Tag: Aparigraha

  • Work Without Motive: Sri Sri Ravi Shankar on Intuition, Nishkama Karma, and Flow States

    Work Without Motive: Sri Sri Ravi Shankar on Intuition, Nishkama Karma, and Flow States

    This article unpacks the axiom “the best work comes out when you work without any motive” through Sri Sri Ravi Shankar’s description of intuition as a “sudden sprout of thought,” the Bhagavad Gita’s Nishkama Karma, and insights from modern psychology. It distinguishes non-attachment from aimlessness, showing how purpose can remain strong while egoic craving for…

  • Introducing Jainism to a Non‑Jain Partner: Research‑Backed, Ahimsa‑Centered Guide to Harmony

    Introducing Jainism to a Non‑Jain Partner: Research‑Backed, Ahimsa‑Centered Guide to Harmony

    This research-backed guide shows how to introduce Jainism to a non-Jain partner through ethics-first dialogue, practical routines, and emotionally intelligent communication. It explains core doctrines—ahimsa, anekantavada, aparigraha, karma theory, and the nine tattvas—without jargon, then translates them into workable household practices. Readers learn how to approach Samayik and Pratikraman together, navigate Jain diet and kitchen…

  • The Fragrance of Truth: Why Dharmic Spiritual Wisdom Must Never Be Bought or Sold

    The Fragrance of Truth: Why Dharmic Spiritual Wisdom Must Never Be Bought or Sold

    A flower does not sell its fragrance—this classical metaphor explains why authentic spirituality in Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism cannot be commodified. Drawing on the Upanishads, the Bhagavad Gita, and core dharmic values such as aparigraha, seva, and anekantavada, this analysis distinguishes stewardship from sale and gratitude from price. It shows how guru–shishya pedagogy, dhamma-dana,…

  • Mahabharata Wisdom on the True Gift: Markandeya’s Guide to Nishkama Dāna and Seva

    Mahabharata Wisdom on the True Gift: Markandeya’s Guide to Nishkama Dāna and Seva

    This long-form exploration distills Sage Markandeya’s Mahabharata teaching on the nature of the true gift (dāna) and explains why intention, not magnitude, confers ethical value. It maps dāna to the Bhagavad-Gita’s guṇa framework, clarifying the difference between sāttvika, rājasa, and tāmasa giving. Through the exemplar of King Śibi, it highlights abhayadāna (the gift of fearlessness)…

  • Spirituality of Nature: Sacred Dharmic Wisdom, Science-Backed Healing, Inner Resilience

    Spirituality of Nature: Sacred Dharmic Wisdom, Science-Backed Healing, Inner Resilience

    This long-form guide presents an academic yet accessible exploration of the spirituality of nature across Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism. It grounds ecological reverence in the Upanishads and the Bhagavad Gita, links practices like mindfulness and pranayama to measurable health benefits, and shows how Ahimsa and Aparigraha become daily Environmental stewardship. Readers gain a stepwise…

  • Dissolving Trishna’s Hidden Fire: Timeless Dharmic Strategies to Transform Craving into Freedom

    Dissolving Trishna’s Hidden Fire: Timeless Dharmic Strategies to Transform Craving into Freedom

    This long-form, research-driven exploration explains trishna (craving) as the subtle energy that precedes action—the “root before the root.” It integrates Hindu, Buddhist, Jain, and Sikh perspectives to present a unified Dharmic framework for transforming craving into clarity and freedom. Readers gain a technical map (kleśas, vāsanās, vedanā, dependent arising), scriptural anchors (Yoga Sutra, Bhagavad Gita,…

  • Conquer Fear of Failure: Evidence-Backed Dharmic Practices to Unlock Peak Efficiency

    Conquer Fear of Failure: Evidence-Backed Dharmic Practices to Unlock Peak Efficiency

    Fear of failure often hijacks attention and slows execution just when performance matters most. This article integrates dharmic wisdom and behavioral science to convert that fear into steady, reliable efficiency. It explains how breath-first resets like Bhramari pranayama and Nadi Shodhana regulate arousal and restore cognitive control. It shows how Nishkama Karma reframes success around…

  • Liberating the Householder’s Heart: Aparigraha via Dana, Seva, and Guru-centered Living

    Liberating the Householder’s Heart: Aparigraha via Dana, Seva, and Guru-centered Living

    This essay examines possessiveness in the grihastha ashrama and presents aparigraha, practiced through dāna and seva, as the shastric antidote. It outlines a give-first discipline—prioritizing Guru, Ishta, and dharmic service before personal consumption—that steadily dissolves attachment. The discussion contextualizes the aspirational fifty-percent ideal found in certain Vaishnava teachings while advocating progressive, capacity-based steps. Cross-dharmic parallels…

  • Beyond Abundance: Why Modest Expectations Foster Lasting Happiness in Dharmic Wisdom

    Beyond Abundance: Why Modest Expectations Foster Lasting Happiness in Dharmic Wisdom

    Modern abundance has not eliminated dissatisfaction because expectations often outrun reality. Dharmic wisdom—Hindu, Buddhist, Jain, and Sikh—offers a unifying solution: cultivate santosha (contentment) and aparigraha (non-hoarding) while acting with clarity and purpose. The Bhagavad Gita’s karma-yoga and the Yoga Sutra’s abhyāsa–vairāgya framework train steadiness without suppressing healthy ambition. Contemporary psychology aligns with these teachings: lower,…

  • Beyond Maya: Dharmic Wisdom on Materialism, Ethical Wealth, and Lasting Fulfilment

    Beyond Maya: Dharmic Wisdom on Materialism, Ethical Wealth, and Lasting Fulfilment

    Hindu philosophy and its sister Dharmic traditions view wealth as a legitimate aim governed by ethics, moderation, and service. The puruṣārthas align Artha with Dharma and Moksha, while the Bhagavad Gita’s Karma Yoga reframes success as disciplined action without fixation on results. Upanishadic counsel, Yoga’s aparigraha, Buddhism’s Right Livelihood, Jain vows of limitation, and Sikh…

  • The Eternal Joy Within: Dharmic Wisdom on True Happiness, Ananda, and Freedom from Suffering

    The Eternal Joy Within: Dharmic Wisdom on True Happiness, Ananda, and Freedom from Suffering

    Modern culture often ties happiness to external milestones, yet Hindu wisdom distinguishes this conditional pleasure from intrinsic ananda—the steady joy of awareness. Drawing on the Upanishads, the Bhagavad Gita, and Yoga philosophy, this essay maps how attention becomes entangled in craving and how disciplined living restores clarity. It outlines four complementary yogas—karma, bhakti, jñāna, and…

  • Beyond the Senses’ Trap: Dharmic Science of Lasting Joy across Hindu, Buddhist, Jain, Sikh

    Beyond the Senses’ Trap: Dharmic Science of Lasting Joy across Hindu, Buddhist, Jain, Sikh

    Modern restlessness around pleasure and possession is precisely mapped in the shared wisdom of Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism. Each tradition explains how untrained senses agitate the mind and how disciplined attention—through pratyahara, mindfulness, aparigraha, Seva, and devotion—transforms agitation into equanimity. The piece integrates Hindu models of the indriyas, Gita psychology of desire, Buddhist dependent…

  • Unattached Like the Sun: Dharmic Wisdom on the Divine Light That Impartially Illumines All

    Unattached Like the Sun: Dharmic Wisdom on the Divine Light That Impartially Illumines All

    This article examines the Hindu aphorism that the Divine is like the sun—illuminating all without attachment—and shows how this insight unifies the Dharmic traditions of Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism. Drawing on scriptural anchors such as the Bhagavad Gita (13.33; 5.10; 9.9; 15.6; 15.12) and the Upanishads, it explains why Brahman/Īśvara is described as nirlepa…

  • Why Nothing Is Ever Lost: Dharmic Wisdom to Transform Grief into Clarity and Peace

    Why Nothing Is Ever Lost: Dharmic Wisdom to Transform Grief into Clarity and Peace

    This long-form exploration explains why, across Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism, nothing is ever truly lost—forms change while meaning, memory, and value continue. It clarifies Vedanta’s two levels of truth, showing how the atman remains untouched even as prakriti transforms. It integrates Buddhist dependent origination, Jain Anekantavada, and Sikh Hukam to present a unified dharmic…

  • The Conscious User: Mastering AI with Jain, Buddhist, Hindu, and Sikh Wisdom

    The Conscious User: Mastering AI with Jain, Buddhist, Hindu, and Sikh Wisdom

    Artificial Intelligence is now a household reality; the challenge is using it without losing clarity, agency, or ethics. This essay outlines a dharmic framework—rooted in Jainism and harmonized with Buddhism, Hinduism, and Sikhism—for human-centered, responsible AI. It translates anekantavada, syadvada, and nayavada into concrete practices for uncertainty handling, multi-metric evaluation, and context-aware decisions. Ahimsa informs…

  • Jada Bharata vs. Kali Yuga: Unmasking Algorithmic Gurus and Reclaiming Timeless Dharma

    Jada Bharata vs. Kali Yuga: Unmasking Algorithmic Gurus and Reclaiming Timeless Dharma

    Jada Bharata’s encounter with the modern attention economy offers a precise lens for navigating Kali Yuga’s spiritual noise. Grounded in the Bhagavata Purana, the sage’s teachings on vairagya, mauna, sakshi-bhava, and nishkama-karma map cleanly onto today’s influencer culture and consumer spirituality. Clear criteria from the Upanishads and the Gita help distinguish authentic guidance from spectacle…

  • Science of Sacrifice: Dharmic principles to practice tyaga, seva, and everyday yajna wisely

    Science of Sacrifice: Dharmic principles to practice tyaga, seva, and everyday yajna wisely

    Sacrifice in a dharmic sense is intelligent, freely chosen renunciation that serves a higher, shared good. This comprehensive guide defines tyaga in relation to dana, tapas, seva, and yajna, and shows how sattva, rajas, and tamas shape the quality of any offering. It unifies insights from Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism—linking loka-sangraha, dana, Aparigraha, and…

  • Srimad Bhagavatam 11.3.13: Detachment, Sacred Stewardship, and Seva for Lasting Peace

    Srimad Bhagavatam 11.3.13: Detachment, Sacred Stewardship, and Seva for Lasting Peace

    Delivered at ISKCON Juhu, Mumbai on 7 April 2026, H.H Guru Prasad Swami’s exposition on Srimad Bhagavatam 11.3.13 frames detachment as sacred stewardship rather than denial. The lecture explains how body, speech, and mind can be harmonized in seva to Krishna, turning temporary possessions into vehicles of lasting purpose. A technical scaffold—sambandha, abhidheya, prayojana—shows why…

  • Modern Education’s Illusion of Control: Dharmic Wisdom to Build Resilient, Purposeful Lives

    Modern Education’s Illusion of Control: Dharmic Wisdom to Build Resilient, Purposeful Lives

    Modern culture often trains people to believe life can be engineered into submission. Dharmic traditions—Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism—offer a corrective: disciplined agency paired with principled surrender. The Bhagavad Gita’s focus on action without attachment, the Yoga Sutra’s blend of practice and non-attachment, Buddhism’s insight into impermanence, Jainism’s many-sidedness, and Sikhism’s hukam together form a…

  • Resisting the Dream‑Big Mandate: The Liberating Dharma, Joy, and Science of Wanting Less

    Resisting the Dream‑Big Mandate: The Liberating Dharma, Joy, and Science of Wanting Less

    This essay interrogates the cultural pressure to “dream big” and shows, with research and Dharmic insight, why wanting less can enhance well-being. It traces how social comparison and positional goods narrow youthful aspirations into a single script centered on status and income. Drawing on hedonic adaptation and self-determination theory, it explains why material gains often…