Unbroken Wings: Rising Above the World with Spiritual Purpose
In the silence between Vasisthaâs hymns of the Rig Veda lies a whisper louder than thunder: You were never meant to crawl. Your wings were never brokenâonly folded.
While the world trains us to walk in lines, Vasistha invites us to soar with alignment. He doesnât ask us to escape the world. He teaches us to rise above it, not in detachment but with dynamic elevationâto live here fully, and yet float untouched by its heaviness.
The great sage never viewed lifeâs purpose as something outside. To him, spiritual purpose was not a career goal, a charitable act, or a retreat in the Himalayas. It was something innate, incorruptible, and ever-liftingâlike wings made of light beneath layers of fear, waiting to unfurl.
đïž The Wings of Intention
Vasistha speaks often of âáčtaââthe cosmic order, the truth-flow. But what makes a being rise in this current is not action, but intention woven with awareness. It is not about doing more. Itâs about flying rightâin tune with your soulâs original rhythm.
Every time you betray your truth to fit in, one feather falls. But the moment you act from alignmentânot approvalâyou grow whole again.
To Vasistha, the human soul is not incompleteâit is compressed infinity. Spiritual purpose is the decision to decompress your divine nature, not by climbing, but by unfolding.
đ„ Soaring Isnât EscapingâItâs Transcending
Rising above the world does not mean leaving it behind. Vasistha doesnât preach renunciationâhe radiates transcendence. You still pay your bills, show up in meetings, cook dinnerâbut now, you do it from a different altitude.
He likens life to a storm and the sage to an eagleânot avoiding the wind, but riding above its chaos. Vasisthaâs wisdom turns our burdens into thermalsâheat we rise on.
âWhy crawl through fire,â he asks, âwhen you were meant to rise from it?â
đ§° Practical Toolkit: Daily Practices for Rising with Spiritual Purpose
1. Wingspan Breath (3 mins)
Stand tall. Inhale deeply while extending both arms outward like wings. Hold breath and silently say: âI rise in truth.â Exhale slowly, imagining yourself above your current limitations. Repeat 7 times.
2. Truth Check-In (Once Daily)
Ask yourself: âIs this action in line with who I am becoming?â If not, pause. Recalibrate. Recommit. Flying isnât speedâitâs elevation through clarity.
3. Feather Journal (Nightly)
At dayâs end, write one act where you honoured your truth. One feather reattached. One wing strengthened. Youâre rising, even if slowly.
4. Mirror Flight Mantra (Mornings)
Stand before a mirror. Look into your eyes and say: âMy purpose is not tied to results. I am purpose in motion. I am already flying.â
5. Release Anchor Thoughts (Weekly)
Write down one fear, expectation, or limiting belief. Burn it safely. Watch the smoke rise and say aloud: âAs this rises, so do I.â
Vasistha doesnât offer salvation. He offers remembrance. The Rig Veda isnât a manualâitâs a mirror reflecting what you forgot: You were born with unbroken wings.
Now, flyânot to escape the world, but to see it as it truly isâfrom the sky of your soul.
Because when you rise with spiritual purpose, gravity becomes guidance. And the world below becomes your launchpad, not your limitation.











