Path to Enlightenment
Silence Begins
Where the Journey Begins
Meditation — Where Silence Begins to Reveal Itself
Meditation
Meditation is an ancient practice known to the yogis of old, transmitted not merely through words, but through direct inner knowing. Rooted in timeless wisdom, this meditation flows from the same current that guided the sages—an unbroken stream of insight traced to the lineage of Ṛṣi Yoga Vāsiṣṭha. It is not shaped by modern invention, but carried forward through subtle transmission, preserved in silence rather than form.
This meditation is guided not by technique alone, but by an unseen presence—the inner master that awakens when the seeker turns inward with sincerity. Beyond instruction and method, it is this silent guidance that draws awareness away from surface activity and into its own depth. The yogis of ancient times did not follow the mind; they followed silence—and so does this path.
Here, meditation is not imposed upon the seeker. One is gently led inward, beyond effort and control, into the natural settling of awareness.
This is how the journey begins—not through force or discipline, but through trust in the same silent guidance that has led seekers inward across ages.
When Silence Deepens Fully
Nirvikalpa Samādhi — Where the Mind No Longer Imposes Limitations
Deep Meditation
In deep meditation, or nirvikalpa samādhi, one rises beyond body-consciousness and abides in the wisdom-body. Awareness is no longer confined to the physical frame or limited by sensory perception. Though the body remains outwardly still, consciousness moves freely, unbound by space, distance, or location.
In this state, one may traverse vast distances while remaining in the same outer environment. What changes is not the body, but the plane of awareness. The mind, having dissolved into silence, no longer imposes the limitations of here and there, near and far. Consciousness functions from a subtler dimension, where movement is not physical but of awareness itself.
Here, the sense of individuality loosens its grip. The habitual identification with form, name, and personality fades, and awareness rests in itself. This is the wisdom-body—not a body made of matter, but of direct knowing.
This state is not imagined, nor is it induced by force or will.