Seeking Answers
The best way to learn is to ask questions. The second best is to listen to what others are asking. The magic is in the listening.
Duryodhana Isn’t a Man Here—It’s Greed: Read the War Inwardly
A clarifying Q&A: the epics use an outer story as a wrapper. “Duryodhana” symbolizes greed to be slain within, not people outside. Read Valmiki’s Ramayana through the inner lens once—and other scriptures become clearer.
“Kill the Aggressor”? Krishna & Rama Point Inward—Destroy the Inner Enemies
A pointed Q&A clarifying that the Gita and Ramayana urge us to destroy inner aggressors—lust, anger, greed, pride—not external communities. Literalizing the texts breeds cruelty; true understanding births compassion and self-work.
Bhakti Isn’t Passivity: Ramayana & Gita Both Demand Self-Responsibility
A pointed Q&A clarifying that Valmiki’s Ramayana—like the Gita—doesn’t tell us to “leave everything to God” and sit back. It calls us to purify the mind, act dharmically, and establish Rama-rajya within. Self-knowledge doesn’t descend by itself; responsibility and practice are essential.
Why Self-Knowledge Is for Society: From Hurt Ego to Helpful Living
A candid Q&A on living spirituality in society: why knowledge is meant for harmonious coexistence, how the first step is purifying the mind (the foundation), and how even one applied drop of wisdom—refusing tit-for-tat or offering small help—brings immediate peace. Established Self-knowledge naturally flowers into right conduct.
Sumantra, Vasiṣṭha & Viśvāmitra: What Dasharatha’s Court Means Inside Us
A crisp Q&A decoding key symbols: Sumantra as excellent inner counsel, Vasiṣṭha as upward (vertical) evolution, Viśvāmitra as outward (horizontal) expansion, Romapāda as calm unexcitedness, Ṛṣyaśṛṅga as inner prompting—and Aśvamedha as the discipline that purifies the mind so Rama (Self-knowledge) can descend within.
Kosala = The Skillful Mind: Why Dasharatha’s Land Symbolizes Many Capacities
A short Q&A clarifying that “Kosala” symbolizes the kuśala (skillful) state of mind—pure, steady, and multi-competent. Its cultural and material prosperity points to a mind proficient across many domains, not just one.
“Desire for a Son” = A Mind’s Longing for Self-Knowledge
A brief Q&A clarifying that Dasharatha’s “desire for a son” symbolizes a pure, steady mind’s powerful yearning for Self-knowledge to descend—moving from merely saying “I am the Self” to actually embodying it, as the Ramayana will illustrate next.