Existential crisis isn't an illness. It's the moment when life as you knew it stops making sense — and this, however painful, is the beginning of something important.

What is an existential crisis
It's when questions that were dormant wake up forcefully: - What am I living for? - What truly matters? - Who am I beyond the roles I play? - Is there anything beyond working, consuming, and dying?
These questions are healthy. The problem isn't having them — it's not having the tools to answer them.
Common Symptoms
- Feeling of emptiness or lack of purpose
- Disinterest in things that previously motivated you
- Questioning of relationships and career
- Anxiety about the future and regret about the past
- A sense that "something is missing"

The Vedanta Perspective
Vedanta doesn't treat an existential crisis as a problem — it treats it as a symptom of maturity. The tradition calls this vairāgya — detachment born from the understanding that finite things cannot provide infinite satisfaction.
The person in crisis has realized (even without being able to articulate it) that: - Money doesn't complete - Fame doesn't complete - Relationships don't complete - Nothing external completes
And they are right. Nothing external completes because you are already complete. The crisis is the invitation to discover this.
What to Do
- Don't medicate the crisis — if there's no clinical depression, don't numb the questioning
- Welcome the questions — they are more valuable than any ready-made answer
- Study — Vedanta, philosophy, deep psychology
- Seek guidance — a teacher, therapist, or mentor who respects your questions
- Meditate — the answer is within, not without
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