In this foundational class introducing Chapter 2, Acharya Tadany presented a clear, universal framework of four stages that every spiritual seeker must traverse to move from saṁsāra’s suffering to mokṣa: (1) Discovery of the Problem — recognizing the three-fold disease of attachment (rāgaḥ), sorrow (śokaḥ), and delusion (mohaḥ) that afflict the mind and distort perception; (2) Recognition of Helplessness — …
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Bhagavad Gītā, Chapter 1, Class 25
In this meticulously structured class on Chapter 1, Acharya Tadany dissected Arjuna’s progressive emotional collapse on the Kurukṣetra battlefield as a deliberate five-part dramatic arc designed by Vyāsa to mirror the universal human descent into saṁsāra (the disease of worldly attachment). From the grand introduction of the dharma-field and the assembled armies, through Arjuna’s systematic observation of beloved relatives and …
Read More »Bhagavad Gītā, Chapter 1, Class 24
In this meticulously structured class on Chapter 1, Acharya Tadany dissected Arjuna’s progressive emotional collapse on the Kurukṣetra battlefield as a deliberate five-part dramatic arc designed by Vyāsa to mirror the universal human descent into saṁsāra (the disease of worldly attachment). From the grand introduction of the dharma-field and the assembled armies, through Arjuna’s systematic observation of beloved relatives and …
Read More »Bhagavad Gītā, Chapter 4, Class 162
In this compassionate and deeply realistic class, Acharya Tadany illuminated Krishna’s non-coercive yet uncompromising philosophy on spiritual freedom (mokṣa) as the ultimate goal of life—the complete liberation from the cycle of birth and death—while emphasizing that the Vedic tradition uniquely grants every individual total freedom of choice. Krishna suggests mokṣa as the highest pursuit but never enforces it as a …
Read More »Bhagavad Gītā, Chapter 4, Class 161
In this class, Acharya Tadany questions the comforting illusion that a “pure mind” alone grants mokṣa, revealing through Krishna’s words that mental purity is merely the prerequisite soil while jñāna (Self-knowledge) is the seed that actually flowers into liberation, I.e., without deliberate planting through śravaṇam, mananam, and nididhyāsanam, even the cleanest mind remains barren. He masterfully unpacked the three layered …
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 »Bhagavad Gītā, Chapter 1, Class 22
The chapter 1 is not history. It is the description of your own biography. You are Arjuna. Your family drama, your job crisis, your fear of ‘what will people say’, your guilt about money, your anxiety about the future, this is your Kurukṣetra. And right now, silently watching you have your meltdown, is your own inner Kṛṣṇa waiting for you …
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Tadany Um refúgio para a alma e um convite à consciência.
