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Anuradha Pandey's avatar

I deeply appreciated this like many other essays of yours, and thank you for the shout out. First, gurupreneur is so good I’m mad at myself for not seeing it as a portmanteau before. You got me thinking of all the Indians who have come to the US selling a specific interpretation of the spirituality of their homeland. This got me thinking about whether there is a distinction between guru and cult leader, because I grew up in the Hare Krishna community. It was led by a gurupreneur but he brought so many people to a place they’d never have gotten spiritually. At the same time, it was a cult. And is that different from the snake oil Jay Shetty is selling? Ironically Shetty got his qualifications by interning with the Hare Krishnas who themselves are separate from the way most other Indians practice.

This made me want to do a pilgrimage trip. My parents are going to Kailash this summer and I can’t get the time off to do it, but if my parents hadn’t dragged me to a million other pilgrimage sites as a kid I wouldn’t be who I am today. I also am very proud to be born of a culture that gives so many others meaning even if they aren’t born of it. I’ve been ruminating for some time on why Westerners gets so much from India, and I think it’s because there’s something you can’t pinpoint in all aspects of society. Almost like you can feel cosmic force of Shakti.

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Penny H's avatar

👏👏 you are dead on here Nathalie 🙌 I love your term gurupreneur. It is fitting and I've met many. One was the head pastor ( I use that term loosely here) at a church. I was so stunned at her behavior and her sales-pitchy attitude 🙄 It was an eye-opening experience for sure.

Selling packages of 'help' is what tells me the person is trying to make someone their employer. I see that a lot.

You are also correct that people will exploit even the desire to belong. Great piece!

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