
Author
Akash – The Larger Intelligence
Akash is not empty space; it is capacity—the subtle field in which all else arises, moves, and remembers. When your inner noise drops, this larger intelligence becomes available.
Pt. Dayaram Joshi says, “Akash is the room of reality. If you tidy your inner house, the room begins to speak.”
What “larger intelligence” means
Think of Akash as the context behind content—the quiet order that allows patterns, timing, and connection. Not superstition, not fortune-telling. When body, breath, and mind align, you perceive finer cues: what to do, when to wait, where to turn. It feels like intuition, but it is trained receptivity.
How to become available
Stillness: Exhale a shade longer than you inhale; the nervous system settles, attention gathers.
Clarity: Clean speech, clean money, clean sleep—static goes down.
Humility: Ask, don’t demand. Precision in the question sharpens perception.
Offering: Let your act be for more than your ego; service thins interference.
A 7-minute Akash practice (daily)
Seat & lamp (30s): Sit easy, spine tall; light a small flame.
Even breath (2 min): Inhale natural; exhale slightly longer through the nose.
Name the question (1 min): One line only—What is the next clean step for X?
Attention in space (2 min): Rest awareness a hand’s breadth in front of the chest; listen without chasing thoughts.
Close & act (1.5 min): Write the smallest actionable step you sensed. Do it today.
Keep the question simple; Akash answers best with steps, not speeches.
Hygiene that amplifies reception
Food & sleep: Lighter dinners, consistent bedtime. A clear body hears subtlety.
Clutter: Tidy one surface daily. Space outside teaches space inside.
Silence pulse: Two quiet minutes at dawn/dusk; rhythm beats intensity.
Satsang & seva: Good company and small service polish perception without drama.
Common mistakes
Chasing visions: Insight is usually quiet and practical.
Outsourcing responsibility: Akash is guidance, not an escape from effort.
Using it for vanity: The field goes noisy when the motive is show.
Skipping verification: Inner signals must stand alongside facts. Align heart and data.
In relationships & work
Timing: Say the hard truth when both systems are receptive; your words will land cleaner.
Meetings: Begin with one minute of shared silence; collective attention sharpens judgment.
Decisions: Let the sequence be—sense → check facts → small pilot → review. Akash is the first nudge, not the final excuse.
The quiet point
Akash doesn’t favor a few; it favors availability. Reduce inner friction, honor small signals, and act with clean intent. Then life starts to feel less like pushing and more like moving with.
“Empty a little every day, and the space will teach you.” – Pt. Dayaram Joshi
Tuesday, 18 November 2025
