By Emily Dickinson Much Madness is divinest Sense – To a discerning Eye – Much Sense – the starkest Madness –…
Main Aisa Kyun Hoon
Craziness & Freedom
“To allow yourself to be crazy is also a certain kind of freedom.”
Truth & the Journey Towards It
“Only two ways to realize the Truth: Either understand that this whole world is nothing but His forms, including our…
This World, Yes, This World
This world where we keep wantingOthers to love usHow little we love others.This world where we keep wantingTo be happy…
Why Do We Wait?
Why do we waitTill we are betrayed in loveTo understand life?Why do we waitTill a loved one diesTo understand life?Why…
The Bhagavad Gita Explained: Key Teachings and Insights
The Bhagavad Gita — spoken on a battlefield over two thousand years ago — remains one of the most profound guides to the human condition ever written. Yet its philosophical depth, Sanskrit terminology, and eighteen dense chapters can feel overwhelming to modern readers.
Sammary of the Bhagavad Gita by D. Samarender Reddy is not a translation or a conventional commentary. It is a guided philosophical journey through the Gita’s core teachings — written for the intelligent general reader who wants to genuinely understand what the Gita is saying, why it says it, and what difference it makes to how one lives.
The book covers the Gita’s two-tier vision of Reality, the Goal of Life as Krishna defines it (compared with Buddhism, Christianity, Stoicism, and modern psychology), the four paths of Karma Yoga, Jñāna Yoga, Bhakti Yoga, and Raja Yoga, and practical guidance on action, duty, meditation, and liberation. A complete fresh English translation of all eighteen chapters is included as an appendix.
Whether you are encountering the Gita for the first time or returning after years of study, this book will deepen your understanding of why this ancient dialogue continues to speak — with remarkable directness — to the most urgent questions of human life.
“If one knows Brahman as non-existent…” — Sankaracharya’s Commentary in Taittiriya Upanishad
In his commentary on the Taittiriya Upanishad (II.vi.1), specifically the verse Asad-brahmeti chet veda… (“If one knows Brahman as non-existent…”), Adi Shankaracharya explains that…
Isha Upanishad Verse 1
ईशावास्यमिदं सर्वं यत्किञ्च जगत्यां जगत् ।तेन त्यक्तेन भुञ्जीथा मा गृधः कस्य स्विद्धनम् ॥ १ ॥ īśāvāsyamidaṃ sarvaṃ yatkiñca jagatyāṃ jagat…
God
“It is funny how we take our thoughts and feelings to be more real than God Himself.”