When awakening strikes, the question often arises: does greater consciousness demand greater responsibility? A friend suggested that finding God is not freedom but a burden—an obligation to guide others. My response, echoing Ramana Maharshi and Nisargadatta Maharaj, is that the world itself is God’s doing, and the roles of both Jnani and Ajnani are part of that play. No “integration” is needed between ego and the Absolute—they were never separate. What remains is simple: God alone acts, through every form.
Don’t Worry
“You are being driven by God. I am being driven by God. The wind does not worry about which way…
Truly Alone
“You are truly alone when you are not even thinking.”
How Long Does it Take to Get Enlightened?
“One is only a few hours of total stillness of mind away from enlightenment.”
Living Alone, Companionship and the Truth
Questioner: Sir, why do we want to have a companion? KRISHNAMURTI: A girl asks why we want a companion. Why…
Why Love is Central to Morality
For Iris Murdoch, morality is not about duties and rules but stopping our ego fantasies and attending to others with love
Love and Wisdom
“Everything, even wisdom, is leading us towards love.”
Who is Wise?
English translation below पोथी पढ़ि पढ़ि जग मुआ, पंडित भया न कोय ढाई आखर प्रेम का, पढ़े सो पंडित होय।…
Justice, Injustice, and the Law of Karma: A Vedantic Reflection
“We deserve all the justices and injustices that happen to us in life.” This aphorism holds weight when seen through the law of karma and Advaita Vedanta. The Bhagavad Gita teaches that while we must act against adharma, the outcomes—justice or injustice—unfold according to past karma. What appears as unfair is not random, but a ripened consequence (prārabdha) shaping our soul’s journey. For the realized Self, untouched by dualities, justice and injustice dissolve altogether. To act dharmically while surrendering fruits is the highest freedom.
Whither Justice
“We deserve all the justices & injustices that happen to us in life.”