Hour 56 Meditation – Nada Brahma – Sound as the Divine

Nada Brahma – Sound as the Divine

Ticket Hour 56 Online Yoga Life
Introduction: The Universe Is Made of Sound

In the Indian yogic tradition, there is a profound declaration:

“Nada Brahma” – Sound is God. The universe is sound.”

Everything in the universe — from the beating of the body to the rotating galaxies — vibrates. Ultimately, this vibration is not a separate entity from consciousness. Because of this, the ancient yogis honored sound not only as a sensory reality, but as a portal into the Divine.

In this module, we delve into Nada Dhyana — the meditation on sound — which leads to the mystical experience that all sound (nada) eventually merges into Brahman, the Ultimate.

Understanding Nada Brahma:
  • Nada: Sound, vibration, resonance
  • Brahma: The Absolute, the Infinite, the Formless Source
  • Nada Brahma: The philosophy and experience that Sound itself is Divine
  • Shabda Brahman: Sound as the carrier of Brahman; the sacred Word
Four Levels of Sound (According to Yogic and Tantric Understanding):
  • Transcendent (Para): Unadulterated, unstructured sound; beyond time and space
  • Subtle (Pashyanti): Imagined sound; between Ajna and Sahasrara
  • Mental (Madhyama): Thought sound (inner speech); throat (Vishuddhi Chakra)
  • Gross (Vaikhari): Heard, spoken sound; mouth, vocal cords

Nada meditation allows you to progress from Vaikhari (gross) to Para (silence), from outer noise to inner silence, from form to formless.

Scriptural Roots of Nada Meditation:
  • Rig Veda: Explains the universe as born out of the sound of the cosmic drum
  • Upanishads: Mention the “Anahata Nada” — unstruck sound in the heart
  • Hatha Yoga Pradipika (Chapter 4): Details the Nada Anusandhana practice
  • Shiva Samhita: Proclaims inner sound as a Self-realization technique
What Is Nada Dhyana?
  • Meditation on sound, including:
    • External sound: Music, chants, mantras, sounds of nature
    • Internal sound: The unstruck sound (Anahata Nada) heard in silence
    • Vibratory awareness: Sensation of sound as energy, rather than hearing it
  • The meditator dissolves into the sound, then into the origin of the sound, and ultimately into silence.
Types of Nada Brahma Meditation:
  • Mantra Japa: Repetition of sacred sound such as OM, So-Ham, or personal mantra — Effect: Focus, clarity, cleansing of energy
  • Bhramari Pranayama: Humming like a bee while closing ears and eyes — Effect: Awakens inner sound, quiets mind
  • Anahata Nada Meditation: Listening to the inner sound in deep silence — Effect: Results in transcendence, union with the Self
  • Sound Bath or Classical Music: Listening fully aware to sacred instrumental music — Effect: Opens heart, focuses awareness
  • Tantric Chanting: Utilization of particular seed sounds (bija mantras) such as Hreem, Aim, Shreem — Effect: Activates chakras, awakens Shakti
Practice: Inner Sound Meditation (Nada Anusandhana):
  • Sit in comfortable posture with spine straight, eyes closed.
  • Close ears with thumbs (Shanmukki Mudra or softly compress tragus).
  • Pay attention to internal sounds appearing on the way — buzzing, ringing, hissing, flue-like tone.
  • Don’t control or comment on the soundings — only deeply listen.
  • When attention enhances, you are likely to discern fainter higher pitches.
  • With time, these soundings even evaporate into expanses of pure silence.
  • Train for 15–20 minutes at the start, going progressively longer.
Sacred Symbolism: The Way of the Sound
  • OM (AUM): Symbolizes the whole range of sound — waking (A), dreaming (U), deep sleep (M), and silence
  • Anahata Nada: “Unstruck Sound” — the original vibration heard during meditation, not produced by any external mechanism
  • Divine Flute (Krishna): Represents the soul being played by the Divine — pure surrender to Nada
  • Veena of Saraswati: Knowledge and harmony through the sacred frequency of truth
Benefits of Nada Brahma Meditation:
  • Deep inner peace and emotional balance
  • Awakening intuition and subtle consciousness
  • Activation of Ajna and Sahasrara chakras
  • Reducing anxiety, insomnia, and mind chatter
  • Spiritual insight — awareness of the Self as Silence beyond sound
Integrating Nada into Daily Life:
  • During bathing: Chant quietly or hum to sense vibration in the body
  • While walking: Listen to nature sounds — birds, wind, leaves — with complete awareness
  • During cooking: Chant your mantra or listen to sacred music while cooking
  • Prior to sleep: Hum Bhramari or listen to OM chanting to soothe nervous system
  • Meditation: Attend to inner vibration or delicate ringing
Questions for Inner Exploration
  • Am I able to truly listen — not with the ears, but with entire being?
  • What is the most delicate sound I ever heard within?
  • How do sounds change my level of being?
  • Can I remain rooted in awareness even amidst noise or turmoil?
  • What happens when I move from hearing outer noise to inner silence?
Nada Brahma Is Not a Concept — It Is a Realization

When the seeker, the sound, and the listening all melt away — only Brahman remains.

Sound, silence, and self become one radiant stillness.

As the Rig Veda states:

“In the beginning was the Word. And the Word was with God. And the Word was God.”

This is Nada Brahma — sound as the Divine.