The 7 Chakras Explained: A Beginner's Complete Guide
The 7 chakras are energy centers said to shape body, mind, and spirit. Here is a clear beginner's guide to each chakra, its color, and how to balance it.
The seven chakras are one of the oldest maps we have for understanding human energy. The idea grew out of ancient yogic and tantric teachings, which describe seven spinning centers that run from the base of the spine up to the crown of the head. The thinking goes that when these centers stay open and balanced, energy moves through you freely, and life tends to feel a little more in tune.
Keep in mind that this is a tradition built on reflection and self-inquiry, not on medical science. It is easier to use the system as a vocabulary, a way to name where you feel stuck, where you feel open, and where you feel most alive.

Image: nessman (BY 2.0) via Openverse
The seven chakras, one by one
Each center sits in a particular place in the body and carries its own color and theme.
1. Root (Muladhara), red
This is your foundation. Located at the base of the spine, it deals with safety, stability, and a sense of belonging. When it feels steady, you tend to feel grounded and secure.
2. Sacral (Svadhisthana), orange
Sitting just below the navel, the sacral center governs creativity, pleasure, and emotion. People often connect it to flow and to the simple capacity to feel.
3. Solar Plexus (Manipura), yellow
Up in the upper belly lives your sense of confidence and willpower. This is where personal power and the drive to act are said to gather.
4. Heart (Anahata), green
At the center of the chest, the heart bridges the lower centers and the higher ones. Love, compassion, and connection all live here.
5. Throat (Vishuddha), blue
The throat is about expression. It links to honesty, to your voice, and to saying what is true for you in a clear way.
6. Third Eye (Ajna), indigo
Resting between the brows, this center points to intuition and insight, that quiet inner knowing that arrives before logic does.
7. Crown (Sahasrara), violet
At the very top of the head sits the crown, often described as your link to something larger than yourself: the spiritual, the universal, a sense of meaning beyond the personal.
How to bring your chakras back into balance
There is no single right method, and that is part of the point. A few common practices people return to:
- Breath and meditation focused on one center at a time.
- Color and visualization, picturing each center glowing softly in its shade.
- Movement, including yoga postures linked to specific areas of the body.
- Journaling, writing around the themes that each center carries.
Some people also like to keep the colors and symbols nearby as a daily cue. If that idea speaks to you, take a look at our chakra-inspired collection.
A closing thought
You do not need to fix yourself to work with the chakras. At its heart, the system is an invitation to listen, to notice where you feel open and where you feel tight, and to bring a bit more breath, color, and intention into the day.