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#Indian Philosophy

Ayurveda

A ritual of high-priced oils and herbs disguised as ancient Indian life science, ultimately disrupting the balance of your finances. It cleverly stirs both comfort and anxiety through so-called constitution tests, urging salon visits under the guise of self-management. While preaching harmony with nature, its advertisements peddle the latest trendy gimmicks. Promised to align your life energy, yet it’s your wallet that undergoes the deepest detox. Borrowing the prestige of ancient wisdom, it tantalizes modern self-help desires with its delightful absurdity.

chakra

A chakra is a collection of invisible energy wheels alleged to reside within the body, serving as devices that justify spending on spiritual balance. It’s the mystical dance partner that has believers swirling in an endless breathing exercise on yoga mats, chasing inner peace. In reality, it’s merely a buzzword absorbed into the modern self-help industry’s business model. When one fails to assemble all seven, you’re told your energy is out of harmony—hence the impulse to purchase color-coded beads and stones by the dozen.

jnana

Jnana is an ancient Sanskrit concept promising soul elevation, yet most people treat it as a cosmic excuse for existential loafing. It thrives as a popular hashtag beneath serene sunrise yoga snapshots. Very few actually know the roadmap to jnana, and even fewer venture beyond quoting mystic tweets. Despite heralding ultimate insight, it primarily acts as a VIP pass to upscale philosophical banter. When faced with confusion, invoking jnana magically restores one’s tranquility—enlightenment still shipping soon.

Karma Yoga

Karma Yoga is the practice of proclaiming the renunciation of rewards while secretly banking praise and self-satisfaction. It is a social experiment under the guise of selfless service, blending goodwill with ego in a peculiar spiritual exercise. With every act, the applause heard is not from others but the inner voice shouting "Like!". The ultimate goal is less about helping others and more about appealing to the divine spectator called oneself. Perhaps true selflessness is the ironic freedom attained only by those who have forgotten receiving compliments in the first place.

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