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Krishna is beyond religion, beyond spirituality, and beyond any conventional means of moksha that the human mind can conceive. To truly understand Krishna is to love him, for in that love, the separation between the self and the divine dissolves. The moment you begin to see the world through Krishna’s eyes, he ceases to be an external entity and instead becomes a part of you. The more you love him, the more you embody his essence—his vision, his compassion, his actions. And once you reach that state, no external religious rituals are needed to connect with the divine.

To sit in the thought of Krishna is to enter a natural state of meditation. To think of him constantly, to see the world as he does, is to align oneself with Brahman. Good karma ceases to be an effort and instead becomes a byproduct of simply existing in Krishna’s consciousness. He is not a distant entity or a supreme force residing beyond reach. The idea that the divine is something external, something to be sought after in the heavens or through extreme penance, fades the moment Krishna enters your heart.

Krishna does not require you to follow rigid doctrines or struggle to connect with an abstract power. Instead, he invites you to embrace him in whatever form resonates with you—as a child, a brother, a friend. It is in this personal connection that the illusion of separation vanishes. The distance we often feel from the divine is not because Krishna is far from us, but because we are far from ourselves. The truth of our being, the essence of our soul, is Krishna.

The farther one drifts from self-awareness, the farther one drifts from Krishna. He is not an external force to be worshipped from a distance; he is the truth within us, waiting to be realized. To love Krishna is not merely an act of devotion—it is the realization of one’s own divine nature.

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