28/09/2025
Sometimes Dharma (Duty) means walking alone, no matter what.
What do you do when you know you’re right, but no one stands with you? When your family doesn’t get it, your friends pull away, and the people around you tell you to “just let it go”?
When following your conscience means breaking off from the group, disappointing others, and losing the safety of belonging? The Bhagavad Gita doesn’t sugarcoat this part of life. It doesn’t promise support, comfort, or even understanding. What it does offer, brutally, beautifully, is this: “Do your Dharma. Even if it breaks you. Even if you have to do it alone.”
Because in the Gita’s world, truth is not democratic. It doesn’t need a majority vote. It just needs one person willing to walk with it.
“Sometimes Dharma (duty) means walking alone. The Gita says, ‘Still walk.'” This sentence touches the truth of life where a person, standing amidst struggle, loneliness, and truth, follows his ‘Dharma’—whether anyone supports him or not.
Still walk
(Inspiration: Gita and Self-Dharma )
Sometimes Dharma means walking alone.
When everyone is silent,
When everyone turns away,
When truth seems like a burden,
And justice… a struggle.
“Do your duty—don’t worry about the results,”
“Follow your own Dharma—even if there are thorns in the path.”
When the world says, “Stop,”
You say, “I’m not finished yet.”
When even your own people seem distant from others,
Then listen to the voice of your conscience—
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