What does it really mean to live your dharma when life looks nothing like a scripture story?
In this episode, Kamala Rose and Nischala Joy Devi begin with Bhagavad Gita 3.34–35—“Better to do one’s own dharma poorly than another’s well”—and follow it into the very human landscapes of work, motherhood, monastic vows, and hard personal choices.
Through stories of bus drivers, mothers, and monastics, they explore how our unique mix of karma, samskaras, upbringing, and temperament shapes a path that is truly our own. They speak candidly about entering and leaving ashram life, facing judgment from others, and the moment you realize the container you once loved has become too small.
This is a conversation about recognizing when you’re out of alignment, finding the courage to course-correct, and discovering how any role—no matter how “ordinary”—can become sacred when it expresses your deepest dharma.
In this episode, we explore:
- The Gita’s teaching on doing your own dharma vs. copying someone else’s
- How karma, samskaras, and swabhava shape your unique path
- The tension between job, role, and true purpose
- Women’s evolving access to study, teaching, and spiritual authority
- Entering and leaving monastic life as an expression of dharma
- How a city bus driver turns work into compassion and seva
- Why alignment with dharma deepens meditation and inner peace
Fler avsnitt av A Woman’s Gita: Bhagavad Gita by and for Western Women
Visa alla avsnitt av A Woman’s Gita: Bhagavad Gita by and for Western WomenA Woman’s Gita: Bhagavad Gita by and for Western Women med Nischala Joy Devi & Kamala Rose finns tillgänglig på flera plattformar. Informationen på denna sida kommer från offentliga podd-flöden.
