In this week's Father's Day satsang — broadcast in person from MPC Serbia in Obrenovac, the day after a Prana Pratishta for a Shiva Linga brought from the Netherlands — Mohanji opens with devotees describing how they felt the energy of the three recent consecrations across Slovenia, Croatia, and Serbia. He answers a mother on supporting a 13-year-old daughter with an eating disorder — 50% of healing is psychological, the parent must hold absolute confidence on her face without complaining, comparing, or forcing. To Lakshmi on building confidence in a learned skill, skills are like spoons and forks — pick them up when needed; stability matters more. To Priya, who felt defeated trying to introduce yoga to her salsa class, he gives the recurring teaching: your stability is your birthright; either drop expectations or stop. To Jovan on inherited karma, he prescribes feeding the hungry and sharing clothes and land. He addresses how not to judge differences (those who judge others judge themselves more), how to support a family member with cancer who wants forbidden food (fulfill them so they can leave peacefully — with his father's hospital story), and what it means when a master enters our dreams (the master operates in both states; dream state is easier because there's no ego). To Pallavi he gives three lines: extreme patience, reduce expectations, increase witnesshood. He answers Aroon on Mukti Nath — Vishnu's abode in Nepal with 126 sacred waters that serve as a portal for liberation — and Shyam on Shiva Linga at home, explaining how namashivaya unifies the five elements and strengthens the panchakoshas. He gives a long answer to "Who am I?" — you are not the body, not the mind, not the personality, but the energy that operates the projector; reach the metaphysical through silence of the mind. To "when will I realize God?" he says God is not a man with a stick but a factor — an impartial intelligent energy like the sun shining equally on all countries — and the soul is a piece of that within. He shares the story of Mukambika who lived 21 years in a cave sustained by rain falling into her mouth, and to a question on grief gives the four life stages and the parable of the dying man hiring an Uber to revisit his birth village, school, and first-date restaurant before reaching the hospital. To a confused question about astral worlds, he distinguishes acquired from experiential knowledge, sharing his own early-2000s communion with an extraterrestrial master who would not reveal his name. He closes by launching the Ahimsa Wear "vegan generation" t-shirt range featuring animals from various Mohanji ashrams.