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  2. Atma Upanishad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atma_Upanishad

    The Upanishad describes three types of Self : the Bahya-atma or external self (body), the Antar-atma or inner self (individual soul) and the Param-atma or highest self (the Brahman, Purusha). [ 2 ] [ 6 ] The text asserts that one must meditate, during Yoga , on the highest self as one's self that is partless, spotless, changeless, desireless ...

  3. Garbha Upanishad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garbha_Upanishad

    The text uses similes of yajna (fire) ritual to describe how cosmic processes are repeated in the temple of body, with food as offering, mind the Brahman and seeking of the soul (Atman) as the goal of the ritual of life. [10] [18] The text then abruptly jumps to enumerating anatomy of a developed human body, likely from lost chapters of the ...

  4. Katha Upanishad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katha_Upanishad

    [68] [69] Parts of the ideas in these first two similes of Katha Upanishad are of far more ancient origins, and found for example in Book 6, Chapter 47 of Rig veda. [ 67 ] That individual is perennially happy, asserts Katha Upanishad, who realizes the Atman is within him, that he himself is the Master, that the inner Self of all beings and his ...

  5. 50 Powerful Bible Verses About Healing the Body, Mind and Soul

    www.aol.com/50-powerful-bible-verses-healing...

    Acts 8:7 “With loud shrieks, unclean spirits came out of many people, and many who were paralyzed or crippled were healed.” The Good News: Though the healing journey may be difficult, it is ...

  6. Ātman (Hinduism) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ātman_(Hinduism)

    Katha Upanishad, in Book 1, hymns 3.3-3.4, describes the widely cited proto-Samkhya analogy of chariot for the relation of "Soul, Self" to body, mind and senses. [33] Stephen Kaplan [34] translates these hymns as, "Know the Self as the rider in a chariot, and the body as simply the chariot. Know the intellect as the charioteer, and the mind as ...

  7. Ratha Kalpana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ratha_Kalpana

    The body is equated to a chariot where the horses are the senses, the mind is the reins, and the driver or charioteer is the intellect. [2] The passenger of the chariot is the Self (Atman). Through this analogy, it is explained that the Atman is separate from the physical body, just as the passenger of a chariot is separate from the chariot.

  8. Shaucha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shaucha

    Along with daily ablutions to cleanse one's body, shaucha suggests clean surroundings, along with fresh and clean food to purify the body. [9] Lack of shaucha might be the result, for example, of letting toxins build up in the body. [10] Shaucha includes purity of speech and mind. Anger, hate, prejudice, greed, lust, pride, fear, and negative ...

  9. Self-realization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-realization

    The path to extrasensory experience of soul is termed as Bhed Vigyān in scriptures like Samayasāra, Adhyatmasaar, Gyaansaar and works of Shrimad Rajchandra. Bhed Nasti refers to the initial step in spiritual awareness where one distinguishes between the self (soul) and non-self (body, mind, soul's transient paryāys, instincts, etc). In this ...