Mahāyoga: Detachment from ‘I/Mine’, Aṣṭāṅga Practice, Oṁkāra and Aham-Brahmāsmi Contemplation
नित्यशुद्धबुद्धंमुक्तमहामानन्दमद्वयम् / अहं ब्रह्म परं ज्योतिर्ज्ञानरूपो विमुक्तये
nityaśuddhabuddhaṃmuktamahāmānandamadvayam / ahaṃ brahma paraṃ jyotirjñānarūpo vimuktaye
جو ہمیشہ پاک، ہمیشہ شعور، آزاد، عظیم سرور اور غیر دوئی ہے—وہی ‘اَہَم برہمن’ نورِ اعظم، علم کی صورت؛ کامل نجات کے لیے (مراقبہ) ہے۔
Lord Vishnu (teaching Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: The Self is eternally pure-conscious-free, great bliss, non-dual; Brahman-realization as knowledge itself grants vimukti.
Vedantic Theme: Sat-cit-ānanda and advaita; jñāna as svarūpa and as sādhana; liberation as recognition (pratyabhijñā) rather than production.
Application: Use the verse as a daily affirmation after meditation: recall purity (śuddha), awareness (buddha), freedom (mukta), bliss (mahānanda), non-duality (advaya); align actions with this identity to weaken saṃskāras.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.226.31-32 (aham brahma, upādhi-negation); Garuda Purana 1.226.34 (aṣṭāṅga yoga as mokṣada)
This verse presents the realization 'I am Brahman' as a direct liberating contemplation: recognizing the Self as eternally pure, conscious, blissful, and non-dual leads to vimukti (complete release).
It points to jñāna (Self-knowledge) rather than external identity as the means to transcend bondage—seeing the true Self as the supreme light dissolves fear and limitation associated with embodied existence.
Use the statement as a meditation: contemplate inner awareness as pure, non-dual, and knowledge itself; let this reduce attachment, anxiety, and harmful actions, supporting a dharmic life oriented toward liberation.