The Bus to Ramanasramam: A Deeper Assessment of One Man’s Lifelong Turn Inward


What does it mean to withdraw from the world not as an act of will, but as an unfolding of destiny? In this deeply personal dialogue, Dr. D. Samarender Reddy responds to three probing questions about his withdrawal into spiritual solitude — and in doing so, dismantles the very premise behind them. There is no blueprint for daily life because life is not a project to be managed. There are no pre-conditions for re-engagement because the ego-self that would set such conditions is not the doer. Teachers are present — Ramana Maharshi and Nisargadatta Maharaj — not in person but in the only form that ultimately matters: direct transmission through their words. Drawing on a lifetime of study across Advaita Vedanta, the Bhagavad Gita, and Western philosophy, this exchange probes the difference between a withdrawal born of hurt and one ripened by decades of seeking — and asks whether the two can even be meaningfully separated when destiny is the real author of all decisions.

What happens when a spiritual seeker’s entire life — his medicine, his economics, his poetry, his philosophy, his 16 books — turns out to have been preparation for a single, irrevocable turning inward? In this rare second-layer assessment, drawing on Dr. D. Samarender Reddy’s published book Happiness and Consciousness and his blog Know Thyself, the earlier evaluation is revised and deepened. The framework he operates within — non-doership, the paradox of seeking, the five modes of mind, the ‘I am’ as the door — is found to be not merely understood but metabolized. The one question that remains is not philosophical but experiential: can the difference between luminous stillness and spiritual torpor be held with honesty in extended solitude, without a mirror? This is the caveat embedded not from outside his tradition, but from squarely within it — in Ramana’s own warning about the difference between sleep and samadhi. A meditation on ripeness, equanimity, and the moment destiny stops asking permission.

The Sacred Withdrawal: When Spiritual Sadhana Becomes Your Raison d’être


What looks like retreat to the world is often the most courageous advance inward. In this deeply personal reflection, I address a well-meaning piece of advice — that I shouldn’t “shut my door” simply because someone hurt me. But my withdrawal from worldly engagement is neither sudden nor born of wounded pride. It is the culmination of a 50-year spiritual quest, a decision quietly forming since December 2021, now firmly made. Drawing on Plato’s Allegory of the Cave, I explore how most of us mistake the shadows of the material world for ultimate reality — and how spiritual sadhana is the very act of breaking free from those chains. As Rousseau reminds us, man is born free, yet lives everywhere in bondage. True freedom isn’t found in the world’s noise; it is discovered in the sunlit stillness beyond the cave. This is not an escape. This is a homecoming.