The Architect: Precision in Systems
With a career rooted in the rigorous world of software engineering and technology consultancy, I have spent decades architecting complex systems for software testing and navigating the rapid evolution of AI and automation. As the lead at K11 Software Solutions, my professional life has been dedicated to logic, structure, and the pursuit of efficiency.
However, I have always believed that the same precision we apply to external technology must be applied to our internal "operating system." This technical background provides the analytical lens through which I approach ancient wisdom—treating spiritual realization not as a vague mystery, but as a systematic "Logic of Liberation."
For years, my world was defined by the binary: logic, systems, and the architectural rigor of software engineering. In that world, if a system fails, we don't pray for it to fix itself—we look at the source code. We identify the dependencies, we isolate the bugs, and we optimize the flow.
But as I looked deeper into the "human operating system," I realized we often treat our internal conflicts with a lack of precision that we would never tolerate in our technology. We navigate our lives through a haze of cognitive biases, unexamined conditioning, and emotional "legacy code" that keeps us looping in the same patterns of stress and attachment.
This blog is the digital home for the Initiative for Vedantic Psychology Research (IVPR). Here, we do not treat the Bhagavad Gītā as a relic of the past or a purely "religious" text. We treat it as the ultimate technical manual for the human psyche.
My mission is simple: Structural Decoding. Through the frameworks I call the Logic of Liberation, we will explore how ancient Vedic insights align perfectly with modern neuroscience and systems thinking. We are moving beyond poetic translation to reveal the actual architecture of freedom.
Whether you are here for the analytical deep-dives of our research papers, the "systems upgrade" chapters of my upcoming book Kaivalya, or the video reflections from @DecodedGitaWisdom, you are part of a community dedicated to Revealing Mukti.
"Every step of this journey was preceded by a whisper of Grace."
These moments from my childhood are the foundational blocks of my life. Long before the frameworks of IVPR or the development of @DecodedGitaWisdom, there was a simple, quiet relationship with the Divine. These memories serve as a reminder that the path to Krishna is not just an intellectual pursuit, but a lifelong homecoming. From early prayers to the first time I held the Gītā, these images capture the "Kripa" (Grace) that has guided my evolution from a curious child to a dedicated seeker.
I founded the Initiative for Vedantic Psychology Research (IVPR) to bridge the gap between ancient Vedic thought and modern cognitive science. In a world of increasing noise and mental fragmentation, the Bhagavad Gītā offers a structural roadmap to clarity, conflict resolution, and ultimate choice.
My commitment is to Revealing Mukti—not as an abstract religious concept, but as a practical, lived reality. Through my books, including Inner Kurukshetra and Kaivalya, and my research into the "Anatomy of Freedom," I aim to provide seekers with the tools to decode their own consciousness and experience the unshakable peace that is our natural state.
The Initiative for Vedantic Psychology Research (IVPR) was born from a singular realization: The Gītā is the ultimate technical manual for the human psyche. By bridging my background in technology with my roots in Vedic tradition, I have dedicated this phase of my life to:
Structural Decoding: Moving beyond poetic translation to reveal the mathematical and psychological "Architecture" of the Gītā.
Cognitive Clarity: Using neuroscience and Vedantic principles to dismantle the biases that obscure our true nature.
Revealing Mukti: Proving that liberation is not a post-death destination, but a real-time "System Upgrade" available to anyone willing to do the internal work.
When I am not decoding ancient texts or consulting on AI frameworks, I am a student of the silence. I believe that the ultimate "High-Level Language" is not Python or C++, but the Silence of the Vrittis described in the Yoga Sutras.
Through my books—Inner Kurukshetra, The Path Back to Krishna, and Kaivalya—I invite you to join me in this research. Not as a follower, but as a fellow architect of your own liberation.