Taboo as Technology: How Aghoris Enact the Upaniṣads’ Boldest Truth

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Advaita in the Aghori context is a fiercely embodied, non-intellectual expression of non-duality (advaita or advaitācāra — “non-dual conduct”) that radically enacts the Upaniṣadic and tantric truth: ātman = Brahman (or, in their Śaiva language, the individual is none other than Bhairava — the all-encompassing, terrifyingly free form of Śiva). While Ādi Śaṅkarācārya’s Advaita Vedānta employs viveka (discrimination) and neti-neti through śravaṇa-manana-nididhyāsana, the Aghori path — as the last living branch of the medieval Kāpālika tradition (4th–8th century CE) within left-hand (vāmācāra / Kaula) Śaivism — demands total experiential annihilation of every duality through deliberate, heroic transgression (vīra-sādhana). Nothing is “other”; everything is Śiva/Bhairava/Brahman.

Aghoris trace their lineage to Dattātreya, the archetypal avadhūta (one who has “shaken off” all conventions) and ādi-guru of the tradition, who is said to have offered his own flesh as prasād in cremation grounds.

All Is Bhairava: Aghoris Turn Horror into the Ultimate Homa of Non-Duality

Scriptural Foundations (Direct References)

The philosophical root is Vedic/Upaniṣadic monism, but the method is purely tantric:

  • Chāndogya Upaniṣad 3.14.1: Sarvaṃ khalvidaṃ brahma (“Verily, all this is Brahman”). This is the constant Aghori refrain: if everything is Brahman, then cremation ash, human remains, excrement, and the “impure” are equally divine. No thing can defile the knower.
  • Bṛhadāraṇyaka Upaniṣad 1.4.10 & 4.4.25: Aham Brahmāsmi (“I am Brahman”) and tat tvam asi (“Thou art That”). Realized not as theory but as lived identity.
  • Avadhūta Gītā (attributed to Dattātreya, the foundational text of Aghori/Avadhūta non-dualism):
  • 1.2: “All that appears in this realm of forms is alone the Ātman… selfless, immutable, auspicious, One.”
  • 1.4: “All is verily the absolute Self. Distinction and non-distinction do not exist. How can I say ‘It exists; it does not exist’? I am filled with wonder!”
  • 1.13: “You are not born nor do you die… The scripture declares in many ways: ‘All is Brahman.’”
  • 1.15: “There is no you, no me, nor is there this Universe. All is verily the Self alone.”
  • 1.17: “For you there is neither birth nor death… neither bondage nor liberation, neither good nor evil.”
  • 1.21: “Know that which has form to be false, that which is formless to be eternal. Through this truth there is no rebirth.”
  • Vijñāna Bhairava Tantra (a chapter of the Rudrayāmala Tantra, the direct scriptural root of Aghori Bhairava worship):
  • 163 verses presenting 112 dhāraṇās (centering techniques) for immediate entry into non-dual Bhairava consciousness.
  • Void/emptiness meditations (verses 43–49, 58–60): e.g., verse 48 — meditate on the body as empty space (śūnya); verses 45 & 49 — on the empty space of the heart. This is the direct scriptural basis for śava-sādhanā (corpse meditation) and śmaśāna living.
  • Equanimity in horror/fear/intense states (verses 100, 103, 123–126, 129): “Even in states of fear, anger, or intense pleasure, remain centered in the witness — that is Bhairava.”
  • Closing verses (149): “Offering the elements, senses, mind into the fire of total dissolution into the Great Void… that is the real homa (fire sacrifice).”
  • The entire text is framed as Bhairava teaching Bhairavī how to recognize that “I am the essence of all” — exactly the Aghori goal.
  • Kularṇava Tantra (core Kaula text revered by Aghoris):
  • 5.48: “Success is attained by those very things which lead to fall” (Yaireva patanaṃ dravyaiḥ siddhis-tair-eva coditā). This is the classic justification for using taboo substances.
  • On purity/impurity: “The impure does not exist” for the knower (echoed in related Ucchiṣṭa-Mahābhairava Tantra: “The perceiver and the perceived are but one reality. Therefore, the impure does not exist.”).
  • 5.91: The five makāras (wine, meat, fish, grain, sexual union) are permitted only after guru initiation and realization of non-duality — otherwise they cause downfall.
  • Symbolic inner meaning (5.49–52): “Wine is Śakti, flesh is Śiva… the bliss arising from their union is mokṣa itself — the intimate form of Brahman.”
  • “Jīva is Śiva and Śiva is Jīva; the only difference is bondage or freedom.”
  • Other key tantras:
  • Mālinīvijayottara Tantra 18.74: “Here there is neither purity nor impurity, nor deliberation about what may be eaten… neither duality nor non-duality.”
  • Tantrāloka (Abhinavagupta, IV.240–241): “Impure is what has fallen away from consciousness; therefore everything stays pure once it achieves identity with consciousness.”
  • Śivadṛṣṭi (Utpaladeva): “In things there is no purity or impurity whatsoever.”
  • Māhānirvāṇa Tantra: Declares tantra (especially Kaula) as the path for Kali Yuga precisely because it destroys all dualistic distinctions.

How Aghoris Embody These Scriptural Teachings

Every Aghori practice is a living commentary on the above verses:

  • Śmaśāna sādhanā & śava-sādhanā: Directly enacts VBT’s void meditations and Rudrayāmala’s cremation-ground rituals. By sitting on corpses or among burning pyres, the sādhaka experientially dissolves life/death duality (Avadhūta Gītā 1.13, 1.17).
  • Embracing the “impure” (including rare historical use of human flesh, excreta, intoxicants): Literal application of Kularṇava 5.48 and the “perceiver-perceived = one” principle. If all is Brahman, nothing defiles.
  • Vibhūti (ash) smearing & kapāla (skull) rituals: Symbolize impermanence and identity with the eternal (Avadhūta Gītā 1.21: form is false, formless is eternal).
  • Rejection of caste, morality, taboos: Because “neither merit nor demerit exists for the Kaula” (Kularṇava).

These are not hedonism or shock tactics; they are precise yogic technologies prescribed in the Bhairava and Kaula āgamas to force the mind beyond every last trace of duality (dvaita-bhāva) into advaitācāra.

In essence, mainstream Advaita says “neti-neti” and contemplates. Aghori Advaita says “This too is Śiva — enter it fearlessly” and lives the scriptures. The realized Aghori is the avadhūta of the Avadhūta Gītā: one who sees “I am the One, beyond space, continuous… How can I see the Self as visible or hidden?” (1.10).

This path is extraordinarily rare and dangerous without a living guru, as the tantras repeatedly warn. Misuse leads to madness; correct application grants the direct, non-conceptual knowing: Aham Brahmāsmi not as words, but as one’s very being — total freedom in which even the most terrifying is revealed as Śiva. Everything — ash, corpse, ecstasy, horror — is the play of the One.

About Post Author

maulikk.buch

Maulik Buch is a mystic and paranormal researcher and has conducted extensive research of 27 years meeting aghoris, Kapalik, Naga Sadhus, Tantrik, voodoo masters etc and is blessed, with expertise in Rudraksha, Aghor, Tantra, and Vedic rituals . Maulik is a journalist and communication consultant by profession.
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