In this landmark centenary class, Acharya Tadany delivered the final knockout blow to the illusion of conditional happiness by proving, through Śaṅkara’s razor-sharp logic and the immortal Yājñavalkya-Maitreyī dialogue from the Bṛhadāraṇyaka Upaniṣad, that nothing in the universe is loved for its own sake. Everything is loved only for the sake of the Self. And the means (sādhanam) like money, …
Read More »Tadany Cargnin dos Santos
Bhagavad Gītā, Chapter 6, Class 198
Acharya Tadany. In this class on Dhyāna Yoga, Acharya Tadany unveiled Krishna’s profound roadmap for meditating on Bhagavān across three progressive levels of spiritual maturity. The manda-adhikārī (beginner) focuses on a single personal form (ēka-rūpa dhyānam), cultivating devotion through concrete images and murtis to build emotional connection. The madhyama-adhikārī (intermediate) expands to see the Divine manifested in everything (anēka-rūpa dhyānam), …
Read More »The Forgotten Gift of Discernment
When the mind closes itself, the other is no longer seen as a complex human being and is instead reduced to labels, categories, and simplistic judgments. The mind of the ordinary person is often inhabited by rigid generalizations, by so-called “immutable truths,” and by beliefs that are hermetically closed to dialogue, inquiry, and revision. These are conclusions reached too early, …
Read More »Class 25, Tattva Bodha
Acharya Tadany. In this class, Acharya Tadany unveiled the profound mechanics of our daily existence by mapping the three states of consciousness onto the anātmā’s structure. In the waking state (jāgrat), the conscious experiencer called Viśva operates predominantly through the gross physical body (sthūla śarīram), using its sense organs to interact with the external world while the mind silently records …
Read More »The Illusion of Control
Living, then, ceases to be an anxious attempt to secure results and becomes a daily exercise in lucidity, surrender, and alignment with the greater intelligence of life. One of the deepest inclinations of any human being is to try to reduce the vastness of life to what can be understood, predicted, and controlled. This happens because the mind seeks security. …
Read More »Bhagavad Gītā, Chapter 1, Class 23
Acharya Tadany. In this class, Acharya Tadany turned Arjuna’s battlefield paralysis into a mirror for every modern seeker, i.e., the Gītā does not ask you to run away from family, job, society, or emotions, or even your WhatsApp groups. it commands you to stay exactly where you are and transform your daily duties into the most powerful yoga possible. He …
Read More »Are We Truly Living?
You are not preparing to live, you are already alive. The breath in your lungs is the only permission slip you need. Stop waiting. Start being. We all crave existence. We go to incredible lengths to validate ourselves, to appear interesting, acceptable, or unique in the eyes of others. We craft identities, chase achievements, and meticulously curate how we are …
Read More »Bhagavad Gītā, Chapter 4, Class 160
Acharya Tadany. In this revolutionary class, Acharya Tadany questioned the most widespread spiritual illusion of our time, God-realisation and Self-knowledge are two different goals. By using Krishna’s own words in Chapter 4, he proved they are the same destination seen from two windows, I.e., when you truly know the Self you automatically know Bhagavān, and when you truly know Bhagavān …
Read More »The Breath of Life
honor this sacred current of life that continually flows through you. Use it consciously and wisely because when you breathe with awareness, you replenish the energy needed to fulfill the aspirations of your soul in this brief human journey. The art of conscious breathing is a subtle and powerful discipline, one that brings stability, vitality, and lucidity to life. I …
Read More »Class 99, vivekacūḍāmaṇi
Acharya Tadany. In this mind-bending class, Acharya Tadany used the classic pot-space analogy to reveal the single cause of all suffering, I.e., the subtle body (sūkṣma śarīraṁ) acts like a clay pot that apparently “contains” unlimited consciousness, instantly creating the false individual (jīva) who believes “I am limited, I suffer, I need things.” In waking and dream the pot is …
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Tadany Um refúgio para a alma e um convite à consciência.
