SCIENCE AND SPIRITUALITY:WHERE DOES YOUR SOUL ACTUALLY GO. The Whirlpool in the River: Where Does Your Soul Actually Go? ​"I. . a universe of atoms, an atom in the universe. ". ​Richard Feynman, the legendary Nobel physicist and a man who famously ...
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"SURiMOUNT" - 5 new articles

  1. SCIENCE AND SPIRITUALITY: WHERE DOES YOUR SOUL ACTUALLY GO
  2. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY
  3. SELF-IMPROVEMENT
  4. TOPIC OF THE DAY :WAR REACHES INDIAN OCEAN
  5. ​SCIENCE AND SPIRITUALITY ​: OUR MOLECULAR HANDSHAKE WITH THE SUN
  6. More Recent Articles

SCIENCE AND SPIRITUALITY: WHERE DOES YOUR SOUL ACTUALLY GO


SCIENCE AND SPIRITUALITY:
WHERE DOES YOUR SOUL ACTUALLY GO

The Whirlpool in the River: Where Does Your Soul Actually Go?

                         ​"I... a universe of atoms, an atom in the universe."

​Richard Feynman, the legendary Nobel physicist and a man who famously "cracked" the secrets of the subatomic world, once stood at the edge of the sea and realized something that most of us spend our lives trying to grasp. He didn’t see himself as a person separated from the world, but as a temporary, conscious arrangement of the world itself.

​In our quest to find the "soul," we often look for a ghost in the machine—a passenger who steps out of the car when it stops running. But Feynman’s physics suggests something more profound, and perhaps a little terrifying: we aren't the passenger; we are the road, the engine, and the wind, all at once. If we are a "pattern" rather than a "thing," then what happens to that pattern when the lights go out?

The Pattern vs. The Stuff

​Think of a whirlpool in a river. The water molecules entering the swirl are constantly changing. New water flows in; old water flows out. Yet, the whirlpool itself persists. You are that whirlpool. Physically, you are a walking miracle of recycling. About 98% of your atoms are replaced every year. Your skin, your blood, even your bones are different than they were a decade ago. If the "stuff" you are made of is always changing, then what is the "soul"?

​Feynman’s perspective suggests the soul isn't a thing (a noun); it is a process (a verb). You are "souling"—a specific, beautiful pattern of information that the universe is "doing" right now.

​The "Terrifying" Beauty of Information

​The discovery that haunts many is that there may be no "extra ingredient"—no 21-gram mist that leaves the body. But in the world of physics, information is never destroyed. If you are a pattern, you are woven into the very fabric of spacetime. When the biological "substrate" (the brain) stops, the pattern doesn't vanish into nothingness; it returns to the total information of the cosmos. As the ancient Hindus said, Tat Tvam Asi—"Thou art that." You are the universe temporarily localized, pretending to be separate, before dissolving back into the Whole.

​Faith in the Facts

​Feynman taught us that knowing the "mechanics" of a flower doesn't make it less beautiful—it makes it more so. The same applies to us. We don't need a supernatural explanation to be eternal. The fact that your atoms were forged in the hearts of dying stars, and that those atoms now have the curiosity to ask "Where do I go?", is the greatest miracle of all.

​Death, then, isn't annihilation. It’s a change in the frequency of the music. The player may stop, but the notes are already written into the history of the stars.

Grateful thanks to GOOGLE GEMINI for its great help and support in creating this blogpost!



   

A THOUGHT FOR TODAY

SELF-IMPROVEMENT


TOPIC OF THE DAY :WAR REACHES INDIAN OCEAN


TOPIC OF THE DAY :
WAR REACHES INDIAN OCEAN

Indian Ocean
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The Indian Ocean—long treated as a highway for oil, trade, and naval patrols—turned into a battlefield this week. On 4 March 2026 a U.S. Navy attack submarine torpedoed and sank the Iranian frigate IRIS Dena off Sri Lanka’s southern coast, marking the first confirmed submarine kill since World War II. Sri Lankan officials reported at least 80 dead and more than 100 missing, with rescue crews still pulling injured sailors from the water. 

The strike didn’t happen in a vacuum. It follows weeks of tit-for-tat attacks: Iranian drone boats hit tankers in the Gulf of Oman, killing Indian mariners, and Iran claimed retaliatory strikes on U.S. ships and bases in early March. Satellite images even showed U.S. F-16s deployed to Diego Garcia in late February as tensions with Tehran spiked. The Indian Ocean, once peripheral to the West Asia conflict, is now the front line. 

Why it matters for India and the region:

• Sea lanes at risk – Over 80 % of India’s oil imports pass these waters. Any disruption ripples into fuel prices and supply chains. • Human cost – Indian sailors have already died on merchant tankers attacked by drones; now naval crews are missing in a war neither New Delhi nor Colombo started. • Strategic shift – The U.S. sinking of an Iranian warship signals that Washington is willing to project force far beyond the Persian Gulf, while Iran’s vow to hit “military and economic infrastructure” raises the specter of wider escalation. 

For readers in Chennai and across South Asia, the headline isn’t abstract geopolitics; it’s a reminder that the ocean we depend on for trade and jobs can become a flashpoint overnight. Shipping insurers are already recalculating risk, and regional navies—from India to Sri Lanka—are on higher alert.

Why readers in Chennai should care

• Energy lifeline – Roughly 80 % of India’s crude transits the Indian Ocean. Threats to freedom of navigation mean higher insurance, rerouted tankers, and pump-price jitters. • Human cost close to home – Indian crew members have already died on merchant ships hit by drones; now naval personnel from a regional neighbor are missing in an expanding conflict. •

 Geopolitical tilt – The U.S. is openly willing to engage Iranian forces far outside the Gulf, while Iran vows retaliation against “military and economic infrastructure.” That leaves littoral states weighing how to protect trade without getting pulled in. 

For a city like Chennai, whose port and supply chains are tied to these waters, the takeaway isn’t abstract. War risk premiums on shipping lanes are climbing, regional navies are moving to higher alert, and New Delhi faces tightrope decisions—security cooperation with Washington on one side, energy and diaspora links with West Asia on the other.

The Indian Ocean is no longer a buffer. It’s the battlefield. What happens next—whether de-escalation or a widening cycle of strikes—will be felt here in fuel bills, freight schedules, and the safety of seafarers. That makes it our topic of the day, not just a headline from far away.

Grateful thanks to META AI for its help and support in creating this blogpost!🙏

   

​SCIENCE AND SPIRITUALITY ​: OUR MOLECULAR HANDSHAKE WITH THE SUN


Good afternoon!. The Hemoglobin/Chlorophyll symmetry is perhaps the most poetic "smoking gun" in biology—it proves that we are literally designed to be the mirror image of the botanical world.

​SCIENCE AND SPIRITUALITY 
OUR MOLECULAR HANDSHAKE WITH THE SUN

​The Crimson and the Emerald: Our Molecular Handshake with the Sun


​In the world of spiritual practice, we often speak of "oneness" as an abstract, lofty goal. But if you look through a microscope, you’ll find that oneness isn’t a goal—it’s a mechanical reality.

​The most striking evidence of this lies in two molecules: Hemoglobin, the iron-rich protein that makes our blood red, and Chlorophyll, the pigment that makes leaves green.

​The Biological Mirror

​If you were to lay the chemical diagrams of these two molecules side-by-side, you would be forgiven for thinking they were twins. Their structures are nearly identical, built around a complex ring of atoms known as a porphyrin ring.

​The difference—the "divine spark" of variety—lies at the very center:

​In Hemoglobin: The center atom is Iron (Fe). It binds with oxygen to fuel our muscles and fire our thoughts. It is the color of rust, clay, and the "red-blooded" vitality of animal life.

​In Chlorophyll: The center atom is Magnesium (Mg). It captures the energy of the sun to build trunks, flowers, and fruit. It is the emerald essence of the "green world."

​The Reciprocal Loop

​This isn't just a coincidence of design; it’s a functional partnership. We are the "external lungs" for the forest, just as the forest is the external lung for us.

​The Forest’s Exhale: In a process called photosynthesis, Chlorophyll strips the carbon from CO_2 and releases Oxygen as a "gift."

​Our Inhale: Our Hemoglobin catches that gift, carrying it to every cell in our body.

​The Return: We exhale Carbon Dioxide (CO_2), the very "food" Chlorophyll needs to keep the tree alive.
​When you breathe, you are participating in a molecular handshake that has been negotiated over billions of years. You are drinking the sun through a green straw, and the forest is growing through your breath.

​Tuning the Sense: A Meditation on the "Green Mirror"

​To "tune" your spiritual awareness to this biological fact, try this practice during your next walk in nature:

​Visualize the Center: As you look at a leaf, imagine the tiny Magnesium atom at its core, vibrating with captured sunlight.

​Feel the Iron: Place your hand over your heart. Feel the Iron in your blood—the same element found in the heart of dying stars—carrying the forest’s gift through your veins.

​The Recognition: Realize that the red in your pulse and the green in the canopy are two halves of the same circuit. You are not observing nature; you are a localized "thickening" of nature's flow.

​The Spirit in the Science: 

We often feel alone, but we are never disconnected. We are biologically woven into the fabric of the Earth. To breathe is to be part of a global conversation that never ends.

Grateful thanks to Google Gemini for its great help and support!🙏

   

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