(Keshav Priya Das)
Founder, Gitacast
I didn’t find the Bhagavad Gita.
It was already in my house—sealed, silent, sitting next to the incense like a VIP guest nobody talks to.
Fast-forward.
I’m an NIT alumnus who walked away from the “safe path” and spent 7 years as a monk—not in the mountains escaping Wi-Fi, but deep inside questions most of us mute with scrolling.
While the world was chasing upgrades, I was debugging life.
What I discovered shocked me:
The Bhagavad Gita is not a religious book.
It’s a user manual for the human mind—written before therapy was cool, before motivation became reels, before burnout had a name.
Anxiety?
Identity crisis?
Career confusion?
Loneliness in a hyper-connected world?
Krishna answered it all. Casually. 5,000 years ago.
My mission is simple (but slightly rebellious):
👉 Take the Gita out of the puja shelf and into everyday conversations.
From “touch the book, take blessings” → to “open it, question it, apply it.”
No heavy Sanskrit overdose.
No moral lecturing.
No “because I said so.”
Just raw wisdom—decoded for homes, minds, and timelines.
Vision 2030
The Gita shouldn’t be an optional spiritual extra.
It should be mainstream in schools—teaching clarity before confusion,
values before validation, purpose before pressure.
If people can learn about money from podcasts,
mental health from memes,
and philosophy from midnight reels -
Why not learn life from the Gita?
This is not about becoming religious.
This is about becoming synchronized with the creation.
The Gita can never be outdated because it never talks about trends.
It talks about three things that don’t expire: the Lord, us (living beings), and our eternal (Sanatan) connection.
When the world keeps changing, the Gita stays relevant because it speaks about what never does.