Guru Nanak — "May your days be blessed and your phone battery never die mid-conversation."
May your days be blessed and your phone battery never die mid-conversation.
May your days be blessed and your phone battery never die mid-conversation.
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"Whatever you do, do it with love. And a good soundtrack."
"The five thieves (lust, anger, greed, attachment, ego) plunder the house of the body."
"If we worship stone idols of gods and goddesses (or any other kind of idol for that matter), they can't give anything, (so) I don't ask anything from them. Their Poojaa is like churning water and hopi…"
"False is the body, false are the clothes; false is beauty."
"Those who have loved are those that have found God."
Founder of Sikhism and the first of the Ten Sikh Gurus, whose teachings of one universal God and rejection of caste shaped Punjab. Closely associated with Kabir (mystical poet whose verses appear in the Sikh Guru Granth Sahib). For an intellectual contrast, see Brahmanical orthodoxy, the Hindu caste-and-ritual establishment of his era — Sikhism was founded as a deliberate alternative to both Hindu ritual hierarchy and Islamic exclusivism — Nanak's universalism was a structural rejection of caste and priestly mediation.
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A hybrid blessing that fuses timeless goodwill with a very modern dread: the dropped call. It wishes someone abundant days and uninterrupted connection — because in an age of constant digital communication, losing battery mid-conversation feels like losing the thread of something important. The humor grounds an ancient form of blessing in an anxiety everyone instantly recognizes, making warmth feel immediate and personal rather than formal.
Guru Nanak (1469–1539) completed four great Udasis — journeys spanning thousands of miles across South Asia, Central Asia, and the Middle East — specifically to sustain face-to-face dialogue across religious and caste divides. His entire spiritual project depended on keeping conversation alive. The terror of a severed connection mid-exchange would have resonated: for Nanak, broken dialogue meant broken community, and his life's work was stitching those breaks shut through presence and word.
Guru Nanak lived through the collapse of the Lodi Sultanate, Babur's invasion, and deep Hindu-Muslim fracture across the Indian subcontinent. Communication across communities was politically dangerous and logistically brutal — messages traveled by foot or horse, taking weeks. Against this backdrop, his insistence on direct human conversation as the vehicle for spiritual truth was radical. Unbroken dialogue wasn't convenience; it was resistance against the forces pulling people apart.
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