There is a familiar fantasy: if you could just leave – the job, the city, the difficult relationships, the noise – you would finally find the stillness you are looking for. The Himalayas appear in this fantasy. So does a monastery, an ashram, a quiet cabin somewhere far from obligation. The assumption underneath it feels self-evident: the world is what is disturbing you, so distance from the world must be the solution.
This assumption is the source of the confusion, not the solution to it.
Look at what the plan actually requires. You would need to leave behind every external circumstance that currently presses on you. But you cannot leave behind the mind that evaluates those circumstances. You cannot leave behind the habits of thought that run their familiar loops regardless of geography. You cannot leave behind the capacity for anxiety, for wanting, for comparison. These are not stored in your city. They travel. Wherever you relocate the body, you relocate the mind with it – and within days or weeks, the mind has reconstructed its dissatisfaction from whatever new material the new environment provides. A different monastery, the same inner weather.
Swami Dayananda puts this plainly: running away from a situation is more often than not running away from yourself, which is not possible. Wherever you go, you find the world is there.
This is not a personal failure of imagination. Nearly everyone who has seriously asked the question of freedom has, at some point, felt the pull of escape. It is the first hypothesis the seeking mind generates: the problem is outside, so the solution must be outside too. The error is logical, not moral. But it is still an error.
The ferocious dog chained to a pole illustrates what is actually happening. A cat sits just inches beyond the dog’s reach. The dog lunges and barks – the full performance of threat. The cat does not move. Its fearlessness has nothing to do with the dog becoming gentle. The dog is exactly as ferocious as it appears. The cat’s peace comes entirely from understanding one structural fact: the chain. The world can bark. But there is a limit to what it can reach.
The cat did not solve its problem by running to a different field. It sat down and understood something about the nature of the dog’s power – and recognized that power had a built-in limitation.
This is the direction the inquiry must go. Not: how do I get far enough away from the world? But: what is the actual nature of the world’s power over me, and does that power have a limit?
The person who escapes to a forest and the person who stays in a city are both, if they remain unexamined, carrying the same wound. The external address is irrelevant to the internal condition. What changes the internal condition is not location but understanding. Specifically, understanding what the world actually is, what you actually are, and what relationship between the two is generating the disturbance.
Physical renunciation – leaving the world – is, at best, a change of environment. It may reduce friction. It may create more time and quiet for inquiry. But it is infrastructure, not insight. And without the insight, the infrastructure changes nothing essential.
The question then is not whether to leave, but what kind of renunciation actually addresses the problem at its root.
Renunciation: External Choice vs. Internal Necessity
The word “renunciation” almost always conjures the same image: shaved head, ochre robes, a Himalayan cave, the permanent abandonment of family and career. If that is what renunciation means, then the question of finding peace while living in the world seems to answer itself-you can’t. But this image captures only one form of renunciation, and not the one Vedanta identifies as essential.
Vedanta draws a sharp distinction between two entirely different things that travel under the same name. The first is Bāhya-sannyāsa-external renunciation, the literal adoption of a monastic life: relinquishing property, stepping outside family obligations, reducing one’s transactions with the world to the bare minimum. The second is Āntara-sannyāsa-internal renunciation, which is not a change of clothes or address but a change in how one cognitively relates to the world. It is the intellectual dropping of dependence on the world for security, completeness, and lasting happiness.
Here is the decisive point: Bāhya-sannyāsa is optional. Āntara-sannyāsa is not.
External renunciation is what [SP] calls a choice of “infrastructure.” A scientist who needs to conduct precision research might choose to work in a controlled laboratory-no ambient noise, no interruptions, stable temperature. The laboratory does not do the research. It creates conditions in which research becomes easier. Similarly, some people choose a monastic environment because it reduces the sheer volume of worldly demands on their attention, giving them more time and mental availability for sustained study and inquiry. That is a legitimate choice. But the laboratory is not the experiment, and the monk’s robe is not the freedom.
Think of it this way: a scientist working at home, surrounded by a busy family, faces more friction. But if that scientist possesses genuine discipline and clarity of purpose, the same research gets done. The infrastructure helped the other person; it was not the thing itself.
Āntara-sannyāsa is something else entirely. A householder who performs every worldly duty-earns a living, raises children, maintains relationships-but does so without treating the world as the source of their security or completeness, has achieved the internal renunciation that Vedanta requires. This is sometimes called Gauṇa-sannyāsa, figurative or secondary renunciation: the person has not formally left the world, but has left emotional dependence on it. The body remains in the game; the psyche is no longer hostage to it.
The confusion between these two is almost universal, and it is understandable. External renunciation is visible. You can see the monk and conclude that something meaningful has happened. Internal renunciation leaves no external trace. The person sitting across from you at dinner, apparently engaged in the same ordinary life as everyone else, may have achieved something the monk in the cave has not. Conversely, the monk in the cave, if he has not undergone the internal shift, has merely relocated his anxieties to a quieter address.
This is not an argument against external renunciation. For some people, in some seasons of life, it genuinely serves as the environment in which the internal shift becomes possible. Vedanta does not dismiss it. What Vedanta insists upon is that the external change can accompany the internal shift, or follow it, or precede it-but it cannot substitute for it. The person who believes that physically leaving the world is the renunciation has confused the scaffolding for the building.
What this means practically is significant: the path to peace is open to you right where you are. The apartment, the office, the family dinner table-none of these are obstacles to internal renunciation. They may create friction; they are not barriers. The barrier, if there is one, is entirely internal.
But what exactly does this internal renunciation consist of? Saying “drop your dependence on the world” is easy to state and almost impossible to act on directly. The next question is how Āntara-sannyāsa actually works-what it means to stop depending on the world, and what understanding makes that possible without simply forcing yourself to feel nothing.
Cultivating Internal Detachment
The question that naturally follows from understanding that internal renunciation is what is required is: what, precisely, is being renounced? Not objects. Not people. Not roles. What is being dropped is emotional dependence on them – the belief that your security, completeness, and lasting happiness actually live inside the things you love, achieve, or own.
This is a subtle but decisive point. You can keep your job, your family, your home, and still be internally free. You can give all of them up and still be a prisoner. The variable is not possession; it is dependence. And dependence, here, does not mean affection or care – it means the structural belief that some object outside you is the source of a peace you do not already have. When that object delivers pleasure, you feel temporarily full. When it is threatened or lost, you feel the floor give way. That oscillation is what Vedanta is targeting, not the object itself.
The precise term for this dispassion, when it matures, is vairāgya. The word is often translated as “detachment,” which creates the wrong image – a person who has drained the color from life and now watches it in grey. That is not what the notes describe. Vairāgya is defined here as a natural drop of dependence that occurs through understanding, not through gritted renunciation. It is not the exhausted withdrawal of someone who tried to find peace in objects and failed. It is the calm recognition that the objects were structurally incapable of providing what was being asked of them.
What creates this recognition is understanding the world’s mithyā nature. Mithyā does not mean the world is illusory or unreal in the sense of a hallucination. It means the world is dependently real – it exists, it functions, it can be transacted with, but it has no independent existence and no power of its own to provide lasting security. The world is real enough to use. It is not real enough to lean on.
The illustration here is precise. Imagine a beautifully made chair – painted, decorated, carefully designed. Looking at it, you would never guess what it is made of. But it is made of cardboard. For display, it is magnificent. For sitting briefly, perhaps it holds. But if you place your full weight on it – if you depend on it for actual support – it collapses, and you land hard on the floor. The problem is not the chair. The chair is what it is. The problem is placing on cardboard a demand that only solid wood can meet.
The world is that chair. It is functionally valid for transaction. You can engage with it, appreciate it, act within it without any problem. What it cannot bear is the weight of your emotional survival – the demand that it be the source of permanent security and happiness. When you place that demand on it, the world does not become evil; it simply cannot hold what you are asking it to hold. Every loss, every betrayal, every disappointment is the cardboard giving way under a structural overload it was never equipped to carry.
Vairāgya is what happens when you see this clearly. Not bitterness. Not world-hatred. Not withdrawal into a kind of emotional numbness. Simply the removal of an unreasonable demand from objects that were never designed to meet it. The objects themselves remain. The relationship with them changes – from desperate dependence to easy transaction. You still enjoy what is enjoyable. You still care for what matters. But the floor of your peace is no longer resting on any of it.
This is not something you force yourself to feel. That is the point the notes make explicitly: vairāgya is a natural drop, not a willful suppression. You cannot manufacture dispassion by deciding to stop caring. But you can expose the structural incapacity of the world to provide permanent security – and once you see it, the grip loosens on its own. The effort is in the understanding, not in the detaching.
It is completely normal to hear this and immediately wonder whether such a shift is possible while remaining in the middle of ordinary life – raising children, managing careers, navigating relationships. That concern is not unique. But the shift being described happens in the mind’s relationship to experience, not in the inventory of experiences themselves. The world you live in does not need to change for vairāgya to develop. Only the demand you are making of it does.
The question that remains is sharper: if this dependence is dropped, if the cardboard is no longer being used as a structural support – what fills that space? What does the inner life look like when it is no longer organized around acquiring and protecting the things that were supposed to deliver peace?
The Freedom from Wanting: Beyond Emptiness
Here is the objection that almost everyone raises at this point, and it deserves a direct answer before it hardens into resistance: if I stop depending on my family, my work, my achievements for a sense of security and happiness, what exactly is left? Won’t I become hollow? Won’t life flatten into grey indifference? This fear is not a personal weakness. It is the universal one, and it arises because we have only ever known one kind of fullness – the kind that comes from getting something. Remove the getting, and it seems like only absence remains.
But this conclusion assumes that the objects were the source of the happiness to begin with. Look more carefully at what actually happens in a moment of joy. You wanted something. You got it. For a brief interval, the wanting stopped. And in that gap – before the next want arose – there was peace. The peace was not in the object. The object simply interrupted the wanting long enough for something already present to show itself. What showed itself was not produced by the object. The object only removed the noise that was covering it.
This is what Vedanta means by pūrṇatvam – fullness, completeness – as the inherent nature of the Self. Not a fullness that needs to be constructed or earned, but one that is already the case, and is only obscured by the constant movement of wanting and fearing. Vairāgya, the dispassion cultivated in the previous section, does not create a vacuum. It clears the interference. What it reveals is not emptiness but the fullness that was there before the interference began.
A useful picture: imagine a pole vaulter. She takes the pole – disciplines, duties, engaged action – and uses it to build momentum, to lift herself off the ground entirely. The pole is not the enemy of the leap. Without it, there is no height. But at the apex of the vault, she must release the pole. If she clutches it, it pulls her back down. The pole served its purpose. Dropping it is not a loss; it is what the pole was always for. The dropping is the clearing of the last claim – the claim that “I am the one doing all this.” And what remains when that claim is released is not absence. It is the height itself.
This is naiṣkarmya – actionlessness. Not the stillness of a body that has stopped moving, but the recognition that “I, as the Self, am not a doer.” The body continues. Duties continue. Conversations, meals, responsibilities – all of it continues. What drops is the tense, effortful sense that you are the one managing everything, responsible for all outcomes, vulnerable to every result. That sense was never accurate. It was an assumption layered onto action, not action itself. Naiṣkarmya is the knowledge that strips that assumption away, not by stopping activity but by correctly identifying who is actually acting.
The fear that detachment empties life rests on a second hidden assumption: that emotional dependence and genuine love are the same thing. They are not. Dependence says, “I need this to be okay.” Love says, “I am already okay, and from that stability I can give.” A person who has dropped emotional dependence on their family does not love them less. They love them more steadily, because the love is no longer contaminated by fear of loss. They are present with their children without the undercurrent of anxiety that the child’s performance reflects on the parent’s worth. They are present with their work without the desperation that makes every setback an existential crisis. The fullness of pūrṇatvam is precisely what makes genuine engagement possible, because you are no longer using the other person to fill something in yourself.
What you lose through vairāgya is not joy. What you lose is emotional slavery – the condition of being pulled around by every fluctuation of a world that was never designed to hold your weight. The peace that replaces it is not the peace of a room with nothing in it. It is the peace of ground solid enough that you can finally stand still.
Which raises the next question: if this inner freedom is available in the midst of action, how does one actually live from it – moment to moment, in an ordinary day?
Living Freely: The Art of Internal Distance
Here is what detachment actually looks like in practice: you are in a difficult meeting, a frustrating conversation, or a moment of grief, and somewhere beneath the reaction, there is a part of you that is watching it happen. That watching presence is not indifferent. It is simply not identical with the storm. The question Vedanta raises here is whether you can learn to locate yourself there – not occasionally, by accident, but as a matter of settled orientation.
The obstacle is a case of mistaken identity. Right now, you take yourself to be the one doing things and the one receiving their consequences – the kartā (the doer) and the bhoktā (the enjoyer or sufferer). When the project succeeds, you succeed. When the relationship struggles, you struggle. The world’s movements land directly on what you believe yourself to be, so every fluctuation is a threat or a reward. This is not a personal flaw. It is the universal starting position. The whole of Vedanta’s practical teaching is a corrective to exactly this.
Internal freedom does not mean performing your role poorly or with held-back energy. It means performing it without the identification that makes every outcome a verdict on your worth or safety. You still show up fully. You still care about the outcome. But underneath the caring, there is something in you that is not riding on it. The difference between a person gripped by a role and a person playing it freely is not visible from the outside. It is entirely a matter of what the person has located themselves as on the inside.
Swami Dayananda’s teaching on maintaining internal space names this precisely. The mind will be disturbed – this is not the problem and is not what needs to be fixed. The problem is collapsing the distance between you and the disturbance, so that the disturbed mind and the witnessing presence are taken to be the same thing. When you maintain even a small gap – enough to say inwardly, “the mind is disturbed, and I am the one noticing that it is disturbed” – you have already located yourself correctly. That gap is not manufactured through effort. It is recognized through attention.
Rāga-dveṣa – likes and dislikes – are what collapse this gap. They are not simply preferences; they are the points where the mind grabs the world and demands that it deliver. When a preference becomes a demand, every outcome that contradicts it lands as a wound. Cultivating citta-śuddhi – purity of mind – means gradually loosening the grip of these demands, not by suppressing what you feel, but by watching feelings arise without immediately treating them as commands. You notice the irritation. You do not become it.
Consider the actor’s green room. On stage, the actor plays a ruined man – weeping, desperate, fully committed to the role. The performance is real in every sense that matters for the theatre. But occasionally, between scenes, the actor steps into the green room, removes the costume, and sits for a moment as himself. He is wealthy. The tragedy is not his. Then he goes back out and performs with the same conviction as before. What changed? Only the recognition. The performance did not become less authentic. But it no longer claimed him completely.
This is what meditation functions as in Vedantic practice – not an escape from the world, but a regular stepping into the internal green room. You sit not to produce peace artificially but to remember what you actually are beneath the role you have been playing all day. Then you re-enter. And the re-entry is different because the identification is looser. The world’s capacity to bind you is exactly proportional to how completely you have forgotten the distinction between the role and the one playing it.
The practical result is that action becomes lighter. Not less serious – lighter. You can work harder, engage more honestly, and care more genuinely when the outcome is not also the measure of your existence. The walking stick analogy from the notes captures the precise relationship: use the world for balance, for mastery, for engagement – but do not lean your entire weight on it. When you lean entirely, the stick’s every wobble throws you. When you use it correctly, even a tilting stick does not take you down.
What this points toward is something the next section addresses directly: the internal distance you have just been asked to maintain is not a technique layered onto an otherwise ordinary identity. It is a pointer to what you actually are. The one who notices the disturbed mind is not itself disturbed. That noticing presence has a nature. And knowing that nature is what makes the distance permanent rather than something you have to keep reconstructing each morning.
The Ultimate Freedom: You Are the Unaffected Witness
Every section until now has been removing a layer of the problem. The world cannot give peace. Physical escape carries the mind with it. Internal detachment is not emptiness but clarity. Action without doership is possible. Each of these removes something false. What remains once all the false has been removed is not a new achievement – it is what you already are.
Here is the precise claim Vedanta makes: the peace you have been seeking is not a state to be produced. It is your nature. Not your nature when you are calm, or spiritually advanced, or free from difficulty – your nature right now, in this moment, as you read this sentence. The Ātmā, the Self, is not something you have. It is what you are. And what you are has never been touched by a single event in your life.
This requires more than acceptance. It requires an identity reversal.
Right now, the default assumption is this: you are a person in the world. The world is external to you, and it acts on you. When it cooperates, you feel good. When it resists, you feel threatened. This is the structure behind every search for peace – the sense of being a relatively small, vulnerable entity trying to navigate a large, unpredictable environment. Vedanta identifies this structure as the root error, not a personal failing but the universal misidentification that every human being begins with.
The reversal is this: you are not a person inside the world. You are the Sākṣī – the Witness – in whom the entire world, including the body and the mind you call yours, appears. The world is not external to you. It arises within your Awareness, plays out within it, and subsides within it. As [SP] states directly: “I am not a human being in the world; I am a spiritual being in whom the entire world – along with time and space – is.”
This is not poetry. It is a structural claim about what you are.
Consider the cinema screen analogy. A violent film plays – fire burns, floods rise, characters suffer catastrophically. The screen does not flinch. It does not get scorched by the fire or soaked by the water. Every event in the film is completely real within the film. And the screen supports all of it without being affected by any of it. Now notice: the screen is not absent from the film. It is the very ground on which the film becomes visible. Without the screen, there is no film. The screen is not a passive backdrop – it is the necessary foundation of every single frame.
You are the Sākṣī, the screen. Not the character in the film, not even the projector. The unmoving Awareness in which all experience – joy, grief, confusion, clarity, the sensation of reading these words – appears, plays out, and passes.
The Ātmā, as [SD] states directly, “is always the Sākṣī, a witness who never gets involved in activity. Without me, no activity can take place – but at the same time, I am indifferent to all activities.” This is not detachment as an achieved state. This is the structure of what you are. The Witness is not something you become through practice. It is what is always already present, illuminating every experience including the experience of feeling disturbed.
When you are anxious, something knows the anxiety. When the mind is scattered, something registers the scattering. When you feel the pull of longing or the sting of loss, something is present and undisturbed in which these states are known. That knowing presence – that is Satyam, the absolutely real, independently existent ground. The anxiety is mithyā – dependent on you to be known, arising and passing within you, unable to touch what you fundamentally are.
The cat in the earlier illustration was fearless not because the dog had become friendly, but because it understood the chain – the structural limitation of what could actually reach it. The Jñānī, the one who has understood this identity, lives in the world with the same calm. The world has not changed. Circumstances still fluctuate. The body still ages. The mind still moves. But none of it reaches what you actually are – because what you are is the adhiṣṭhāna, the substratum, not the content appearing within it.
This is the edge the article has been building toward. If it is true – if you are the Witness and not the witnessed – then the question of whether to stay in the world or leave it changes its character entirely. A screen does not need to escape the movie. It was never in it.
Living Liberated: Peace in Every Moment
The question you started with was practical: can I have peace while remaining here, in this life, with these responsibilities? The answer the previous sections have built toward is now complete. You are not a person who must escape the world to find freedom. You are the unaffected Witness in whom the world appears. That recognition changes everything about how you live – not by removing you from life, but by removing the weight that made life feel like a trap.
This is what mokṣa actually means. Not a cosmic event after death. Not a state of permanent blankness. Mokṣa is the freedom from the sense of being a perpetually insecure, wanting person – the person who needed the world to cooperate before they could relax. When the Witness is recognized as your true identity, that neediness has no ground to stand on. The world can still be difficult. Relationships still require effort. Responsibilities remain. But none of it binds, because you are no longer someone who requires a particular outcome to feel whole.
A practical shift follows naturally from this. A jñānī – a person who has recognized the Self – continues to act fully in the world. They are not withdrawn, not indifferent, not performing a cold detachment from the people around them. They act. What has changed is the internal grammar of the action. There is no longer a self that acts for security, for completion, for the relief of finally getting what it always needed. The action flows from fullness, not from lack. This is what makes loka-saṅgraha – acting for the welfare of the world order – possible in its truest form. You can serve the world completely only when you no longer need it to serve you back.
The mirror illustration from [SP] lands precisely here. A mirror reflects a flame perfectly – the colour, the movement, every flicker. But the mirror is not scorched. It is not warming itself on the fire. It reflects totally and remains untouched totally. The mind of someone who has recognized the Witness functions this way. It registers sorrow without being destroyed by sorrow. It registers joy without grasping at it. The registration is full; the bondage is absent. This is not numbness. Numbness is a wall. This is transparency – everything passes through, nothing sticks.
The fear that this state makes life empty has now been answered at its root. Life does not become empty when you stop depending on it. It becomes lighter. You engage with your family, your work, your obligations – not as a hostage who needs them to stay a certain way, but as someone who can give to them freely precisely because you are not extracting anything from them. The walking stick does not disappear from your hand. You simply stop leaning your entire weight on it.
What becomes visible from here is not a diminished life. It is the same life, perceived from the correct address. The world did not need to change. The circumstances did not need to improve. The transformation was a recognition – of what you already were, before the confusion about your identity began. That recognition is available now, in this life, in this body, in whatever situation you currently occupy.
And from that recognition, one further horizon opens: if the peace you were seeking was never outside you, then no future circumstance can take it away either. What was always yours cannot be lost. That is not a promise about the future. It is a description of what the Self already is – untouched, undiminished, complete.