Tuesday, June 30, 2026

No compare.

Social Media: Are You Living Your Life or Comparing It?

"Comparison is the thief of joy." These words, often attributed to Theodore Roosevelt, are even more relevant today than when they were first spoken.

For most of human history, people compared themselves with their neighbours, classmates, or colleagues. Today, a young person can compare themselves with millions of people across the world in just a few minutes. A smartphone has made the entire world our neighbourhood.

Social media is one of the greatest inventions of our age. It allows us to reconnect with old friends, learn new skills, discover cultures, support worthy causes, and share joyful moments with family and loved ones. Used wisely, it can educate, inspire, and bring people together.

Yet, like every powerful tool, it has another side.

Most people share only the happiest moments of their lives—a graduation, a holiday, a promotion, a new home, a delicious meal, or a carefully edited photograph. Rarely do we see their disappointments, sleepless nights, financial worries, family disagreements, or personal struggles.

When we compare our ordinary everyday life with someone else's carefully selected highlights, we begin to feel that everyone else is happier, more successful, and more fulfilled than we are. This illusion slowly steals our contentment.

Psychologists call this social comparison. It can lead to anxiety, low self-esteem, loneliness, and the constant feeling that we are falling behind. We begin measuring our worth by the number of likes, followers, and comments we receive.

But can a human being's value really be measured by a number on a screen?

The answer is no.

Your character is more important than your popularity. Your integrity matters more than your online image. The kindness you show, the promises you keep, the knowledge you gain, and the lives you touch are far greater achievements than collecting virtual approval.

Ask yourself a few simple questions:

Am I using social media, or is social media using me?

Do I open an app because I have a purpose, or simply because I am bored?

Am I learning something useful, or merely scrolling without thinking?

When I put my phone down, do I feel inspired or exhausted?

If the answers trouble you, perhaps it is time to make a few changes.

Set limits on screen time. Spend time with family and friends without looking at your phone. Read books. Walk in nature. Learn a new skill. Exercise. Pray. Meditate. Create something with your own hands. Real life happens beyond the screen.

Our ancient sages taught the importance of viveka—the ability to distinguish appearance from reality. Social media often shows appearances. Wisdom seeks reality.

The Bhagavad Gita reminds us to perform our duties without becoming attached to praise or criticism. The opinions of strangers rise and fall like waves. Lasting happiness comes from living according to our values, not from chasing applause.

The greatest achievements in life are often invisible. A loving family, a peaceful mind, good health, honesty, compassion, and a clear conscience rarely become viral—but they are the true wealth of life.

Use social media as a window to the world, not as a mirror that determines your self-worth. Let it be a servant that enriches your life, never a master that controls it.

A Thought to Carry Home

Every generation inherits new tools, but the principles for using them wisely never change. Social media can connect people across continents, but only wisdom can connect us with ourselves. Live your own life with gratitude and purpose, for no number of followers can equal the quiet joy of becoming the person you are meant to be.

New series next gen.

Ancient Wisdom for Modern Challenges

A New Series for the Next Generation

Every generation faces its own unique challenges.

Our grandparents lived through wars, scarcity, and the struggle for survival. Our parents witnessed the arrival of television, computers, and the internet. Today's young people, however, live in a world transformed by artificial intelligence, social media, smartphones, biotechnology, and instant global communication.

Never before has humanity possessed so much information. Yet never before have so many people felt overwhelmed, distracted, anxious, or uncertain about the future.

Technology has made life easier, but it has not answered life's deepest questions.

How do we distinguish truth from falsehood?

How do we protect our privacy in a digital world?

How do we use artificial intelligence without allowing it to replace our own intelligence?

How do we remain healthy when shortcuts are available for almost everything?

How do we build character in a world that often rewards appearances more than substance?

These questions cannot be answered by technology alone.

For thousands of years, Indian civilization has reflected deeply on the nature of the human mind, self-discipline, truth, duty, compassion, and wisdom. The Vedas, the Upanishads, the Bhagavad Gita, and the lives of our great sages do not teach us how to build smartphones or artificial intelligence. They teach us something even more important—how to use knowledge wisely.

This series is an attempt to bring those timeless insights into conversation with the modern world.

Each article will begin with a challenge faced by today's generation. We shall examine the science, technology, or social reality behind it, separate fact from fiction, and then ask a simple question: What guidance can timeless wisdom offer us today?

This is not a rejection of modern science. On the contrary, science has enriched humanity in countless ways. But science tells us what can be done; wisdom helps us decide what should be done.

My hope is that these essays will help young readers think more clearly, choose more wisely, and live more meaningfully. If they encourage even one reader to pause before acting, to question before believing, and to seek truth before convenience, they will have served their purpose.

Every age has its own challenges, but wisdom never grows old.

Technology changes rapidly. Human nature changes slowly. Truth does not change.

 A Thought to Carry Home

Every generation inherits new tools, but the principles for using them wisely never change. Technology may evolve, but discernment, self-control, truthfulness, and compassion remain timeless. The future belongs not to those who know the most, but to those who use knowledge with wisdom.

Monday, June 29, 2026

Stay safe.

 "Ancient Wisdom for Modern Challenges: Thirty Conversations with the Next Generation." 

Staying Safe in the Digital World – Think Before You Click

The internet has opened doors to unlimited knowledge, friendship, business, and creativity. Yet it has also become a place where deception travels at astonishing speed.

Today's criminals often never meet their victims. They use emails, text messages, fake websites, voice cloning, deepfake videos, and fraudulent investment schemes to steal money and personal information.

The first rule of digital safety is simple: never act in haste.

If someone pressures you to send money immediately, stop.

If a message promises unbelievable profits, stop.

If an unknown caller asks for passwords or banking details, stop.

If a sensational video appears online, verify it before believing or forwarding it.

Strong passwords, two-factor authentication, regular software updates, and careful privacy settings provide important protection. Equally important is protecting your reputation. Once something is posted online, it may remain accessible for years.

The internet never forgets.

Every click reflects our judgment. Every post shapes our character. Every decision leaves a digital footprint.

Ancient Indian thought teaches that every action has consequences. The digital world is no exception. Wisdom lies not merely in knowing how to use technology, but in knowing when to pause, reflect, and choose wisely.

A Thought to Carry Home

Every generation inherits new tools, but the principles for using them wisely never change. Technology may evolve, but discernment, self-control, truthfulness, and compassion remain timeless. The future belongs not to those who know the most, but to those who use knowledge with wisdom.

AI

"Ancient Wisdom for Modern Challenges: Thirty Conversations with the Next Generation." 

 Artificial Intelligence – Your Greatest Assistant, Never Your Master

Artificial Intelligence is changing the world faster than any technology in human history. It writes, translates, solves mathematical problems, creates images, generates computer programs, and answers questions within seconds.

Many students wonder whether learning is still necessary when AI can provide instant answers.

The answer is an emphatic yes.

AI possesses enormous information, but information alone is not wisdom. It does not possess conscience, moral responsibility, or lived experience. It cannot replace curiosity, compassion, judgment, or integrity.

Used wisely, AI can become an extraordinary teacher. It can explain difficult subjects, help organize ideas, summarize books, improve writing, and accelerate learning. Used carelessly, it can make people intellectually lazy, encouraging them to copy instead of understanding.

The future will reward those who learn continuously. Technical knowledge will remain important, but equally valuable will be creativity, communication, ethical judgment, and the ability to work with other human beings.

Technology should always remain our servant. The moment we stop thinking for ourselves, we surrender one of the greatest gifts we possess—the power of discrimination.

Our sages called this viveka, the ability to distinguish truth from appearance. In the age of AI, that ancient virtue has become more valuable than ever.

A Thought to Carry Home

Every generation inherits new tools, but the principles for using them wisely never change. Technology may evolve, but discernment, self-control, truthfulness, and compassion remain timeless. The future belongs not to those who know the most, but to those who use knowledge with wisdom.


Glp1.

" Ancient Wisdom for Modern Challenges: Thirty Conversations with the Next Generation."

 GLP-1 – The New Weight-Loss Revolution: Miracle Drug or Medical Marvel?

The struggle with excess weight has become one of the defining health challenges of the twenty-first century. Unlike earlier generations, today's youth live in an environment where calorie-dense food is available at every corner, physical activity has declined, and long hours are spent in front of computers and mobile phones. As a result, obesity has become common even among teenagers and young adults.

Into this landscape has arrived a new class of medicines known as GLP-1 receptor agonists. Many people have heard of them through celebrities and social media, where they are often portrayed as "magic injections." The reality is more nuanced.

GLP-1 is a natural hormone produced by our intestines after eating. It signals the brain that we are full, slows the emptying of the stomach, and helps regulate blood sugar. Scientists developed medicines that mimic this hormone, allowing people to feel satisfied with smaller meals and reducing excessive hunger.

For people living with obesity or diabetes, these medicines can be life-changing. When prescribed appropriately and combined with healthy eating and physical activity, many people achieve significant weight loss and improvements in overall health.

However, these medicines are not cosmetic shortcuts. They can cause nausea, vomiting, constipation, or diarrhea, especially in the beginning. They are unsuitable for some people and must always be taken under medical supervision. More importantly, if healthy habits are not developed, weight may return after stopping the medication.

Young people should remember a timeless truth: no medicine can replace disciplined living. Good food, regular exercise, adequate sleep, and a peaceful mind remain the foundation of lasting health. Medical science is a wonderful servant, but it cannot replace self-control.

Our ancient wisdom reminds us that the body is a sacred gift entrusted to us. Caring for it is not vanity—it is a responsibility.

A Thought to Carry Home

Every generation inherits new tools, but the principles for using them wisely never change. Technology may evolve, but discernment, self-control, truthfulness, and compassion remain timeless. The future belongs not to those who know the most, but to those who use knowledge with wisdom.

Sunday, June 28, 2026

Vahanas.

 In the ancient Hindu tradition, every deity has a Vāhana (वाहन)—a divine vehicle or mount. A vāhana is not merely a means of transport; it symbolizes the powers, virtues, and instincts that the deity has mastered. 

Here are some of the best-known vāhanas:

Deity  Vāhana (Vehicle) Traditional Name  Vāhana

Lord Ganesha  MouseMushika or Krauncha 

Lord Shiva Bull  Nandi

Lord Vishnu Eagle Garuda

Lord Brahma Swan Hamsa

Goddess Saraswati Swan Hamsa

Goddess Lakshmi Owl Uluka

Lord Kartikeya Peacock Paravani (also Mayura)

Goddess Durga Lion Simha

Indra White Elephant Airavata

Agni Ram Mesha

Yama Buffalo Mahisha

Varuna Makara (mythical sea creature) Makara

Vayu Deer/AntelopexMriga

Surya Chariot drawn by seven horses

The seven horses represent the seven metres of the Vedas, the seven colours, and the seven days.

Shani Crow or Raven Kāka

Bhairava Dog Shvana

Kamadeva Parrot Shuka

Ganga Makara Makara

Symbolic meanings

Nandi – strength, patience, unwavering devotion.

Garuda – courage, speed, and victory over ignorance.

Mushika – the restless mind and desires brought under control.

Hamsa – discrimination (viveka), the ability to distinguish truth from falsehood.

Uluka (owl) – wisdom and alertness even amidst darkness.

Airavata – royal power, rain, and prosperity.

Mayura (peacock) – beauty, fearlessness, and the conquest of pride.

Simha (lion) – courage, righteousness, and divine sovereignty. 

One interesting feature of ancient Indian tradition is that many of these vāhanas are themselves revered. Temples often have separate shrines for Nandi, Garuda, or Mushika, and worship of the deity is traditionally considered incomplete without offering respect to the vāhana. 

 Unlike the fixed divine vāhanas of the gods, warriors often had famous chariots, horses, elephants, and celestial vehicles with their own names.

Chariots (Rathas)

Nandighosha – The chariot of Arjuna, driven by Krishna. It bore the banner of Hanuman (Kapi-dhvaja).

Pushpaka Vimana – Originally belonging to Kubera, later seized by Ravana and finally used by Rama after the war.

The chariot of Karna was famed for its speed and strength, though no universally accepted traditional name survives.

Indra possessed a magnificent golden chariot driven by Matali.

Horses

Rama's war chariot was drawn by divine horses sent by Indra.

Nakula was renowned as the greatest horse-master (Aśva-vidyā) among the Pāṇḍavas.

Uchchaihshravas, the celestial white horse that emerged during the Churning of the Ocean, became the mount of Indra and the king of horses.

Elephants

Airavata – Indra's divine elephant and the foremost of all elephants.

Supratika – The mighty war elephant of Bhagadatta, feared by the Pāṇḍava army.

Many kings maintained elite elephant corps (Gaja-sena) as a major division of the army.

Other Divine Mounts

Garuda – The mighty eagle who carried Vishnu into battle.

Nandi – The bull of Shiva, who is also portrayed as a great commander of Shiva's gaṇas.

Mayura – The peacock mount of Kartikeya, the commander of the celestial armies.

The Four Military Vāhanas (Caturanga Bala)

Ancient Indian warfare was based on the Caturanga Bala, the fourfold army:

Ratha – Chariots

Gaja – Elephants

Turaga (Aśva) – Cavalry (horses)

Padāti – Infantry

This fourfold organization is the origin of the game chaturanga, which later evolved into chess.

In the epics, these vehicles were not merely transportation. Each represented a different mode of warfare, with trained warriors specializing in Rathis (chariot warriors), Gajayodhas (elephant warriors), Aśvayodhas (cavalry), and Padātis (foot soldiers). The Mahābhārata contains extensive descriptions of battles involving all four arms working together.

Sastanga N

 Sāṣṭāṅga Namaskāra (साष्टाङ्ग नमस्कार) means prostration with all eight limbs (aṣṭa = eight, aṅga = limbs) touching the ground in complete surrender before the Divine.

A well-known verse describing it is:

उरसाऽ शिरसा दृष्ट्या मनसा वचसा तथा ।

पद्भ्यां कराभ्यां जानुभ्यां प्रणामोऽष्टाङ्ग उच्यते ॥

Transliteration:

Urasā śirasā dṛṣṭyā manasā vacasā tathā |

Padbhyāṁ karābhyāṁ jānubhyāṁ praṇāmo'ṣṭāṅga ucyate ||

Meaning:

"That prostration is called Aṣṭāṅga Praṇāma in which one offers oneself with:

the chest (urasā),

the head (śirasā),

the eyes (dṛṣṭyā),

the mind (manasā),

the speech (vacasā),

the feet (padbhyām),

the hands (karābhyām), and

the knees (jānubhyām)."

The inner significance

The eight "limbs" are not merely physical. They symbolize the offering of the whole person:

Head – surrender of the ego.

Eyes – purity of vision.

Speech – truthful and devotional words.

Mind – complete concentration on God.

Chest (heart) – love and devotion.

Hands – dedication of all actions.

Knees – humility.

Feet – readiness to walk the path of dharma.

Thus, a true Sāṣṭāṅga Namaskāra is not just lying flat on the ground; it is the complete surrender of one's body, speech, mind, and heart to the Divine.

In many Vaishnava and Shaiva temples, devotees perform this prostration before the deity, considering it one of the highest expressions of reverence and self-surrender.