Krishna Living
Play, Love, Yoga, and the Evolution of Consciousness
Sanatana Dharma – Lived Experience– Volume II
Introduction
This book is not a scripture.
It is not a teaching manual.
And it is not written to convince anyone of anything.
It is a record of lived experience.
Sanātana Dharma – Lived Experience explores what spirituality looks like when it happens through life itself, not through renunciation, not through belief, and not through deliberate practice alone. It is the story of how awareness evolves naturally—through play, attraction, struggle, love, failure, discipline, and ordinary human living.
Volume II, Krishna Living, focuses on a phase of life where consciousness learns through līlā (play) and rasa (felt sweetness) rather than effort or austerity. This is not Krishna as mythology, deity, or theology. It is Krishna as a principle of intelligence—the way life educates awareness through joy, charm, mischief, beauty, relationship, and timing.
Premyogi Vajra’s journey shows how spiritual maturation does not always begin with silence or withdrawal. Often, it begins in the world—through friendships, attraction, study, confusion, and emotional intensity. When lived with awareness, these very forces become instruments of refinement rather than bondage.
This volume traces:
- How play trains perception before discipline appears
- How love without possession refines desire instead of suppressing it
- How attraction, when not discharged blindly, turns inward and stabilizes awareness
- How devotion can arise without belief, ritual, or doctrine
- How a phase can complete itself naturally, leaving behind clarity rather than loss
Nothing here is claimed as universal truth. Nothing is presented as a method to imitate. What is offered instead is pattern recognition—a way to see how life itself moves consciousness forward when it is allowed to unfold intelligently.
The language is simple because the experiences were simple.
The insights are subtle because life is subtle.
And the conclusions are modest because transformation does not announce itself.
This book is written for:
- Those who feel spirituality must deny life—and sense something is missing
- Those who have tasted intensity but fear losing balance
- Those who seek meaning without rejecting the human world
- And those who want to understand why certain phases come, stay, and then leave
Krishna Living is not an endpoint.
It is a passage—one that refines the heart so that strength, discipline, and clarity can later arise without cruelty or ego.
What follows is not instruction.
It is observation.
Read it slowly.
Not to agree or disagree—
but to notice what resonates with your own lived experience.