color of the four horses associated with 4 lower centers; pale horse for Thymus; red for Solar Plexus; black for Lyden; white for Gonads?
(A) That comes as has just been given as the illustration of same from the EMOTIONS or physical forces that ride forth to their expression in the higher forces of the activity.
READING 281-30 EXPLAINED
Reading 281-30 is explaining that color is not just something we see with our eyes, but something connected to energy, vibration, and our inner experience. Cayce says that everything in the body works through vibration, and when vibration becomes noticeable to our awareness—especially during meditation—it can appear as color. These colors are connected to the seven major glandular centers in the body, and each center expresses a different type of energy, feeling, or state of consciousness. So the body is not just physical—it is also a system of energy moving through different levels, and color is one way that energy shows itself to the mind.
He explains that colors can be both general and personal at the same time. There are some common meanings—for example, red is often linked to anger, and blue can feel heavy or depressing—but the exact meaning of a color can change depending on the person and their experience. As someone grows and becomes more aware of their inner life, the colors they feel or see begin to take on more detailed meanings. For example, red might start as simple anger, but later it can represent different kinds of energy, like physical desire, emotional passion, or even spiritual strength. In the same way, a soft rosy color might feel like joy or love, but that joy can come from different levels—physical happiness, mental satisfaction, or spiritual peace.
Cayce then explains that the colors connected to the glandular centers follow a natural order, like the colors of a rainbow. The energy starts from the lower centers, which are more physical and heavy, and moves upward to the higher centers, which are more mental and spiritual. At the lowest level, the energy is connected to basic life force and physical creation. As it moves upward, it becomes instinct, then emotion, then feeling, then expression, then intuition, and finally a state of unity or higher awareness. At the highest level, the color is like white light or a halo, which represents all colors combined and a fully balanced state of being.
He also uses the symbol of the four horses, like those described in the Book of Revelation, to explain the lower centers. These horses are not meant to be taken literally, but as symbols of the different forces inside a person. Each color—white, black, red, and pale—represents a type of energy or emotion that comes from the physical and emotional parts of the body and moves upward toward higher awareness. In simple terms, these are the strong forces inside us—our desires, emotions, and instincts—that can either control us or be lifted and transformed into something higher.
The main message of this reading is that our body, mind, and spirit are all connected through vibration, and that color is one way this connection becomes real to us. As we grow, especially through quiet reflection or meditation, we begin to notice these inner experiences more clearly. What starts as simple feelings or emotions can develop into deeper awareness, and the colors connected to these experiences help us understand what is happening inside us. In this way, color becomes a kind of language of the soul, showing us how our energy is moving and helping us move from basic physical life toward higher spiritual understanding.
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