The ashram sat among the redwoods of Northern California, quiet in the early morning light. My teacher was seated on a simple cushion near the window, and I took my place across from her. Our weekly conversations had become a refuge—a place where the noise of ordinary life gave way to deeper questions.
That morning, we turned toward one of the most fundamental questions of all: Why does peace seem so elusive?
The Forgotten Self
“Teacher,” I began, “Vedanta says that the peace we seek is already our nature. But honestly, that feels abstract to me. In my experience, peace comes and goes. It seems to depend on what is happening in my life.”
She nodded. “That is exactly what makes Vedanta so radical. We are so accustomed to tying our happiness to circumstances that we overlook what is always present.”
“But why?” I asked. “Why do we overlook something so central?”
“It begins with ignorance,” she said. “Not ignorance as a moral failing, but simple non-recognition. In Vedanta this is called avidya—not knowing our true nature. From that comes a sense of incompleteness, and from that incompleteness comes the search.”
“The search for what?”
“For fullness,” she replied. “Almost all human striving begins there. We feel something is missing, and we spend our lives trying to complete ourselves.”
The Search for Experience
I considered that for a moment. “So we look outside for what is already within?”
“Exactly. And what we seek outside ourselves is always some form of experience.”
“What do you mean?”
“Take any desire,” she said. “Why do you want a beautiful home? A successful career? Recognition? Love? None of those things matter merely as objects. They matter because of the experience they promise—the feeling of security, pleasure, importance, connection, accomplishment.”
As she spoke, something subtle shifted in me.
“So even the things I value most are really valued for the experience they produce.”
“Yes. Relationships, possessions, achievements, status, even identity itself. All of them are sought because of the inner state they seem to offer.”
“And the ego too?”
She smiled. “The ego may be the most compelling experience of all—the experience of being a separate ‘me,’ with all its pride, fear, shame, and longing. But even that is something appearing in consciousness.”
The Spiritual Experience Trap
I paused. “What about spirituality? Are we not seeking experiences there too—peace, bliss, oneness, transcendence?”
“You have touched something important,” she said. “Many seekers approach spirituality in exactly the same way they approach worldly life. They merely substitute subtler experiences for grosser ones.”
“So the search continues, only in a more refined form.”
“Yes. But the basic error remains. If you seek fulfillment through experience—any experience—you remain dependent on what comes and goes.”
“And all experience comes and goes,” I said quietly.
“Precisely. Even the highest spiritual state, if it is a state, is temporary. It may be profound. It may be transformative. It may point toward truth. But if it begins and ends, it cannot be your true nature.”
I leaned forward. “Then what is the alternative?”
“Vedanta shifts the focus from experience to understanding. Not becoming something new, but recognizing what is already true.”
Consciousness Is Not an Experience
“You mean recognizing that we are already whole?”
“Yes. The fullness you seek is not produced by any event, object, or inner state. If something could make you whole, it could also take that wholeness away. True fullness must be intrinsic to what you are.”
I hesitated before asking the next question. “Then consciousness—our true Self—cannot be experienced as an object?”
“That is the point,” she said. “Consciousness is not one more experience among other experiences. It is that to which all experiences occur. You cannot step outside it and observe it as an object, because it is the very basis of observation.”
“Then how can it be known?”
“Through recognition. Through clear understanding. Not by producing a new experience, but by correctly identifying what has always been present.”
“Is that what Self-knowledge means?”
“Yes. It is not information about yourself. It is the recognition of your true nature.”
Experience and the One Who Knows It
I sat with her words for a while.
“If everything I know is an experience, then what am I?”
She smiled. “That is the essential question. What is the nature of the one to whom all experience appears?”
She continued, “Thoughts, emotions, sensations, perceptions—all of them arise and pass. Their common feature is change. But while they change, the consciousness in which they are known does not come and go.”
“You are saying consciousness itself is unchanging?”
“Yes. It is the constant presence in whose light all changing experience is revealed. Happiness appears in it. Sadness appears in it. Dreams appear in it. Even the absence of mental activity is later known because of it.”
She gestured toward the open window.
“Think of the sky. Clouds move through it. Weather changes within it. Day and night alternate. But the space itself is not burdened by what passes through it. Consciousness is like that.”
The Great Oversight
“Then why is it so easily missed?” I asked. “If it is always present, why do we not recognize it?”
“For the same reason the background of a painting is often overlooked. Attention is captured by what is changing, dramatic, and immediate. We become absorbed in the movement of experience and fail to notice that in which all movement appears.”
I nodded. That felt true not just philosophically, but personally.
The Unconscious and the Restless Mind
She continued, “And our experience is not only conscious. Much of our inner life lies below the surface. Old impressions, fears, habits, emotional patterns—these shape how we see and respond long before we are clearly aware of them.”
“You mean the subconscious?”
“Yes. Much of what we call personality is really conditioning operating beneath ordinary awareness. That is why the mind can remain restless even when outer circumstances are favorable. Unseen patterns keep generating disturbance.”
“That explains why silence can feel uncomfortable,” I said. “When distractions fall away, what is hidden starts to rise.”
She nodded. “Exactly. And that is also why these patterns are not easily dismissed by willpower. Many of them were formed long before they could be examined clearly. They operate automatically.”
Three Layers of Experience
She held up her hands as if outlining something invisible.
“Think of your present condition in three layers. At the surface are your conscious experiences—thoughts, feelings, reactions, perceptions. Beneath that lies the subconscious—the stored impressions, patterns, and tendencies that quietly influence your life. At the core is Atma—pure consciousness itself.”
“So both my conscious and subconscious life are known to consciousness?”
“Yes. Neither layer is your true nature. Both are objects of knowledge. They are experienced. You are that because of which they are experienced.”
Misidentification
“This makes sense intellectually,” I said. “But if my nature is peace, why do I feel so caught in experience—especially difficult experience?”
“Because of identification,” she replied. “We mistake what appears in consciousness for what we are. A thought arises and we say, ‘I am thinking.’ An emotion surges and we say, ‘I am upset.’ We fuse identity with the contents of experience.”
“Like mistaking the movie for the screen.”
“Exactly. The images depend on the screen, but the screen does not depend on the images. In the same way, experience depends on consciousness, but consciousness is not limited by experience.”
Karma Yoga as Inner Work
“So how does one begin to loosen this identification?” I asked. “Especially with those deeper patterns?”
“This is where Karma Yoga becomes essential,” she said. “But not merely as outward selfless action. At its heart, Karma Yoga is a way of understanding oneself through one’s actions, reactions, likes, and dislikes.”
“So it is a form of introspection?”
“Yes. It asks: Why am I doing what I am doing? Why do I react this way? Why do I need this result? Why does this praise matter so much? Why does this failure hurt so deeply? When you examine your motives honestly, you begin to trace visible behavior back to hidden conditioning.”
I could feel the practicality of it.
“Then Karma Yoga is not only about acting well. It is also about uncovering the structure of the ego.”
“Exactly. It is a progressive unwinding. You begin with the gross and obvious. Over time, subtler layers reveal themselves. In that sense, Karma Yoga prepares the mind for deeper stillness and insight.”
The Difficulty of the Path
“This all sounds clear,” I said, “but I can also sense why it would be difficult.”
She smiled. “Spiritual understanding is often simple in principle and difficult in practice. The difficulty lies not in hearing the truth, but in facing the attachments, fears, and patterns that make us resist it.”
“That is why the work can feel uncomfortable.”
“Yes. You are not merely rearranging ideas. You are questioning the very structure of the self you have taken yourself to be. That takes time, honesty, and patience.”
“And guidance?”
“Very much so. Because when deeper material begins to surface, it helps to have someone who can distinguish between clarity and avoidance, between genuine insight and subtle self-deception.”
Creating Space for Recognition
“So through Karma Yoga and inquiry,” I said slowly, “one begins to see that thoughts, emotions, and patterns are happening to me, but are not what I am.”
“Yes. And that shift, though subtle, is powerful. You begin to discover that peace is not something to be manufactured. It is what remains when misidentification begins to loosen.”
“It sounds so simple.”
“It is simple,” she said, smiling. “But it is not always easy. We are not being asked to become something new. We are being asked to stop overlooking what is already true.”
Vairagya and Peace
I reflected on that quietly. “Is this what Vedanta calls vairagya? Not indifference, but seeing clearly that fullness does not come from experience?”
Her face brightened. “Yes. True vairagya is not a rejection of life. It is freedom from the belief that experience can complete you. From that freedom, you can enjoy what comes and meet what goes without losing yourself in either.”
Coming Home
The room grew still. Through the open window I could see a raven gliding above the redwoods, wings catching the morning light.
“I notice,” I said slowly, “that when I really listen to what you are saying, something quiets. The usual restlessness loosens. It feels less like learning something new and more like remembering something I had forgotten.”
She smiled. “That recognition is the beginning of wisdom. Vedanta does not give you peace. It reveals the peace that was never absent.”
“And when that understanding becomes steady?”
“Then you have come home,” she said. “Not to something newly acquired, but to what you have always been.”
Outside, the wind moved through the redwoods. Inside, another kind of movement was taking place—the subtle shift from seeking peace to recognizing that peace is one’s nature.
That, I began to see, is the promise of Vedanta.