Hour 38 Meditation – Ajapa Japa – The Hamsa-Soham Meditation

Ajapa Japa – The Hamsa-Soham Meditation

Ticket Hour 38 Online Yoga Life
Overview: From Acting to Existing

The majority of meditation practices necessitate an effort—a discipline, a method, or a doing. However, what if you didn’t have to “do” meditation at all?

The link between effortlessness and effort is Ajapa Japa. It is the silent movement of the mantra with the breath, echoed in your very inhalations and exhalations rather than chanted out loud. It occurs naturally and without stress. The seeker discovers how to just listen and be in the moment with the inner chant that was always there.

This is at the core of Hamsa-Soham Meditation, a technique that is revered in many yogic traditions and has been lovingly rediscovered by countless ancient sages as well as masters like Osho, Swami Sivananda, and Swami Satyananda.

Ajapa Japa: What is it?

“A” denotes not

“Japa” refers to chanting or repetition.

Therefore, the literal meaning of Ajapa Japa is “non-recitation of recitation,” or fluid, unplanned repetition.

In this technique, the mantra—more especially, Soham or Hamsa—repeats organically with the breath:

Breathing in: “So”

“Ham” is the exhalation, or the opposite:

Breathing in: “Ham”

“Sa” is the exhalation.

Different traditions use both forms. The meaning is profound regardless of the order:

“Soham” translates to “I am That.”

“Hamsa” means “That I am.”

The Hamsa-Soham Elements’ Symbolic Significance

The pure soul that can distinguish between milk and water—between reality and illusion—is Hamsa (swan).

The constant, ever-present mantra

Your cosmic origin’s subtle connection

Ajapa

The path from internal surrender to deliberate effort

Gliding on the lake of consciousness, the Hamsa is the bird of the soul, constantly resonating, “I am that. I am that.

The Reason for Ajapa Japan Is Special

Whether we realize it or not, it always occurs.

There is no need for outside effort, in contrast to traditional Japanese.

Mantra and breath merge into a single, smooth stream of consciousness.

Like the heartbeat, it eventually continues on its own.

Ajapa Japa Practice Stages

There are five stages of evolution for Ajapa Japa:

Stage Focus/Experience

1. Breath awareness

Taking note of the inhalation and exhalation

2. Sound awareness

Syncing “So” with the inhale and “Ham” with the exhale

3. Internalization at a deep level

Without conscious repetition, the mantra flows.

4. Breath and mantra combine
5. The mantra persists in silence as breathing turns into it and duality vanishes.

It endures even when you’re sleeping or in complete silence.

Ajapa’s journey is from noise to silence rather than from ignorance to knowledge.

The Yogic Scriptures’ Ajapa Japa
Scripture/TraditionReference / Insight
Shiva SamhitaMentions the Hamsa mantra as the breath of God
Hatha Yoga PradipikaDescribes Ajapa Japa as essential for Kundalini arousal
Kularnava TantraSays the highest sadhana is the awareness of breath
OshoTaught Ajapa Japa as an “inner music” that transforms unconscious breathing into meditative breathing
Swami SatyanandaCalled it “the natural meditation”
Advantages of Practice in Ajapa Japa
Physical BenefitsMental & Emotional BenefitsSpiritual Benefits
Lowers blood pressureReduces anxiety & mental agitationDeepens meditative absorption (Dhyana)
Balances nervous systemSharpens focus and memoryAwakens subtle prana and inner silence
Promotes restful sleepHarmonizes breath-mind connectionLeads to Self-realization and inner bliss

How to Prepare for Ajapa Japa Practice: Pick a peaceful, quiet area

Maintain an upright spine while sitting in any meditative position.

Shut your eyes and focus on your breathing.

Method:

Step Description: 

1: Pay attention to the breath’s natural flow; there is no control, only awareness.

 2: Start connecting the mantra with the breath.

Breathe in: “So” (or “Ham”).

3.”Ham” (or “Sa”) is the exhale.

4 Gradually transition to pure witnessing—the sound, the silence, and the breath—by letting the mantra flow with the breath without pressuring it.

5. Let go In complete silence, the mantra will continue on its own.

If necessary, use a mala in the beginning, but as the mantra develops into an internal river on its own, the mala eventually disappears.

Kundalini and Ajapa Japa

The central energy channel, sushumna nadi, is activated by Ajapa Japa.

The spiritual pulse created by repeating “So-Ham” gently awakens the dormant Kundalini energy.

Ajapa harmonizes all chakras and is safe, natural, and subtle in contrast to forceful methods.

Sincere Ajapa Japa practice has the power to awaken the soul itself, resulting in a profound inner blossoming of bliss and silence.

Adaptation to Everyday Life

After your practice session, Ajapa Japa doesn’t stop. It starts to carry you through the day:

Walking: Steps flow with the mantra

Working: Emotions are balanced by breath awareness

The mantra hums in the background while you sleep.

Stress: Soham’s voice brings you back to reality

This is Ajapa’s grace: wherever you go, you carry a shrine of stillness inside of you.

Introspective Questions for Self-Reflection

Even when I’m not meditating, can I feel the mantra Soham shifting with every breath?

Does Ajapa Japa cause a slight tremor in my heart or spine?

Since starting this practice, has my breathing gotten quieter and smoother?

Do I perform Ajapa with loving awareness or as a robotic routine?

Can I rest in the mantra as a witness, rather than a doer?

Conclusion: Ajapa is the Soul’s Silent Music

Chanting is not necessary. You don’t have to exert yourself. You just have to pay attention to the breath, the pause between breaths, and the truth that reverberates with each inhalation and exhalation: “Soooo.”

“Haaam.” “I am That… That I am…”

Ajapa Japa turns into your living meditation when the mantra turns into a whisper inside your breath and the breath turns into a prayer inside your being.