प्रह्लादस्य विष्णुमयता, विष्णोः दर्शनं, वरदानं, तथा चरितश्रवण-फलम्
एवं संचिन्तयन् विष्णुम् अभेदेनात्मनो द्विज तन्मयत्वम् अवापाग्र्यं मेने चात्मानम् अच्युतम्
evaṃ saṃcintayan viṣṇum abhedenātmano dvija tanmayatvam avāpāgryaṃ mene cātmānam acyutam
ஓ இருபிறப்பனே! இவ்வாறு தன் ஆத்மாவோடு அபேதமாக விஷ்ணுவை இடையறாது தியானித்ததால், அவன் தன்னிலையிழந்து அவரில் முழுமையாக ஒன்றிய உச்ச நிலையை அடைந்து, தன் ஆத்மாவையே அச்யுதன் எனும் அழிவிலாதவன் என்று எண்ணினான்।
Sage Parāśara (narrating to Maitreya)
Speaker: Parasara
Topic: Means and fruit of contemplation on Viṣṇu leading to liberation
Teaching: Devotional
Quality: authoritative
Concept: By unwavering contemplation of Viṣṇu as non-different from oneself, one attains tanmayatva—complete absorption in Acyuta.
Vedantic Theme: Moksha
Application: Sustain daily japa/dhyāna with the sense that the Lord is the inner Self, reducing egoic separation.
Vishishtadvaita: Union is by intimate participation (tanmayatva) in the Lord while He remains the imperishable Acyuta, grounding devotion rather than mere identity-claim.
Vishnu Form: Para-Brahman
Bhakti Type: Shanta
This verse presents tanmayatva as the supreme attainment produced by sustained contemplation of Vishnu—where the meditator’s awareness becomes wholly oriented to and filled by the Lord, culminating in liberation-oriented realization.
Here Parāśara frames it as a contemplative discipline: meditating on Vishnu with abheda-bhāva (non-separateness) yields the highest state, in which one recognizes the self only in relation to the Imperishable Lord.
Acyuta emphasizes Vishnu’s unfailing, imperishable sovereignty; the realization described is not mere self-deification but a theistic culmination where the self is understood in the light of the Eternal Lord.