Phase I: The Awakening of Sight
Developing the discernment to see the "Software" of the mind from the perspective of the "User."
Chapter 1: The Seer and the Seen Distinguishing the changing experiencer (ego) from the witnessing Self (Atman).
Chapter 2: Breaking the Mirror of Thought Ending the deep-seated identification with mental reflections, stories, and persistent inner noise.
Chapter 3: The Clarity of the Unconditioned Systematically clearing the cognitive biases, Samskaras (impressions), and conditioning that obscure pure awareness.
Phase II: The Process of Detachment
The surgical removal of the self-image from the external world.
Chapter 4: The Sacred Aloneness Withdrawing identity from external validation, psychological dependency, and emotional entanglement.
Chapter 5: Dissolving the Ego-Grip Untying the "Inner Knots" (Granthis) that bind consciousness to fear, traumatic memory, and the self-concept.
Chapter 6: The Silence of the Vrittis Discovering the "Null-State" of stillness even in the midst of modern responsibility and rapid movement.
Phase III: Living the Realization
The integration of liberated awareness into the practical world of action.
Chapter 7: The Sovereign Presence Remaining established in unshakable clarity while being fully and effectively engaged in worldly duties.
Chapter 8: Action Without Attachment Redefining Karma Yoga as the natural, friction-less expression of a liberated mind.
Chapter 9: The Anatomy of Freedom [IVPR Research Focus] Exploring how the body, mind, and nervous system physically reorganize around sustained inner clarity.
Phase IV: Beyond the Mind
The stable state of unbroken equanimity.
Chapter 10: The Unshakable Peace The lived meaning of Sthitaprajna—stable wisdom and the end of psychological reactivity.
Chapter 11: The Infinite Return Recognizing Kaivalya not as a distant achievement, but as the ever-present, underlying ground of being.
Intellectual Property Note
This architectural breakdown and chapter sequence are the proprietary research of Kavita Jadhav under the Initiative for Vedantic Psychology Research (IVPR). This work is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0.