Many people silently carry a painful belief inside themselves — “There is something wrong with me.” After moments of anger, jealousy, fear, selfishness, or negativity, the mind starts identifying with these patterns. Slowly, impurity begins feeling personal.
But spiritual wisdom reveals something deeply freeing:
Evil is not the true nature of the soul. It is an intruder — an invited disturbance that temporarily covers natural innocence.
Human beings are born with softness, innocence, trust, and purity. A child naturally smiles, forgives quickly, and lives without psychological heaviness. No child is born carrying deep hatred, manipulation, greed, or egoistic comparison.
These patterns slowly enter later through conditioning, fear, attachment, hurt, imitation, and unconscious living.
This is why goodness feels peaceful while negativity creates inner disturbance. Truth creates calmness. Compassion creates lightness. But jealousy burns inside. Anger creates heat. Dishonesty creates fear.
The heart suffers because impurity is not its natural home.
Nirdoshata is eternal. Dosh survives only through unconscious invitation.
Imagine a clean mirror covered with dust. The dust may hide the reflection temporarily, but the mirror itself never becomes dust. In the same way, negativity may cover awareness, but it never becomes the deepest truth of consciousness.
Most people unknowingly keep inviting inner disturbance every day:
Through comparison
Through ego
Through unconscious reactions
Slowly, repeated habits become personality. Then people start believing:
“This is just who I am.”
But what is temporary cannot be eternal truth.
Clouds may cover the sky, but the sky itself never becomes impure.
Nature quietly teaches this wisdom everywhere. Water remains naturally clear unless polluted externally. The sun remains untouched even when hidden behind storms. Darkness itself has no independent existence — it survives only where light becomes absent.
In the same way, evil is not an independent reality inside the soul. It grows stronger only when awareness becomes weak and unconscious patterns are continuously fed.
The real suffering begins when people stop observing negativity and start identifying with it completely. Anger appears, and the person says, “I am angry by nature.” Fear appears, and the person says, “I am weak.” Slowly, temporary disturbances become permanent identity.
Spirituality gently dissolves this illusion.
Meditation, self-awareness, prayer, satsang, and silence do not artificially manufacture purity. They simply stop feeding impurity continuously. The moment unconscious invitation weakens, natural innocence slowly begins revealing itself again.
This is why moments of deep silence feel healing. For a few moments, the artificial noise becomes weaker, and the original purity hidden underneath quietly starts shining again.
Your true nature is not evil struggling to become pure. Your true nature is purity temporarily covered by invited disturbances.
And perhaps this is why truth, simplicity, and goodness feel so peaceful — because whenever consciousness moves closer to them, it slowly returns to its original untouched nature.

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