Mahāyoga: Detachment from ‘I/Mine’, Aṣṭāṅga Practice, Oṁkāra and Aham-Brahmāsmi Contemplation
अहं ब्रह्म परं ज्योतिः सूक्ष्मदेहविवर्जितम् / अहं ब्रह्मपरं ज्योतिः स्थानास्थानविवर्जितम्
ahaṃ brahma paraṃ jyotiḥ sūkṣmadehavivarjitam / ahaṃ brahmaparaṃ jyotiḥ sthānāsthānavivarjitam
میں برہمن ہوں—نورِ اعظم—جسمِ لطیف سے پاک۔ میں برہمن ہوں—نورِ اعظم—مقام و لا مقام دونوں سے ماورا، بے حد۔
Lord Vishnu (teaching Garuda/Vinata-putra in a Brahman-realization context)
Concept: The Self as Brahman is free from the subtle body (linga/sharira) and beyond spatial predicates; consciousness is not located.
Vedantic Theme: Upadhi-bheda-nivritti (negation of limiting adjuncts); desha-kala-pariccheda-rahita (beyond space-time limitation).
Application: In meditation, notice thoughts of ‘here/there’ and ‘inside/outside’ as subtle-body functions; rest as the witnessing light prior to spatial imagination.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.226.26-27, 1.226.29-30 (progressive negation: gross, elements, subtle, senses, prana)
This verse presents liberation-oriented knowledge: identifying oneself with Brahman, the supreme Light, which is not bound to the subtle body or any realm—pointing to moksha rather than post-death transit.
Much of the Garuda Purana discusses the jīva’s post-death experiences through the subtle body; this verse contrasts that by stating the highest truth—Brahman-realization—where one is free from the subtle-body framework and therefore not confined to any loka or ‘place’ at all.
Use it as a contemplative affirmation for detachment: remember the Self as consciousness/light beyond bodily identity, supporting ethical living, reduced fear of death, and steadiness in spiritual practice.