Wisdom of the Sages
Krishna bhakti went global not through wealth, planning, or infrastructure, but through faith — the kind of faith that sends teenagers across oceans with no money, no guarantees, and no backup plan. In this episode, recorded at Govardhan Eco Village, Raghunath speaks with Mahāmāyā and Bali Mardana, whose personal memories reveal the unpredictable, humorous, and deeply human early days of the Hare Krishna movement — a time when chanting became survival, surrender became strength, and Śrīla Prabhupāda’s presence inspired ordinary people to attempt extraordinary things. ...
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In a world engineered for distraction, yoga becomes the deliberate practice of training the mind to place its attention where meaning, clarity, and love actually grow. Raghunath and Kaustubha explore attention as the most valuable thing we possess — and the one thing modern culture constantly hijacks. Drawing from Simone Weil’s insight that attention is the rarest and purest form of generosity, and the Śrīmad Bhāgavatam’s metaphor of glowworms shining when real stars are covered, this episode exposes how noise replaces wisdom, visibility replaces value, and misplaced attention quietly...
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Karma isn’t about guilt—it’s about growth. Drawing from a quote by Keanu Reeves and the timeless wisdom of the Śrīmad Bhāgavatam, this episode explores how understanding karma restores agency, dissolves victimhood, and quietly cultivates compassion. Raghunath and Kaustubha clarify why karmic law isn’t meant to judge who’s “up” or “down,” but to help us respond more wisely, act more gently, and move through the world with awareness. When responsibility is understood properly, life stops feeling random—and starts feeling meaningful. ...
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This episode begins with the idea that pride must die in you, or nothing of heaven can live in you—and uses it as a doorway into bhakti: not just emptying the mind, but making room for something sacred to actually live within us. Raghunath and Kaustubha reflect on “reentry” after pilgrimage, why holy places and holy people rekindle faith, and how steady practice becomes a shelter when the inspiration fades. Then the Śrīmad Bhāgavatam paints Vrindavan: summer that feels like spring, forest beauty, childlike play, and the sudden intrusion of danger as Pralambāsura appears disguised...
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The meaning we find in scripture often reveals more about our motive than the text itself. This episode explores the uncomfortable truth: that we don’t just read scripture—we often recruit it. Nearly any philosophy can be bent in the direction we’re already leaning. Raghunath and Kaustubha examine how two people can read the same teaching and walk away with completely opposite conclusions, why real growth begins with examining our motives rather than merely quoting sources, the difference between being transformed by sacred texts and being justified by them, and how compassion may be the...
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This episode is a deep dive into death, vulnerability, and the strange grace that appears when we stop running and start facing reality with the holy name on our lips. A near-death moment in Māyāpur cracks open one of life’s most carefully avoided truths: everything we refuse to face quietly takes control from the shadows. In this episode of Wisdom of the Sages, Raghunath and Kaustubha explore Carl Jung’s piercing insight—“Until you make the unconscious conscious, it will direct your life and you will call it fate”—and why bhakti is anything but spiritual bypassing. ...
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A striking model of surrender emerges in this episode: accepting both mercy and correction as meaningful, purposeful, and transformative. Spoken live from Śrīdhāma Māyāpur, this conversation unfolds around a simple Christian devotional line—“I do not know what tomorrow holds, but I know who holds tomorrow”—and follows it into much deeper bhakti territory. Rather than offering certainty or comfort, the discussion explores what it actually means to trust God when outcomes are unclear and control quietly slips away. Drawing from pilgrimage moments in Navadvīpa, immersive kīrtan,...
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A quiet morning of kirtan in Mayapur opens into a deeper reflection on what spiritual maturity actually looks like—not as an idea, but as a lived quality of the heart. Using Confucius’ insight on wisdom, compassion, and courage, this episode explores why compassion is not sentiment or softness, but a measure of real growth. Drawing from the prayers of the Nāgapatnīs in the Śrīmad Bhāgavatam, the conversation moves into fear, surrender, and why grace does not wait for a perfectly purified heart. Along the way, Raghunath and Kaustubha reflect on Narasiṁhadeva as the remover of inner...
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As global uncertainty hums in the background, this moment in history feels both fragile and purposeful. Moving between history, theology, and lived experience, Raghunath and Kaustubha reflect on pilgrimage, mercy, and the distinct generosity of Śrī Caitanya’s path. Broadcast from Śrīdhāma Māyāpur, they explore how bhakti continues to shape culture in India and beyond and why spiritual emotion often arises not from sentimentality, but from a sudden recognition of the gift one has received. ******************************************************************** LOVE THE PODCAST? WE...
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Live from Govardhan Eco-Village in India, this episode unfolds as a grounded, unscripted exploration of why material life grows stale—and why spiritual sound never does. With Kaustubha away, Raghunath is joined by Pranapriya and a circle of pilgrims whose stories naturally reveal how bhakti works in real life: not as blind belief, but as lived, repeatable realization. Drawing from the Śrīmad Bhāgavatam, Raghunath reflects on the “shadow world” of material attachment, the restless mind that can’t be satisfied by consumption, and the Bhagavatam’s promise that devotion becomes an...
info_outlineKarma isn’t about guilt—it’s about growth. Drawing from a quote by Keanu Reeves and the timeless wisdom of the Śrīmad Bhāgavatam, this episode explores how understanding karma restores agency, dissolves victimhood, and quietly cultivates compassion. Raghunath and Kaustubha clarify why karmic law isn’t meant to judge who’s “up” or “down,” but to help us respond more wisely, act more gently, and move through the world with awareness. When responsibility is understood properly, life stops feeling random—and starts feeling meaningful.
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