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.
The Meaning of Ravana’s Many Queens
In this Q&A, the teacher explains how “wives” or “queens” in mythology represent different powers within us, and why Ravana’s statement “I’ll make you my chief queen” symbolizes the dominance of our thoughts.
Maya, Attraction, and Ignorance: Are They Different or the Same?
In this Q&A, a seeker asks whether attraction comes from maya or maya comes from attraction. The answer clarifies that maya has no independent existence; our own ignorance of our true Self is what we call maya, avidya, or delusion. Through examples like mirage (mrig-marichika) and references to Krishna’s use of the word mudha in the Gita, it shows that terms like maya, ignorance, and illusion all point to the same fundamental inner unawareness.
Diwali’s Five Days: The Spiritual Meaning Behind the Rituals
A clear, symbolism-based interpretation of Diwali’s five days: Dhanteras as adopting pure conduct and virtues, Rūp Chaudas as cleansing negative thoughts and remembering karma, Diwali as lighting the inner Self, Lakshmi–Ganesha as wealth guided by wisdom, Govardhan Pūjā as uplifting consciousness, and Bhāī Dūj as living brotherhood—not just thinking it.
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.