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The Inner Balance: Between Detachment and Emotion

 Life is paradoxical. The more you withdraw from the illusions of the world—family, love, attachment—in pursuit of inner peace, the more you risk losing a part of yourself. Yes, silence may come. Stillness may arise. But after a point, you begin to notice that your creativity fades. When you suppress worldly bonds, you also suppress the feminine energy within—the source of emotion, beauty, art, and connection. As the feminine quiets, the masculine energy takes over. Discipline sharpens, focus deepens—but along with it comes aggression, restlessness, and a strange emptiness. Compassion starts to dry up. I’ve seen it often: people who dive too deep into rigid spirituality become intense, sometimes even harsh. On the flip side, when one becomes too entangled in worldly pleasure and attachment, the feminine energy becomes excessive—leading to emotional chaos, over-sensitivity, and disconnection from the self. Balance is the key. Until a person learns to harmonize the masculine and femi...

The Forgotten Guardian: Why Invoking a Deity Without Discipline Invites Chaos

 When a person calls upon a deity with devotion, something profound begins to happen. The divine chaitanya—the living essence of that deity—descends and settles into the devotee’s heart. The heart becomes the garbhagriha, the innermost sanctum, while the body becomes the kshetra, the sacred ground of that temple. But with this divine presence also comes a responsibility—protection. Just like a temple requires a guardian, the human temple does too. This is where the Kshetrapal enters—a fierce, powerful, and uncompromising guardian of the sacred field. He is not a comforting figure. He is raw, ruthless, and loyal only to truth. If someone invokes a deity but ignores the presence or invocation of the Kshetrapal, then all kinds of energies—visible and invisible—can be drawn toward the sanctum they've created. Negative people, toxic influences, and even subtle parasitic energies may be attracted to the unguarded divine flame within. Eventually, the person feels vulnerable, disturbed, ev...

When Everything Is Not Fine: The Blind Pursuit and the Silent Awakening

 When we casually ask someone, “Is everything fine?”, we rarely realize how heavy that question truly is. In most cases, the answer we receive reflects either material comfort or temporary emotional stability. Very few will ever answer from the space of true inner silence. And even fewer still are those whose material life and spiritual life walk together in perfect balance. A spiritually awakened being can live in simplicity and still say, “Everything is fine.” Not because the outer world has fulfilled every desire — but because desire itself has burned away in the light of deeper understanding. Such a soul has learned the ancient art of contentment: to smile with little, to bow to loss, to bless even the absence. But the unawakened — the spiritually blind — live trapped in the cycle of endless wanting. They believe that life will become ‘fine’ only after the next possession, the next victory, the next achievement. Their thirst has no end. In chasing the mirage, they lose the real...

The Unseen Power of a Woman’s Curse: Lessons Forgotten in Blind Pride.

 The curse of a woman is extremely powerful — even Lord Krishna, an avatar of Vishnu himself, could not escape it. What then can be said about ordinary men? Duryodhana, through Ashwatthama, mercilessly killed Draupadi’s five sons. His own father, brother, and thousands of others also perished. Yet despite all this, neither Yudhishthira nor Krishna treated Gandhari and Dhritarashtra with disrespect. They did not destroy their palace, nor did they abandon them. Even after Gandhari cursed Krishna, he made sure that she continued to receive the same love, honor, and respect that Kunti did. This is the true teaching of Sanatan Dharma — the wisdom that warns: if a woman is innocent, never cause her suffering. In Pahalgam, when a terrorist Adil brutally killed 28 people, his mother bore the same sin as Gandhari — she had given birth to a Duryodhana-like sinner. That terrorist’s mother had last seen her son seven years before the incident. After the Pahalgam massacre, the Indian army bombe...

The Light She Receives: A Woman’s Journey from Illusion to Truth.

 A woman is not just emotion — she is the embodiment of elemental energy. In Jyotish, she is represented by the Moon and Venus — both flowing, receptive, and powerful. She carries within her the power to nurture or destroy, to uplift or consume. And the direction her energy takes depends on the man beside her. Just as the Moon becomes full and radiant only when it receives the light of the Sun, a woman blossoms when she is guided by a man grounded in truth and wisdom. His role is not to control her, but to awaken her — to protect her from the toxic pulls of society by lighting the flame of discernment within her. When a man helps his woman turn inward — from outer noise to inner silence — she becomes his Shakti, his strength, and like Ketu, she leads him towards liberation. But when there is no light, no knowledge — the same woman becomes like Rahu. Lost in illusions, she gets entangled in the filth of the world, casting a shadow over the man, the family, the entire life — just lik...