Modern Spiritual Thinkers and Tartam Wisdom

Modern Spiritual Thinkers and Tartam Wisdom 

If we look closely at modern spiritual thinkers, we find something interesting—they offer powerful insights, but also have some limitations. Deepak Chopra teaches that consciousness is the ultimate reality and talks about the unity of mind, body, and energy. His ideas help people shift their focus from the outer material world to inner awareness, which is an important first step in any spiritual journey. In a similar way, Eckhart Tolle emphasizes “living in the present moment”—going beyond thoughts and freeing yourself from mental suffering. This helps a person wake up from the constant noise of the mind.

At the same time, Ken Wilber brings a bigger picture through his “Integral Theory.” He explains growth through multiple dimensions like waking up, growing up, cleaning up, showing up, and opening up. His idea of “transcend and include” teaches us not to reject any stage of growth, but to go beyond it while still including it.

All three approaches share something important—they guide us toward consciousness, inner growth, and a more complete way of looking at life. But when we understand them in the light of Tartam wisdom, we notice a subtle but important difference. These teachings mostly help us expand our awareness (what Tartam language calls the Akshar level), but they don’t fully reveal what lies beyond—Aksharateet: the Supreme Reality, divine play (Leela), and a living relationship based on love.

This is where Tartam Vani goes further. It doesn’t stop at “awareness”—it takes us into “relationship.” It reveals a deep, personal connection between the soul and the Supreme, filled with love, belonging, and divine play. So while Tolle helps us stay present, Tartam wisdom transforms that presence into love-filled experience. While Chopra speaks of universal consciousness, Tartam Vani reveals a personal connection with Dham, Vatan, and divine reality. And while Wilber integrates different aspects of growth, Tartam wisdom completes that journey by leading to surrender and direct realization of the soul’s relationship with the Supreme.

So, these modern teachings are not wrong—they are valuable steps on the path. But they are not the final step. Tartam Vani does not reject them; it completes them. It takes the journey beyond awareness into love, identity, and the experience of the highest reality—Paramdham.

In simple terms:
These teachings open the path…but Tartam wisdom takes you all the way home.

 

Sada Anand Mangal Mein Rahiye

April 15, 2026 , CA

 


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

On Integrity : Tartam Vani

આધ્યાત્મિક અનુભવોના મુખ્ય પ્રકારો

Meditation: Integral Tartamic Nourishment Hindi