There are two other terms related to this: Paramartha and Paramarthasatya. The word Para means “Absolute, complete.” Parama means “supreme or highest.” Artha is “meaning.” The Sanskrit word Martha means “consciousness or cognizance.” In order to stay within the bosom of the Absolute you have to have absolute cognizance as an Ain Soph. An Ain Soph that does not have cognizance of itself does not have Paramartha. Therefore, all the atomic particles of the Absolute are within Nishpanna or happiness, we can also say Paramarthasatya (Absolute Happiness) but they do not have cognizance of that happiness within their individuality. This is why the Beings that acquire cognizance of their happiness within the bosom of the Absolute are called Paramarthasatyas. Samael Aun Weor stated in the book Tarot and Kabbalah that the Ain Sophs that acquire cognizance of themselves are Ain Soph Paranishpanna. With that term he indicated that the Ain Soph has cognizance of its absolute happiness. The other Ain Sophs exist within the Paranishpanna but without cognizance of it; they are just simple Ain Sophs, not Ain Sophs Paranishpannas. This is why creation exists, because the Ain Soph wants to acquire cognizance of itself. This is why there is complication or Mahamanvantara. This is why the Absolute is always creating a Cosmic Day.
When someone has developed the perception to perceive things in a Paranishpannic way, to have Right View fully developed, this person has reached Paramartha. Paramartha is absolute truth, absolute happiness. What that means is: when you have developed your perception to its fullest capacity, you are naturally happy, Glorian
It is the false or relative ‘I’ called Ahamkara or ego or that Jiva that wakes up, dreams and sleeps. The waker, the dreamer and the sleeper are all changing personalities and unreal. The real self, the real ‘I’ never wakes up, dreams and sleeps. From the point of the Absolute Truth or Paramartha Satta no one wakes up, dreams and sleeps. Excerpted from Philosophy of Dreams by Sri Swami Sivananda, A Divine Life Society publication; First Edition: 1958.