EkamHindu Dharma
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Conquer Your Own Mind

The hardest battle is fought within — master your own mind, and the whole world is won.

Katha UpanishadKatha Upanishad 1.3.3

Know the Self to be sitting in the chariot, the body to be the chariot, the intellect (buddhi) the charioteer, and the mind the reins.

F. Max Müller, Sacred Books of the East vol. 15 (1884), public domain
Bhagavad GitaBhagavad Gita 6.6

बन्धुरात्माऽऽत्मनस्तस्य येनात्मैवात्मना जितः।

अनात्मनस्तु शत्रुत्वे वर्तेतात्मैव शत्रुवत्।।6.6।।

bandhur ātmātmanas tasya yenātmaivātmanā jitaḥ anātmanas tu śhatrutve vartetātmaiva śhatru-vat

The Self is the friend of the self of him by whom the Self has been conquered; but to the unconquered self, this Self stands in the position of an enemy, like an external foe.

Swami Sivananda (public domain)

Common thread

Every path turns the same way: inward. The real victory is over the restless mind, not over others.

Echo

The Katha Upanishad's chariot — the body the chariot, the mind the reins — becomes the Gita's “the mind is friend and foe,” and the Guru's “conquer the mind, conquer the world.”

📖 A story to understand

A proud hermit, Wali Kandhari, kept the only spring atop a hill and refused water to Nanak's thirsty companion. When fresh water sprang up below at the Guru's touch, the hermit in fury hurled a boulder down the slope. Nanak raised his open hand and the rock came to rest against his palm. What broke that day was not the boulder, but the hermit's pride — the only enemy worth defeating.

Traditional sakhi / story (simplified retelling)