Category: Money

  • Caught In The Success Trap?

    Caught In The Success Trap?

    About The Book

    What if your greatest success was actually your biggest trap?

    You’ll walk beside six archetypal seekers:

    • A high-achieving executive haunted by a hollow peace;
    • A nurturing parent lost after the children have gone;
    • A burned-out professional on the edge of collapse;
    • A soulful rebel yearning to embody their truth;
    • A couple drifting in golden silence after a lifetime together and
    • A wise retiree facing the ache of unfinished inner business.

    Through their journeys, you’ll see your own. And in their longings, you’ll find the call to break free—from busyness, roles, and noise—and return to the sacred truth of your soul.

    This is not just a book. It’s a mirror.
    It reflects what success has hidden… and how you can reclaim your inner peace before it’s too late.

    • For midlife seekers and older souls;
    • For those longing for meaning beyond performance;
    • For anyone ready to make the most important transition of their lives

    Includes an invitation to The Soul’s Journey – A 21-Week Guided Path of Inner Awakening Soul’s Journey

  • The Circle

    The Circle

    The Circle — And Why You Need to Be Aware and Mindful of It

    “What goes around comes around.”

    — Universal proverb echoed across cultures.

    Life moves in circles. Seasons turn, the moon waxes and wanes, breath flows in and out. We are born, we live, we return. This truth — simple, profound, and often forgotten — lies at the heart of many spiritual traditions: that everything is interconnected, and all we put out eventually returns.

    The circle is not just a shape; it is a sacred principle. It teaches us that nothing truly ends — it transforms, it evolves, and it loops back in new forms. To live without awareness of this circle is to walk blindfolded, casting words, actions, and choices without understanding their echo.

    The Bible reminds us:

    “Do not be deceived: God is not mocked. A man reaps what he sows.”

    — Galatians 6:7

    What you give — in attitude, in energy, in kindness or cruelty — comes full circle. This is not punishment or reward. It is alignment. Cause and effect. Energy in motion.

    In the East, this is known as karma. The Bhagavad Gita teaches:

    “Every action has its fruit, and those who act in awareness are not bound by it.”

    When you are conscious of the circle, you act with intention. You speak with care. You give with heart. You no longer toss stones into the pond without regard for the ripples.

    Buddhist teachings go deeper still. The law of dependent origination reveals how every thought and deed weaves the web of our reality. Mindfulness, then, becomes a sacred duty — the way we keep from turning the circle into a wheel of suffering.

    Even in Native traditions, the circle is revered as the Medicine Wheel — representing balance, cycles, community, and sacred reciprocity. To step out of the circle is to step out of harmony.

    Why is this so important today?

    Because in a world obsessed with forward motion and linear progress, we forget that life is not a straight line — it is a loop. Our disconnection from this natural rhythm leads to burnout, environmental harm, broken relationships, and spiritual emptiness.

    But when we return to the wisdom of the circle, we remember:

    > What I take, I must give.

    > What I break, I must mend.

    > What I say, I must embody.

    Every moment, you are contributing to the circle — consciously or unconsciously. Every purchase, every word, every silence adds to the shape of your life and the world around you.

    So be mindful. Not out of fear, but out of reverence.

    Be aware of the circles you are spinning — and whether they are circles of peace or chaos, love or fear.

    Because what you pour into the circle…

    will return to you, again and again — not as fate, but as reflection.

  • Money Is Spiritual

    Money Is Spiritual

    Money Is Spiritual — A Sacred Perspective

    “You cannot serve both God and money.”

    — Jesus, Matthew 6:24

    This quote has often been misunderstood as a rejection of wealth. But in truth, it is a call to reawaken our relationship with money — not to worship it, but to use it wisely, humbly, and with heart. Because money, like fire, can burn or illuminate. It is not inherently good or evil. It simply takes the shape of the hand that holds it.

    Money is spiritual — not because it floats above the material, but because everything is spiritual when seen with awakened eyes. Money, too, is energy. It carries our intentions, reflects our values, and amplifies our inner state. In the hands of the wise, it becomes a blessing. In the hands of the lost, a burden.

    The Bhagavad Gita teaches:

    “One who sees inaction in action, and action in inaction, is truly wise.”

    So it is with money. On the surface, it may seem like a worldly tool. But behind every transaction is an intention. Behind every act of giving or spending lies a seed of consciousness. The spiritual path asks not that we abandon money, but that we use it as a mirror — to see where we are generous, where we are afraid, where we grasp, and where we release.

    Buddhist teachings offer another lens. The principle of right livelihood in the Noble Eightfold Path encourages us to earn and give in ways that do not harm, but heal. Money earned with integrity, spent with mindfulness, and shared with love becomes a sacred flow. It’s not about how much, but how. The energy behind it matters more than the amount.

    In the Sufi tradition, the poet Rumi writes:

    “Don’t seek the water, become the thirst.”

    Money, when disconnected from spirit, becomes an endless chase — more, more, more. But when it flows from soul, it becomes enough. It nourishes. It serves. It does not possess you.

    The real question is not, Do you have money?

    It is, Does your money have you?

    To walk the path of spiritual maturity is to bring consciousness into every part of life — including our finances. To ask: Is my earning aligned with my values? Is my giving coming from joy or guilt? Is my spending an expression of love or fear?

    Money is not separate from the sacred. It can build temples or walls. It can feed hunger or feed ego. It can liberate or enslave.

    The difference is not in the coin.

    It is in the soul that spends it.

    So yes, money is spiritual.

    It’s a path of growth, a test of values, and a tool for transformation.

    Handled with awareness, it becomes not a weight — but a wing.

  • Anna & Scent Of Bread

    Anna & Scent Of Bread

    A story inspired by The Alchemist, with Anna as the modern seeker, weaving in symbolism, dreams, omens, fear, and the heart’s quiet calling—just like Santiago’s journey toward his treasure Is the Soul’s Journey — And Why It Is Needed Now

    Anna had the kind of life people admired on LinkedIn. A well-paying job at a global consulting firm, a tidy apartment in the city, tailored suits, back-to-back meetings, and a rising LinkedIn profile that read “Strategic Lead – Performance & Optimization.” But none of that made her heart beat faster.

    Each morning, she awoke with the same dream lingering on her tongue like the aftertaste of honey. In the dream, she stood in a sun-drenched bakery. The shelves were filled with golden loaves, braided challah, crusty sourdoughs, and pastries dusted with powdered sugar. She wasn’t just buying them. She was making them—with her own hands. The warmth of the oven, the scent of rising dough, the laughter of a little girl nibbling a croissant—all felt real. Every detail repeated each night.

    For weeks, she ignored it. Dreams are dreams, she told herself. Nothing more than the brain’s attempt to stitch meaning into chaos. But the dream came again—and again. It always ended the same way: an old woman with flour-dusted hands would whisper, “The recipe is inside you. Follow the scent.”

    One sleepless night, Anna typed “Bakery near the Seine” into her browser. She had no idea why she chose Paris—perhaps it was the poetry of it. She clicked through images of old boulangeries with tiled floors, copper pots, and sunlight cascading through tall windows. Her heart stirred.

    That was the night she remembered The Alchemist, a book she had read in college and loved, though it felt naïve then. Santiago had a recurring dream too. A treasure buried at the base of the pyramids. A shepherd who risked everything to follow it.

    Was her dream a calling?

    Omens in the Office:

    The following Monday, Anna arrived early for a leadership meeting. A junior analyst had brought pastries from a new local bakery. She picked up a pain au chocolat—and nearly dropped it. It tasted almost exactly like the one from her dream. She turned to ask where they were from, but the analyst was already gone.

    That day, her computer froze. Her boss, for the third time, “forgot” she was on the promotion list. And during lunch, she overheard a conversation between two strangers on the street:

    “Sometimes, it’s not about certainty. It’s about courage. The calling doesn’t shout—it whispers.”

    Anna stopped walking.

    The universe, it seemed, was nudging her. Santiago called them omens.

    A Leap into the Unknown:

    She didn’t quit immediately. First, she signed up for a weekend baking course. Just to “explore.” On the first day, she burnt the sourdough. On the second, she cried while kneading brioche—unexpectedly overwhelmed by joy. On the third, the instructor said, “You have good hands. You feel the dough. That can’t be taught.”

    That night, she made a list of fears:

    • Will I lose everything?
    • What if it fails?
    • What if this is just a phase?

    Then she made another list:

    • What if I never try?
    • What if the dream never stops chasing me?

    She remembered a line from The Alchemist:

    “When you want something, all the universe conspires in helping you to achieve it.”

    Anna handed in her resignation three weeks later.

    Following the Scent:

    She flew to Paris. She rented a tiny apartment above a bookstore in the Marais and enrolled in an artisan baking course. She woke before dawn, learned to mix, knead, rest, and shape. She burned more loaves. She made friends with a soft-spoken Algerian woman named Leïla who said, “Bread is memory. You must bake with your whole story.”

    The more Anna baked, the more alive she felt. It wasn’t easy. She missed the comfort of paychecks, the illusion of certainty. Some nights, fear whispered, “What are you doing?”

    But then the dream would return. Now, she stood confidently in the bakery. This time, it was her own. People smiled. Children clutched sticky fingers. And the old woman no longer whispered. She simply smiled—and nodded.

    Coming Full Circle:

    Two years later, Anna opened her own small bakery in a quiet corner of her hometown. She named it “Le Coeur Levé”—The Rising Heart.

    Locals were curious. “Weren’t you the one in consulting?” they’d ask.

    “I still am,” she’d smile. “I just consult with dough and dreams now.”

    She kept a copy of The Alchemist near the register. And sometimes, when young professionals wandered in with tired eyes and hopeful questions, she would hand them a loaf, warm and crusty, and say:

    “The treasure isn’t out there. It’s wherever your heart is most alive. You just have to follow the scent.”

    ✨Reflection:

    Like Santiago, Anna discovered that the dream wasn’t just about bread. It was about listening. Trusting. And daring. The treasure was not only a bakery, but the rediscovery of herself.