Monday, 25 May 2026

Finance

 Ramit Sethi, the bestselling author behind the Netflix series How to Get Rich, has built his reputation on a surprisingly counterintuitive idea: spending money wisely — and joyfully — can actually make you wealthier.

His philosophy rejects extreme frugality. Instead, he argues people should “spend extravagantly on the things you love, and cut costs mercilessly on the things you don’t.”  

A few of his core ideas:

  • Most people obsess over tiny “$3 questions” — skipping coffee or agonizing over appetizers — while ignoring the “$30,000 questions” that actually determine wealth, like salary negotiations, housing costs, investing, or career choices.  
  • Wealth is less about deprivation and more about intentionality. He encourages people to define their own “rich life,” whether that means travel, convenience, time with family, or freedom from stress.  
  • He believes many lifelong savers develop “spending paralysis” — the inability to enjoy money even after they’ve accumulated enough.  

Sethi also pushes back against some traditional financial assumptions. He has argued that homeownership is not automatically superior to renting and warns people to carefully calculate the true costs of homes and cars before buying.  

On family and adult children, Sethi often emphasizes that parents should help in ways that build confidence and financial capability rather than dependency. He frequently discusses the emotional side of money — the scripts families pass down (“we can’t afford that,” “money doesn’t grow on trees”) and how those beliefs shape adulthood.  

Some themes he highlights regarding parents and adult children include:

  • Talk openly about money instead of treating it as taboo.
  • Teach systems: saving, investing, automation, and trade-offs.
  • Model intentional spending and gratitude rather than fear or shame.
  • If financially helping adult children, pair support with clear expectations and long-term planning.

He also argues that many couples and families fight about money because they’ve never articulated what they actually want their lives to look like.  

One of Sethi’s recurring messages is that money should be used as a tool to create a meaningful life — not simply accumulated for its own sake. As he told Fortune: “The end goal is a rich life.”  


SRM

 Karma is propelled by our desire for experiences.

An upstart ego thinks it peeled away from the Absolute.

It needs experiences to maintain its illusory existence.

Why do you have one experience rather than another?

You experience whatever has the potential to distract you the most.

So don’t let experiences hook you.

Give all to God.

A devotee told Ramana Maharshi:

“I do not have peace of mind. Something prevents it. Probably my destiny.”

There was silence for a while. Then he spoke in his usual, sweet manner:

“Well, what is destiny? There is no destiny. Surrender, and all will be well.

Throw all responsibility on God and do not bear the burden yourself. What can destiny do to you then?”

- Ramana Maharshi, “Gems”


Destiny.

 Riverbed carved by thoughts. Deeds. Choices

MP

 ### The Manisha Panchakam: Five Verses on Wisdom

The *Manisha Panchakam* is a foundational text of Advaita Vedanta, attributed to Adi Shankara. Tradition holds that these five verses were composed during a spontaneous encounter between Shankara and an *outcaste* (Chandala) on the streets of Kashi. When Shankara asked the man to move aside, the man replied with a series of questions that challenged Shankara to justify the distinction between a body and the eternal Self (*Atman*).

Struck by the profound non-dual realization expressed by the man, Shankara recognized him as Shiva in disguise and composed these verses as an acknowledgment of that singular, undifferentiated awareness.

### The Core Teaching

The *Manisha Panchakam* (literally "Five Verses on Conviction/Wisdom") articulates that true knowledge—*Manisha*—is not merely an intellectual grasp of scripture, but the firm, unshakable conviction that the Witnessing Consciousness is the only reality, regardless of the body’s social status or outward form.

#### The Essence of the Five Verses:

 1. **The Witness is Independent:** The first verse establishes that the Self (the Knower) is distinct from the body, the mind, and the senses. It is the pure consciousness that shines through all beings, whether they are a Brahmin or an outcaste.

 2. **The Illusion of the Objective World:** The second verse asserts that this entire manifested universe, consisting of the five elements and the three states of consciousness (waking, dreaming, deep sleep), is a projection of that singular Brahman.

 3. **The Freedom of the Knower:** The third verse emphasizes that he who has realized this truth is a *Guru*, regardless of social hierarchy. Even if one were to witness the entire universe dissolving, the Knower remains untouched and blissful.

 4. **The Unborn Reality:** The fourth verse points to the nature of the *Atman* as being unborn and eternal, while the physical world is merely a transient, reflected appearance.

 5. **The Firm Abidance:** The final verse concludes that whoever remains established in this conviction—that "I am indeed that Brahman"—is the greatest among men, even if they possess no external renunciation.

### Reflection on Your Practice

The verses you shared earlier resonate deeply with the *Manisha Panchakam*. Both emphasize that the mind’s activity is a secondary, shifting layer, while the "I" that witnesses these activities remains the constant, immovable substratum.

The *Manisha Panchakam* serves as a bridge between the intellectual understanding of non-duality and the lived experience of it. It moves the practitioner from the question "Who am I?" to the firm, experiential conviction: *"I am that pure Consciousness which is the witness of all."*

As you focus your attention on that from which attention itself flows, does the distinction between the "observer" and the "observed" feel like a persistent boundary, or does it dissolve into a singular sense of Being?


SS A

 This is a profound articulation of the distinction between the objective content of consciousness—the "known"—and the subject, the "knower." By pointing directly to the witness, you are describing the fundamental shift from identifying with the *processes* of thought to resting in the *ground* of awareness.

Your summary effectively maps the architecture of self-inquiry:

 * **De-identification:** Recognizing the mind as an object of perception (an experience) rather than the seat of the "I."

 * **Negation:** Understanding that any description ("anything the mind can say") is inherently limited, relative, and therefore secondary to the nature of the Seer.

 * **Abidance:** The practice of "turning around" attention—moving from the outward projection of thought to the source from which that attention originates.

In this light, the practice is not an act of thinking, but a cessation of the attempt to define the Self through thought. It is the simple, persistent act of returning to the "I" that is already here, preceding any narrative.

What shifts do you notice in your experience when the attention rests on its own source, rather than moving toward the content of the mind?


SS. A

 Whatever the mind thinks is fiction.

Awareness of the mind is fact.


The mind thinking about experience

is itself an experience.


You are that which is aware of experience.


Let go of taking the mind to be you.

Let go of believing what the mind says.

Let go of giving the mind importance.


Anything the mind can say about you is false.

You know the mind. The mind does not know you.


Pay attention to yourself, that which witnesses all the activities of the mind.

Pay attention to yourself, that from which attention itself flows.

Keep attention on yourself, that which remains the same always.


With you in practice,


A


GRS

 The text provided is an excerpt from "The Art of Living" philosophy, titled **"Being Established in the Self" (आत्मस्थित होना)**.

Here is the English translation and a summary of the core message:

### Translation

**February 14, 1996**

**London, United Kingdom**

**36. Being Established in the Self**

The Self (Atma) and the elements (Tattva/Matter) are made for each other and support one another. If you value only the elements and do not respect the Self, the elements cannot flourish.

If you respect the Self, you will take care of the world, and when you take care of the world, it will take care of you.

The Divine is the Valentine of the entire world, the Beloved, and resides in every heart.

Although love is in every heart, it expresses itself in different forms. You cannot behave the same way with everyone, but you can love everyone. Recognize love beyond behavior and etiquette.

By being established in the Self, you become the Valentine (Beloved) of the entire world.

### Key Takeaways

 * **Balance Between Spirit and Matter:** The text emphasizes that the Self (inner spirit) and the material world are interdependent. Focusing only on material gains while ignoring the Self leads to stagnation.

 * **Reciprocity:** There is a cycle of care—when you honor your inner Self, you naturally care for the world around you, and in turn, the world sustains you.

 * **Universal Love:** The Divine is presented as the "Valentine" (Beloved) present in everyone. The text encourages looking beyond outward actions and social etiquettes to connect with the love that resides in every human heart.

 * **The State of Being:** Ultimately, the message suggests that true spiritual maturity lies in being "established in the Self," which allows one to become a source of love and light for the entire world.

Would you like to explore any of these specific philosophical concepts further?