
The Daily Vedantic Venice Vedanta Club: Philosophy Fridays (Live in Venice)
Reserve your spot and sign up now to be part of this engaging Friday morning conversation: https://forms.gle/QaRSWndLbyvKeF1j8
In this New Year’s Philosophy Fridays session, host James is joined by co-host Reva, together they unpack practical Advaita Vedanta for modern life: how to use goals as direction without becoming psychologically owned by outcomes, why the real shift is from output metrics to controllable inputs, and how service can function as a stabilizing “north star” when ambition and comparison start to hijack your focus.
They walk through a concrete planning method that starts with “success” and works backward (even out to a 30-year horizon), while emphasizing the crucial distinction between clarity and attachment. The conversation also explores swadharma (alignment with what you are wired for), and Vedanta’s body, mind, intellect model, with intellect as the charioteer that can train the mind rather than being dragged by it.
In the Q and A, they challenge the obsession narrative around high performers, warn against confusing wealth for wisdom, and end with a memorable closing idea: “man equals God minus desire,” plus the dream metaphor as a radical pointer to what Vedanta claims is ultimately real.
Takeaways
- Use goals like a destination in a taxi: direction matters, but attachment to outcomes creates suffering.
- Plan from the end backward: 30 years, then halve repeatedly until you get to what matters this month and this week.
- Outputs tempt vanity and anxiety; inputs keep you honest, consistent, and sane.
- Reva’s shift as an operator: revenue and metrics are secondary to delivering real client value and service.
- “Surrender to a duty bound existence, and immediate peace follows” is framed as a near-term felt result, not a distant reward.
- Swadharma is the difference between rowing and sailing: alignment can produce scale without chronic stress.
- Your biggest minefield is comparison: headlines, other founders, and social feeds can pull you off the input path fast.
- Vedanta’s body, mind, intellect model: intellect can be trained to guide the mind, instead of the mind running the show.
- The Bhagavad Gita frame: the battlefield is often internal, the “civil war” between lesser impulses and higher duty.
- Be cautious copying icons: their story is still unfolding, and cultural fame often gets mistaken for wisdom.
- Helping others ranks higher as you move from money to time to emotion to wisdom, but the highest is your own self-development.
- Closing heuristic: “man equals God minus desire,” with desire and attachment positioned as the root mechanism of suffering.
Chapters
00:00 Welcome and setting the room
03:03 New Year’s meaning, reflection, and why the date is still useful
04:00 Advaita Vedanta overview and the frame for practice
08:51 Making reflection daily instead of a once-a-year reset
11:06 Goals without attachment, direction with inner freedom
12:21 The taxi metaphor and starting with “success” then working backward
14:32 The 30-year planning ladder and shrinking horizons into action
16:35 Reva’s 2026 planning shift: service, value, then metrics
17:34 Founder pressure story: valuation, OKRs, and the “at all costs” trap
18:44 Inputs over outputs and commitment to truth over consistency
21:10 Reorienting to service as a north star, hour by hour
28:00 Swadharma: rowing vs sailing, and why alignment changes everything
30:49 The minefield: comparison, social media, and staying on course
32:16 Bhagavad Gita lens: inner conflict as the real battlefield
44:00 “Surrender to duty” plus journaling prompts to find your usefulness
54:49 Body, mind, intellect model: training the intellect to guide the mind
01:15:47 Q and A: obsession, high performers, and not copying the limelight
01:41:31 Closing: “man equals God minus desire” and the dream metaphor
