Self-knowledge isn't about 'knowing yourself better'—understanding your likes, preferences, and traumas. It's something much more radical: knowing what you truly are.

What Self-Knowledge is Not
- It's not therapy (though therapy helps)
- It's not astrology, the enneagram, or personality tests
- It's not introspection about your emotions
- It's not a vague "inner journey"
These tools map the mind—preferences, conditionings, patterns. They are useful, but they don't answer the fundamental question: who is the one who has a mind?
What Self-Knowledge (Truly) Is
In the Vedic tradition, self-knowledge (atma-jñāna) is knowing that you are not the body, not the mind, not the roles you play. You are pure consciousness (ātman)—limitless, unborn, undying.
This is not a belief. It is a discovery—made possible by the systematic study of Vedanta.

Why It's Important
All human dissatisfaction stems from a fundamental error: you mistake yourself for what you are not. You think you are the body (and suffer from illness and old age). You think you are the mind (and suffer from anxiety and depression). You think you are your roles (and suffer when you lose them).
Self-knowledge corrects this error. The correction is permanent—it doesn't depend on continuous practice, mood, or circumstance.
How to Begin
- Question—stop automatically accepting "I am this"
- Study—the Bhagavad Gītā is the entry point
- Seek a teacher—in the traditional Vedanta lineage
- Practice—meditation, karma yoga, viveka (discernment)
Self-knowledge is not the end of a journey. It is the end of the illusion that there was a journey.
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