July 06, 2026
The soul, by its own nature, is pure, conscious, and blissful.
Kundakunda was a Jain monk writing in South India around the early centuries of the Common Era, during a time when his community faced enormous pressure to define what was truly real amid competing philosophical schools. He wrote the Samayasara as a direct address to practitioners who kept getting pulled into ritual, doctrine, and external performance at the expense of knowing their own nature. The line cuts through all of that. It says the thing you are looking for is not somewhere else in time — not in a better future version of yourself or a corrected past — but is the actual character of the soul right now, in this moment, before you add anything to it.
Reflection
Kundakunda taught that we suffer because we identify with what we do rather than what we are. What is one thing you are holding onto right now that you treat as part of your identity but is actually just a role or a habit?
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