Veda & Vitality
Welcome back to Veda & Vitality — where ancient timeless wisdom meets everyday life. Ayurveda, Vedic wisdom, Sanskrit — traditions where health, mind, and daily rhythm are inseparable — made practical for anyone ready to live with more clarity, energy, and intention. Namaster, I am Anindita Sarkar, your host, innovation leader, and researcher. This week I did something a little different. Every morning — before tea, before my phone, before anything else — I chanted. Same sounds, five minutes, seven days straight. And I want to tell you exactly what I noticed. Because it surprised me. Let's start with Om — the most ancient of all Sanskrit sounds. Not a word, not a prayer — a sound. A vibration. In Sanskrit philosophy, Om is considered the primordial sound — the hum from which all creation emerges. Now — before we go further, let me address what some of you might be thinking. Is this religious? The short answer is no. Om predates organised religion. It appears in the Vedas — texts that are fundamentally about the nature of existence, consciousness, and the universe — not doctrine, not deity worship, not ritual belonging. You don't need to believe anything to chant it. You just need a voice and a few minutes. Think of it the way you might think of a tuning fork. A tuning fork doesn't ask you what religion you are. It just vibrates at a specific frequency — and that frequency has an effect. Om works the same way. The sound itself is the practice. My experiment with Om I chanted Om for five minutes each morning. What I noticed by day three: a strange stillness after. Not tiredness — more like the mental noise had been... rinsed. My first thoughts of the day felt cleaner, less reactive. The second chant I experimented with is the Gayatri Mantra — one of the most sacred verses in the Vedas, over 3,000 years old. It's traditionally chanted at sunrise — a salutation to the divine light, and a request for illumination of the mind. ॐ भूर्भुवः स्वः Om Bhur Bhuvaḥ Svaḥ Sanskrit Devanagari Meaning Together: We invoke all three planes of existence — body, breath, and consciousness. तत् सवितुर्वरेण्यं Tat Savitur Vareṇyaṃ Sanskrit Devanagari Meaning Together: That divine light of the sun — the most worthy of all. भर्गो देवस्य धीमहि Bhargo Devasya Dhīmahi Together: We meditate upon the radiant, purifying light of the divine. धियो यो नः प्रचोदयात् Dhiyo Yo Naḥ Prachodayāt Together: May that light illuminate and inspire our intellect. Full meaning in one breath: We meditate on the radiant light of the divine sun — that illuminates all three planes of existence. May that light purify and inspire our minds toward higher understanding. When to Chant Brahma Muhurta — Early Morning (Most Powerful) About 1.5 hours before sunrise Noon — Madhyahna Sandhya The midday transition Dusk — Evening Sandhya Traditionally, the Gayatri Mantra should not be chanted at night, as it does not coincide with the solar energies that the mantra venerates. Ideally, the Gayatri Mantra should be recited at least three times, but it can be repeated up to 108 times. For beginners, 11 times is a great starting point My experiment with Gayatri The Gayatri Mantra is longer, more complex — and that's actually the point. Your mind has to stay with it. There's no room for your to-do list when you're tracking those syllables. I found it almost meditative by default — like a moving anchor. What shifted for me: I noticed I started my mornings with an orientation toward clarity, not urgency. It sounds subtle. It didn't feel subtle. Day 1–2: Five minutes of Om. Slow, eyes closed, feel where the vibration lands in your body. Day 3: Try the Gayatri Mantra. Just follow and feel. Then come tell me what happened. DM me, leave a comment, send a message. I genuinely want to know. If today's episode resonated — share it with one person who might need a quieter morning. Until next time — live with rhythm, not rush.
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