Yenka Tantra Now

Here we encounter the aspect of Yenka Tantra most often co-opted by modern romanticized Tantra. Unlike pop-culture "sacred sex," the paired work in Yenka Tantra is non-genital in its primary phase. Practitioners work with a partner of any gender to exchange breath and gaze without touching for 40 consecutive days. Only when both partners can maintain complete internal stillness during intense emotional or energetic contact are they allowed to progress to physical union—and even then, the act is described as "two bodies experiencing one energy current, without a single muscle of lust."

At its core, Yenka Tantra, like other Tantric traditions, is built upon several key principles:

To understand Yenka Tantra, one must first appreciate the broader tapestry of Tantric history. Traditional Tantra originated around the 5th century CE in India, branching into Hindu (Shaiva and Shakta) and Buddhist (Vajrayana) streams. The term "Tantra" itself means "loom" or "weave," symbolizing the interweaving of the material and spiritual worlds. YENKA TANTRA

The specific term "Yenka" does not appear in classical Sanskrit texts. Unlike "Kundalini" or "Laya" Tantra, Yenka Tantra is believed by its scholars to stem from a semi-secret oral tradition originating in the border regions of Northeast India and Tibet. According to lineage holders, Yenka translates roughly to "the mirror of inherent force"—a practice designed not to add anything to the practitioner, but to reflect their already existing divine nature.

Some esoteric historians suggest that Yenka Tantra was preserved for centuries by a small order of householder yogis who refused to institutionalize their teachings. They passed their wisdom through direct mind-to-mind transmission, avoiding written texts to prevent persecution during periods of religious orthodoxy. Today, the revival of Yenka Tantra is attributed to a handful of modern masters who have broken the traditional vow of secrecy in response to what they call "the global spiritual emergency." Here we encounter the aspect of Yenka Tantra

YENKA (real name Anastasia Stanković) first burst onto the electronic scene in 2019 with the deep‑house anthem “Cave of Light.” Since then, she’s cultivated a reputation for fusing emotive melodic content with crisp, club‑ready production.

Tantra marks a deliberate step toward a more ritualistic aesthetic. In interviews leading up to the release, YENKA cited the ancient Indian practice of Tantra—not as a purely erotic metaphor, but as a system of energy exchange and mind‑body alignment. She wanted the track to act as a sonic “sadhana” (practice), guiding listeners from a grounded, body‑focused groove to an expansive, transcendent headspace. The final stage has no technique


The final stage has no technique. It is the spontaneous realization that one was never separate. Masters of Yenka Tantra are said to be able to enter "the luminous gap" between any two moments at will. They do not renounce the world; they live as ordinary householders, but every action—washing dishes, paying taxes, arguing with a spouse—is recognized as a pure expression of the Yenka current. This is non-dual living, fully actualized.

The primary energetic technique in Yenka Tantra is known as the "Womb-Breath" (Yonī Prāṇa), but it is not gendered. It is a circular breathing pattern that begins at the base of the spine, rises along the spinal cord, and loops down through the frontal channel. Where Kundalini is often described as a serpent rising, Yenka describes its energy as a spiral returning. The goal is not ascension to a crown chakra, but the integration of the spiral into every cell.