I don’t read the Gita to be only a “religious” book but I read it because it refuses to lie to me.
It doesn’t pretend life will get easier. It doesn’t promise instant peace. It looks straight at chaos:war, duty, guilt, fear and says, “Stay. Let’s look at this properly.”
Over years of teaching, speaking, and fumbling my own way through overwhelm, one thing has become crystal clear: people don’t need more self‑help tips, they need a framework that can hold their inner storms. The Gita gives that. Not as a museum text, not as a set of rules, but as a living dialogue.
A Gita Moment is my way of inviting you into that dialogue without Sanskrit anxiety or spiritual posturing. Just you, your real life, and a set of questions that cut through the noise.





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