Is truth layered or singular? In this voice-led dialogue, Ranjit argues for levels of truth—conventional to ultimate—drawing on Vedanta, Buddhism, and lived context. Sam insists on “naked” nonduality: in the absolute, neither love nor compassion can arise because there is no second. Both concede a paradox: ultimate reality must speak through dual words, bodies, and choices. Meeting people where they are (upaya) becomes the bridge. Sartre’s freedom, Shankara’s clarity, and Christ’s command to love surface as touchstones. Finally, they converge: truth may be one, yet when it moves through the relative world, its authentic signature is love and compassion. Naturally.
Sam Upanishad
They know notBig Bang, they sayAn unproven theoryWho knows how it beganAnd what was there or notBefore it began. Forms…
A Long Story Short (My Autobiography)
I was born.God knows why. I am living.God knows how. I will die.God knows when.
Doing NOTHING Changes EVERYTHING… – Jiddu Krishnamurti
Love God, Love Your Neighbour, Love Your Enemy – James Talarico’s interview with Joe Rogan
Not Afraid of Death
“I’m not afraid of death. Everyday I die for 8 hours when I sleep.”
Understanding & Misunderstanding
“By the time one starts to understand oneself, many others begin to misunderstand one.”
The Examined Life
“Philosophers become so busy trying to understand life that they miss out on living it.”
The Mirage Within a Mirage
This thirst for richesThis thirst for loveThis thirst for powerThis thirst for nameThis thirstThis unquenchable thirstUnslakable it seemsEncountering as one…
The Demarcation Problem
“The line blurs between where God ends and this world begins.”