The Lost Wisdom of Nalanda

Centuries ago, when knowledge was the highest form of devotion, the ancient Nalanda University stood as a symbol of enlightenment. Scholars from across the world — China, Tibet, Greece, and India — came here to study the deepest secrets of the human mind.
But history took a dark turn. In 1193 A.D., when Bakhtiyar Khilji invaded Bihar, the university was set ablaze. Thousands of manuscripts burned for months, and the wisdom of ages turned to ashes.

The Discovery of Triakshya

Years later, in modern India, a new spark of that lost wisdom reappeared — not in books, but in experience.
During a journey to Varanasi, I met a monk on the ghats — silent, calm, and radiant with unseen awareness. For weeks, I stayed with him, learning through his words and silence. What he shared was not religion or philosophy, but a forgotten process — the awakening of the Third Eye, known in ancient texts as Triakshya.

(The monk who shared this knowledge is no longer in this world, and today, only Shuvnath hold the understanding he passed on.)

What is Triakshya?

Triakshya is not a practice or belief. It is the awakening of inner sight — the ability to sense beyond physical vision, to perceive energy, emotion, and truth without words.
When the mind becomes still and awareness turns inward, a new vision opens — one that sees not with the eyes, but with consciousness itself.

The Path of Awakening

The process of awakening the Third Eye involves:

  1. Silence and Stillness — learning to quiet the noise of thought.
  2. Breath and Focus — channeling inner energy to the center of awareness.
  3. Observation Without Judgment — seeing without reacting.
  4. Inner Light Meditation — awakening the dormant center of perception.

This is not instant magic. It is a gradual alignment of body, mind, and energy — the same process once taught at Nalanda to seekers who sought truth beyond words.

Triakshya in the Modern Age

In today’s world of noise and distraction, the wisdom of Triakshya offers a way back to clarity and awareness. Through the Triakshya Digital Book, I’ve tried to preserve what I learned — the process, the discipline, and the transformation that follows when the Third Eye awakens.

Conclusion

Triakshya is a bridge between lost ancient knowledge and modern awakening. It reminds us that wisdom never truly dies — it waits to be rediscovered.
And today, through this journey, that forgotten vision lives again.