Om Swami is a spiritual leader and bestselling author[1] who resides in his ashram in the Himalayan foothills. He is the founder of the Black Lotus App[2] and os.me,[3][4] a writing platform. Before renunciation, he was a successful tech entrepreneur.[5] Swami is the bestselling author of more than fifteen books on meditation, wellness, and spirituality, such as Kundalini: An Untold Story, The Wellness Sense, and If Truth Be Told: A Monk's Memoir.[6][7][8] He has also documented his experiences on meditation for over 15,000 hours in his well-received book A Million Thoughts.
Early life
Swami was born on the twelfth night of the waxing moon in the month of Margasirsa, according to the Vedic calendar. Showing deep inclination towards spirituality[10] from an early age, Swami studied a range of Vedic and astrological texts, eventually becoming a professional astrologer during his teen years. He quit his job as a part-time editor for a weekly business newspaper to pursue graduation and post-graduation degrees from Australia. Later, he acquired Australian citizenship.
Education and early career
In 2000, Swami graduated with a Bachelor of Business from University of Western Sydney. He acquired Master of Business Administration from University of Technology Sydney. Later, he started a software business in Australia and expanded its operations to the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, and India over the next six years.[11] He became a millionaire owing to his IT company.[12] Later, Swami moved back to India and acquired a healthcare company.
Renunciation and spiritual journey
On 15 March 2010, Swami renounced his material wealth[1] and left for his spiritual journey quietly. Heading straight to Kashi, he was initiated[13] into the path of renunciation by a Naga saint in a little village some eighty kilometers from Varanasi.[14] After spending four and a half months there, Swami left for the Himalayas where he spent the next thirteen months in intense meditation in complete isolation and solitude. During the days of his intense practice, he meditated for up to 22 hours every day including straight 10-hour stretches.[15] Researchers and Scientists from IIT studied the effects of his intense spiritual practices (tapasya) and published the findings in 2019 research papers.
Views
Swami gives his own perspective on enlightenment on his website[17] and in his book If Truth Be Told. "Enlightenment does not mean you have to live like a pauper. It does not mean you have to subject yourself to a life of hardship and abstinence. On the contrary, to be enlightened means to live in the light of love, compassion and truthfulness".
Literary work
If Truth Be Told: A Monk's Memoir is his memoir, published by Harper Collins in December 2014.[19][20] The book was listed as number 6 in the top 10 non fiction books in the country as reported by The Financial Express (India).[21] His fictional novel The Last Gambit was translated as La vie est un jeu d'échecs in French. It won the Chronos Prize for Literature (2019) in France.
Courtesy – Wikipedia
- Om Swami