


The Journey from Ego to Self-Knowledge.
From Confusion to Clarity. From Bondage to Freedom.
Krishna represents the supreme consciousness, the divine wisdom that dissolves all confusion. He is the eternal charioteer guiding Arjuna—and all of us—from the battlefield of life toward the immortal Self.
Krishna's teachings transcend time. He speaks not just to Arjuna but to every confused soul seeking truth in the chaos of existence.
In the Vishvarupa Darshan, Krishna reveals his cosmic form—the entire universe contained within him. He is all that was, is, and will be.
Whenever righteousness declines and unrighteousness rises, Krishna manifests to restore balance and guide humanity back to truth.
Krishna's love is unconditional. He accepts Arjuna's doubts, fears, and confusion with infinite patience, gently guiding him to self-realization.
"Whenever there is a decline in righteousness and rise of unrighteousness, I manifest myself on earth."
Arjuna represents every human being standing at the crossroads of life, paralyzed by doubt and moral dilemma. His journey is our journey.
Arjuna drops his bow. Overwhelmed by attachment, fear of loss, and moral confusion. He cannot see clearly.
Arjuna surrenders as a disciple. He listens to Krishna with an open heart, ready to receive truth beyond his mind.
Arjuna picks up his bow again—not out of hatred, but from a place of duty, wisdom, and inner freedom.
"I am confused about my duty. Tell me what is truly good for me. I am your disciple and surrender unto you."
Arjuna's confession is the beginning of wisdom. He does not pretend to know. He admits his confusion and asks for guidance. This humility opens the door to transformation.
The Bhagavad Gita is not a religious text—it's a roadmap from confusion to clarity, from ego to truth, from bondage to freedom.
You are not eliminating the ego. You are redirecting it.
Move toward that which cannot be destroyed.
Nature is not evil. It's mithya—seemingly real but ultimately impermanent.
One whose mind is anchored in the soul, unshaken by life's storms.
Do I have the courage to do what I already know is right?
The ability to distinguish Sat from Asat.
Moksha is not a place. It's a recognition.
Live fully. Act fearlessly. But remain anchored in the deathless Self.
Not in renouncing the world, but in not being dependent on it for your peace.
"Use Prakriti to escape Prakriti. If you find yourself in the world, don't build a home there. There is death there."
"The soul alone is sat (truth). Prakriti is asat (unreal). And the wise person? The ego that has turned toward the soul."
"Dharma is simple: Worship what takes you toward the soul. Destroy what blocks the soul."
"The one who knows the soul—they alone truly live. The rest are walking corpses, chasing shadows."