Discover Your Principles
What Do You Stand For?
42 principles from the Gita, Upanishads, and Yoga Sutras. Find what resonates — and make it yours.
Category
All Tattvas
48 tattvas
Abhyasa: The Art of Consistent Practice
Abhyasa means steady, uninterrupted practice over time. Patanjali calls it the foundation of mental stillness. This tattva transforms scattered efforts into disciplined routines—whether learning code, meditation, or a new language.
Write your personal version of this principle
Ahimsa: Non-Violence Toward All, Including Yourself
Ahimsa means non-violence—not just physical harmlessness, but kindness in thought, word, and deed. Patanjali calls it the first Yama. This tattva extends compassion to others and, crucially, to yourself—ending self-criticism and inner violence.
Write your personal version of this principle
Aparigraha: Freedom Through Non-Possessiveness
Aparigraha means non-possessiveness—taking only what you need, not hoarding. Patanjali calls it a Yama (restraint). This tattva helps you declutter physically and mentally, creating space for what truly matters.
Write your personal version of this principle
Bhakti Tattva: Lead With a Devoted Heart
Bhakti is emotional focus. You choose a living ideal—love, compassion, a mentor, a deity—and let that relationship shape how you speak, work, and serve. It’s a stabilizer for overthinking minds and hyperconnected lives.
Write your personal version of this principle
Brahma Muhurta Reset
Brahma Muhurta is the 96 minutes before sunrise when the mind is naturally calm. This tattva modernizes the ritual into a sleep-friendly evening routine plus a gentle dawn practice.
Write your personal version of this principle
Brahmacharya: Conserving Your Vital Energy
Brahmacharya means energy conservation—preserving vitality instead of dissipating it. Patanjali calls it a Yama. This tattva teaches you to manage your energy wisely, avoiding burnout and maintaining vitality for what truly matters.
Write your personal version of this principle
Dharana: The Art of Single-Pointed Focus
Dharana means concentration—holding attention on one point. Patanjali calls it the sixth limb of yoga. The Gita describes it as steadying the mind like a lamp in a windless place. This tattva trains your focus muscle in an age of constant distraction.
Write your personal version of this principle
Dhyāna: Calm Focus for Always-On Minds
Ancient meditators sat by rivers; we sit between Slack pings and family chats. Dhyāna is not escape—it is training the mind to stay rooted while the world scrolls fast.
Write your personal version of this principle
Dinacharya: Align With Nature's Clock
Dinacharya is Ayurveda's daily routine—activities timed to natural rhythms. Wake with the sun, eat when digestion peaks, rest when energy dips. This tattva adapts ancient wisdom into a modern schedule that syncs your body with nature.
Write your personal version of this principle
Dosha Balance: Restoring Harmony in Body and Mind
Doshas are the three fundamental energies—Vata (air/space), Pitta (fire/water), Kapha (earth/water)—that govern your body and mind. When spiritual practices begin, dosha imbalances can manifest as health disturbances. Understanding dosha balance helps you restore harmony and support purification.
Write your personal version of this principle
Drishti & Nazar: Ancient Protection for Modern Energy
Ancient texts recognized that negative attention—envy, malice, or ill-will—can affect wellbeing. The Atharva Veda offers protective mantras and rituals. Today, this wisdom translates to managing energy boundaries, recognizing toxic environments, and creating protective practices.
Write your personal version of this principle
Eco-Dharma: Protect the Earth That Protects You
Indian wisdom treats Earth as mother (Bhoodevi)—patient, forgiving, abundant. Like caring for our own mother, each small action may not show instant effect, but rituals add up. Let's turn a few problems into Earth-care rituals.
Write your personal version of this principle
Ishvara Pranidhana: The Art of Surrender
Ishvara Pranidhana means surrendering to a higher power or principle. Patanjali calls it a Niyama. The Gita calls it "taking refuge." This tattva teaches you to do your best, then trust the process and release control.
Write your personal version of this principle
Karma Purification: Burning Through Accumulated Karma
Karma purification is the process of burning through accumulated karma (Sanchita) through spiritual practices. When you engage in bhakti, karma yoga, or meditation, you're not just creating new habits—you're purifying past karma, releasing stored impressions, and moving toward liberation.
Write your personal version of this principle
Karma Tattva: Do the Work, Drop the Weight
Karma Yoga is the art of showing up fully while releasing the obsession with applause, likes, or instant ROI. It turns every task—slides, caregiving, code reviews—into a contribution aligned with your dharma.
Write your personal version of this principle
Kriyas: Purification Techniques for Body and Mind
Kriyas are yogic purification techniques—six practices that cleanse the body's systems and prepare the mind for deeper spiritual work. When health disturbances arise during spiritual practice, kriyas help release accumulated toxins and restore balance.
Write your personal version of this principle
Krodha Mastery: Breaking the Anger Chain Before It Breaks You
Krishna maps the exact chain: desire → frustration → anger → delusion → memory-loss → destruction. Patanjali offers the antidote: pratipaksha bhavana — when a destructive impulse arises, consciously cultivate its opposite. This isn't suppression; it's redirection at the root.
Write your personal version of this principle
Kshama: Forgiveness Is the Warrior's Weapon, Not the Weak One's Surrender
Vidura tells Dhritarashtra: kshama is the strength of the strong, not the excuse of the helpless. Forgiveness doesn't mean accepting harm — it means refusing to let someone else's actions become your permanent inner burden. The Mahabharata treats grudges as self-poisoning.
Write your personal version of this principle
Mitahara: Moderation in Eating
Mitahara means moderation in eating—filling the stomach halfway with food, one-quarter with water, leaving one-quarter empty. This tattva complements Sattva Diet by focusing on quantity and timing, not just quality.
Write your personal version of this principle
Mudra Circuit: Plugging Calm into Everyday Moments
Mudras are micro-gestures that change how prāṇa flows. Think of them as ancient wearables—no hardware, instant feedback. Hold one shape for 2–5 minutes and watch the nervous system soften.
Write your personal version of this principle
Nadi: Reading Your Body's Pulse
Nadi Pariksha is ancient pulse diagnosis—reading your body's signals before symptoms explode. This tattva adapts that wisdom into daily self-check rituals: listening to your pulse, energy, and emotional rhythms to catch imbalances early.
Write your personal version of this principle
Nayaka Wisdom: Lead by Doing, Not by Declaring
Krishna tells Arjuna: whatever the best among people do, others follow. Chanakya adds: a leader's character is their most potent policy. This isn't about charisma or authority — it's about the silent power of going first, admitting mistakes publicly, and doing the work you ask of others.
Write your personal version of this principle
Pancha Mahabhuta: Balance the Five Elements Within
Pancha Mahabhuta are the five great elements—Earth, Water, Fire, Air, Space—that compose everything, including your body. This tattva teaches you to recognize elemental imbalances and restore harmony through simple daily practices.
Write your personal version of this principle
Prasad: Gratitude Through Sacred Offering
Prasad means sacred offering—food or gifts offered to the divine, then received back as blessed. This tattva adapts the ritual into daily gratitude practice, recognizing abundance and offering thanks for what you receive.
Write your personal version of this principle
Prashanti: Peace After Purification
Prashanti is the supreme peace that follows purification—when impurities are released, disturbances subside, and tranquility emerges. After health disturbances during spiritual practice, Prashanti is the calm, stable state that indicates purification is complete.
Write your personal version of this principle
Pratyahara: Withdrawing From Sensory Overload
Pratyahara means withdrawal of the senses—consciously choosing what you take in instead of being pulled by every stimulus. Patanjali calls it the fifth limb of yoga. This tattva helps you manage digital overload and sensory distractions.
Write your personal version of this principle
Rajadharma: The Weight of Leading Others
Yudhishthira asks Bhishma on his deathbed: what is the hardest thing for a leader? Bhishma answers: acting against your own comfort for the good of those you lead. Kautilya's Arthashastra reinforces it — the leader's personal happiness is the last priority. This isn't martyrdom; it's the operating system of anyone responsible for others.
Write your personal version of this principle
Relationship Dharma: Boundaries With Bhava
Indian epics show how relationships thrive when anchored in dharma—mutual respect, truthful speech, and shared responsibility. This tattva helps you navigate joint families, parenting, or partnerships without resentment.
Write your personal version of this principle
Rina-Moksha: Debt Awareness & Freedom
Ancient dharma texts speak of three debts—toward ancestors, teachers, and the divine. Modern Indians add EMIs, education loans, and care duties. This tattva helps you plan money decisions without guilt spirals.
Write your personal version of this principle
Sahasa Tattva: Build Your Inner Warrior
Sahasa means daring action anchored in dharma. This tattva adapts Arjuna and Abhimanyu’s battlefield grit into modern micro-bravery rituals for career, relationships, and self-expression.
Write your personal version of this principle
Samskaras: Rewiring Your Mental Patterns
Samskaras are mental impressions—deep grooves carved by repeated thoughts and actions. Every scroll, every reaction, every choice leaves a mark. This tattva teaches you to consciously create positive samskaras and weaken negative ones.
Write your personal version of this principle
Santosha: Finding Contentment in What Is
Santosha is contentment—finding peace with what you have while still growing. Patanjali calls it a Niyama (observance). This tattva helps you escape comparison traps and find genuine satisfaction in your present moment.
Write your personal version of this principle
Saraswati's Gift: Knowledge That Transforms, Not Just Informs
Saraswati isn't just for students cramming for exams. She embodies the discriminative wisdom (buddhi-viveka) that transforms who you are—the flow of consciousness that separates truth from noise, knowledge from information, liberation from mere success.
Write your personal version of this principle
Satsang: The Power of Good Company
Satsang means good company—surrounding yourself with people who uplift, inspire, and support your growth. Ancient texts emphasize its importance. This tattva helps you choose your circle wisely and create meaningful connections.
Write your personal version of this principle
Sattva Diet: Eat for Calm, Not Chaos
Sattvic food nourishes prāṇa and keeps the mind light. This tattva translates ancient ahara wisdom into realistic weekday rituals—no extreme detoxes, just mindful upgrades.
Write your personal version of this principle
Satya-Sandhana: Radical Honesty With Grace
Satya is more than “never lie.” It means aligning speech with dharma, empathy, and courage. This tattva offers scripts for telling the truth online and offline without burning bridges.
Write your personal version of this principle
Seva-Sangha: Belong by Serving
Seva is giving time, skill, or presence without expecting returns. This tattva helps metro-dwelling Indians build friendships and purpose through monthly service rituals.
Write your personal version of this principle
Shoka Navigation: Understanding Grief Without Drowning in It
Krishna doesn't tell Arjuna to stop feeling. He tells him to examine what he's actually grieving for — the loss itself, or the story he's built around it. Clean grief is natural. Suffering is the extra layer of narrative we add. The Gita teaches you to separate the two so grief doesn't become a permanent identity.
Write your personal version of this principle
Shravana-Manana: Learn, Reflect, Integrate
Upanishads teach a three-step study cycle: shravana (listen), manana (reflect), nididhyasana (live it). This tattva converts binge-consuming content into actionable wisdom.
Write your personal version of this principle
Shuddhi: The Purification Process
Shuddhi is the process of purification—when accumulated impurities, toxins, and negative energies are released from body and mind. Health disturbances during spiritual practice aren't punishment; they're signs that purification is happening, that stored karma and toxins are being cleared.
Write your personal version of this principle
Sthitaprajna: Steady Wisdom in Life's Storms
Sthitaprajna means one of steady wisdom—unmoved by success or failure, pleasure or pain. The Gita describes this as the highest state. This tattva teaches you to maintain inner balance regardless of external circumstances.
Write your personal version of this principle
Svadhyaya: The Art of Self-Study
Svadhyaya means self-study—reflecting on sacred texts and, more importantly, studying yourself. Patanjali calls it a Niyama. This tattva transforms journaling and reflection into a systematic practice of self-awareness.
Write your personal version of this principle
Svadhyaya: The Power of Reading Over Watching
Svadhyaya means self-study through reading sacred texts. The Upanishads emphasize Manana—reflection that reading enables. This tattva teaches why reading creates deeper understanding than passive watching, training your mind for contemplation and wisdom.
Write your personal version of this principle
Tapas: The Fire of Disciplined Practice
Tapas means discipline, austerity, or the fire of focused effort. Patanjali calls it a Niyama. This tattva teaches you to burn through resistance, build willpower, and stay committed when motivation fades.
Write your personal version of this principle
Types of Karma: Understanding Prarabdha, Sanchita, and Agami
Karma is threefold: Prarabdha (destined karma you're experiencing now), Sanchita (accumulated karma from past lives), and Agami (future karma you're creating). Understanding these types helps you navigate life's challenges and recognize that health disturbances may be Prarabdha karma being worked through.
Write your personal version of this principle
Vairagya: The Art of Detachment
Vairagya means non-attachment—doing your work fully while releasing obsession with outcomes. The Gita pairs it with Abhyasa: practice with dedication, detach from results. This tattva frees you from anxiety spirals and comparison traps.
Write your personal version of this principle
Viveka: The Skill of Seeing Through Noise to What's Real
The Gita describes three types of understanding: sattvic (sees clearly what to do and what to avoid), rajasic (confuses right and wrong based on desire), and tamasic (inverts reality entirely). Patanjali calls viveka-khyati the unbroken awareness that separates the real from the apparent. This isn't philosophy — it's the operating system for every decision you make.
Write your personal version of this principle
Yoga Path Transition: From Karma to Bhakti
The spiritual journey often begins with Karma Yoga (selfless action) and naturally progresses toward Bhakti Yoga (devotion). This transition isn't forced—it emerges when action becomes devotion, when service becomes love. Understanding this progression helps you navigate the path with clarity and trust.
Write your personal version of this principle