jnana yoga

Ramana Maharshi's self-inquiry and traditional advaita vedanta

Ramana Maharshi's simple self-inquiry instruction -- to attempt to chase and locate the "I" -- may seem, at first glance, to be quite different from the more scriptural and thinking-based instruction of traditional advaita vedanta. But this difference is only on the surface. Both ultimately come to exactly the same method from just slightly different angles: quiet the mind and discern away the unchanging by investigating the "I" thought. By doing so, the normal I disappears and an intuition is generated which destroys ignorance. What is left is the Self, which was always there, but simply was't recognized because of that ignorance.

Akilesh Guides a Seeker - August 6, 2019

This is a recorded session of a guidance session between me and a seeker who very graciously consented to be recorded. We have already had several sessions together, so he's familiar with many of the concepts and practices already. We cover self-inquiry, surrender, jnana yoga (knowledge yoga), and more, all in the context of his real-world experience.