• Ramana Maharshi's Silence - A Story About the Teaching That Needs No Words
    May 7 2026

    A story from modern India about a sixteen year old boy who asked one question - and spent the rest of his life pointing everyone he met back toward it.

    In 1896 Venkataraman Iyer sat alone in his uncle's house and felt a sudden overwhelming certainty that he was about to die.

    Instead of running he lay down, went completely still, and asked - If the body dies - what is it that dies?

    What he found at the end of that question he never quite put into words.

    He walked to the great temple of Arunachala, stood before the Shivalinga. And said nothing.

    Then he sat down.

    And did not speak again for years.


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    8 mins
  • Karna and his Armor - The Most Generous Act in All of Indian Literature
    May 6 2026

    A story from the Mahabharata about a man who gave away the only thing keeping him alive.

    Karna was born with his armor. Not given it, not forged for him - born with it, fused to his flesh, a gift from his father the Sun God.

    As long as he wore it, no weapon could kill him.

    A god came to him in disguise to take it away.

    Karna saw through the disguise immediately.

    He gave the armor anyway - cutting it from his own body, still warm, still bleeding - to a god who had come in deceit to rob him of the one thing standing between him and death.

    He knew exactly what it would cost him.

    He gave it anyway.

    This story will stay with you for a very long time.


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    8 mins
  • Birbal's Khichdi - An Akbar-Birbal Story About the Most Elegant Lesson in Justice Ever Delivered
    May 5 2026

    A story from the court of the great Mughal emperor Akbar about justice, wit, and a pot of khichdi hanging five feet above a fire.

    A poor man stood waist-deep in a freezing lake from dusk until dawn to win a reward he desperately needed.

    He survived by keeping his eyes fixed on a distant lamp burning in a palace window.

    The emperor refused to pay.

    "You were warmed by that lamp. The terms are not met."

    The poor man went to Birbal.

    The next morning Birbal did not come to court.

    When the emperor finally went to find him - Birbal was sitting very comfortably in his courtyard beside a small fire.

    And hanging from a branch five feet above the flame - A pot of khichdi.


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    7 mins
  • The Brahmin's Dream - A Panchatantra Story About the Castles We Build in Our Heads
    May 4 2026

    A story from the Panchatantra about the most human mistake

    in the entire collection.

    A poor Brahmin received a pot full of rice flour - more than he had seen in months.

    He hung it beside his bed, lay down, and began to think.

    If a famine came, he could sell the flour for a hundred silver coins.

    With that he could buy goats.

    The goats would become cows.

    The cows would become a house.

    The house would come with a wife.

    The wife would bear him a son.

    He named the boy Soma Sharma.

    Soma Sharma was, as sons tend to be, somewhat difficult.

    Still fast asleep - the Brahmin drew back his foot and kicked.

    His pot shattered.

    The flour scattered everywhere.

    He woke up covered in everything he had.

    The Panchatantra has been telling this story for two thousand years.


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    6 mins
  • Sudama's Rice - A Bhagavatam Story About the Friend Who Ran Across the Courtyard
    May 3 2026

    A story from the Shrimad Bhagavatam about friendship, grace, and a small bundle of flattened rice.

    Sudama and Krishna were childhood friends - inseparable at their guru's ashram.

    Then life separated them completely.

    Krishna became the king of Dwarka - the most celebrated ruler in all the land.

    Sudama became a poor Brahmin whose family sometimes went without food.

    His wife finally persuaded him to visit his old friend.

    He arrived at the palace with the only gift he could afford - a small bundle of poor man's rice tied in a torn cloth.

    He was too ashamed to show it.

    He was too overwhelmed to ask for anything.

    What Krishna did the moment he saw Sudama approaching across the courtyard - and what happened to Sudama's home while he was away - is one of the most quietly humbling stories in all of Hindu scripture.


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    7 mins
  • Bodhidharma and Emperor Wu - The Three Questions That Changed the Course of Buddhism
    May 2 2026

    A story about the most important conversation in the history of Zen Buddhism.

    Emperor Wu of China had built more temples, commissioned more sacred texts, and supported more monks than any ruler in history.

    He summoned a remarkable Indian monk who had walked across the Himalayas to China with nothing but a staff and a begging bowl.

    The monk's name was Bodhidharma.

    The emperor asked him three questions.

    The answers have been unpacked by Zen scholars for fifteen hundred years.

    The first answer alone - two words - will make you look very carefully at every good thing you have ever done.

    And why you did it.


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    6 mins
  • The Lion and the Rabbit - A Panchatantra Story About the Power of a Thinking Mind
    May 1 2026

    A story from the Panchatantra written in Sanskrit two thousand

    years ago, about what a rabbit can do when it has no choice but to think.

    A lion was terrorizing a forest. Killing not from hunger, but from pleasure.

    The animals struck a deal - one animal sent to his den every day. Voluntarily.

    One day it was the rabbit's turn.

    The rabbit walked very slowly.

    Stopped to eat grass.

    Stopped to rest in the shade.

    Arrived at sunset instead of morning.

    The plan was forming the entire time.

    What happened at the well has been retold for two thousand

    years - because it is still true.

    Intelligence is power.


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    6 mins
  • The Most Irresistible Urge - A Sufi Story About the Ego's Most Subtle Trap
    Apr 30 2026

    A Sufi story about the one trap that catches everyone - especially the people who think they have escaped all the others.

    Four disciples sit together in a small room.

    One candle burning between them.

    Their master has given them a single instruction - do not speak until morning.

    The first disciple speaks.

    The second corrects him.

    The third corrects them both.

    The fourth has watched all of this in silence.

    He has not said a single word.

    He is the only one who has kept the vow.

    He cannot hold it any longer.

    "I," he says with great satisfaction, "am the only one who has not spoken."


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    5 mins