Dhyāna of Hari as the Nirguṇa Witness (Ātman), and the Attainment of Viṣṇu’s Realm
प्राणप्राणो महाशान्तो भयेन परिवर्जितः / अहङ्कारादिहीनश्च तद्धर्ंमपरिवर्जितः
prāṇaprāṇo mahāśānto bhayena parivarjitaḥ / ahaṅkārādihīnaśca taddharṃmaparivarjitaḥ
هو الحياةُ في كل حيّ، عظيمُ السكينة، منزَّهٌ عن الخوف. وهو خالٍ من الأنا (الأهَنْكارا) وما شابهها، ولا يفارق دَرْمَه الخاص (حقيقته الذاتية) قطّ.
Lord Vishnu (speaking to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: The Divine is the life within life, supremely peaceful and fearless; free from ego; unwavering in its own essential nature.
Vedantic Theme: Abhayam (fearlessness) as mark of Self-knowledge; ahankara-tyaga; svarupa-nishtha (abiding in one’s nature).
Application: Contemplate fear as ego-based contraction; practice letting go of ‘I-maker’ narratives; return repeatedly to still awareness, especially during anxiety or conflict.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.14.9
This verse presents the Supreme as intrinsically beyond fear; contemplating that fearless inner reality is taught as a way to loosen fear—especially fear of death—and move toward liberation.
By pointing to the indwelling ‘life of life’ that is peaceful and ego-free, it implies that the soul’s progress is aided by shifting identity from ego and anxiety to the Self/Paramatman nature.
Cultivate humility and reduce ego-driven reactions; practice remembrance/meditation on the peaceful inner Self—this steadies the mind during loss, death-related rites, and daily ethical decisions.