Satsang with Mohanji 2026
The New Year’s satsang with Mohanji began with a powerful emphasis on focus and mindfulness in everyday actions. Most people, the moment they wake up, rush to their mobile phones—an immediate sign of a distracted mind. A distracted mind cannot create clarity. Focus and clear vision are the true mantras of success.
Successful people
Everyone is born into the same world, under similar circumstances and opportunities, yet some succeed while many fail. The difference lies not in destiny, but in attitude and awareness. Failure is often self-created—through constant complaining, fault-finding, and self-sabotage. Such tendencies gradually become a recipe for failure. These individuals fail to use opportunities with purpose and focus.
Successful people, on the other hand, identify opportunities and utilise them optimally. They meditate on the task at hand and remain deeply involved with it. Passion is a common trait among all successful people. Passion leads to contentment, and contentment leads to fulfilment. Fulfilment, in turn, opens doors to new possibilities.
Another important quality is silence in action. Successful people speak less about what they are doing; they allow their thoughts and intentions to “bake” silently, purifying their actions. Along with this comes controlled and conscious delegation. They ensure steady forward progress in whatever responsibility they take on. Progress, however small, is essential.
Equally important is the balance between work and rest. Just as our organs need rest after functioning, our actions also require pauses. Action followed by rest sustains clarity and reduces unnecessary stress. When you work, work with total concentration. When you rest, rest completely. This rhythm transforms concentration into a lifelong companion and frees you from anxiety about results.
Mobile phone addiction, excessive social media engagement, and other distracting habits contaminate the mind. Such a mind seeks escapism—complaining, gossiping, or wasting opportunities. These unconscious habits can and must be removed. Mindfulness is the master key to success.
A distracted mind also struggles to accept criticism. It becomes dejected by negative opinions. Mohanji reminds us: why worry about others’ opinions if your actions are conscious, sincere, and aligned with truth? Accept only what is relevant and corrective; ignore the rest.
Always place purpose above pleasure. Stay away from negativity and excessive information. Social media floods the mind with unnecessary content—there is no need to absorb everything. Reduce virtual engagement and seek direct experience instead. Avoid gossiping, judging, excessive analysing, and negativity; these weaken actions and obstruct success.
Krishna’s message was clear: be practical, stand for truth, and uphold righteousness. This is clarity in action.
Effectiveness is achieved by minimising distractions. Do what you must do—without expecting others to do it for you. Expect less from people; expectations often lead to disappointment.

Social pattern
Mohanji also highlighted a common social pattern: most people communicate not to connect, but to prolong conversations driven by their own agendas. They neither listen nor stay present. When you encounter such communication, pause. Do not waste energy. Silence brings stability.
If engagement is ineffective and the other person is unwilling to listen, step back. Do not dissipate energy. Your pause creates space and safety. If the other person is ready, the connection will naturally emerge. How you feel about a person determines whether genuine engagement is possible. Conversations without heart leave no imprint.
Therefore, mindfulness is essential—not only in daily tasks but also in our interactions. Complaining leads to isolation; commitment builds strength. Get on with your work, be a pillar to society, and reflect clarity and commitment.
Feel people rather than judge them—this deepens the connection. Some individuals carry an overwhelming presence; this comes from inner alignment and awareness.
These are fundamental behavioural patterns that lead to success, stability, and fulfilment. Mindfulness, above all, remains the guiding mantra.

Changing Gurus
Regarding changing Gurus or seeking spiritual experiences from multiple sources, Mohanji offered a profound analogy. He said that changing a Guru is like changing one’s father or mother. Just as parents are not chosen casually, a Guru does not come into one’s life by accident.
A Guru arrives because the connection is destined, evolved, and purposeful. It is not random. When such a connection happens, it does not require doubt or constant evaluation. Doubting the Guru reflects instability in faith rather than a lack in the Guru.
Mohanji emphasised that every true spiritual connection is the Guru’s call, not the seeker’s choice. The seeker’s role is to remain steady, rooted, and committed. Spiritual growth demands stability, not experimentation driven by curiosity or restlessness.
Faith deepens only when there is consistency and surrender, not when one keeps shifting in search of newer experiences. Deviating, doubting, or comparing weakens the inner connection and scatters spiritual energy.
Therefore, once a Guru is recognised, one must stay anchored in faith, trust the process, and walk the path with sincerity and perseverance—without deviation or doubt.
When times are difficult, do not stop or collapse. Move steadily—even if the pace is slow. Keep your focus firmly on the objective and continue walking.
Progress does not always require speed; it requires steadiness, balance, and perseverance. As long as you are moving forward without falling, the path will eventually open.
Organ donation
Organ donation is one of the most profound expressions of Karma Yoga when it arises from pure intention. However, harming or killing individuals for the purpose of organ extraction is a grave crime and a severe violation of dharma.
When a person voluntarily consents to donate organs after leaving the body, it becomes a sublime and selfless act. Such a donation carries high karmic merit because it is rooted in compassion, awareness, and detachment from the physical form.
From a karmic perspective, this is a higher-order act of Karma Yoga—an offering made without expectation of reward, recognition, or return. The intention is pure, and the service continues even after the individual has departed from the body.
To give without demand, without fear, and without attachment—especially for the well-being of unknown others—is among the purest forms of service to humanity.
We are deeply grateful for such profound insights from Mohanji, as he walks us on this powerful path of Raja Yoga!
Thank you, Mohanji!

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|| JAI BRAHMARISHI MOHANJI ||
Edited & Published by – Testimonials Team, 07th January 2026