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Mandukya Upanishad — Opening Verse

Mandukya Upanishad 1 Upanishad
📖 Mandukya Upanishad (Atharvaveda)
ओमित्येतदक्षरमिदं सर्वं तस्योपव्याख्यानम् ।
भूतं भवद् भविष्यदिति सर्वमोङ्कार एव ।
यच्चान्यत् त्रिकालातीतं तदप्योङ्कार एव ॥
Om ityetad aksharam idam sarvam tasyopa vyaakhyaanam |
Bhootam bhavad bhavishyaditi sarvam omkaara eva |
Yacchaanyat trikaalateekam tadapyomkaara eva ||
ओमित्येतदक्षरम्
the syllable Om — this one imperishable sound
इदं सर्वम्
all of this (the universe)
तस्य उपव्याख्यानम्
its explanation / elaboration
भूतं भवद् भविष्यत्
past, present, and future
ओङ्कार एव
is nothing but Om
त्रिकालातीतम्
that which is beyond the three times
तदपि
that also

The Mandukya Upanishad opens with a breathtaking claim: Om is everything. The past, the present, the future — all of it is Om. And even what is beyond time is Om.

Om is not merely a sound used in puja or meditation. It is being declared here as the very fabric of existence — the sound-form of Brahman, the ultimate reality. Everything that exists is a form of Om; Om is a form of everything.

The Mandukya is the shortest Upanishad — only 12 verses — yet Adi Shankaracharya's teacher Gaudapada wrote a famous commentary on it (the Mandukya Karika), and Shankaracharya himself commented on that. Together they form one of the deepest treatments of Advaita Vedanta.

The Mandukya Upanishad belongs to the Atharvaveda. It analyses consciousness through the framework of the four states: waking (jagrat), dreaming (svapna), deep sleep (sushupti), and the fourth (turiya) — pure witness-consciousness.

The sage Gaudapada (circa 7th century CE) wrote the Mandukya Karika, which became a foundational text of Advaita Vedanta. His student's student was Adi Shankaracharya.

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