Upāya and Upeya as a Pair
Upeya (Sanskrit: उपेय) — from upa-i (to approach, to attain) — is the goal of all spiritual striving, the 'what one approaches' as opposed to upāya (the 'how' or means). In Śrī Vaiṣṇava discourse, upāya and upeya are always discussed as a pair because the highest spiritual aspiration must be clearly defined.
The Upeya in Sri Vaishnavism
The upeya is Śrīman Nārāyaṇa — specifically:
- The direct experience (sākṣātkāra) of the Lord's divine form in Śrī Vaikuṇṭham
- The eternal performance of kainkaryam (loving service) to the Lord and Śrī
- The uninterrupted enjoyment (bhoktṛtva) of the Lord's beauty, grace, and glory
This is not a distant, abstract 'union' but a living, conscious, devotional relationship — the mukta as eternal servant (dāsa), the Lord as eternal master (śeṣī).
Uniqueness: Upeya Even as Means
Piḷḷai Lokācārya notes a beautiful paradox: Bhagavān is both the upāya (the means, since He accomplishes the liberation) and the upeya (the goal). This is because the soul's relationship with the Lord cannot be bifurcated into 'path' and 'destination' — He is present and accessible even now as antaryāmin, and He is the ultimate fulfillment in Vaikuṇṭham.
Dvayam Encodes Upeya
The second sentence of Dvayam — 'I desire the kainkaryam of Nārāyaṇa and Śrī' — is the articulation of upeya: the soul explicitly declares what it seeks. The completeness of Dvayam lies in its covering both upāya and upeya in its two sentences.