Siddhis Are Not Superpowers. They Are Engineering
Right now, the world is intoxicated with technology.
If you speak about machines, mechanics, algorithms, futures—people listen. Their eyes light up. Not because it transforms them, but because it titillates their intellect.
So yes, I speak that language.
I hover around technology, mechanics, systems—because that is the entry point of the modern mind. You throw a shiny tool at it, and it becomes attentive.
But understand this clearly—
Technology is not the destination. It is bait.
The real work has nothing to do with machines.
The real work is this human system.
If I find someone—not curious, but hungry—
Not someone interested in brooding about life or merely breeding for continuity,
But someone who is absolutely devoted to life itself,
Then we can go far.
Very far.
This human mechanism is the most sophisticated technology on the planet.
But people want shortcuts.
They want powers without preparation, experiences without discipline, liberation without responsibility.
Yogic sciences never hid anything.
There are no secrets—only ineligible listeners.
If you are willing to refine your perception,
If you are willing to discipline your energies,
If you are willing to drop your nonsense and your psychological dramas,
Then exploring dimensions of experience is not a miracle—it is engineering.
But such people are rare.
So we wait.
Not impatiently—intensely.
Like vultures, yes—not to consume the dead, but to recognize real life from miles away.
When someone comes—not asking what will I get?
But asking how far can this life be taken?
Then technology is dropped instantly.
And the real journey begins.
Until then, we speak the language people understand.
Because once in a while, among the noise,
Someone hears the call behind the words.
And that one person is enough.
Love this direction. Here’s a clean, Isha-style Q&A, where participants ask and Parth responds—calm, slightly humorous, cutting through nonsense, experiential, not preachy. This is written to feel like a live satsang interaction.
Participant Q&A with Parth
(On Technology, the Human System, and Ultimate Possibility)
Participant 1:
Parth, today everyone is fascinated by technology and innovation. Why do you speak so much about technology if your work is really about the human system?
Parth:
Because if I start talking about the human system directly, most people will switch off immediately.
Technology is like the ringtone—you pick up the call because of it. But once you pick up, the conversation is about life.
If you don’t know how to use the current fascination of the mind, you will never get a chance to speak about deeper possibilities.
Participant 2:
Are you saying technology has no value in human evolution?
Parth:
Technology has immense value—for comfort, convenience, survival.
But evolution does not happen through comfort.
If evolution happened through comfort, the human race would have finished long ago—too comfortable to move.
Technology can support life, but it cannot fulfil life.
Participant 3:
You mentioned that the human system is the most advanced technology. Can you explain this?
Parth:
This body can create chemistry, electricity, magnetism, memory, intelligence and perception—all by itself.
You have a device that can create heaven or hell within you, and you are using it only for digestion and reproduction.
That is not a technology problem—it is a user problem.
Participant 4:
People talk a lot about yogic powers and siddhis. Are they real or just imagination?
Parth:
If you imagine something, it will disturb only you.
If something is real, it will disturb everyone around you.
Siddhis are not fantasies; they are side-effects of a refined system.
But if you chase them, you will miss the real treasure—freedom from limitation.
Participant 5:
Why do only a few people seem capable of accessing these deeper dimensions?
Parth:
Because most people are busy managing their emotions, relationships, fears, and opinions.
If all your energy is spent on psychological noise, where is the fuel for higher perception?
This is not about capability—it is about priority.
Participant 6:
You said you are “waiting like vultures.” What does that mean?
Parth:
A vulture does not waste energy hunting everything.
It waits, but it sees clearly from a great height.
When someone is genuinely ready—not curious, not entertained, but burning to know life—they are visible immediately.
Until then, waiting is not patience; it is intelligence.
Participant 7:
What disqualifies a person from exploring higher dimensions of experience?
Parth:
Two things mainly—
One, wanting results without discipline.
Two, wanting experiences without responsibility.
The moment you want convenience more than truth, the door closes automatically.
Participant 8:
Is this path only for monks or renunciates?
Parth:
No. It is only for the serious.
You can live in a city, run a business, raise a family—but if life is your highest priority, this is possible.
Renunciation is not of the world; it is of nonsense.
Participant 9:
What should someone do if they feel this longing but don’t know where to start?
Parth:
First, stop pretending.
Drop borrowed ideas, borrowed beliefs, borrowed ambitions.
Become absolutely honest about one thing—“I want to know life, not opinions about life.”
Once that clarity comes, the next step will find you.
Participant 10:
So who is this work really meant for?
Parth:
Not for those who want comfort.
Not for those who want entertainment.
Not even for those who want healing alone.
This is for those who want to explore how far being human can go.
Even if there are only a few—
That is more than enough.

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