(or Ah-hi; Sanskrit अहि) In ancient literature, Ahi can have many meanings depending upon usage: a snake, the serpent of the sky, the demon Vritra, a cloud, water, the sun, a traveller, the navel, lead, or (in arithmetic) the number eight. In Theosophy, the term Ah-hi is defined as “the serpents or dragons of wisdom,” a reference to realized Beings. In the Germanic Eddas, the Dragon is called Ahti.
Ah-hi (Sensar), Ahi (Sanskrit) Serpents, Dhyan Chohans, “Wise Serpents” or Dragons of Wisdom. Theosophical Glossary, HPB
(Hebrew, אימא ; אם “mother”) A Kabbalistic name of the Divine Feminine or Goddess.
Continue reading “Aima”
(Hebrew אין) The first aspect of the primordial Absolute or Emptiness.
“AIN is the same as SAT in Sanskrit, in other words, the Unmanifested Absolute.” – Samael Aun Weor, Tarot and Kabbalah
“The Thirteenth Aeon, which is beyond the Twelve Gates, is Ain, Sat, the Unmanifested One. Knocking on the Thirteenth Gate is equivalent to entering the bosom of the Cosmic Common Eternal Father, whose Hebraic name is Aelohim.” – Samael Aun Weor, The Pistis Sophia Unveiled
Egyptian name for both the netherworld and the goddess who presides there to aid the suffering beings of that region.