EPISODE · May 15, 2026 · 1H 32M
Venice Vedanta Club: Philosophy Fridays (Live in Venice)
from The Daily Vedantic · host James Beshara
Reserve your spot and sign up now to be part of this engaging Friday morning conversation: https://forms.gle/QaRSWndLbyvKeF1j8In this Philosophy Fridays episode at The Lighthouse, James Bechera and Reva explore Advaita Vedanta as a practical framework for clarity, self-understanding, and right action.The conversation begins with the growth of the Philosophy Fridays community, then moves into one of Vedanta’s most powerful distinctions: the difference between identifying as the “doer” and living as the witness. James and Reva unpack how this shift creates more clarity, better decision-making, and less self-sabotage.They discuss love as “seeing no otherness,” the role of the intellect in guiding the mind, and why inner work is not separate from service but often the foundation of it. Through examples from the Bhagavad Gita, The Lion King, Shakespeare, surfing, business, and daily life, they explore how attachment, fear, people-pleasing, and social conditioning pull people away from their true nature.This episode is both philosophical and deeply practical, challenging listeners to question everything, reflect daily, detach from outcomes, and remember who they are.TakeawaysPhilosophy is not abstract theory; at its core, it is the pursuit of clarity.Vedanta teaches the shift from “I am the doer” to “I am the witness.”Love, in Vedantic terms, means seeing no otherness in the world.The most important work we do for others is often the work we do on ourselves.Lack of clarity creates self-sabotage, even for highly skilled people.The intellect must be strengthened so it can guide the mind.False humility can actually be ego in disguise, especially when it avoids boundaries.Attachment to outcomes corrupts action and blocks flow.Duty-bound action asks, “Who am I becoming?” not “What am I getting?”Your true nature is often found by asking what you would do simply to do more of it.Detachment does not reduce engagement; it allows fuller engagement.Daily reflection is the inoculation against attachment, conditioning, and confusion.Chapters00:00 Philosophy Fridays at The Lighthouse03:56 Doer vs. Witness06:28 Clarity, Wisdom, and Love12:57 Inner Work During External Chaos18:54 The World of Opposites22:32 Why Clarity Prevents Self-Sabotage29:10 Mind, Intellect, and Psychology38:57 Selfless Action vs. People-Pleasing44:37 The Bhagavad Gita and Spiritual Bypass50:21 Conditioning and Remembering Who You Are59:23 Finding Your True Nature01:02:48 Attachment, Desire, and Peace01:13:34 Duty-Bound Action01:21:55 Detachment and Full Engagement
What this episode covers
Reserve your spot and sign up now to be part of this engaging Friday morning conversation: https://forms.gle/QaRSWndLbyvKeF1j8In this Philosophy Fridays episode at The Lighthouse, James Bechera and Reva explore Advaita Vedanta as a practical framework for clarity, self-understanding, and right action.The conversation begins with the growth of the Philosophy Fridays community, then moves into one of Vedanta’s most powerful distinctions: the difference between identifying as the “doer” and living as the witness. James and Reva unpack how this shift creates more clarity, better decision-making, and less self-sabotage.They discuss love as “seeing no otherness,” the role of the intellect in guiding the mind, and why inner work is not separate from service but often the foundation of it. Through examples from the Bhagavad Gita, The Lion King, Shakespeare, surfing, business, and daily life, they explore how attachment, fear, people-pleasing, and social conditioning pull people away from their true nature.This episode is both philosophical and deeply practical, challenging listeners to question everything, reflect daily, detach from outcomes, and remember who they are.TakeawaysPhilosophy is not abstract theory; at its core, it is the pursuit of clarity.Vedanta teaches the shift from “I am the doer” to “I am the witness.”Love, in Vedantic terms, means seeing no otherness in the world.The most important work we do for others is often the work we do on ourselves.Lack of clarity creates self-sabotage, even for highly skilled people.The intellect must be strengthened so it can guide the mind.False humility can actually be ego in disguise, especially when it avoids boundaries.Attachment to outcomes corrupts action and blocks flow.Duty-bound action asks, “Who am I becoming?” not “What am I getting?”Your true nature is often found by asking what you would do simply to do more of it.Detachment does not reduce engagement; it allows fuller engagement.Daily reflection is the inoculation against attachment, conditioning, and confusion.Chapters00:00 Philosophy Fridays at The Lighthouse03:56 Doer vs. Witness06:28 Clarity, Wisdom, and Love12:57 Inner Work During External Chaos18:54 The World of Opposites22:32 Why Clarity Prevents Self-Sabotage29:10 Mind, Intellect, and Psychology38:57 Selfless Action vs. People-Pleasing44:37 The Bhagavad Gita and Spiritual Bypass50:21 Conditioning and Remembering Who You Are59:23 Finding Your True Nature01:02:48 Attachment, Desire, and Peace01:13:34 Duty-Bound Action01:21:55 Detachment and Full Engagement
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Venice Vedanta Club: Philosophy Fridays (Live in Venice)
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