2026 - May 10: Weekly Satsang Live with Mohanji

2026 - May 10: Weekly Satsang Live with Mohanji

  • Video
  • 5/9/2026
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Description

In this week's satsang, on Mother's Day, Mohanji opens with a question someone had asked him: what is the major advantage of being spiritual? His answer: the aerial view — seeing life from above so that ownership, possessiveness, and the constant "why, why, why" fall away, replaced by responsibility connected to dharma and a sense of freedom. He then gives an extended teaching on the gross versus the metaphysical — explaining that the laws of each are completely different, that masters operate from the metaphysical plane (which is why peanuts can cure dysentery when the master's will is the command), and that pleasures connected to the gross are short-lived while the metaphysical is timeless. He honors Mother's Day with a powerful reflection on the sacredness of motherhood across all species, condemning the violence of slaughterhouses and the moral bankruptcy of our era — drawing parallels to the Nuremberg trials and the dehumanizing logic that has justified killing across history. He answers questions on caring for an elderly mother who refuses to chant or pray (treat her like a small child and let her be), how to help a son with schizophrenia, his own personal weaknesses (cutting off 100% when trust is broken, and being unable to say no), whether dissolution affects other dimensions, and how energies and entities attach to people based on their orientation and patterns — and why connection to a master doesn't automatically protect someone whose orientation remains gross. He addresses a mother whose daughter hasn't spoken to her in four years (don't chase, invest in your own stability — that's what attracts people back), the difference between mind-level remembrance and consciousness-level connection through the story of Narada and the farmer who never spilled a drop, the role of men as protectors and women as nurturers in nature's design and how moral degeneracy has corrupted this, the war in Iran and how weapons-marketing economies require wars to sustain themselves, balancing empathy for animal abuse without becoming paralyzed, superstitions and why blind following — even of a guru — should be questioned, fluctuating confidence (the Hanuman story before the leap to Lanka), reducing expectations through 1-5% witnesshood, autism and autoimmune disorders potentially linked to vaccination, and a closing call for newcomers to explore the foundation's verticals and offer their skills.