The profound yogic practice of developing awareness of one’s inner landscape—thoughts, emotions, sensations, and ultimately, the space between them—is known as Antar Mouna, or “Inner Silence.”
By becoming a silent observer of all inner activity, Antar Mouna permits silence to arise naturally, in contrast to many other methods that seek to physically silence the mind. It is the acceptance and transcendence of thoughts rather than their repression.
Antar Mouna is a state as well as a process. It is a process that includes phases of growing self-awareness. It is the state in which effortless silence within blossoms.
Sanskrit Term | Meaning |
Antar | Inner |
Mouna | Silence |
Antar Mouna | Inner Silence or Silent Witnessing |
Originating in the Tantric and Yogic traditions, Swami Satyananda Saraswati of the Bihar School of Yoga systematized Antar Mouna in the modern era.
Antar Mouna fills the gap by bringing the unconscious into light, which creates the conditions for true meditation to occur. Many traditional systems taught concentration (Dharana) and absorption (Dhyana) following purification.
The majority of people are always thinking about their worries, fantasies, regrets, and judgments. This internal chatter saps vitality, warps perception, and stymies intuition.
Antar Mouna’s advantages:
“A dead man’s silence is not the silence you achieve through awareness. It is the quiet of a flame in motion.
–Osho
Let’s examine the methodical technique of Antar Mouna as it is taught in traditional yoga:
Stage | Name | Description |
1 | Awareness of External Stimuli | Paying attention to external sounds, smells, and physical sensations |
2 | Consciousness of Inner | Thoughts Seeing ideas as they come to mind without responding |
3 | Generation and Disposal of Thoughts | Consciously generating and releasing thoughts |
4 | Uninterrupted Observation | Thoughts diminish naturally |
5 | Knowledge of the Quiet Area | Observing the spaces between ideas |
6 | Constant Inner Quiet | Staying in the stillness and silence outside of the mind |
Every step gets ready for the one after it. Moving through the levels is facilitated by perseverance and regular practice.
Technique | Focus | Effort Type |
Antar Mouna | Inner thoughts and silence | Passive observation |
Japa (Mantra) | Repetition of a sound | Active focus |
Mindfulness (Vipassana) | Present moment sensations/thoughts | Passive attention |
Trataka | Gazing at external object | Concentration |
Breath Awareness | Natural breathing | Soft witnessing |
Because Antar Mouna engages the thinking process rather than opposes it, it is particularly beneficial for modern minds that are full of stimulation and unrest.
Sitting in a meditative position is one way to practice this. The length can range from 20 to 60 minutes, with a gradual increase in length.
STAGE 1: Awareness of the Outside World
STAGE 2: Unplanned Thought Observation
STAGE 3: Generation and Disposal of Thoughts
Step 4: Regaining Awareness of Spontaneous Thoughts
STAGE 5: Recognition of Quietness
Step 6: Maintain Inner Quiet
According to Osho, silence is an overpowering presence rather than a form of suppression. According to his teachings:
“Your heart becomes a flute for the divine when your inner chatter stops.”
Antar Mouna’s development is reflected in the phases of observing the inner world in Osho’s Nataraj, Nadabrahma, and Vipassana meditations.
It is mental overactivity, not physical activity, that overstimulates and exhausts the modern mind. Antar Mouna is the remedy because it creates space for pure awareness to emerge rather than numbing the mind.
This quiet within:
Day | Focus Area | Suggested Time |
1 | External awareness (Stage 1) | 15–20 minutes |
2 | Thought observation (Stage 2) | 20 minutes |
3 | Create & release thoughts (Stage 3) | 25 minutes |
4 | Observe spontaneous thoughts | 25–30 minutes |
5 | Notice silence between thoughts | 30 minutes |
6 | Sit in silence | 30+ minutes |
7 | Cycle through all 6 stages | 45–60 minutes |
Repeat the weekly cycle, progressively lengthening and deepening it.
Underneath the noise, silence already exists and cannot be obtained. Instead of fighting the noise, Antar Mouna teaches us to become conscious of it until it becomes inconspicuous.
Osho once said, “You don’t have to go far to find silence. Silence will welcome you like an old friend if you just remove your thoughts from it.