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BELOVED FATE

"My formula for greatness in a human being is amor fati: that one wants nothing to be different, not forward, not backward, not in all eternity.
Not merely bear what is necessary, still less conceal it… but love it."
Nietzsche
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The Sound of No-Thing
A Journey Through Buddhist Emptiness and Kabbalistic Nothingness


The Four Reminders
The four contemplations that can change your life.


Melting the Golden Chain
What is the highest good in life? For millennia, two of the greatest philosophical schools of the ancient world offered competing answers. For the Stoics, the answer was Virtue . A good life was a rational, disciplined one, lived in accordance with nature and duty, where one’s inner character was the only true good. For the Epicureans, the answer was Pleasure . Not a wild, hedonistic party, but a profound state of tranquility ( ataraxia )—a life free from pain, fear, and ment


Gratitude is Fuel
The simple yet profound assertion that "gratitude is fuel" offers a powerful lens through which to understand our inner world.


Govindam Adi-purusham
Here is the English translation of the fifth chapter of the Brahma Samhita, which contains the prayers of Lord Brahma to Lord Govinda.


Fields of Longing
The grand treasure of life isn't a hidden chest of cosmic jewels, but the gratitude felt while holding a warm mug on an ordinary morning.


The Journey
AMOR FATI  is a personal system of thought and practice aimed at achieving human greatness. It merges the Buddhist teachings of the Bhavachakra (the Wheel of Becoming) with Friedrich Nietzsche’s formula for greatness: a love of one’s fate. For me, this active and devotional love for fate is synonymous with the spirit of Hare Krishna . An Introduction: A Marriage to Life Welcome to a practice of the heart. The system you are about to explore is rooted in Amor Fati , a Latin ph


One Talisman
The One Talisman is a map of consciousness, a guide for the practitioner seeking to harmonize the two most fundamental forces of spiritual life: active Will and graceful Surrender. At its core, it presents a central challenge and a path to its resolution. On one hand, we are called to "Hold on tightly" —to master our will and choice, to cultivate perception and intensity, and to consciously shape our reality. On the other, we are urged to "let go lightly" —to renounce our fe
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