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A journey that began in silence and grew into my first book: “The Everyday Gurus.”

Over the past months, I had stepped back a little from the online world. There was simply too much noise, too many energy drains, and not enough stillness. I chose more time offline, in the real world where life truly unfolds. I walked in nature, shared small Dharma Talks with kind souls, deepened my Sadhana, created new music, and wrote my first book.

That period of retreat became a precious space. Quiet yet fertile. The first inquiries for next year’s retreats were already arriving, and change was moving beautifully. Life felt like it was rearranging itself in harmony. Something deeper wanted to unfold through stillness rather than effort.

Those who wanted to reach me always found a way. For everything else, its moment has come or it soon will.

Ghanashyam Das playing the harmonium with focus and devotion in front of a golden patterned curtain.

From Reflection to Creation — the Birth of The Everyday Gurus

During that time, I also began shaping what will become my first book, The Everyday Gurus. I had shared glimpses of this project here on the blog before. But as I kept writing, I realized the theme reached far deeper than I initially imagined. What began as a simple collection of reflections grew into a full journey. I felt called to capture it completely in this first work.

In The Everyday Gurus, you’ll discover the wisdom that surrounds us every single day, in the elements, the animal world, and the natural rhythms of life itself.
This book invites you to meet teachers who don’t live in distant temples but within our environment. Sometimes they are obvious, sometimes hidden, sometimes whispering so quietly that only a still mind can hear them.

With meditations, soundscapes, and practical exercises, The Everyday Gurus opens a space for mindful learning and inner transformation, anytime and anywhere.

The book will first be released in German, likely in spring 2026. It’s a completely DIY project, crafted with love and independence. It will be available only in printed form—something tangible, meant to be held, not just scrolled.

Hari Om Tat Sat.