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Glossary›Sakshi

Glossary

Sakshi

Sanskrit term for 'witness' or 'observer'; the unchanging consciousness that observes thoughts, emotions, and experiences without identification.

What is Sakshi?

Sakshi (Sanskrit: साक्षी) refers to the witnessing consciousness in Hindu philosophy—the aspect of awareness that observes all mental and physical phenomena without becoming entangled in them. Unlike the fluctuating contents of experience (thoughts, sensations, emotions), sakshi represents the stable, unchanging observer that remains constant across all states of consciousness. In Advaita Vedanta, sakshi is understood as the pure awareness (chit) that illuminates all experience but is itself untouched by what it observes, much as a mirror reflects images without being altered by them.

The concept distinguishes between the seer and the seen, positing that true self-knowledge requires recognizing oneself as the witness rather than as the witnessed phenomena. This witnessing awareness is considered self-luminous (svayam-prakasha)—it does not require anything else to know it, yet all other knowledge depends upon it.

Origins & Lineage

The sakshi concept emerges from the Upanishads (circa 800-200 BCE), particularly the Kena and Mandukya Upanishads, which explore the nature of the knower behind all acts of knowing. The Brihadaranyaka Upanishad (3.8.11) describes the witness as “the unseen seer, the unheard hearer, the unthought thinker, the unknown knower.”

Adi Shankara (8th century CE), founder of Advaita Vedanta, systematized the sakshi doctrine in his commentaries, establishing it as central to non-dual philosophy. He distinguished sakshi from both the empirical ego (jiva) and the absolute Brahman, positioning it as the intermediary awareness through which the individual recognizes ultimate reality. Later Advaita teachers including Vidyaranya (14th century) and Sadananda (15th century) elaborated the witness doctrine in texts like Panchadashi and Vedantasara.

The 20th century saw sakshi teaching disseminated globally through figures like Ramana Maharshi, who emphasized self-inquiry (atma-vichara) to recognize the witness, and Nisargadatta Maharaj, whose dialogues repeatedly pointed students toward the observing consciousness. Contemporary teachers in the Advaita and Neo-Advaita movements continue this lineage.

How It’s Practiced

Sakshi is cultivated through witnessing meditation (sakshi bhavana), a practice of observing mental and physical phenomena without reaction or identification. Practitioners sit in meditation and notice thoughts, sensations, and emotions arising and passing, repeatedly returning attention to the awareness that observes these phenomena rather than to the phenomena themselves.

The practice involves three stages: first, observing external sensory experiences (sounds, sensations); second, observing internal mental events (thoughts, memories, emotions); third, recognizing the observer itself—the awareness that remains constant throughout all observations. Unlike concentration practices that focus on a single object, witnessing practice maintains a broad, receptive attention.

Many teachers recommend periodic “witness checks” throughout daily life—brief pauses to notice whether one is identified with thoughts and emotions or resting as the observer. The question “Who is aware of this?” serves as a recurring pointer toward sakshi. Over time, practitioners report increasing ability to maintain witness consciousness during challenging emotions and situations, creating what some describe as “inner space” or “dis-identification.”

Sakshi Today

Contemporary seekers encounter sakshi teaching primarily through Advaita Vedanta teachers, both traditional and modern. Traditional Vedanta schools in India, such as those at the Sringeri and Kanchi mathas, teach sakshi as part of comprehensive philosophical study. Modern satsang teachers influenced by Ramana Maharshi and Nisargadatta—including Mooji, Adyashanti, and Rupert Spira—emphasize direct recognition of witnessing awareness through guided inquiry and pointing-out instructions.

Vipassana and mindfulness meditation, while emerging from Buddhist rather than Hindu tradition, share functional similarities with sakshi practice, leading to cross-pollination and occasional conflation of concepts. Retreat centers worldwide offer programs specifically focused on witness consciousness, often combining sitting meditation with self-inquiry dialogue.

The concept has entered mainstream psychology through constructs like “metacognitive awareness” and “decentering” in mindfulness-based cognitive therapy, though these applications typically omit the metaphysical claims about the nature of the witness found in traditional teaching.

Common Misconceptions

Sakshi is not a practice of suppressing emotions or creating distance from life—a misunderstanding that leads some practitioners toward spiritual bypassing or dissociation. Authentic witnessing includes full acknowledgment of what arises, without the reactive patterns that typically follow. The witness is not another mental position or perspective to achieve, but rather the pre-existing awareness in which all positions appear.

Some confuse sakshi with the Buddhist concept of “bare attention” or “choiceless awareness,” but important differences exist: Buddhism generally denies a permanent witness-self (rejecting the atman doctrine), while Advaita identifies sakshi with the ultimate reality. The witness is also distinct from the “observing ego” in psychoanalysis, which remains a psychological function rather than transcendent awareness.

Sakshi is not a state to be attained or lost—according to traditional teaching, one is always already the witness, and practice consists of recognizing what is perpetually present rather than achieving something new. Seeking the witness as a future attainment paradoxically obscures its present availability.

How to Begin

New practitioners can begin with five-minute periods of sitting quietly and observing thoughts as though watching clouds pass through the sky, noting the awareness that observes without being caught in the content. The question “What is aware of my thoughts right now?” serves as an effective entry point.

For textual study, the Drg-Drishya-Viveka (“Discrimination Between Seer and Seen”), a short Vedantic text attributed to Shankara or his student Bharati Tirtha, provides a systematic introduction to witness consciousness. Ramana Maharshi’s Who Am I? offers accessible pointing-out instructions. Nisargadatta Maharaj’s I Am That presents the witness teaching through dialogue format.

Seek teachers trained in traditional Vedanta or established Advaita lineages, as the pointing-out instructions require precision. Many teachers offer online satsangs and recorded teachings. The key entry point remains consistent inquiry into the nature of the one who is aware—an investigation available in any moment, requiring no special circumstances or preparations.

Related terms

advaita vedantaatmanself inquiryvipassananon dualityramana maharshi
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