તત્ત્વમસિ
Tat Tvam Asi (That Thou Art) in Gujarati · ગુજરાતી
તમારી ભાષા/લિપિમાં વાંચો
ઉત્પત્તિ અને કથા
Chandogya Upanishad, Verse 6.8.7 · Traditional (Upanishadic); taught by sage Uddalaka Aruni · Vedic / Upanishadic
In the sixth chapter of the Chandogya Upanishad, the sage Uddalaka Aruni instructs his son Shvetaketu, who had returned from twelve years of study proud of his learning. Through a series of beautiful illustrations — the clay and its products, the juices gathered by bees into honey, the rivers merging into the sea, the salt dissolved invisibly in water, and the seed of the great Nyagrodha tree — Uddalaka shows that one subtle essence underlies all things. Concluding each teaching he declares, 'That is the Truth, That is the Self, Tat Tvam Asi — That thou art, O Shvetaketu,' repeating it nine times so the truth is firmly grasped.
✦ શાસ્ત્રોમાં કહ્યા પ્રમાણે
Sages of the Vedanta tradition hold that the sincere realization of this single sentence is itself the goal of all scripture — that the moment a prepared seeker truly knows 'That thou art', the long dream of separateness and the fear of death dissolve, for one has recognized one's own Self as the deathless Brahman.
મંત્ર
કોઈપણ પંક્તિ અથવા ▶ બટન દબાવી સાંભળો
સ ય એષોઽણિમૈતદાત્મ્યમિદં સર્વમ્ । તત્સત્યં સ આત્મા તત્ત્વમસિ શ્વેતકેતો ॥
sa ya eṣo'ṇimaitadātmyam idaṁ sarvam tat satyaṁ sa ātmā tat tvam asi śvetaketo
અર્થ:That which is the subtlest essence — this whole universe has That as its Self. That is the Truth. That is the Self. That thou art, O Shvetaketu.
શબ્દ-શબ્દ અર્થ
ઉચ્ચારણ સાંભળવા કોઈપણ શબ્દ પર ક્લિક કરો
Tat Tvam Asi (That Thou Art) પાઠના લાભ
One of the four Mahavakyas (great sayings) of the Upanishads, used for contemplation (nididhyasana) on the identity of the Self and Brahman.
Reveals that the individual Self is not separate from the supreme Reality, dissolving the root ignorance of duality.
Bestows Self-knowledge (Atma-jnana) and liberation (moksha) when meditated upon with a prepared mind.
Cultivates inner peace and fearlessness by establishing the seeker in the unchanging Self.
Forms the heart of Advaita Vedanta study and is recited at the start and close of Vedantic enquiry.
Frees the mind from attachment to the perishable by turning it toward the eternal Truth.
Tat Tvam Asi (That Thou Art) જપ વિધિ
This is a mantra for contemplation rather than mere repetition. Sit quietly, recite 'Tat Tvam Asi' slowly, and reflect on its meaning — that the 'Thou' (your innermost awareness) and the 'That' (Brahman, the source of all) are one and the same. Traditionally studied under a qualified teacher after preparing the mind through hearing (shravana) and reasoning (manana), then dwelt upon in deep meditation (nididhyasana).
વારંવાર પુછાતા પ્રશ્નો
આ પણ વાંચો
ॐ
સંપૂર્ણ Tat Tvam Asi (That Thou Art) શ્લોક-શ્લોક અર્થ સહિત વાંચો, અથવા વધુ પવિત્ર પાઠ જુઓ