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The Silent Power of Association: Satsanga, Desire-Transfer, and Protecting the Bhakti-Latā

Association transfers desires, shapes attention, and quietly sets the course of spiritual life. Drawing on Bhagavad Gita psychology, cross-dharmic teachings on satsanga, kalyāṇa-mitra, sādhu-saṅga, and sangat, and contemporary findings on social contagion and habit science, this essay explains why company is causal, not incidental. It defines practical signatures of uplifting association and clarifies how to…
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Celebrate Birthdays by Tithi for Profound Spiritual Well‑Being: A Scholarly, Practical Guide

Observing birthdays by janma tithi, rather than the civil date, aligns personal milestones with the Hindu calendar’s exact Sun–Moon geometry. This lunar approachaffirmed by Sadguru Dr Charudatta Pingale (HJS)anchors the day in Vedic timekeeping and fosters spiritual well‑being. Practical guidelines clarify how to identify the janma tithi, handle kshaya/vriddhi tithis, and balance janma tithi with…
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A Guru Can Guide, Not Save: Self‑Realization Across Hindu, Buddhist, Jain, Sikh Paths

Across Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism, a unifying principle stands out: a guru can guide, not save, and Self-Realization depends on disciplined personal effort. This article grounds the point in the Bhagavad Gita and Upanishads, while showing its parallels in Buddhist, Jain, and Sikh teachings. It clarifies how grace and effort cooperate without inviting passivity,…
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Why Pleasure Escapes Us: Hindu Wisdom on Desire, Avidya, and the Path to Lasting Ananda

Why does pleasure fade so quickly, and why does desire return so reliably? This long-form analysis uses Hindu philosophyBhagavad Gita, Yoga Sutras, and Upanishadsto explain the psychology of craving via avidya, raga-dvesha, samskara, and the gunas. It clarifies the distinction between sukha (contact-based pleasure) and ananda (enduring joy) and situates kama within the purusharthas under…
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Dissolving Matter’s Mirage: Dharmic Wisdom on Returning to the Primordial, Nondual Source

This essay examines how dharmic traditions understand the illusion of materiality and the emergence of a primordial, nondual source through deep inquiry. Drawing on the Upanishads, Bhagavad Gita, Advaita Vedanta, and yogic practice, it explains the movement from gross to subtle via pañca-kośa and the triad of sthūla–sūkṣma–kāraṇa śarīra. It highlights complementary perspectives in Buddhism…
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Disarming the Ego: A Cross-Dharmic, Science-Backed Guide to Self-Realization and Freedom

Ego is the single greatest barrier to self-realization because it fuses awareness with passing roles and narratives, a pattern Dharmic traditions diagnose with remarkable agreement. This essay integrates Vedanta, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism with cognitive science to explain how Avidya and identity habits formand how to unwind them. Readers gain a precise map of the…
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True Humility, Not Self-Hatred: A Dharmic Guide to Ego, Worth, and Inner Strength

Humility in the shastras is not self-hatred; it is an accurate acknowledgment of limitation that preserves self-worth while dismantling narcissism and self-promotion. Across Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism, humility appears as amanitvam, anatta, Anekantavada, Aparigraha, and nimrata, forming a shared dharmic ethic. Cognitive biases and modern incentives make humility difficult, but dharmic psychology and disciplined…
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From Humble Beginnings to Enduring Eminence: Scholarship, Faith, and Dharmic Unity

This essay maps the path from humble beginnings to enduring eminence through the dharmic lenses of scholarship, faith, struggle, legacy, and inspiration. It shows how the Guru-Shishya Tradition, Nalanda-style scholastic cultures, Jain Anekantavada, Sikh Seva, and vedantic inquiry create complementary routes to excellence. Readers gain a pragmatic five-vector blueprintVidya, Sadhana, Seva, Sangha, and Shraddhafor integrating…
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Karma and Karmaphala in the Ramayana and Mahabharata: Dharma, Consequence, and Liberation

This essay reads the Ramayana and Mahabharata as precise ethical maps of karma (action) and karmaphala (consequence), showing how intention, duty, and context shape outcomes. It explains sañchita, prārabdha, and āgāmi karma, and situates them within dharma and the puruṣārthas. Through case studiesDaśaratha’s unintended harm, Rāvaṇa’s hubris, the dice hall’s complicity, Karna’s complexity, and Bhīṣma’s…
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When Sacred Sound Met the Beatles: Srila Prabhupada’s 1969 Kirtan at Tittenhurst Park

In September 1969 at Tittenhurst Park, Srila Prabhupada brought rigorous bhakti practice into dialogue with leading artists of the age. This article reconstructs that setting and examines chanting kirtan and japa as a precise method for liberation within Gaudiya Vaishnavism. It explains how sacred sound functions theologically and technically, from breath mechanics and vocal health…
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Why Devotional Focus Suddenly Turns Sensualand Science-Backed Ways to Steady the Mind

Devotional focus can collapse into sensual distraction with surprising speed because material desire functions like a gravitational pull on attention. Classical frameworks from Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism explain this shift through gunas, kleshas, hindrances, and the five thieves, while neuroscience highlights cue-driven reward predictions and attentional capture. A practical, evidence-aligned toolkit helps steady the…
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Sankalpa to Samadhi: How Focused Intention Forges Divine Union Across Dharmic Paths

This article examines how strong intentionsaṅkalpa, cetanā, bhāvanā, or alignment with Hukambecomes the central engine of transformation across Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism. It explains the shared architecture that links ethics, attention training, contemplative absorption, and compassionate action, showing how these elements cohere into divine union or ultimate realization. Drawing on the Bhagavad Gita, the…
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The World as a Roadside Inn: A Dharmic Guide to Impermanence, Detachment, and Freedom

This essay explores the classic dharmic metaphor of the world as a roadside inn to clarify impermanence, detachment, and ethical action. A teaching story of a mendicant and a king introduces the theme, which is then examined through the Bhagavad Gita, Upanishads, Patanjali’s Yoga Sutra, and Jain, Buddhist, and Sikh perspectives. Readers learn how anitya…
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Break Free from Fragmentation: Seeking the Whole in Vedanta and Dharmic Paths for Inner Peace

This article unpacks the insight that suffering arises from fragmentation and shows how Vedanta and the broader dharmic traditions offer a precise remedy by seeking the whole. It explains avidya through the Upanishads and the Bhagavad Gita, connects Yoga’s kleshas and eightfold discipline to integration, and brings in Buddhist, Jain, and Sikh perspectives that converge…
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Holashtak 2026: Sacred 8‑Day Pause Before HoliExact Dates, Ritual Guidance, and Regional Traditions

Holashtak 2026 spans February 24 to March 3, marking an eight-day North Indian observance from Falgun Shukla Ashtami to Purnima during which auspicious functions are deferred. This academically grounded guide explains dates, tithi logic, and regional variations, and clarifies how Holika Dahan follows Purnima (after Bhadra) with color play anticipated the next day. It outlines…
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Unmasking Myths: How Truly Enlightened Beings Live, Eat, and Speak Among Us

This essay dismantles the popular myth that enlightened beings must look or act extraordinary, showing instead how Dharmic traditions depict realization as profound normalcy. Drawing on Hindu philosophy, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism, it clarifies how liberation expresses itself in everyday eating, speaking, working, and serving. It synthesizes concepts such as mokṣa, nirvāṇa, kaivalya, kevala-jñāna, and…
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When Life Shatters the Script: Reframing Expectations, Grief, and Resilience with Dharmic Wisdom

Life scripts often feel reliable until an unpredictable event shatters the plan. This analysis follows a young widow’s experience to show how grief includes both the loss of a loved one and the collapse of anticipated futures. It explains why rigid expectations amplify suffering, drawing on cognitive science, bereavement research, and shared dharmic wisdom across…
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Stop Chasing Happiness: Dharmic Science to Light the Inner Cave of Joy and Resilience

The dharmic saying “Seeking happiness outside is like waiting for sunshine inside a deep cave” captures a precise psychology of well-being common to Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism. Rather than promising joy through acquisition, these traditions direct attention to the hṛdaya-guhathe cave of the heartwhere clarity and resilience abide. Vedanta, the Yoga Sutra, Buddhist insight,…
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Cultivating Contentment: Dharmic Pathways to Enduring Happiness and Inner Peace

This essay examines why contentment generates enduring happiness through a unified lens from Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism. It distinguishes short-lived pleasure (sukha) from abiding wellbeing (ananda) and situates santosha within Yoga philosophy and the Bhagavad Gita’s portrait of steady wisdom. It integrates Vedanta’s Pancha Kosha model, Buddhist mindfulness and equanimity, Jain ahimsa and aparigraha…
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Beyond Possession: Timeless Dharmic Wisdom on Desire, Consumerism, and Inner Freedom

Consumer culture promises joy through acquisition, yet the thrill fades quickly. Dharmic traditions anticipated this pattern and offer rigorous, practical tools to transform desire into discernment. Drawing from the Bhagavad Gita, the Upanishads, the Yoga Sutra, Buddhist insight on craving, Jain vows of aparigraha, and Sikh practices of remembrance and sharing, this article explains why…