शान्तं शिवम् अद्वैतम्

​Shantam Shivam Advaitam is a luminous condensation of this stream, revealing the nature of the Self not as an idea to be understood, but as a reality to be recognized. This expression finds its most direct articulation in the Mandukya Upanishad, where the ultimate truth of the Self is declared with striking clarity. Rather than describing a distant spiritual goal, these words point to what is already present as ones own being.

Peace । Fullness । Non-duality

The Mandukya Upanishad identifies the Self beyond waking, dream and deep sleep as Turiya, the ever present reality underlying all experience. This is expressed in its seventh mantra:


This declaration forms the philosophical and experiential backbone of Atmabodham. What follows in the Vedic tradition is not a new teaching, but a progressive unfolding of this same recognition.

शान्तम् । Shantam – From Stillness to Peace

If the Self is non dual, it must be free from conflict. This freedom from conflict is expressed as Shantam, the unshakable peace that remains untouched by mental movement. The Upanishads guide the seeker naturally from restlessness to this inner stillness.

The Katha Upanishad describes the moment when agitation ends and peace reveals itself:


Desire dissolves when completeness is recognized. Immortality means freedom from limitation born of body identification. This recognition reveals Shantam.

Peace is not achieved by controlling desire, but by understanding the source of fulfillment. Atmabodham echoes this insight by showing that peace arises naturally when the Self is no longer mistaken for the mind.

The Bhagavad Gita continues this flow by describing the inner disposition of one established in this recognition:


Shantam is not withdrawal from life, but alignment with the Self while living fully.

शिवम् I Shivam – From Peace to Fullness:

When peace is recognized as ones own nature, it naturally reveals Shivam, the auspiciousness of inner completeness. Peace matures into fullness when the sense of lack dissolves.

The Taittiriya Upanishad expresses this fullness not as an emotion, but as the very substance of reality:


This bliss is not produced by experience, but revealed when ignorance ends. Living from this fullness, fear naturally falls away.

The Bhagavad Gita captures this fearlessness as a vision of unity:


Here, Shivam is not merely inner well being. It is the deep assurance that nothing exists outside the Self.

अद्वैतम् । Advaitam – From Fullness to Non Duality

When fullness is seen as ever present, the final veil of separation dissolves. This is Advaitam, the recognition that there is only one reality appearing as many.

The Upanishads make this declaration unambiguously:


This vision leaves no room for division, as affirmed again in the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad:


Atmabodham aligns seamlessly with this understanding by dissolving the false identification with body and mind, allowing the one Self to shine unobstructed.

The Bhagavad Gita brings this non dual vision into lived action:


Here Advaitam is not an abstract truth, but a way of seeing life itself.

One Continuous Vision

Shantam, Shivam and Advaitam are not separate stages. They are one continuous recognition seen from different angles.

शान्तम् । शिवम् । अद्वैतम् ।

Non duality removes conflict, revealing peace

Peace dissolves lack, revealing fullness

Fullness confirms oneness, revealing Advaitam

Atmabodham stands as a clear mirror to this eternal Vedic vision, inviting the seeker not to accumulate knowledge, but to recognize the Self as it is.