The Spiritual Roots of Tamil Brahmin Identity Crisis

Last January, I made a post about the unusually high rate of intercaste marriages among the Tamil Brahmin community. I actively followed the discussion but, unfortunately, did not receive any satisfactory explanations in any of answers. Now, nearly ten months later, I believe I have a better understanding of the reasons behind this trend. Before drawing any conclusions, I would like to outline four separate but seemingly unrelated observations.

1. Historical and scriptural references

a. Just before Lord Krishna concluded his avatar, it is said that the Yadavas committed grave acts against the Abhira women. Later, when Arjuna was escorting the Yadava women to Hastinapur, the Abhira men attacked and took away many of them. When Arjuna tried to invoke his astras, the deities did not respond, leaving him powerless. In the end, both the Yadavas and Abhiras suffered the loss of their women.

b. In the 4th century, King Mayura Sharma of the Kadamba dynasty invited Kashmiri Brahmins who settled in uttar pradesh from northern India to the karnataka to help revive Hinduism. These Brahmin men married local Dalit women, creating a new community called the Havyakas. Historically, this community has experienced alternating periods of gender imbalance, at times having too many men and at other times too many women. In the 1950s–1970s, they had severe shortage of women, by the 1970s–1990s, there was a surplus. Since after 2000s, they have again faced a shortage due to low birth rates and intercaste marriages.

2. “Marriages made in heaven”, a personal reflection

A bit about myself, I had an arranged marriage. My wife and I have opposite interests, yet we felt an instant, powerful attraction to each other. In our early days together, we often wondered what had drawn us so strongly, but we never found an answer.

Later, as I became more involved in spiritual practices, my kundalini awakened through divine grace, and I began to have spiritual experiences. In one out of body experience, I witnessed an agreement made before certain deities regarding my life, marriage, and spiritual journey. After returning to my body, I finally understood the inexplicable pull I had felt toward my wife, it truly was a “marriage made in heaven.” She was someone my heart drawn towards, even when my mind couldn’t make sense of it.

3. Interracial and intercaste marriages in the West

Among newlyweds in the U.S. and the U.K., interracial marriage rates among whites have remained around 10% over the past decade. Similarly, intercaste marriage rates among Indians(except TB)range between 5% and 10%.Interracial marriage rate among 3rd generation gujaratis in UK hovers around 5% in UK.

4. Traditional versus liberal mindsets
Having traveled to around 20 countries, I have noticed a consistent global pattern: conservative and religious women are more likely to marry within their race, while liberal or progressive women are more likely to marry outside of it. This holds true across White, Black, East Asian, and South Asian communities.

However, among Tamil Brahmin women, even the conservative ones seem more inclined toward intercaste or interracial marriages. In many Hindu temples across the U.S. and Canada, I’ve observed that Tamil Brahmin women married to white men frequently attend services far more than the reverse. I’ve also heard many Tamil Brahmin women openly say they are not even attracted to Indian men. This pattern resembles what is often seen among East Asian (Chinese, Japanese, etc.) women who prefer white men lot more than their own men.Very few women from other indian community I heard, making such statements.


Some Conclusions

I understand that many people here approach such topics purely from a scientific standpoint. However, based on my own spiritual experiences combined with a scientific perspective, I’ve reached a tentative conclusion:

If attraction and marriage are indeed influenced by karmic connections, it is possible that the Tamil Brahmin community is undergoing a form of collective karmic retribution or even a curse, that drives so many women to seek partners outside their community more often than men or other groups. Just as the Yadavas once lost their women in a karmic reversal, perhaps past actions are now manifesting as a similar challenge for Tamil Brahmins.

Karma operates not only at the individual level but also at the level of communities and nations. When third generation Gujaratis in the U.K. have interracial marriage rates below 5%, and Orthodox Jews in New York City maintain rates around 2%, Tamil Brahmins cannot easily justify intermarriage levels as high as 70–80% in the United States.

Perhaps this curse caused rise of a far left, ideologically “woke” mindset among many Tamil Brahmins, particularly in the diaspora. Sadly, I have encountered numerous such individuals in the U.S., making it increasingly difficult to find balanced, apolitical, and spiritually grounded members of the community. When I meet Brahmins from Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra, or Andhra Pradesh, our conversations usually revolve around spiritual topics, but when I meet Tamil Brahmins, discussions tend to drift toward progressive and political themes.
 
Every relationship in this world be it family, spouse, friends,neighbors,enemies etc all have a karmic bond.
Nothing is random.

Btw, could you explain the reason for the collective Karmic retribution?
 
Last January, I made a post about the unusually high rate of intercaste marriages among the Tamil Brahmin community. I actively followed the discussion but, unfortunately, did not receive any satisfactory explanations in any of answers. Now, nearly ten months later, I believe I have a better understanding of the reasons behind this trend. Before drawing any conclusions, I would like to outline four separate but seemingly unrelated observations.

1. Historical and scriptural references

a. Just before Lord Krishna concluded his avatar, it is said that the Yadavas committed grave acts against the Abhira women. Later, when Arjuna was escorting the Yadava women to Hastinapur, the Abhira men attacked and took away many of them. When Arjuna tried to invoke his astras, the deities did not respond, leaving him powerless. In the end, both the Yadavas and Abhiras suffered the loss of their women.

b. In the 4th century, King Mayura Sharma of the Kadamba dynasty invited Kashmiri Brahmins who settled in uttar pradesh from northern India to the karnataka to help revive Hinduism. These Brahmin men married local Dalit women, creating a new community called the Havyakas. Historically, this community has experienced alternating periods of gender imbalance, at times having too many men and at other times too many women. In the 1950s–1970s, they had severe shortage of women, by the 1970s–1990s, there was a surplus. Since after 2000s, they have again faced a shortage due to low birth rates and intercaste marriages.

2. “Marriages made in heaven”, a personal reflection

A bit about myself, I had an arranged marriage. My wife and I have opposite interests, yet we felt an instant, powerful attraction to each other. In our early days together, we often wondered what had drawn us so strongly, but we never found an answer.

Later, as I became more involved in spiritual practices, my kundalini awakened through divine grace, and I began to have spiritual experiences. In one out of body experience, I witnessed an agreement made before certain deities regarding my life, marriage, and spiritual journey. After returning to my body, I finally understood the inexplicable pull I had felt toward my wife, it truly was a “marriage made in heaven.” She was someone my heart drawn towards, even when my mind couldn’t make sense of it.

3. Interracial and intercaste marriages in the West

Among newlyweds in the U.S. and the U.K., interracial marriage rates among whites have remained around 10% over the past decade. Similarly, intercaste marriage rates among Indians(except TB)range between 5% and 10%.Interracial marriage rate among 3rd generation gujaratis in UK hovers around 5% in UK.

4. Traditional versus liberal mindsets
Having traveled to around 20 countries, I have noticed a consistent global pattern: conservative and religious women are more likely to marry within their race, while liberal or progressive women are more likely to marry outside of it. This holds true across White, Black, East Asian, and South Asian communities.

However, among Tamil Brahmin women, even the conservative ones seem more inclined toward intercaste or interracial marriages. In many Hindu temples across the U.S. and Canada, I’ve observed that Tamil Brahmin women married to white men frequently attend services far more than the reverse. I’ve also heard many Tamil Brahmin women openly say they are not even attracted to Indian men. This pattern resembles what is often seen among East Asian (Chinese, Japanese, etc.) women who prefer white men lot more than their own men.Very few women from other indian community I heard, making such statements.


Some Conclusions

I understand that many people here approach such topics purely from a scientific standpoint. However, based on my own spiritual experiences combined with a scientific perspective, I’ve reached a tentative conclusion:

If attraction and marriage are indeed influenced by karmic connections, it is possible that the Tamil Brahmin community is undergoing a form of collective karmic retribution or even a curse, that drives so many women to seek partners outside their community more often than men or other groups. Just as the Yadavas once lost their women in a karmic reversal, perhaps past actions are now manifesting as a similar challenge for Tamil Brahmins.

Karma operates not only at the individual level but also at the level of communities and nations. When third generation Gujaratis in the U.K. have interracial marriage rates below 5%, and Orthodox Jews in New York City maintain rates around 2%, Tamil Brahmins cannot easily justify intermarriage levels as high as 70–80% in the United States.

Perhaps this curse caused rise of a far left, ideologically “woke” mindset among many Tamil Brahmins, particularly in the diaspora. Sadly, I have encountered numerous such individuals in the U.S., making it increasingly difficult to find balanced, apolitical, and spiritually grounded members of the community. When I meet Brahmins from Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra, or Andhra Pradesh, our conversations usually revolve around spiritual topics, but when I meet Tamil Brahmins, discussions tend to drift toward progressive and political themes.
Okay, ahem. I think you're letting your imagination get the better of you here sir. :D :D

Amazing how the success of Bengaluru is actually fanning regional jealousies. Its all nature.

Why calling it a 'curse', sir? To make it look like they did something wrong? So you can cleanse the area after the driving away all the existing brahmins, and take their place? Just so it doesn't look like your occupation of that place would look unjust, eh?

I didn't realize talking about 'the relative success of TB' would have such a reaction. See how the jealousy is manifesting. Well, whatever. TB community is in a crisis. Bad blood with a neighbor is the last thing we need, no matter what that neighbor might be having, in his heart.

So, good day to you Sir. Have a nice day full of talespinning drawn from Indian myths to show your enemies in poor light so you feel better.
 
Collective retribution stems from bad karma committed by a community. Just as many Yadava men who wronged the Abhiras nearly caused their own community’s extinction, the TBs too may have done something wrong collectively in the past. Karma affects people and their descendants, manifesting only when the time is right. Sometimes karmic retribution is swift; at other times, it takes generations, but it always arrives eventually.

A few months ago, I accidentally met a half-TB girl (with a White father) at a party. As I’m well-known as a past-life regressionist among my friends, she shared her relationship troubles and sought my help. None of her relationships had lasted beyond a couple of months, often ending with men who had commitment issues. After speaking with her, I realized that many of the conservative qualities she valued were more common among traditional Indian men. When I asked if she had ever dated an Indian, she said she wasn’t attracted to them.


Then I conducted an hour-long deep regression session with her. During the regression, I had a very interesting conversation with her Higher Self. Below is a snippet of that exchange.

HS denotes her Higher Self, and Rg refers to me, the Regressionist.

Rg: Why isn’t she attracted to Indian men? I believe the qualities she seeks in a partner are more often found among Indian men than White men.
HS: Karma! It is what drives her interests.
Rg: Is it personal karma or community karma?
HS: Both.
Rg: Does this apply to her mother as well?
HS: Yes. She wasn’t marked for the community.


After the regression, I asked her whether she would like to dissolve her karmic bonds related to physical attraction, allowing her to connect with a person’s soul rather than just their external attributes. She said Yes. I then conducted four additional sessions, during which I requested her Higher Self to release some of these karmic ties.

Last week, I happened to run into her at a friend’s house. She greeted me warmly and said, “Hey <my name>, I’ve started meeting a lot of good-quality men from different races. And you know what’s most surprising even to me? I’ve started finding Indian men attractive! I met two of them last week, and both dates went really well.”

This incident truly solidified my understanding of how karma influences mutual attraction.
 
When I meet Brahmins from Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra, or Andhra Pradesh, our conversations usually revolve around spiritual topics, but when I meet Tamil Brahmins, discussions tend to drift toward progressive and political themes.
It may be applicable to not only TB but other Brahmins(kannada, telugu, marathi etc.,) too who are born and brought up in TN when their ancestors moved here through kings of other states for many generations before.
 
Last January, I made a post about the unusually high rate of intercaste marriages among the Tamil Brahmin community. I actively followed the discussion but, unfortunately, did not receive any satisfactory explanations in any of answers. Now, nearly ten months later, I believe I have a better understanding of the reasons behind this trend. Before drawing any conclusions, I would like to outline four separate but seemingly unrelated observations.

1. Historical and scriptural references

a. Just before Lord Krishna concluded his avatar, it is said that the Yadavas committed grave acts against the Abhira women. Later, when Arjuna was escorting the Yadava women to Hastinapur, the Abhira men attacked and took away many of them. When Arjuna tried to invoke his astras, the deities did not respond, leaving him powerless. In the end, both the Yadavas and Abhiras suffered the loss of their women.

b. In the 4th century, King Mayura Sharma of the Kadamba dynasty invited Kashmiri Brahmins who settled in uttar pradesh from northern India to the karnataka to help revive Hinduism. These Brahmin men married local Dalit women, creating a new community called the Havyakas. Historically, this community has experienced alternating periods of gender imbalance, at times having too many men and at other times too many women. In the 1950s–1970s, they had severe shortage of women, by the 1970s–1990s, there was a surplus. Since after 2000s, they have again faced a shortage due to low birth rates and intercaste marriages.

2. “Marriages made in heaven”, a personal reflection

A bit about myself, I had an arranged marriage. My wife and I have opposite interests, yet we felt an instant, powerful attraction to each other. In our early days together, we often wondered what had drawn us so strongly, but we never found an answer.

Later, as I became more involved in spiritual practices, my kundalini awakened through divine grace, and I began to have spiritual experiences. In one out of body experience, I witnessed an agreement made before certain deities regarding my life, marriage, and spiritual journey. After returning to my body, I finally understood the inexplicable pull I had felt toward my wife, it truly was a “marriage made in heaven.” She was someone my heart drawn towards, even when my mind couldn’t make sense of it.

3. Interracial and intercaste marriages in the West

Among newlyweds in the U.S. and the U.K., interracial marriage rates among whites have remained around 10% over the past decade. Similarly, intercaste marriage rates among Indians(except TB)range between 5% and 10%.Interracial marriage rate among 3rd generation gujaratis in UK hovers around 5% in UK.

4. Traditional versus liberal mindsets
Having traveled to around 20 countries, I have noticed a consistent global pattern: conservative and religious women are more likely to marry within their race, while liberal or progressive women are more likely to marry outside of it. This holds true across White, Black, East Asian, and South Asian communities.

However, among Tamil Brahmin women, even the conservative ones seem more inclined toward intercaste or interracial marriages. In many Hindu temples across the U.S. and Canada, I’ve observed that Tamil Brahmin women married to white men frequently attend services far more than the reverse. I’ve also heard many Tamil Brahmin women openly say they are not even attracted to Indian men. This pattern resembles what is often seen among East Asian (Chinese, Japanese, etc.) women who prefer white men lot more than their own men.Very few women from other indian community I heard, making such statements.


Some Conclusions

I understand that many people here approach such topics purely from a scientific standpoint. However, based on my own spiritual experiences combined with a scientific perspective, I’ve reached a tentative conclusion:

If attraction and marriage are indeed influenced by karmic connections, it is possible that the Tamil Brahmin community is undergoing a form of collective karmic retribution or even a curse, that drives so many women to seek partners outside their community more often than men or other groups. Just as the Yadavas once lost their women in a karmic reversal, perhaps past actions are now manifesting as a similar challenge for Tamil Brahmins.

Karma operates not only at the individual level but also at the level of communities and nations. When third generation Gujaratis in the U.K. have interracial marriage rates below 5%, and Orthodox Jews in New York City maintain rates around 2%, Tamil Brahmins cannot easily justify intermarriage levels as high as 70–80% in the United States.

Perhaps this curse caused rise of a far left, ideologically “woke” mindset among many Tamil Brahmins, particularly in the diaspora. Sadly, I have encountered numerous such individuals in the U.S., making it increasingly difficult to find balanced, apolitical, and spiritually grounded members of the community. When I meet Brahmins from Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra, or Andhra Pradesh, our conversations usually revolve around spiritual topics, but when I meet Tamil Brahmins, discussions tend to drift toward progressive and political themes.
I don't think migrated kashmiri Brahmins married locals and from them only Havyakas descended, instead just like iyers migrated to Palakkad are called Palakkad iyers Brahmins migrated to Karnataka are called Havyaka Brahmins.
 
Okay, ahem. I think you're letting your imagination get the better of you here sir. :D :D

Amazing how the success of Bengaluru is actually fanning regional jealousies. Its all nature.

Why calling it a 'curse', sir? To make it look like they did something wrong? So you can cleanse the area after the driving away all the existing brahmins, and take their place? Just so it doesn't look like your occupation of that place would look unjust, eh?

I didn't realize talking about 'the relative success of TB' would have such a reaction. See how the jealousy is manifesting. Well, whatever. TB community is in a crisis. Bad blood with a neighbor is the last thing we need, no matter what that neighbor might be having, in his heart.

So, good day to you Sir. Have a nice day full of talespinning drawn from Indian myths to show your enemies in poor light so you feel better.
I only speculated, I don’t know for sure if that’s the case. But how else can one explain the near total destruction of TBs through intermarriage? How else can one account for the unusually high number of “woke” individuals among TBs? This trend is visible even among Tamil Brahmins who migrated to other states centuries ago, long before the rise of the DMK.

For example, I’ve met many far-left, woke Tamil Brahmins in the old Mysore and Rayalaseema regions, whose families that moved there centuries back.

You can call our Ancient histories written in hindu texts(puranas) as "myths". But I don't believe in that.My belief didn't stem from mere blind beliefs , but experiencing/watching many of them in my own Out of Body state.However there is no way I can make you believe in that, as neither I've time or resources to train someone else to experience the same , which I did.

At a time when Brahmins already face significant hostility and prejudice, the last thing we need is internal conflict. My intention is sincere: to awaken Tamil Brahmins to the challenges their community faces and encourage them to take action to preserve it. It may not be very effective, but at least I’ve made my effort.
 
I don't think migrated kashmiri Brahmins married locals and from them only Havyakas descended, instead just like iyers migrated to Palakkad are called Palakkad iyers Brahmins migrated to Karnataka are called Havyaka Brahmins.
T
he Kadamba inscriptions mention that the ancestors of the Havyakas were brought from Ahicchatra. Even the Havyaka Mahasabha officially acknowledges this.

it is mentioned on their own website. https://havyakamahasabha.com/en/about-community/
 
It may be applicable to not only TB but other Brahmins(kannada, telugu, marathi etc.,) too who are born and brought up in TN when their ancestors moved here through kings of other states for many generations before.

I haven’t met many non-TB Brahmins from Tamil Nadu, but I have interacted with people from other communities there, such as Thevars, Goundars, and Vanniyars. Even though their leaders are often associated with the left-wing ecosystem, many ordinary members of these groups seem to have a stronger sense of pride in their community and culture.

In fact, I’ve noticed that these people tend to be less “woke” than Tamil Brahmins. However, anti-Brahmin sentiment appears to be widespread even among those who aren’t particularly woke
 
Collective retribution stems from bad karma committed by a community. Just as many Yadava men who wronged the Abhiras nearly caused their own community’s extinction, the TBs too may have done something wrong collectively in the past. Karma affects people and their descendants, manifesting only when the time is right. Sometimes karmic retribution is swift; at other times, it takes generations, but it always arrives eventually.

A few months ago, I accidentally met a half-TB girl (with a White father) at a party. As I’m well-known as a past-life regressionist among my friends, she shared her relationship troubles and sought my help. None of her relationships had lasted beyond a couple of months, often ending with men who had commitment issues. After speaking with her, I realized that many of the conservative qualities she valued were more common among traditional Indian men. When I asked if she had ever dated an Indian, she said she wasn’t attracted to them.


Then I conducted an hour-long deep regression session with her. During the regression, I had a very interesting conversation with her Higher Self. Below is a snippet of that exchange.

HS denotes her Higher Self, and Rg refers to me, the Regressionist.

Rg: Why isn’t she attracted to Indian men? I believe the qualities she seeks in a partner are more often found among Indian men than White men.
HS: Karma! It is what drives her interests.
Rg: Is it personal karma or community karma?
HS: Both.
Rg: Does this apply to her mother as well?
HS: Yes. She wasn’t marked for the community.


After the regression, I asked her whether she would like to dissolve her karmic bonds related to physical attraction, allowing her to connect with a person’s soul rather than just their external attributes. She said Yes. I then conducted four additional sessions, during which I requested her Higher Self to release some of these karmic ties.

Last week, I happened to run into her at a friend’s house. She greeted me warmly and said, “Hey <my name>, I’ve started meeting a lot of good-quality men from different races. And you know what’s most surprising even to me? I’ve started finding Indian men attractive! I met two of them last week, and both dates went really well.”

This incident truly solidified my understanding of how karma influences mutual attraction.
I have heard a lot of Karmic past life regression.
Some practitioners say they can access Akashic records of clients to let them know what are the karmic lessons one has come with in this life.

For eg, a person's karmic lesson could be to learn humility and this person might be born in a family of high standing, making it even more difficult to cultivate humility, hence one might not ever " remember" their karmic lesson is to cultivate humility.
And one struggles from birth to birth trying to get over pride.

My question is..is it actually safe to access a persons higher self and change things?
What are the risks of " The Butterfly Effect"?

Outwardly, it might look as if you solved the girls issues but what if the Butterfly effect happens and in the future it leads to total chaos?

Is it advisable to play God?
How does it affect your own Karma if you change the outcome of someone elses journey?

Are you actually just carrying out destiny which had to come through your auto suggestion or are you actually the doer here?
 
America is a land of make believe and utter artificiality. I am certain that the TB girls who married white men are living a life of that grade. Poor girls.

Renuka I will respond to your post soon.
 
Renuka,
Nothing happens without nature's consent and involvement. Even negativity. Sometimes it might seem you are playing God but it is nature that makes you execute it's will.

You can never outsmart or overpower nature. It has all the safety measures in place. You are just playing it out for a higher purpose.

It is not that we are inconsequential but we are lot less in control than we think we are.
 
On my scale the quality of life would rate F--
Sravna...why would it be rated F?
Any marriage is because of a karmic reason..even the worst of worst marriages are because of karmic lessons.

karmic lessons are not meant to be graded...its meant for us to reflect.
 
Sravna...why would it be rated F?
Any marriage is because of a karmic reason..even the worst of worst marriages are because of karmic lessons.

karmic lessons are not meant to be graded...its meant for us to reflect.
Renuka

You can't totally ignore the physical mental aspect. So the grade
 
I have heard a lot of Karmic past life regression.
Some practitioners say they can access Akashic records of clients to let them know what are the karmic lessons one has come with in this life.

For eg, a person's karmic lesson could be to learn humility and this person might be born in a family of high standing, making it even more difficult to cultivate humility, hence one might not ever " remember" their karmic lesson is to cultivate humility.
And one struggles from birth to birth trying to get over pride.

My question is..is it actually safe to access a persons higher self and change things?
What are the risks of " The Butterfly Effect"?

Outwardly, it might look as if you solved the girls issues but what if the Butterfly effect happens and in the future it leads to total chaos?

Is it advisable to play God?
How does it affect your own Karma if you change the outcome of someone elses journey?

Are you actually just carrying out destiny which had to come through your auto suggestion or are you actually the doer here?
One cannot access the Akashic Records as easily as picking a book from a shelf. In a trance state, we typically request the Higher Self to take over. It is the Higher Self that accesses both prārabdha karma (the portion of karma being experienced in this lifetime) and sañchita karma (all the accumulated karma from past lives), which together form part of the Akashic Records. The Higher Self only reveals information that is safe and appropriate, and it does not make changes that are not meant to occur. This Higher Self is a subtle aspect of our own being, yet directly connected to the Paramātman (Supreme Soul).

Any changes made are done safely and in harmony with the karmic balance of others. For example, it would never alter someone’s life to make them an emperor overnight. Adjustments occur only within the limits of the larger karmic framework. Certain karmas must be experienced and cannot be changed, but many minor karmas can be modified.

It is important to remember that we ourselves choose our prārabdha karma before birth, with the guidance of devatas. For instance, before I was born, I was shown several “packages” of possible lives, each with its own future outcomes. I chose one that I believed would be most beneficial for my growth. Each package represented a set of positive and negative karmas, along with the lessons to be learned during one’s earthly life.
 
One cannot access the Akashic Records as easily as picking a book from a shelf. In a trance state, we typically request the Higher Self to take over. It is the Higher Self that accesses both prārabdha karma (the portion of karma being experienced in this lifetime) and sañchita karma (all the accumulated karma from past lives), which together form part of the Akashic Records. The Higher Self only reveals information that is safe and appropriate, and it does not make changes that are not meant to occur. This Higher Self is a subtle aspect of our own being, yet directly connected to the Paramātman (Supreme Soul).

Any changes made are done safely and in harmony with the karmic balance of others. For example, it would never alter someone’s life to make them an emperor overnight. Adjustments occur only within the limits of the larger karmic framework. Certain karmas must be experienced and cannot be changed, but many minor karmas can be modified.

It is important to remember that we ourselves choose our prārabdha karma before birth, with the guidance of devatas. For instance, before I was born, I was shown several “packages” of possible lives, each with its own future outcomes. I chose one that I believed would be most beneficial for my growth. Each package represented a set of positive and negative karmas, along with the lessons to be learned during one’s earthly life.
Thank you Sir for explanation.
 
One cannot access the Akashic Records as easily as picking a book from a shelf. In a trance state, we typically request the Higher Self to take over. It is the Higher Self that accesses both prārabdha karma (the portion of karma being experienced in this lifetime) and sañchita karma (all the accumulated karma from past lives), which together form part of the Akashic Records. The Higher Self only reveals information that is safe and appropriate, and it does not make changes that are not meant to occur. This Higher Self is a subtle aspect of our own being, yet directly connected to the Paramātman (Supreme Soul).

Any changes made are done safely and in harmony with the karmic balance of others. For example, it would never alter someone’s life to make them an emperor overnight. Adjustments occur only within the limits of the larger karmic framework. Certain karmas must be experienced and cannot be changed, but many minor karmas can be modified.

It is important to remember that we ourselves choose our prārabdha karma before birth, with the guidance of devatas. For instance, before I was born, I was shown several “packages” of possible lives, each with its own future outcomes. I chose one that I believed would be most beneficial for my growth. Each package represented a set of positive and negative karmas, along with the lessons to be learned during one’s earthly life.
Nice explanation Sir
 
Ok. I don't believe in occult stuff, including many of the religious rituals. But I was very devout. I am planning to become religious after marriage. Whether I will marry a TB or non-South Indian B/NB, non-Indian girl, will decide how the TB community will accept me and my partner. And that will determine the extent to which I can be religious and ritualistic post-marriage.

But seeing a few tamil B girl NB boy couples doing a 'traditional' marriage, and following brahminish customs has left a very very bitter impression on me.

IDK which path I will take. But overall, I don't believe in occult stuff. They stem from a weak mind and intellect. Sorry to say but I think its your own bias coming out in the form of your divinations. But, that's perfectly okay. These are natural human emotions. :)

The problems of weakening of endogamy, dilution of cultures is happening everywhere. What needs to be done is - each caste has to be mindful of this, and try to salvage what they can.
 
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