I had an interesting texting interaction recently. A friend had experienced a significant kundalini rising in 2014. We decided to meditate together, although she lives in England, seven time zones away. Meditating together often leads me more easily/readily into deeper states of absorption, which was the case this time. She reported that the kundalini had "blasted" her - and then she spent the next several days dealing with various unwanted symptoms of kundalini overload. She basically sat in a dark room day and night until everything finally settled back down.
At some point she said that she doesn't feel right about formal sitting meditation, because she doesn't want to become attached to bliss states. Something we've all heard many times. It occurred to me that, once jhana activates (kundalini, chi, prana, whatever we want to call it), we have an obligation to be stewards of that energy. It's not something that can be stuffed back in the bottle. So I told her that I was aware of the "bliss bunny" phenomenon, but that what's really going on is finding a practice that supports this blessing, that respects it and gives it a proper home in our bodies. In a way it's about the bliss, but not from the perspective of bragging rights or personal accomplishment. It's about accepting that this has happened and adopting a life that aligns with it.
Of course, I walked away from this entire sentiment for a good while. It occurs to me that suffering increased because jhana was not given a proper home. This is the complicated part of the equation, because some relationships are more conducive to contemplative practice than others - just as no relationship provides the most freedom to build a life around contemplative practice.
I guess all I'm saying is, there is peace in fully accepting the presence of meditative absorption in our life. Once this acceptance has occurred, all the other priorities fall into line. It took me a long time to fully accept - had to deal with the Dark Night and all - but it does feel good to know peace again.