Enlightenment, as often misunderstood, is not about merging with an eternal presence but seeing through the illusion of an "I" entirely. While some traditions speak of uniting with the cosmos, the Buddha’s wisdom moves beyond even that—toward the absolute absence of self, revealing a path where no entity exists, no being endures, and nothing holds inherent existence. The vibrating world itself stills, and in that cessation, liberation is found. This is not a doctrine of merging but a path of complete transcendence—where the very notion of an eternal essence dissolves, unveiling the truth beyond all conditioned existence.
The disease of saṃsāra comes to an end—it reaches zero. This means the cycle no longer generates its power, the vibration ceases, and with that, saṃsāra itself dissolves. But more than just cessation, in truth, all the mysteries of the universe become unveiled.
Everything is seen as mere vibration, and the unshaken—the Akampita—is revealed as Nirvana. Not only that, but Akampita is the very edge of the universe itself. If the cosmos is vibration, then its cessation is the only true ending. To see that end is to see Nibbāna—the final stillness where no being, no self, and no entity endures.
Through Abhijñā wisdom, the Aryan Wahanse beholds this truth and offers it to the world—a revelation unparalleled since the time of the Buddha. In reality, this profound analysis is not just something to understand but something that must be explored, for it reshapes the very essence of what we call existence.