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India News Updated Oct 1, 2025

'Epic Exercise': Reaping the 'Ramayan' for rare life lessons (Book Review)

This book review explores how Talari Anand Mahesh makes the ancient Ramayana relevant for today's generation. He extracts over 40 practical life lessons that go beyond the epic's traditional religious interpretations. The author creatively adapts characters and situations to highlight their modern applicability. This approach helps readers discover timeless wisdom for both personal growth and professional success.

New Delhi, Oct 1

Long revered as India's preeminent religious epic, an integral constituent of its religious and cultural landscape, and much familiar to the populace due to its manifold presentations, especially in the visual media and the Ramlilas, the Ramayana has a resonance beyond its key motifs of cosmic dualism, religious duty, and Hindu theogony.

When plumbed with insight and discernment, sage Valmiki's work offers a wide spectrum of life lessons beyond ethics, morality, and destiny - not only from the conduct of the principal protagonists of the work, but also their antagonists, big and small, spanning from the Prince of Ayodhya down to the charioteer of his demon king adversary.

And that is what marketing strategist, storyteller, and avid reader, Talari Anand Mahesh, seeks to unfold for the present-day generation in ‘Unlocking the Wisdom of the Ramayana’ (One Point Six Technologies Pvt. Ltd/228 pp/Rs 455).

As he notes, the "victory of good over evil" is taken to be the central theme and message of the Ramayana, and while this is correct, there is much more to be gained from it.

The author maintains that he finds the epic "full of knowledge, far richer than what any visual medium can capture" as "every word, tale, and side story in these texts offer lessons that many people overlook because they cannot take the time to read the complete texts of our 'itihas' or due to the limitations of visual media in conveying the message and helping people retain it".

Mahesh, who has helped authors, brands, and thought leaders craft compelling narratives, thus seeks to distil the enduring lessons of the esteemed epic into an accessible form for a 21st-century audience to understand and emulate, since "we need a fresh approach to presenting these teachings to today's family and youth."

While stressing that he does not seek to present an "exhaustive retelling" of the Ramayana or a "singular interpretation" of its lessons, he says he only aims to "extract lessons" that can help us in both our personal and professional lives.

Mahesh also admits that while his effort is inspired by Valmiki's work, particularly the translation of the late Bibek Debroy, he has taken "extensive creative liberties", adapting dialogues, passages, and situations for a "nuanced exploration" of both the characters and the story for "enhancing the lessons' relevance". Thus, there is a bit of subjectivity in the interpretation of some characters and situations to reflect the intended insight -- which the reader must keep in mind.

Before coming to the lessons proper, he gives us a brief, yet engaging account of how Valmiki found out that he was equal to the task of composing the epic, and an encapsulation of its seven 'kandas', from the "Bala Kanda" to the "Uttara Kanda" (though he notes that the latter is considered to be a later interpolation).

In all, there are 40-odd lessons Mahesh presents in this work - with the last combining all of the lessons - traversing the ideal life, ethics, justice, forgiveness, humility and hubris, stress and serenity, diplomacy, decision-making, duty and luxury, loyalty, and many other facets and issues of the human condition.

‘Unlocking the Wisdom of the Ramayana’ is a commendable attempt to go beyond the optics of an epic to delve into what it teaches us about ourselves and how we live our lives.

More importantly, there is the impetus to go beyond the mere text and ponder how certain issues persist and how some values remain constant across the aeons.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Rohit P

As someone working in corporate India, I'm particularly interested in the lessons on decision-making and diplomacy. Lord Ram's leadership qualities are something we can all learn from in today's professional world.

Ananya R

While I appreciate the effort to make Ramayana relevant to modern youth, I hope the author doesn't take too many "creative liberties" with the original text. Some stories are sacred and should be treated with respect.

Vikram M

The mention of 40+ lessons covering everything from stress management to ethics is impressive! Our ancient texts truly are treasure troves of wisdom. Planning to gift this to my teenage daughter who only knows Ramayana through TV serials.

Sarah B

As someone new to Indian culture, I find this approach really helpful. The Ramayana can be overwhelming to understand, so having someone distill the key lessons makes it more accessible for people like me who want to learn about Indian philosophy.

Karthik V

The point about going beyond "victory of good over evil" resonates deeply. Ramayana teaches us about complex human emotions, relationships, and ethical dilemmas that are still relevant today. Jai Shri Ram! 🚩

Michael C

Interesting concept! I've always been fascinated by how ancient wisdom can be applied to modern challenges

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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