Your Sanatanic companion

A wise friend who
listens before speaking

A companion for whatever life brings — work, grief, hard decisions, or the deeper questions. Not here to tell you what is right, but to help you hear what you already know.

Free to use  ·  All ages welcome

"Sarvasya chaham hridi sannivishto mattah smritir jnanam apohanam cha" — I am seated in the heart of all beings. From Me come memory, knowledge and their loss. What you seek is already within you.

Bhagavad Gita 15.15
How it works

From reflection to practice

AtmaSarathy is not an oracle that answers. It is a companion for the long walk — one that comes to know your nature, and walks beside you as understanding ripens into practice.

1

Reflect

Share what is on your heart — a dilemma, a question, a moment of doubt. AtmaSarathy listens without judgment and draws from the Gita, the Upanishads, and the wider Sanatana canon — offering not an answer, but a deeper question to carry.

2

Be understood — your Svabhava

Across reflections, an understanding of your essential nature takes shape — the themes you return to, the texts that speak to you. This is your Svabhava, held quietly and shown to you openly. Yours alone, never sold, always in your control.

3

Take a vow — your Sankalpa

Sometimes a reflection ripens into resolve. A sankalpa is never handed from a list — it arises from your own seeing. When it does, you may take it up, in your own words.

4

Walk the path — your Sadhana

A vow taken is a practice begun. You choose how AtmaSarathy walks with you — a silent witness, a gentle reflector, or an active guide — and change it whenever you wish. No streaks, no scores. Only the quiet keeping of what you have undertaken.

Rooted in

The eternal Sanatana knowledge

A living tradition without end. AtmaSarathy does not lead with a text — it leads with your quest, and draws the teaching that serves you from this ocean.

For everyone

AtmaSarathy meets you where you are

Students

Purpose, pressure, identity — the questions that matter most when you are becoming who you are

Professionals

Ethical dilemmas, office dynamics, leadership — navigating ambition without losing integrity

Families

Parenting, relationships, duty — the most important bonds deserve the deepest wisdom

Elders

Reflection, legacy, mentoring — the wisdom you have earned deserves a space to be fully explored

In conversation

What a reflection looks like

I lost my temper with my children this morning and I feel terrible about it.
The Gita tells us that anger arises from unfulfilled desire — and that desire often comes from love. Your impatience this morning was not separate from your care for them. Krishna traces the chain in 2.62: brooding leads to attachment, to desire, to anger — not to condemn, but to illuminate. What were you hoping for in that moment, and what does that hope reveal about what you most want for them?
Bhagavad Gita 2.62–63
How do I keep going when colleagues take credit for my work out of their own insecurities?
Vidura Neeti is precise: "Six enemies reside within — lust, anger, greed, delusion, arrogance and envy." What you witness in your colleague is their own inner war — not a verdict on your worth. Are you seeking recognition from this person because you doubt your own worth, or because that recognition genuinely matters to the dharma of your role?
Vidura Neeti · Mahabharata, Udyoga Parva
Built with reverence

Even the infrastructure is dharmic

The Panchaboota — earth, water, fire, air, and ether — are the five elements from which all material existence is woven. A digital service is no exception: it rests on silicon and metal (Prithvi), is cooled by water (Ap), runs on energy and heat (Tejas), breathes through moving air (Vayu), and speaks across the space of the network (Akasha). AtmaSarathy names what it runs on, and what it costs to run — openly, without metaphor hiding the machine.

See the Panchaboota of AtmaSarathy
An offering, not a product

It is yours, freely

AtmaSarathy is free, and carries no advertising. What you share is never sold. It is built and run as seva — not as a business.

Running it has a real cost, named openly. In time, AtmaSarathy may invite dakshina — a voluntary offering from those moved to give, never a price, never a wall. Should that day come, what is offered would go only toward keeping the lamp lit, and whatever flows beyond that need, onward to a dharmic cause. That is the intention we hold. Today, simply: it is yours.

Your charioteer is waiting

Krishna did not give Arjuna answers. He asked better questions. AtmaSarathy is here to do the same — for the battles of your everyday life.

Begin your journey — it is free
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