Wednesday, April 22, 2026

To Beatles and Beyond

Our introduction to the world is our conditioning. The less an introduction, the less the conditioning. Thanks, Dad.

I was taught to be afraid of the world. Mother wasn't wrong. It's just Samsara isn't the truth either.

They say, turn off your mind. Relax and flow upstream. The river is tidal. I am not dying. Play the game. Existence to the end. Of the beginningless. Of the beginning.



later that day, fyi the final overdubs of Tomorrow Never Knows were recorded on 22 April 1966. Sixty years ago today. I did not know that until just now. Coincidence, serendipity, destiny, or a fourth way?

Mahavakya Story

Consciousness is Brahman. The mind is reflected consciousness. Pure consciousness is that everyday awareness beyond thought in which this universe is appearing.

They say consciousness is not experiencing a universe as something separate from Itself but experiencing Itself as a universe. For more, see Maya.

Without words, one points to your self and silently shouts tattvamasi you are that. Myself is Brahman sitting by the river contemplating such a truth. Can confirm. I am Brahman.

Mahavakyas from Suka Rahasya Upanishad (21-39)

21-22. Meditation: I bow to the noble teacher, beyond becoming and the three Gunas, one, eternal, holy, witness of all knowledge, giver of bliss, beyond the world, sky-like, purpose of major texts.

The four major passages:

(1) Consciousness is Brahman

(2) I am Brahman

(3) That Thou Art and

(4) This self is Brahman.

Those who recite the statement of identity become liberated in Sayujya (identity).


23-24. Of the great incantation ‘Tat’, the seer is Hamsa, un-manifest Gayatri is the metre. Paramahamsa the deity; Hamsa the seed; Sama-Veda, power; So’ham is the pin; application is the meditation for my liberation. Bow to the thumbs, to that aspirant Svaha to Isana, the index fingers, Vasat to Aghora the middle fingers, to Sadyojata, the ring fingers, hum; to Vamadeva, the little fingers Vausat; to that spirit, Isana, Aghora etc. Phat.

Meditation: Meditate on that shining light as knowledge and its objects and what is beyond them both, taintless, awake, free and imperishable.


25-26. Of the chant of ‘Tvam’ Vishnu is the seer, Gayatri is the metre, supreme self the deity, ‘aim’ the seed, ‘klim’ the power, ‘sauh’ the pin, application is to the repetition for my liberation.

Bow to Vasudeva, to the thumbs: Svaha to Samkarsana, the index-fingers; Vasat to Pradyumna, the middle fingers; Hum to Aniruddha, the ring fingers; Vausat to Vasudeva, the little finger; Phat to Vasudeva and others.

Meditation: I adore the word ‘Thou’ the Jiva state, in all living things, everywhere, impartite form, controller of mind and egoism.


28-29. Meditation: ‘Meditate ever on Asi, thou art. Aiming at the merger of Jiva in that, as long as the mind dwells on the purport’. Thus have been stated the six limbs of the major texts.


30-38. Now according to the classification of the mystic teachings are set forth the verses on the purport.

Prajnana is that whereby one sees, hears, smells and makes clear all objects here, pleasant and unpleasant, by which one knows. In the four-faced Brahman, Indra and Devas, men, horses, cows, etc., spirit is one Brahman – so, in me too Prajnana is Brahman. In this body being remains witness to the intellect and is called I. The Being full in itself is described as Brahman, referred to with Asmi. So, I am Brahman. The being, one without a second, without name and form before creation and even now is called That. The being called Thou here beyond the senses understood as one. Let this unity be experienced. The inner self, from ego to the body, is called this (ayam) because it is self-luminous and realizes intimately. The truth of the universe is stated of all that is seen by the word Brahman.


39. I was in the state of dream of ‘I’ and “Mine’ because of the absence of the vision of the spirit. But I was awakened when the sun of my own nature arose by means of the major texts spoken clearly by the perception.


as transcribed by VivekaVani

https://vivekavani.com/suka-rahasya-upanishad/


*****


The Shukarahasya Upanishad also called Rahasya Upanishad

The text is a mix of prose and verses. It asserts that it has six parts and is structured as a discourse between Shiva and Shuka – the son of Vedic sage Vyasa. Shukha is celebrated in Hinduism as the one who became a sannyasi (Hindu monk) at a very young age.

The text is notable for extracting and describing four Mahavakyas, or sacred statements one each from the ancient layers within the four Vedas, and presenting them as meditative tools. The text asserts that Shuka achieved Jivanmukti – achieving freedom in this life, after he meditated on the knowledge in this Upanishad that he received from Shiva. The text further asserts that anyone can achieve similar spiritual liberation by meditating on the four Mahavakyas, and there is no need for rituals, pilgrimages and mantras for the one willing to meditate on these four.

The author and the century in which Shukarahasya Upanishad was composed is unknown. Manuscripts of this text are also found titled as Rahasyopnisad and Sukarahasyopanisad. This Upanishad is listed at number 35 in the Telugu language anthology of 108 Upanishads of the Muktika canon, narrated by Rama to Hanuman.


Bibliography

Deussen, Paul (1997). Sixty Upanishads of the Veda. Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 978-81-208-1467-7.

Hattangadi, Sunder (2000). "शुकरहस्योपनिषत् (Shukarahasya Upanishad)" (PDF) (in Sanskrit). Retrieved 3 March 2016.

Mahadevan, T. M. P. (1975). Upaniṣads: Selections from 108 Upaniṣads. Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 978-81-208-1611-4.

AM Sastri, ed. (1921). The Samanya Vedanta Upanishads with the commentary of Sri Upanishad-Brahma-Yogin. Adyar library seriesno. 7 (in Sanskrit). Adyar Library (Reprinted 1970). hdl:2027/mdp.39015065237664.

Tinoco, Carlos Alberto (1996). Upanishads. IBRASA. ISBN 978-85-348-0040-2.

Warrier, AG Krishna (1967). Sāmanya Vedānta Upaniṣads. Adyar Library and Research Center. ISBN 978-8185141077. OCLC 29564526.


~from Wikipedia (260422)



Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Prajñānam Brahma ~Sarvapriyananda

"The Advaitic understanding unfolds in three careful stages: 

1.We undeniably experience the universe through our senses, appearing to interact with an external world.

2.However, all objects must appear in Consciousness—nothing can exist “outside” awareness, as even the concept of “outside” appears within Consciousness.

3.If objects can only exist within Consciousness and cannot be separated from it (unlike a book from its bookmark), they must be non-different from Consciousness itself.

This leads to the profound meaning of Prajñānam Brahma: Consciousness is not merely experiencing the universe as something separate from itself; rather, it is experiencing itself as the universe. The apparent multiplicity and separation we experience is explained through the concept of Maya, while the underlying Reality remains one undivided, infinite Consciousness. 

This understanding resolves the seeming contradiction between our experience of multiplicity and the non-dual nature of reality. The universe isn’t denied or dismissed—it’s recognized as the play of Consciousness itself, appearing to itself, through itself. This is the essence of the Mahāvākya (great utterance) Prajñānam Brahma, which points to the ultimate oneness of consciousness and reality.

~Sarvapriyananda in 'Mahavakya' (bolding is mine)

*****

"Pancadasi 5.1: Yenekṣate śṛṇo-tīdaṁ jighrati vyākaroti ca, svādva svādū vijānāti tat prajñānam udīritam (That by which a person sees, hears, smells, and speaks, and can distinguish between pleasant and unpleasant tastes, either bitter or sweet, and so on; this is called prajñānam, or consciousness.) 

This verse refers to the Mahāvākya, Prajñānam Brahma, found in the Aitareya Upanishad. Prajñānam Brahma means Consciousness is the ultimate and infinite reality. Brahman means expansion without limit, or vastness.

"Pancadasi 5.2: Catur-mukhendra-deveṣu manuṣyā-śva-gavādiṣu, caitanyamekaṁ brahmātaḥ prajñānaṁ brahma mayyapi (The one Consciousness which is in Bramha, Indra, and other gods, as well as in human beings, horses, and cows; that is Brahman. This means this consciousness in me is also Brahman.)

Vidyaranya Swami illustrates the omnipresence of Consciousness through a series of examples, starting from Brahma (Catur-mukha, the four-faced one) to all divine beings, humans, and animals. This one Consciousness (Caitanyam ekam) pervades all existence—past, present, and future. While our individual minds and experiences differ, creating the appearance of separate consciousnesses, the underlying awareness remains singular and undivided."

~Sarvapriyananda in 'Mahavakya'

*****

All this has consciousness as the giver of its reality. All is impelled by consciousness. Consciousness is the eye of the universe and consciousness is its end. Consciousness is Brahman. 

~Lakṣaṇa Vākya - Prajñānam Brahma - Consciousness is Brahman. (Aitareya-upaniṣad. (3-1-3) – Ṛg-veda). 






Monday, April 20, 2026

Upanishadic Creations

God, world and soul appear to have a reality in the beginning. As the fundamental stage, the Sadhana of the Jiva should begin from this level. The Upanishads speak of Isvara’s creation in various ways.

Prakriti which also goes by the name of Maya, is the material cause, and the Supreme Lord or the Mayin, the instrumental cause of creation: so says the Svetasvatara.

Atman alone was in the beginning, and it willed to create the many by a cosmic ideation; so says the Aitareya.

Brahman is truth, knowledge and infinity, and from it arose ether, air, fire, water, earth, the different bodies, and so on. And the variety of creation was effected by the primeval contemplation of the Divine Being to appear as the many: so says the Taittiriya.

In the beginning it was only pure Existence, and in it arose the idea to become manifold, and it created the luminous medium of fire, from which water and earth and other bodies came out as effects: so says the Chandogya.

As sparks emanate from fire, all the variety consisting of conscious and unconscious beings came out from the one Imperishable: so says the Mundaka.

In the beginning it was all unmanifested. By the will of the unmanifested Absolute, the one became the many names and forms, down to the universe animated by the Virat. Then by evolution appear the celestials, humans, and animals, the varied expressions of the Universal Purusha: so says the Brihadaranyaka.

~Krishnananda (edited) commentary on Pancadasi 4.2-9



Svetasvatara 4.10 (Pancadasi 4.2)

The Śvetāśvatara Upaniṣad says: ‘know Māyā as Prakṛti and Brahman associated with Māyā as the great Īśvara’ (who imparts existence and consciousness to it and guides it). It is He who creates the world. ~Pancadasi 4.2 (tr-Swahananda)

*****

māyāṁ tu prakṛtiṁ vidyān-māyinaṁ ca maheśvaram, tasyāvayavabhūtaistu vyāptaṁ sarvam-idaṁ jagat. (10)

10. Know that nature is surely māyā and the Lord of māyā is Maheśvara, the supreme Lord. This whole world is verily filled by His limbs. ~Svetasvatara 4.10 (tr-Tejomayananda)

*****

Māyā and prakṛti: Both are synonyms, however they have special connotations. Prakṛti is that power of the Lord which is capable of producing things (prakarṣeṇa kṛti yogyatvāt). It is the material cause and brings to mind the ever-changing aspect of creation.

Māyā refers more to the illusory aspect of creation and the power that deludes and eludes all. Māyā, like magic, makes everything appear without any real happening. That which is not, but appears to be there is called māyā (yā mā sā māyā). It makes the impossible possible (aghaṭita ghaṭanā paṭīyasī māyā). However māyā has two aspects – vidyā māyā – which creates the world and helps us gain knowledge and avidyā māyā – which deludes and binds. 

Lord – the Māyāvī: God is the Master, the controller or the wielder of māyā or prakṛti. It is confusing when we hear that prakṛti creates the world and then again we are told that God creates the world. Who actually creates? We must understand that ‘Māyā presided over by God/Truth creates the world.’ By itself māyā can do nothing. ~commentary on Svetasvatara 4.10 by Tejomayananda

*****

Vidyāt, one should know; that prakytim, Nature, presented everywhere earlier as the material cause of the universe; is surely māyā, Māyā. The particle tu is for emphasis. Maheśvarah is He who is great (mahān) and also the Lord (īśvara). (Know) Him as māyinam, the Ruler of Māyā-who imparts substance, appear-ance, etc. to Māyā, and who is its impeller by virtue of being its basis. This portion is to be connected with the foregoing phrase, 'know surely'. 

Through superimposition, idam, this; sarvam (jagat) whole (universe), earth etc.; is surely vyāptam, per-vaded, i.e. filled up; tasya avayava-bhūtaih, by what are His limbs, by the illusory limbs of the supreme God under discussion, which are analogous to the snake etc. imagined on such substrata as rope etc. The particle tu is for emphasis.

(The text now shows that the unchanging Entity, which is the source of Māyā and its effects, is the basis (of everything) through Its own power; that It is the cause of the origin of such effects as space etc.; and that Liberation follows from the knowledge of identity --as, 'I am Brahman' with that which in reality is Existence-Knowledge-Bliss and which is regarded as the substratum of all.)

~Shankara on Svetasvatara 4.10 (tr-Gambhirananda) [note there is some controversy whether the commentary is actually Shankara's]

*****

Śvetāśvatara Up. 4.10. Prakṛti is the material cause of the world, in the sense that names and forms which distinguish one thing from another and thereby create diversification are the creation of Māyā. 

Maheśvara, the great Lord, is the efficient cause of the world because He guides Māyā in all her conjuring up of names and forms, and imparts the appearance of reality and consciousness to them and guides her throughout. 

But be it noted that separately (and this separation is impossible except in absolute knowledge in superconsciousness where there is no trace of creation, and the memory thereof) they are neither the material cause nor the efficient cause. It is only in conjunction that they are both. In fact they are not two but one, functioning differently, though jointly.

~Swahananda commentary on Pancadasi 4.2

*****


Aitareya 1.1 (Pancadasi 4.3)

The Aitareya Upaniṣad says that before creation there was Ātman only, and He thought, ‘Let me create the world’, and then He created the world by His will (to create). ~Pancadasi 4.3 (tr-Swahananda)

Aitareya Up. 1.1 in the Rg Veda. This passage also attributes creation to Brahman. In this śloka Ātman has been used in the sense of Paramātman or Brahman; for before creation individual souls remained merged in the unmanifest. So they could not create. ~Swahananda commentary on Pancadasi 4.3

oṁ ātmā vā idameka evāgra āsīt, nānyat-kiñcana miṣat,

1. Om! In the beginning, this was but the absolute Self alone. There was nothing else whatsoever that winked. It thought, ‘Let Me create the worlds.’ ~Aitareya 1.1 (tr-Gambhirananda)

*****

Ātmā vai, the absolute (23) Self. The word ātmā, Self, is derived in the sense of comprehending, engulfing, or pervading, and by it is signified one that is the highest, omniscient, omnipotent, and devoid of all such worldly attributes as hunger; by nature eternal, pure, conscious, and free; birthless, undecaying, immortal, deathless, fearless, and without a second. Idam, this — all that has been referred to as this world, diversified through the differences of name, form, and action; āsīt, was; agre, in the beginning, before the creation of this world; ātmā ekaḥ eva, but the one Self. ~Shankara commentary on Aitareya 1.1 (tr-Gambhirananda)

*****

The same Self, or Brahman, which existed before the creation exists even now. Then why does the text use the past tense was? In reply we say that though Atman is the same after the creation as It was before, there is a slight difference. Before the creation, the universe, devoid of the differentiation of names and forms and completely identified with Atman, was designated by the name Atman alone and also was the object of the knowledge designated by the term Atman. In other words, there was then no such term as universe, nor any object denoted by that term. But after the creation, owing to the manifestation of names and forms, the same universe sometimes is known by many different names and also becomes the object of the knowledge denoted by those names and sometimes becomes known by the name Atman alone and becomes the object of the knowledge denoted by that name. This is the difference between the state prior to the creation and that after it. The past tense in the text, conveyed by the word was, has been used with this difference in view. ~Nikhilananda's commentary on Aitareya 1.1


Taittiriya 2.1.2 (Pancadasi 4.4-5)

4. The Taittiriya Upaniṣad says that from the Self or Brahman alone arose in succession the whole creation including ākāśa, (ether), air, fire, water, earth, vegetation, food and bodies.

5. The Taittiriya Upaniṣad says that desiring ‘I shall be many, so I shall create,’ the Lord meditated; and thus created the world. ~Pancadasi 4.4-5 (tr-Swahananda)

om brahmavidāpnoti param, tadeṣā’bhyuktā, satyaṁ jñānamanantaṁ brahma, yo veda nihitaṁ guhāyāṁ parame vyoman, so‘śnute sarvān kamān saha brahmaṇā vipaściteti. (2)

Om, the knower of Brahman attains the Supreme. With reference to that, is the following hymn recited: Brahman is the Truth, Knowledge and Infinity. He who knows It as existing in the cave of the heart in the transcendent ākāśa, realises all his desires along with omniscient Brahman. ~Taittiriya 2.1.1 (tr-Chinmayananda)

tasmādvā etasmādātmana ākāśaḥ sambhūtaḥ, ākāśādvāyuḥ, vāyoragniḥ, agnerāpaḥ, adbhyaḥ pṛthivī, pṛthivyā oṣadhayaḥ, oṣadhībhyo‘nnam, annātpuruṣaḥ. (2)

From that (which is) this Ᾱtman, is space born; from ākāśa, air; from air, fire; from fire, water; from water, earth; from earth, herbs; from herbs, food; and from food, man. ~Taittiriya 2.1.2 (tr-Chinmayananda)

so’kāmayata, bahu syāṁ prajāyeyeti, sa tapo’tapyata, sa tapastaptvā idagṁ sarvamasṛjata yadidaṁ kiñca, tatsṛṣṭvā tadevānuprāviśat, tadanupraviśya sacca tyaccābhavat, niruktaṁ cānirukataṁ ca, nilayanaṁ cānilayanaṁ ca vijñānaṁ cāvijñānaṁ ca, satyaṁ cānṛtaṁ ca satyamabhavat, yadidaṁ kiñca, tatsatyamityācakṣate, tadapyeṣa śloko bhavati. (3)

He desired, ‘I shall become many and be born. He performed tapas; having performed tapas, He created all this whatsoever (we perceive). Having created it, He entered into it. Having entered it, He became the manifest and the unmanifest, the defined and undefined, the housed and the houseless, knowledge and ignorance, truth and falsehood, and all this whatsoever that exists. Therefore, it is called Existence. In this sense, there is the following Vaidika verse.’ ~Taittiriya 2.6.3 (tr-Chinmayananda)

*****

It says satyaṁ jñānam anantam brahma (T.U. 2.1.1): Truth, knowledge, infinity is the Absolute. It was alone there. Suddenly, it willed. It became space. It became emptiness, the repository of further creation. Space became air, air became fire, fire became water, water became earth. Earth produced all the vegetables, plants, trees, etc.—the articles of diet for living beings; and the food that we eat became the substance of this physical body, which is verily constituted of the very food that we eat. This is the kind of creation that the Taittiriya Upanishad describes. It willed, and that will is called tapas. The universal concentration of Brahman Consciousness is the original tapas, whose heat manifested this world of five elements; thus the Taittiriya Upanishad tells us. ~Krishnananda commentary on Taittiriya 2.6.1-3

*****

From that Brahman which is identical with the Self, akasah, space; sambhutah, was created. Akasa means that which is possessed of the attribute of sound and provides space for all things that have forms. Akasat, from that space; vayuh, air-which has two attributes, being possessed of its own quality, touch, and the quality, sound, of its cause (akasa). The verb, `was created', is understood. Vdyoh, from that air; was created agnih, fire-which has three attributes, being possessed of its own quality, colour, and the two earlier ones (of its cause, air). Agneh, from fire; was produced, apah, water-with four attributes, being endowed with its own quality, taste, and the three earlier ones (of fire). Adbhyah, from water; was produced prthivi, earth-with five attributes, consisting of its own quality, smell, and the four earlier qualities (of its cause, water). Prthiaydh, from the earth; osadhayah, the herbs. Osadh:bhyah, from the herbs; annam, food. Annat, from food, transformed into human seed; (was created), purusah, the human being, possessed of the limbshead, hands, etc. Sah vai esah purusah, that human being, such as he is; annarasamayah, consists of the essence of food, is a transformation of the essence of food. ~Shankara commentary on Taittiriya 2.1.2 (tr-Gambhirananda

*****

Says the ṛṣi, ‘the Supreme, first desired – meaning, when a desire bumped up in that Ocean of Perfection (in It’s all-fullness, desire too is in It), It identified Itself with that desire and performed tapas. Concentrated and consistent thinking in the line of a desired object is tapas. These thoughts dynamise the desire and the individual – meaning, ‘the Supreme, identified with It’s desire’, struggles to create the necessary world in which It can fulfil It’s desire. Having created the world, He enters it, meaning, He comes to live in an intimate and immediate relationship with the world of objects so created’. Thus, concludes the ṛṣi, ‘the Supreme Himself became the entire world of experience in plurality!!’. ~Chinmayananda commentary on Taittiriya 2.6.3


Chandogya 6.2.1-4;6.3.1-2  (Pancadasi 4.6)

1. Sad eva, saumya, idam agra asid ekam evadvitiyam, tadd haika ahuh, asad evedam agra asid ekam evadvitiyam, tasmad asatah saj jayata.

6.2.1. ‘In the beginning, dear boy, this was Being alone, one only, without a second. Some say that, in the beginning, this was Non-being alone, one only, without a second. From that Non-being arose Being.’

2. Āruṇi said, ‘But how, indeed, dear boy, could it be so? How could Being arise from Non-being? In truth, dear boy, in the beginning (before creation), there was Being alone, one only, without a second.

3. ‘That Being willed, “May I become many, may I grow forth.” It created fire. That fire willed, “May I become many, may I grow forth.” It created water. Therefore whenever a man grieves or perspires, then it is from fire that water issues.

4. ‘That water willed, “May I become many, may I grow forth.” It created food11 Therefore, wherever it rains, abundant food grows there; it is from water that food for eating is produced.

6.3.1.Of the aforesaid beings there are only origins: those born from eggs, born from living beings, and born from sprouts.

2. ‘That deity willed,15 “Well, let me, entering into these three ofeities through this living self (Jīvātman),16 differentiate name and form. ~Chandogya Upanishad 6.2.1-4; 6.3.1-2 (tr-Swahananda)

4.6. The Chāndogya Upaniṣad says that before creation Brahman or the Self alone existed, and that His nature was pure existence. He desired to become manifold, and created all things including fire, water, food, and beings born of eggs and so forth. ~Pancadasi 4.6 (tr-Swahananda)

*****

Even now it is surely Existence. But now it stands qualified by name and form, and also as an object of the word and idea 'this'. Therefore it is termed as 'this'. But before creation, in the beginning, this was only an object of the word and idea 'Existence'. Hence it is emphasized that 'in the beginning this was Existence alone'. 'Without a second' means that It (Existence) has no second thing different from Itself. ~Shankara commentary (tr-Gambhirananda)


Mundaka 2.1.1 (Pancadasi 4.7)

7. The Muṇḍaka Upaniṣad says that just as sparks emanate from a blazing fire, so from immutable Brahman arose different animate and inanimate things.

 Muṇḍaka Up. 2.1.1 in the Atharvaveda. The Jīva like the sparks is a part of Brahman from a lower point of view, for Brahman is partless. Jīva is identical with It. The illustration is for easy comprehension of a beginner. ~Pancadasi 4.7 (tr-Swahananda) & commentary

tadetat satyaṁ yathā sudīptāt pāvakād visphuliṅgāḥ sahasraśaḥ prabhavante sarūpāḥ, tathā’kṣarādvividhāḥ somya bhāvāḥ prajāyante tatra caivāpi yanti. (1)

1. This is the truth, as from the flaming fire thousands of sparks similar to its form (nature) issue forth; so from the Immortal (Brahman) O My beloved youth! Diverse (manifold) beings (jīvas) originate and they find their way back into it. ~Mundaka 2.1.1 (tr-Chinmayananda

*****

The spark example is excellent if one understands it properly. Otherwise, it can create all kinds of problems. Here, the example is not meant to show that the sparks come from the fire and go back into the fire, but it is to point out that one fire alone is in the form of many sparks due to many upādhis. The spark has some kind of upādhi-viśeṣa, attributes of a limited form. It is fire with a dimension of its own. With this conditioning, the fire is called a spark. Therefore, we use two different words, ‘spark’ and ‘fire’. The sparks are many, but all of them are one fire. That is the extent of the example here. ~Dayananda commentary on Mundaka 2.1.1


Bṛhadāraṇyaka 1.4.1 Pancadai 4.8-9

8. It is also said that before its manifestation the whole world existed in Brahman in a potential form; then, assuming name and form it came into being as Virāṭ.

Bṛhadāraṇyaka Up. 1.4.1 in the Vājasaneya branch of the Śukla-Yajurveda. 

9. From Virāṭ came into being the ancient law-givers, human beings, cattle, asses, horses, goats, and so on, both male and female, down to the ants. Thus says the Bṛhadāraṇyaka Upaniṣad. 

Bṛhadāraṇyaka Up. 1.4.4. The latency of the world in Brahman before creation does not mean its real existence. Such description is a concession to the beginner who cannot conceive the world or Avidyā to be causeless.

~Pancadai 4.8-9 (tr-Swahananda) & Swahananda commentary

1.4.1

In the beginning, this universe was verily the self (Virāj1) in the form of a person. He pondered and beheld nothing else but himself. He first said, ‘I am he’. Therefore he got the name ‘I’. Hence even now when any one is accosted, he first says, ‘It is I’, and then tells the other name that he has. Because he was the first (among the aspirants to the status of Prajāpati), and (before) this whole group consumed all evils,2 therefore he is called Puruṣa. He who knows thus verily consumes him who wishes to be (Prajāpati) in advance of him. 

[1 Prajāpati, the universal being who attained his status on being purified by Vedic knowledge in his past life. When Prajāpati identifies himself with the sum total of subtle bodies in the universe, he is called Hiraṇyagarbha, and when he identifies himself with the sum total of gross bodies in the universe, he is called Virāj. 2 Ignorance and its offshoots, which thwarted his attainment of the position of Prajāpati. 3 Metaphorically speaking. He only beats the others in the race.]

~Bṛhadāraṇyaka 1.4.1






Saturday, April 18, 2026

Sugarmagnoliananda

Not deconstructing duality but intuiting nonduality. Take and that takes it back. Give and that gives you something to give. As self-awareness nears ground zero, things grow self-evident.

It was after the plums blossom but before the cherries. Half the docks are in. No boats but willows are weeping. Ospreys on the cam. Hummingbirds have been sighted. Om.

There is no memory and desire. Love is now. April flowers. The sun isn't yellow. Chickens never cross the road. The no knows. Honeybees. Sugar Magnolia Ananda.






Goodnight Daydream Ananda

It's not deconstructing duality as it is intuiting nonduality.

Take and that takes it back. Give and that gives you something to give.

As self-awareness nears ground zero, things grow self-evident.

It was after the plums blossom but before the cherries.

Half the docks are in. No boats but willows are weeping.

Ospreys on the cam. Hummingbirds have been sighted. Om.

There is no memory and desire. Love is now. April flowers.

The sun isn't yellow. Chickens never cross the road.

No knows. Honeybee. Sugar Magnolia Ananda.






Diamond Meme

Both likes and dislikes are the stuff of samsara. Maya is just the stuff of creation. The mind is the means of our house arrest.

A diamond is just another stone in this Isvaraverse. Our relation to that stone is dependent on the meaning we are giving to the diamond.

Freedom isn't reading meaning into anything—seeing all things are made of Brahman. And self-awareness is the highest meaning of them all.

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Space-time Body-Mind Maya

Existence is the substrate Turiyam. Space-time is primal superimposition on Brahman. Body-mind is primeval superimposition on Atman. 

Space-time is not the real substrate called Reality. And Existence isn't evolutionary. The body-mind is an aftereffect of Maya.

Existence is not space and space is not existence. Space is an appearance in Existence. Minus Existence, space is nothing.  


This Is Called Intuition

The power of Brahman is Maya. Maya is not the same as Brahman (Existence) nor different from Brahman (non-existence). Thus Maya neither exists nor doesn't exist.

It's impossible to investigate the origin of Maya because our understanding is one of its effects. And there is no understanding of a cause by its effect.

An effect transcends to the state of its cause to understand itself as an effect. As the mind transcends to that state of Turiyam to see through Maya. This is called Intuition.

I Am (Aham Asmi)

Beyond the Big Bang Theory of All Creation, there is Existence alone (sat eva), one only without a second (ekam eva advitiyam).

Because Existence is beyond the manifestation of names and forms, Existence is unconstrained by names and forms.

When they say 'existence is,' all that can be said about Existence has been said. For Existence is Brahman and Atman is Brahman, I am.

Saturday, April 11, 2026

Our Sonnet

Sunny Saturday in early April—

Forsythia Suspensa!

And no sign of cherry blossoms yet.

Sunroof open and radio on—

I'm in love with Massachusetts.

Without memory there's no desire.

"I need you more than want you and I want you for all time."

Saturday is Saturn's day.

Saturn is the god of time.

Its ring of timelessness is crow.

From the principle of existence springs the river.

In the ground of consciousness appears a way.

I love I know I am. 

You can tell everybody this is our sonnet.


Isvaraverse

1. That Isvaraverse

Isvara, or Brahman reflected in the intelligent creatrix of Maya, is the Maker, The Creator, instrumental cause.

And Isvara, in relation to the appearance of matter (tamas) in that Big Creatrix, is material cause too.

And Brahman in Avidya of sattva, tamas, and rajas appears as the jiva. Brahman is creator, creation, and creature. Aham Brahmasmi.

2. That Reflexive Isvaraverse of Light

In that reflexive Isvaraverse of light, the nuclear appears, binding and forceful, like the probability of wave or particle.

The second stage of materialization is atomic. Center, order, and property appears in the form of hydrogen and its 108 transformations.

Full tamas is the molecular. Classical physics lives here. But a great turn occurs with the appearances of functional compounds

like organic chemicals and sexual hormones, foretelling the motion of plants, animals, and true gurus of the light of self-awareness.



Wednesday, April 8, 2026

The Creatrix

The primordial substance of the cosmos, the source of creation, is called prakriti, the creatrix. The whys are beginningless but truth transcends time.

The creatrix is not a product of Brahman nor other than Brahman. As self-awareness is neither a product of awareness nor something other than awareness.

There are three kinds of threads weaving the net of this creatrix: intelligence (sattva), motion (rajas), and material (tamas). Like energy, the speed of light, and matter.

When the weave is pure intelligence, this creatrix is called Maya. When such a weave is then mixed with motion and matter, it's called Avidya (nescience).

Brahman reflected in Maya is Isvara, that supreme universal god. Brahman reflected in Avidya are jivas like me and you.



(see Pancadasi 1:15-17)






Saturday, April 4, 2026

Absolutely Om / Turiya

Om Jesus. Om Beatles. Om Joni Mitchell singing paradise and parking lots. Om Van the Man into the Mystic.

Om Anne Bradstreet. Om Good Gray Poet in a Supermarket. Om White Whale. Om Walden Pond. Om Desolation Peak.

Om New Testament. Om Tao Te Ching. Om Four Agreements. Om Here and Om Now. Om Tattvamasi. Om Aum.

A is the waking state. U is dreaming. M is deep sleep. Substrate to such superimpositions is the satcitananda silence called the Fourth.

Turning on a Metaparadigm

Atman is neither the seed of consciousness as unmanifested Maya nor that god of universal omniscient consciousness called Isvara—Atman is Brahman.

Brahman both pervades and transcends this universe like ocean air does to an island atmosphere—imperceptible, unreachable, and indescribable.

Consciousness is that foundational "one self intuition essence" and not some highly refined product of oxygen, carbon, and hydrogen as scientific materialism preaches without proof.

The social conditioning of scientific atheistic materialism is the greatest obstruction to self-awareness in the current western world.

That the world appears in consciousness is common experience yet we've bought this snake oil advertising—

consciousness as a product of the material world and we drink of it until it becomes our metaparadigm. Turn, turn, turn, my friend.


Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Versicle on Ekatma Pratyaya Saram

1. meditate on that

Self-awareness of the godhead is the arc of the universe. You're almost there.

The godhead is timelessly self-aware but space-time is what such self-awareness looks like from the point of view of maya.

Any questions concerning maya are generated within maya and have no absolute answer. Meditate on that, satcitananda.

2. mandukya abc

Nantah-prajnam, na bahis-prajnam, na ubhayatah prajnam, na prajnana ghanamna, na prajnam, na aprajnam (consciousness: not inner, nor outer, nor both, nor measurable, nor immeasurable, nor not) ~Mandukya 7a.

Adrstam, avyavaharyam, agrahyam, alaksanam, acintyam, avyapadesyam (imperceptable (unseen), unrelatable (not emperical), incomprehensible (beyond reach), uninferable (not a sign), unthinkable, indescribable (beyond words)) ~Mandukya 7b. 

Eka-atma-pratyaya-saram (one-self-intuition-essence) ~Mandukya 7c¹.

3. one intuitive i-essence

Ekatma pratyaya saram (one self-intuition-essence) is called the Fourth.

It is the one intuitive I-essence underlying our three states of ignorance (waking, dreaming, deep sleeping)

like a substrate to their superimpositions.

4. ekatma pratyaya saram

Sages say the seventh mantra of the Mandukya Upanishad is the peak of Advaita. In fact, the word, advaita, makes its first appearance there.

If not the creator, Gaudapada is the godfather of Mandukya. Tradition says he’s the guru of the guru of Shankara, Govinda. Disciple of a godlike teacher, Shukadeva son of Vyasa, Gaudapada is Paramaguru of Advaita Vedanta.

Mandukya 7 is divided into three parts. The first nullifies the microcosmic atmans of every state of consciousness (and unconsciousness). The second nullifies all macrocosmic brahmans. The third affirms Mandukya’s mahavakya—ayam atma brahma. Ekatma pratyaya saram.





260331tu1915

ekatma pratyaya saram (one self-intuition-essence) is called the fourth.

it is the one intuitive i-essence underlying our three states of ignorance (waking, dreaming, deep sleeping)

like a substrate to their superimpositions.

260331tu1839

nantah-prajnam, na bahis-prajnam, na ubhayatah prajnam, na prajnana ghanamna, na prajnam, na aprajnam.

(consciousness: not inner, nor outer, nor both, nor measurable, nor immeasurable, nor not.)

~Mandukya 7a


adrstam, avyavaharyam, agrahyam, alaksanam, acintyam, avyapadesyam.

(imperceptable (unseen), unrelatable (not emperical), incomprehensible (beyond reach), uninferable (not a sign), unthinkable, indescribable (beyond words))

~Mandukya 7b 


eka-atma-pratyaya-saram

(one-self-intuition-essence)

~Mandukya 7c¹


260331tu1835

Self-awareness of the godhead is the arc of the universe. You're almost there.

The godhead is timelessly self-aware but space-time is what such self-awareness looks like from the point of view of maya.

Any questions concerning maya are generated within maya and have no absolute answer. Meditate on that, satcitananda.





Saturday, March 28, 2026

Satcitananda Forever

1. Can't You See?

Duality can't be proved. Nonduality is beyond proof. Story at eleven eleven.

That which is higher proves something lower. Thus the mind can't prove itself.

Nondual awareness is the highest ground, can't you see? 

The mind is reflected consciousness and reflections are lower states by definition.

2. A Consciousness Hero

Being existence presence consciousness awareness intelligence holistic infinity bliss, oh my.

First you're conditioned by karmic DNA and then they lock you in space-time instead of it all.

Maya is beginningless and the seed of mind. Atman is not a seed of consciousness

nor omniscient consciousness. Brahman is indescribable. Ayam atma brahma is turiyam.

3. To Self-awareness

From awareness to self-awareness appears as space-time but in reality is spontaneous.

I know I am takes space and time. From a snake to a rope is a self-reflexive universe.

First principle is existence. People die for it. Ground is consciousness. Materialism be damned.