To book a session please send an email to
vedantalucua@gmail.com
to allows us to verify your identity.
Also, please use Vedanta Inquiry for 1h in the subject line.
Unfortunately, we have been pestered by a mentally disturbed adharmic troll (what the Bhagavad Gita refers to as a Rakshasha*).
There’s actually no such thing as a bad person anyway, only an ignorant person.
These Asuras** and Rakshasha are everywhere in life, and we have to manage our engagement with them, through the qualifications of Discrimination, Dispassion and Discipline.
We might even realise that we have been one at a time of our life.
The focus is to bring your actions to dharma (non-injury) and ensure that we add value to everyone that we meet and bring a focus to the Light that is our very nature.
Asuras are generally harmless but best avoided, due to their predominant Tamasic nature. A Rakshasha is someone you actively have to protect yourself from. Remembering that they are just the Self in a very delusional form, yet take active steps to ensure that you can not be reached by them (as we are doing here).
*Rakshasha:
The term rakshasha means ‘man eater’, and as the name implies, these are harmful, destructive people. They have all the traits of the asura**, but owing to a rajasic temperament and a general focus on their dislikes rather than their likes, they are always at war with everyone around them.
**Asuras:
Asuras are generally tamasic and driven by their binding likes, desires and attachments. Their lives are characterised by lust—lust for money, power, fame, pleasure and all kinds of sense gratification. Staunchly materialistic, they are extroverted in nature; hooked to the world of objects with little capacity to turn inward and absolutely no value for spiritual matters.
Source: THE DIVINE SONG – A New Translation and Commentary by Rory B Mackay