The text consists of 9 verses. Some manuscripts include a prelude in the form of an invocation asserting that the Vedas must be imbibed in one's mind, thoughts and speech, and through truth only is peace assured. The Upanishad opens with the assertion "Devi is one and she alone existed in the beginning", she is
Kama (love), and she is
Atman (soul, Self), The second verse of the Upanishad states that not only Brahma, Vishnu and Rudra are her progeny but every being in the universe is her creation. The Upanishad describes Devi as identical to all truth and reality, and whatever is not she as unreal, non-truth and non-self. She is the ultimate unchanging reality (
Brahman), the consciousness, the bliss who shines by herself. She is everywhere, within and without, asserts the Upanishad. She is pure, she is love and she symbolized as the
Tripurasundari goddess is the form of all. She is the ardha matra, last half syllable, of the
Om syllable. Her
Shakti is in Om. The closing verses of the text asserts that she should be contemplated as "That which I am", as
Sodasi and fifteen syllabled
Sri Vidya, the power of
Savitur,
Sarasvati, and
Gayatri, the sacred, the mother, the auspicious who chooses her own partner, the mistress, the dark, the light, the
Brahmic bliss. ==See also==