
Our Services
We offer our services to a select few. If you’ve been referred through our website or by someone we trust, we may 'see' your code to sense whether the timing and energy are aligned.
Please don’t take it personally if we feel the alignment is not right. It simply means your path may be better supported by another teacher who resonates more deeply with your current stage. There are many teachers, and for a guru-disciple relationship to truly flourish, it must begin with mutual clarity and consent.

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If we feel a connection, we offer a complimentary introductory session to share the foundational principles that guide our work. True transformation begins at the disciple stage.
Many ashrams ask disciples to withdraw from the world to immerse fully in the guru’s field, rich with stillness, insight, and transcendence. But this often creates a disconnection. When disciples return, they find themselves disoriented, trying to integrate higher consciousness into a surface-level world that neither understands nor supports it.
We walk a different path. We do not ask disciples to abandon their lives, families, or responsibilities. We encourage them to stay grounded in the world while holding space for our guidance. We lower our vibration just enough to meet them where they are, so we can understand their world, and then help them raise their own frequency. This allows our disciples to live with more clarity, purpose, and spiritual awareness, without disconnecting from everyday life.
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Disciples are always free to leave the ashram or the relationship with the guru at any time, for any reason. We have consistently honored this freedom, letting individuals go when we discern that their readiness, alignment, or capacity does not match the path, even when they wish to stay. Likewise, we may release a disciple when their conduct, focus, or alignment does not support the sacred work. Discipleship is a mutual covenant of clarity, readiness, and consent, one that thrives only when both guru and disciple are fully aligned.
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Our primary dharma is not mass instruction, but original seeing. We are entrusted with creating teachings and designing systems that are precise, enduring, and intelligent - intended not merely for this moment, but for decades and centuries ahead. Such work demands uninterrupted clarity, depth, and inward stillness. To scatter ourselves in constant outward teaching would fracture the very channel through which this knowledge flows.
We therefore protect ourselves from the blindness of the age, aware that much of what we create cannot yet be seen, and that many teachings may fall unheard in a world too busy or distracted to receive them. We do not allow the density of the era, nor the ignorance of those living within it, to dilute or extinguish our message, as our vision is futuristic. To safeguard the purity and integrity of what we receive and transmit, untainted by noise, urgency, or distortion of the age, we dedicate ourselves fully to refinement and unadulterated truth.
NOVICE: FIRST STEP ON THE SPIRITUAL PATH
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Every seeker begins as a novice. In this phase, we invite you to spend 2-4 hours with us at a time. After meeting in person, we discern whether the time is right for deeper work or if more time and readiness are needed.
Readiness means you're not just pursuing what you want, it's about responding to what life is truly asking of you. When this deeper calling begins to stir, it often leads a person to a guru.
If our guidance aligns with your path, you’ll start to experience greater clarity, forward movement, and a sense of inner fulfillment. These are signs that we may be the right gurus for your journey. If not, you’re encouraged to continue seeking, your teacher may be waiting for you elsewhere.
Once we reach our capacity of apprentices, disciples, and initiates, we will not meet with any more novices.

Seeking the Footprints
The novice begins searching. They sense there is something more than the material world. They are looking for guidance, for signs of truth, like footprints of the bull.

Seeing the Footprints
The novice becomes an apprentice. With the guru’s presence, they begin to notice clear signs of the higher spirit within themselves. The footprints lead them forward.
​APPRENTICES: KARMIC BALANCING, KNOW ONESELF
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Apprentices are at the early stages of their spiritual journey, driven by a sincere desire to know themselves beyond the surface personality, history, or circumstance.
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As enlightened gurus, we do not merely teach - we read the karmic blueprint of each soul. We identify the patterns binding you to repetitive loops of suffering or limitation. Through precise, individualized guidance, we expose unconscious karmic imprints, cleanse inherited or self-created distortions, and initiate the process of balancing 'sowing with reaping.'
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This includes recognizing both strengths and weaknesses, and cultivating a deepened understanding of cause and effect, so that every aspect of life, mental, emotional, physical, and spiritual, can be consciously transmuted.
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The karmic path is a partnership between guru and disciple: shaped 20% by the guru’s spiritual vision and guidance, and 80% by the disciple’s own karma, choices, and willingness to grow.
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The spiritual world operates very differently from the material world. In the material world, things are transactional and tangible; matter can be exchanged and its value measured. In the spiritual world, however, the fruits of the spirit are not physical and cannot be seen or weighed. This means the “transaction” is not merely material.
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When an apprentice supports a guru financially, it is a simple exchange of money for a service. It allows the guru to live and continue their work on earth, while also recognizing the value of wisdom, truth, purity, peace, joy, understanding, and strength gained through the spiritual path. Your contribution sustains both our physical survival and the sacred work that matters to you.
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Monthly contribution: $2,000.
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We accept only 4 apprentices.

Glimpsing the Bull
The apprentice discovers the bull, their higher spirit. It feels real but unfamiliar. The guru patiently explains the world of spirit, helping them begin to trust what they see.

Catching the Bull
The apprentice struggles to hold on to the reality of the spirit. Their old habits resist. The guru gives instruction and discipline to steady their hands.

Taming the Bull
Through effort and obedience, the apprentice learns to bring spirit and matter into some harmony. They begin to act with more awareness.
DISCIPLES: DHARMIC PATH, FINDING YOUR PURPOSE
Disciples have passed the early tests of discipline, proving sincerity, resilience, and deep resonance with the path. The guru now guides them to remember their dharma, the soul’s purpose beyond karmic conditioning. Through dissolving illusions, quieting societal and personal identities, and balancing faith with intellect, the guru awakens the disciple’s true essence. This is no passive path; it demands courage, humility, and unwavering discipline.
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The dharmic path is a partnership between guru and disciple: shaped 51% by the guru’s spiritual vision and guidance, and 49% by the disciple’s own karma, choices, and willingness to grow.
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Having glimpsed the real, the disciple turns toward unwavering guidance from a living guru, one who embodies what they have longed for. Through this sacred relationship, the disciple's energy begins to align with the higher flow of consciousness.
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You can be a CEO, a parent, or an artist, and still be a disciple. A disciple is a seeker of truth, someone who walks through life with clarity, strength, and purpose.
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True discipleship, especially direct training with an enlightened guru, is for mature souls. These are people who, after many lifetimes of chasing success, pleasure, and recognition, have realized that “once they get what they want, they don’t want it anymore.” They’re ready to learn from a living guru and walk the higher path of wisdom.
Younger souls are still exploring, building careers, relationships, and identities. This is an earlier phase of evolution, a path of trial-and-error. When the soul tires of purely me-centric experiences, it begins to see its individuality as part of a larger purpose. Discipleship then becomes the natural next step, guiding the soul to recognize its dharma within the whole.
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While ordinary life gathers experiences, discipleship gathers light. It’s the sacred art of living truthfully, bringing spirit and matter together in one luminous, purposeful life.
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In worldly life, exchanges are transactional: money for goods, power for influence, fame for recognition. In emotional life, the currency is affection, gestures, intimacy, and devotion freely given as expressions of love. In the intellectual realm, the reward is understanding, curiosity fulfilled and knowledge gained. But in the spiritual world, the exchange transcends all form. Here, the true return is refinement of spirit, wisdom, inner growth, and transformation.
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​Spiritual ethics govern this sacred exchange. A guru is bound to teach but must never exploit. A disciple is bound to learn with respect and never abuse the guru. This mutual respect ensures that discipleship does not diminish who you are; it enhances you.
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​We are also creating Ashram Laws: guidelines that protect both guru and disciple, ensuring that the guru teaches with authority while the disciple flourishes within their dharma. ​
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To understand the dynamic of our relationship with our disciples more fully, visit Our Disciples, where we share their journeys and transformations.​
Contribution: Our disciples meet our basic needs, so we can focus on teaching and vision.
We will accept only six disciples. Two places are currently filled.

Riding the Bull Home
The disciple stage begins. They no longer doubt the bull is real. They ride the energy of spirit and try to align their life, thoughts, actions, and heart with the truth.

Forgetting the Bull
Spirit and self begin to unify. The disciple sees less difference between “me” and “the bull.” The guru points them inward, away from clinging to forms.
INITIATES: ENTERING THE STREAM OF ENLIGHTENMENT
An Initiate is someone who has entered the living stream of pure consciousness, the sacred current that draws the soul inevitably toward liberation. Their enlightenment will come within seven lifetimes if they stay true to the path. Once this current is entered, the soul is no longer bound to cycles of confusion or lower rebirth. Though many lessons remain, the direction is certain.
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The Guru’s role is to help the Initiate attune to this higher flow and stabilize it, so that truth, clarity, and divine intelligence begin to move naturally through their thoughts, words, and actions. The Initiate learns to walk the earth while remaining rooted in the rhythm of spirit.
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For the disciple, the stage before initiation, the Guru’s work is purification. The disciple is still learning to clear the inner distortions that block the flow of divine consciousness. Through teachings, discipline, and direct experience of the Guru’s embodied truth, the disciple learns to recognize and dissolve the forces of ego: illusion, manipulation, desire, and deceit. This is the stage of cleansing and alignment, where the soul is trained to live according to dharma, the natural law of truth. The Guru does not merely instruct but transmits a living current that begins to awaken remembrance within the disciple. As purity deepens, the current of divine consciousness starts to flicker within; when the heart becomes transparent and steady, the current awakens fully, and the disciple becomes an Initiate.
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The Initiate’s work is integration, to remain grounded in the physical world while anchored in divine consciousness. Without grounding, spiritual awareness becomes abstract and detached; without purity, it collapses back into illusion. The Guru, who has crossed this stream many times, helps the Initiate refine their light and channel awakened intelligence as a creative, stabilizing force in the world.
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The stream-enterer's path is a partnership between guru and disciple: shaped 80% by the guru’s spiritual vision and guidance, and 20% by the initiate's own karma, choices, and willingness to grow.
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The Arhant: the Enlightened Guru
The Guru is the embodied channel of the higher current of consciousness, an Arhant, one who has walked the path of enlightenment across many lifetimes. As a human vessel of divine intelligence, the Guru teaches, corrects, and uplifts, not merely speaking truth, but living it.
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Through the Guru, the deepest fetter, ignorance (avijja), the root of all suffering and rebirth, is dispelled. When ignorance dissolves, the entire chain of dependent origination collapses: unconscious drives lose their momentum, craving ceases, and the compulsion toward rebirth falls away.
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The Guru is the living bridge between the soul and the Absolute, guiding seekers beyond the cycle of suffering into the stillness of liberation.
The Bull as the Initiates' spiritual counterpart:
The Bull of the Initiate symbolizes the soul’s accumulated experience, the life-force refined through countless trials across more than eight hundred karmic lifetimes. It is a reservoir of strength, endurance, and cosmic stability, prepared to carry the Initiate into the living current of enlightenment.
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It is the first glimpse of the eternal, the awakening to the truth that every layer of self the world taught them to protect was never real. The illusions of identity begin to dissolve, revealing the soul’s innate purity. ​Between the Initiate and the Guru flows a sacred exchange: the Initiate offers harmony, sincerity, and trust; the Guru offers truth, clarity, and grace.
Contribution: Money, bound by its material impurities, fails as a true instrument of exchange; what is offered here moves beyond transaction into the realm of sacred reciprocity.
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We will accept only 1 Initiate.

Bull and Self Transcended
At the initiate stage, the guru, the disciple, and the bull are working in unison. The separation is dissolving. Service becomes natural.
ADEPT: THE ENLIGHTENED PATH
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The Adept embodies the functional consciousness of enlightenment, a living bridge between realization and action. When an Adept comes into the presence of an enlightened Guru, they enter a sacred field of transformation where their awareness deepens, energy refines, and purpose crystallizes.
An Adept may dwell in an ashram or spiritual center for refinement before re-entering the world to fulfill their dharma. Even at this advanced stage, continual communion with the Divine is essential; mastery is sustained through humility and surrender, not attainment.
An Adept’s life is defined by service (seva), discipline (tapas), meditation (dhyana), and discernment (viveka). They act as conscious instruments of divine will; healers, teachers, initiators, translating timeless truth into living experience.
The Guru’s Role in the Adept’s Life
Even an awakened consciousness, such as that of an Adept, cannot fully manifest in the world without a supporting field, just as no child, however destined, can be born without a mother’s womb. The Guru serves as this living, sacred womb of consciousness: an embodied space-time formed by their own realization, within which the Adept can be “born” into their fullest awakened expression.
In the Kali Yuga and Dvapara Yuga, each Adept, in accordance with their readiness and accumulated karma, is initiated into the living current of the Guru. Through this sacred transmission, they transcend the limitations of birthline and ancestral karma, entering the parampara, the unbroken lineage of the Guru, a vibration of enlightenment that carries the Divine consciousness into the world.
History illustrates this sacred chain of transmission: The Buddha trained under Alara Kalama and Uddaka Ramaputta before attaining Nirvaṇa; Shankaracharya sought Govindapada to anchor his innate illumination in living Vedanta; Ramakrishna was initiated by Tota Puri, who dissolved his final veil of duality and transmitted that current to Swami Vivekananda. Yogananda received initiation from Sri Yukteswar, who was in the line of Lahiri Mahasaya and Mahavatar Babaji. Each found their parampara, the living lineage of awakened wisdom, before radiating light to the world.
Reaching the level of an Adept represents profound spiritual attainment. It signifies mastery over the world of spirit, dominion over the mind, and entry into higher states of consciousness. This mastery is not intellectual alone; it is vibrational, experiential, and transformative.
Adepts are born for diverse purposes: to teach, to stabilize energies, to sustain a lineage, or to maintain a higher vibration within humanity’s collective field. Beneath these varied dharmas lies a single essence, complete liberation from the cycle of birth and death (saṃsara).
The Adept, whether Arhant (one who has attained liberation), Anagami (one who will not return to earthly birth), or Sakadagami (one who will return only once more), remains vigilant and receptive, embodying the vibration of the lineage and discerning their unique dharma. They act as a bridge between Paramatma (the Supreme Divine Intelligence) and the temporal world, translating eternal wisdom into living experience and making the truths of Spirit tangible for those still bound by worldly limitations.
On the enlightened path, Guru and Adept are one, merged in the indivisible oneness of Advaita Vedanta.
Highest Attainment:
When an Adept’s dedication and refinement culminate in full liberation, they have transcended ignorance, attachment, and desire. Free from the cycle of rebirth, yet retaining a subtle sense of individuality, they are called “the worthy one”, an Arhant.
Following Arhanship, there are three distinct expressions of realization:
Paramahamsas: An Arhant may become a Paramahamsa when, after liberation, they choose to return to the world to teach, serve, and uplift humanity. A Paramahamsa is a fully liberated being who acts out of compassion, abiding in sahaja samadhi and perceiving the world not as illusion but as a living expression of the Divine (lila). The name Paramahamsa, or “Supreme Swan,” symbolizes the soul’s ability to discern truth from illusion, living amidst desire yet remaining untouched by it. Recognizing every form and every soul as a manifestation of the same infinite Spirit, they understand each being’s role within the divine field and serve humanity effortlessly through presence and truth. From this boundless awareness, they teach, write, and uplift through the fullness of realization, as exemplified by masters such as Yogananda and Ramakrishna.
Bodhisattvas: Some Arhants take the Bodhisattva path, remaining inwardly withdrawn while holding a high vibration in the world. They focus on the liberation of their own energy, yet subtly guide humanity’s evolution. They perceive the world as impermanent, lacking independent self-nature (sunyata), fundamentally illusory, and a field of suffering to be alleviated through compassionate action without attachment. Understanding that clinging to appearances or desires perpetuates suffering, they act with wisdom and detachment. Their presence itself becomes a living teaching, and their words and actions shape the spiritual architecture of future ages, as exemplified by the life of the Buddha.
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Jivanmuktis: Every Arhant is, by nature, a Jivanmukta, liberated while alive. A Jivanmukta has realized the Self (Atman = Brahman) and is completely free from ignorance, attachment, and the binding effects of karma, even while embodied. They live in the world but engage with it minimally, often withdrawing to solitude and remaining silent to avoid creating new karma, yet remaining naturally compassionate. Those who come into their presence may benefit spontaneously, like resting under a tree. Unlike Paramahamsas or Bodhisattvas, they have no obligation to teach, guide, or serve; their focus is entirely on abiding in the Self. They experience moksha, liberation from the cycle of birth and death (saṃsara), in this life, not only at death. This state is exemplified by sages such as Ramana Maharshi, who embodied complete freedom while living in the world.
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Across the world’s great traditions, these stages speak to the same eternal truth: liberation unfolds in many expressions but culminates in unity. The Bodhisattva, the Paramahamsa, and the Jivanmukta, and then variations of each with some attributes of each to make subtypes each mirror a different radiance of realization, one of transcendence, one of compassion, one of embodiment, and one of dissolution.
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In the end, all find rest in the same source, the timeless awareness that is Paramatma, the Self of all beings. The Adept, in merging with this awareness, becomes both mirror and messenger of the Divine: enlightenment made visible upon the earth.

Returning to the Source
At the adept stage, the master has transcended the bull. Spirit and matter are no longer divided. They rest in unity and wisdom.

Awakened in the World
The adept walk through life untouched by illusion; their presence emanates purity, and the fragrance of truth endures wherever they pass.
CHARITY
​Our form of charity is to offer our expert guidance, insight and wisdom to souls who are not yet ready to fully commit to a spiritual path but can still benefit from direction. We provide them with practical tools, read their soul codes, and explain where they are going off track.
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This support can come through our disciples via text or, in some cases, a few one-on-one sessions, just enough to help them realign with their life’s path. These individuals are often “earth-teach-me” spirits: they are not prioritizing spirituality yet, but they need a guru to help balance their karmas, clarify their purpose, make better decisions, and move forward in the right direction.
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We’ve offered this kind of charitable guidance to over 20 people so far, helping them reorient before sending them on their way.
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We call our work charity because our help, wisdom, and guidance are given freely, without condition or personal gain, yet often misread as self-serving by those unfamiliar with the ways of spirit. Many approach us, believing they are doing us a favor by meeting us or showing interest, thinking, “You are fortunate to have me here. You need me. I am important, famous, successful, influential.”
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Such projections arise from ignorance. They assume we seek followers for validation, or that spiritual authority can be measured by material stature. In truth, our worth does not depend on admiration, esteem, or numbers. Our authority flows solely from spiritual realization, the inner mastery that cannot be bought, borrowed, or bestowed by worldly acclaim.
In a culture that glorifies independence and idolizes self-sufficiency, dependence on a guru is often mistaken for weakness. Unlike the ancient civilizations that revered the sacred role of the guru, the modern mind rarely recognizes the value of true guidance.
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Thus, when we offer direction, it is easily dismissed or claimed in pride: “I was going to do this anyway. I didn’t need an enlightened guru. You are merely an opinion. I have my own methods. God is within.” Such statements reveal not wisdom, but resistance to our insights.
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We gain nothing by imposing our insight on anyone. Yet when a soul is ready, open, sincere, and receptive, we give our time and enlightened energy freely, as an act of spiritual charity, to help them awaken to their highest truth.