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.

“Husband and Wife” in Scriptures
Ramayana Arpan Gupta Ramayana Arpan Gupta

“Husband and Wife” in Scriptures

A listener asks whether scriptures command a wife to serve even an immoral husband. The answer clarifies the symbolic language of the Puranas: “man/husband” signifies the soul (puruṣa) and “woman/wife” signifies prakriti (body–mind–senses). The teaching is that prakriti should follow the soul’s direction — not a gender rule — illustrated with episodes like Nishadraj Guh and Bharadwaj Muni.

Read More
What Does “Forest” Mean in Ram’s Journey?
Ramayana Arpan Gupta Ramayana Arpan Gupta

What Does “Forest” Mean in Ram’s Journey?

A Q&A explaining that “Ram going to the forest” doesn’t mean entering a literal jungle. The vana symbolizes the unseen inner world — the conscious and subconscious mind. Only Self-awareness (Ram) and mastery of thought (Lakshman) can explore that inner forest.

Read More
The Inner Science of Last Rites: Asthi Saṅcayana, Jalāñjali, Piṇḍa-Dāna, and Kapāla-Kriyā
Festivals Arpan Gupta Festivals Arpan Gupta

The Inner Science of Last Rites: Asthi Saṅcayana, Jalāñjali, Piṇḍa-Dāna, and Kapāla-Kriyā

A clear explanation of the deeper meaning behind Hindu post-death rites—why asthi saṅcayana, jalāñjali-dāna, piṇḍa-dāna, and kapāla-kriyā are actually for the living. Understand “pitṛs” as saṃskāras, how to redeem kriyamāṇa, prārabdha, and sañcita impressions, and how knowledge, action, and devotion take a solid form that opens the path to liberation.

Read More
Inner Meaning of Savitri–Satyavan
Festivals Arpan Gupta Festivals Arpan Gupta

Inner Meaning of Savitri–Satyavan

An interpretation of the Savitri–Satyavan tale as a precise symbolic teaching: Aśvapati as the mind, Savitri as the mind’s sāttvic power, Satyavan as the truth-Self, Yama as the law of karma, and the banyan-thread ritual as a reminder to keep attachments light while restoring Self-remembrance.

Read More
Difference Between Sukha and Ānanda — Stability and Bliss of the Soul
Basic Concepts Arpan Gupta Basic Concepts Arpan Gupta

Difference Between Sukha and Ānanda — Stability and Bliss of the Soul

 A seeker asks about the difference between the soul’s two similar qualities — sukha-svarūpa (happiness) and ānanda-svarūpa (bliss). The teacher explains that sukha means inner stability — the stillness of the mind when established in the Self — while ānanda is the bliss that flows naturally from that stability. External things only trigger these states, but their source is always within.

Read More