Sutra 1.5
Translation The spontaneous upward surge is Bhairava.
Meaning In this concise declaration, the text identifies the very essence of the Divine not as a static object or a distant deity, but as a dynamic, eruptive energy. The term udyama refers to a sudden rising, an effortlessness that precedes thought, or the initial impulse of consciousness to recognize itself. It is the moment before the mind categorizes experience, the raw, vibrating potential that leaps forth from the void. This is not an action you perform; it is the fundamental activity of reality itself, the eternal springing forth of existence from its own depths.
To say this surge is Bhairava is to assert that the terrifying and magnificent power of the Absolute is present in every instant of awakening. When you feel the sudden intake of breath before speaking, the flash of insight before understanding, or the sheer aliveness that pulses beneath your routine, you are touching Bhairava. The tradition teaches that liberation is not found by suppressing this energy or calming the mind into dormancy, but by recognizing that this very upsurge is the nature of your own Self. There is no separation between the one who rises and the power of rising; they are identical.
Contemplation Throughout your day, wait for the gap between the end of one thought and the beginning of the next. In that fleeting silence, notice the subtle, upward lift of awareness that occurs naturally, like a bubble rising in water. Do not try to create this feeling or analyze it; simply rest in the sensation of that spontaneous emergence. Recognize that this tiny, effortless surge is the same power that sustains the stars and animates the universe, and whisper inwardly that this very movement is your true nature.
A contemplative reading in the spirit of the Kashmir Shaivism (Trika / non-dual Tantra) tradition — an aid to reflection, not a substitute for a living teacher or the classical commentaries.