Spirituality is an Inner Phenomenon
Humans are always searching for divinity everywhere, feeling that it is somewhere far away, perhaps in the sky, in a sacred place, or in another world. But divinity is not something that exists far from us. It is the very nature of everything that exists.
In Chivality, space itself is understood as divine. It is pure, endless, and untouched. The human mind arises from the same source. Yet it is not experienced as divine because it is mixed with thoughts, desires, and emotions.
When these reduce through Silentation and remembrance of the Master, the mind becomes quiet. When it becomes completely still, what remains is Chivam, the original state of divinity.
Divinity is already present as space, silence, and stillness within us. We do not notice it because the mind is constantly active. When the mind becomes silent, even for a short time, divinity is not seen as something separate to achieve. Instead, it is felt as our own natural state. Even though divinity is always present, it reveals itself in three levels.
Brahmam — Divinity as Pure Mind
Brahmam, the first level, is when the mind becomes calm and purified as negative thoughts fade away. Even when thoughts arise, they are positive and non-disturbing. A person feels calm, happy, and balanced. Here, the person feels: “I am experiencing peace or divinity.” Therefore, there is still a sense of “I” experiencing peace. This means duality remains. Brahmam is a clean and peaceful state of mind, where divinity is reflected through the mind.
Parabrahmam — Divinity as Pure Intellect
Parabrahmam is the next stage, where the shift deepens from mind to intellect. At this level, even positive thoughts are not necessary. There is a quiet understanding that arises without thinking. The person can clearly perceive what is right and wrong, without confusion or emotional disturbance. A subtle sense of “I” still remains,but it is very light. Divinity at this stage is not experienced as peace or happiness, but as clarity and simple knowing. Here, the mind is no longer active, yet the identity has not fully disappeared.
Chivam — The Supreme (Beyond Experience)
Chivam is the final level, which cannot be explained in ordinary terms. Here, there is no mind, no intellect, and no experiencer. Because of this, there is no experience of divinity.
Experience needs two things: someone who experiences and something that is experienced. In Chivam, this division is not there.
What really happens is that the one who was experiencing disappears. The sense of “I” comes to an end. It is not that a person becomes Chivam. It is that the person as an identity is no longer present.
Because of this, Chivam cannot be seen, imagined, or experienced. Seeing requires a seer. Thinking requires a mind. Experience requires an experiencer. In this state, none of these are present.
So, the most important understanding is this: when the identity of the experiencer is gone, that itself is called Chivam. It is not a change from one state to another, but the ending of the sense of being separate.
These three levels unfold naturally. First, the mind becomes calm and pure. Then even thinking subsides. Finally, the sense of “I” dissolves.
Silentation plays an important role in this process. It helps to reduce mental noise, which leads to the first level. With deeper practice and the support of the Master’s energy, even the intellect becomes quiet, leading to the second level. When stillness becomes complete and effortless, the experiencer itself disappears, and what remains is Chivam.
In the end, Brahmam can be experienced through the mind. Parabrahmam can be understood without the mind, using Buddhi. But Chivam cannot be experienced or known, because there is no one left to experience or know it.
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Chivality: The Path to Chivam and Inner Liberation
In many spiritual traditions, it is believed that the impurities of the mind, such as desires, fears, anxieties, anger, jealousy, attachments, and ego, are reduced through continuous penance, austerity, or Satwik Tapas, a form of pure spiritual discipline involving sustained inner effort. When a person lives a disciplined life with purity in thought and action, the gross layers of the mind gradually become thinner.
However, as long as even subtle impurities remain in the mind, liberation (Mukti) is not possible. Liberation is not merely a concept or belief; it is a state of absolute inner freedom. A mind filled with impressions, tendencies, reactions, and restlessness cannot experience that freedom. Therefore, the purification of the mind is not optional; it is essential.
In the Chivality system, this purification is accelerated through the energy of the Master, called “Chiv.” The Master is not merely a physical personality but a living source of Chivam, the liberated state. His energy has the capacity to remove deep-rooted impurities that cannot be eliminated by personal effort alone.
However, this energy does not act automatically. The practitioner must consciously draw it through constant remembrance of the Master. Remembrance is not mechanical repetition; it is a gentle, heartfelt inner connection. When one remembers the Master without doubt, prejudice, or expectation, the Master's energy begins to flow into the seeker.
This energy works most effectively when the mind is silent and thoughtless. When thoughts are active, they create disturbance and resistance. Silence makes the mind receptive. Just as still water reflects the moon clearly, a silent mind receives the Master's energy more powerfully.
Interestingly, there are many moments in daily life when we are naturally thoughtless, especially when we are deeply engaged in work. During such times, the mind is relatively quiet because attention is absorbed in action. If one learns to remember the Master during these natural silent gaps, the energy can be received effortlessly.
Therefore, in Chivality, progress ultimately depends on remembrance of the Master combined with Silentation, the practice of consciously silencing the mind. Silentation reduces thought activity, while remembrance invokes the Master's energy. Together, they purify the mind at a deeper level.
This practice should continue until Self-realisation occurs. Self-realisation is not the gaining of something new; it is the discovery of what has always been present. It is the direct experience of one’s true nature beyond the mind. This realisation is equivalent to liberation because the individual no longer identifies with the restless mind but abides in stillness, Chivam.
Some wise men have said that all of us are already liberated. This statement is true from the ultimate standpoint. Our essential nature is pure and free. However, due to ignorance and impurities of the mind, we do not experience this freedom. It is like the sun hidden behind clouds: the sun is always shining, but it is temporarily obscured.
Through continuous practice of Chivality, through Silentation and constant remembrance of the Master, the clouds of impurity gradually dissolve. One day, the seeker does not merely believe in freedom; he experiences freedom from everything — from fear, from attachment, from suffering, and even from the sense of individuality. This experience is not imagination; it is living liberation. The ultimate goal of Chivality is to transform the human mind into the state of Chivam, the fully liberated condition.
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Why the Mind Must Dissolve for True Liberation
Every human being continues in this earthly existence because of relief. It is not because of philosophy or knowledge, but because of subtle psychological comfort. Relief may appear in many forms, such as pleasure, emotional security, entertainment, achievement, relationships, hope, and even spiritual satisfaction.
These are produced by two factors: the mind and the material world. The world provides objects, and the mind extracts relief from them. Without the mind, the object is neutral, and without the object, the mind feels restless. Thus, bondage is the relationship between the two.
Why Leaving the World Feels Impossible
As long as relief is available, detachment is impossible. Even if someone speaks about renunciation, inwardly the mind asks, “Where will I get my comfort?” The mind does not want truth; it wants continuity of relief. This is why attachment survives, desire regenerates, and rebirth becomes inevitable.
Rebirth is not forced from outside; it is pulled from impressions of the mind. The mind that depends on earthly experience naturally gravitates back to earthly existence.
Beyond Physical Death
Death does not end this mechanism. If the mind remains, tendencies, attachments, and subtle cravings remain. The physical body may fall, but the psychological structure continues. As long as the mind seeks relief from material existence, it will return to material existence. Rebirth is not punishment; it is psychological momentum.
Why Detachment Alone Is Not Enough
One may practice detachment by reducing possessions and emotional dependency. However, if subtle relief still comes from recognition, identity, pride, or inner satisfaction from being detached, then the mind is still functioning.
As long as there is some enjoyment, whether gross or subtle, the mind will not dissolve. Detachment without dissolution is incomplete.
The Mind Cannot Liberate Itself
The human mind is part of the five elements and is associated with the element of space (Akasha). It is not separate from nature; it is a refined product of material existence.
Therefore, the mind cannot transcend the material world permanently because it belongs to it. The mind can modify itself. It can purify itself.
It can discipline itself. But it cannot liberate itself, because the liberator and the prisoner are the same.
## The Real Bondage
Bondage does not lie in wealth, family, society, or the earth; it lies in the mind’s need for relief. The mind fears emptiness, absence, and the state of non-experience. So it clings to experience, whether pleasant or unpleasant. Even suffering gives identity. Even pain gives continuity. Thus, the cycle continues.
Why Mano Nasha Is Essential
Mano Nasha (dissolution of mind) does not mean physical death, nor does it mean unconsciousness. It means the end of psychological dependency, relief-seeking, identity formation, and craving for existence.
When the mind dissolves, there is no one seeking pleasure, no one seeking solace, and no one fearing emptiness. Then the material world loses its grip, not because it disappears, but because there is no receiver.
True Liberation
Liberation is not going somewhere else, nor is it reaching a higher world. It is the end of the mind that demands worlds. As long as the mind exists, existence, experience, and birth are required.
When the mind is absent, no relief is needed, no world is required, and no rebirth is compelled. This understanding leads to an important conclusion about the path to liberation.
Why Mano Nasha Is Central in Chivality
In Chivality practice, the aim is to transform the impure mind into a pure mind and ultimately dissolve it through Silentation practice and remembrance of the Master.
True liberation becomes possible only when the mind disappears completely. Therefore, Mano Nasha is not a violent destruction of the mind, but its dissolution in stillness. When the mind disappears, the need for relief ends and the cycle of rebirth ceases.
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