Beetak teaches how we should conduct ourselves on Social Media too!

In this context, a deeply touching and instructive guidance from Shri Bitak Sahib becomes especially relevant. In a short handwritten note, Mahamati Shri Prannath Ji himself teaches the principle of restraint and dignity in service, saying:


"Ab maryādā chaliyo, rākhiyo merī lāaj."

("Now walk in restraint; preserve my honor.")


This single line encapsulates the entire social discipline of Tartam practice. Its meaning is not that truth should be hidden or that one should withdraw from service, but that all service in the name of dharma must be conducted within dignity and restraint. Shri Ji asks for only one thing from his followers—that in the name of religion, service, or truth, nothing should be done that compromises the dignity of dharma or diminishes the honor of the path he revealed.


In the present age—especially in the context of digital platforms and public communication—this instruction becomes even more relevant. When words lose discipline, when emotions overpower discernment, and when proclamation begins to overshadow service, dharma itself loses its gentleness and turns confrontational. "Walking in restraint" means that service must have boundaries, speech must carry responsibility, and expression must remain anchored in awareness.


Therefore, in relation to social media, public discourse, and digital outreach, this becomes the Tartam-aligned measure:

Does this expression remain within dharmic dignity?

Does it preserve the honor of the path and its intent?

Does it protect the sanctity of seva rather than inflating the ego of the speaker?


If the answer is yes, then speech becomes service. If not, silence itself becomes a higher form of practice.

"Preserve my honor" is not merely an emotional appeal—it is the living ethical framework of Tartam Vani.

Sada Anand Mangal Mein Rahiye

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