🔮myTarot 🪷myKrishna 🔢myNumbers 🌙myDreams ☯️myIChing 🐍mokshaPatam myRamal myRunes 🪐myJyotish 📖myScriptures
🔮myTarot 🪷myKrishna 🔢myNumbers 🌙myDreams ☯️myIChing 🐍mokshaPatam myRamal myRunes 🪐myJyotish 📖myScriptures
4 Vedas · 10 Upanishads · 18 Puranas 4,000+ years of Vedic transmission 5 sections per reading Sanskrit · Transliteration · Meaning 2 credits per reading
✦ Vedic Scripture for Your Life

The Vedas have already
spoken to this.

Describe what you are facing — in plain, honest words. myScriptures finds the verse, hymn, or teaching from across the entire Vedic canon that speaks directly to your situation, and brings it into contact with your life.

4Vedas
10+Upanishads
18Puranas
5Sections
2Credits

No Sanskrit knowledge needed · 2 credits per reading · One wallet across numiVeda

Why existing approaches fall short
The wisdom exists.
The connection to your life doesn't.
Verses without context
A verse of the day is beautiful. It is also disconnected from what you are actually carrying today. The Rigveda's hymns were composed in response to real human conditions — fire, fear, grief, longing, confusion. That is how they need to be received.
One text, one tradition
The Dharmashastra addresses duty and right action. The Upanishads address the nature of the self. The Puranas address the cosmic forces that shape a life. The Atharvaveda addresses the body and its needs. Different situations call for different texts — myScriptures searches the whole canon.
Teaching that stays abstract
Knowing that "Atman is Brahman" is not the same as knowing what to do with the grief you are carrying or the decision you cannot make. The tradition has always known this — which is why the Rishis answered real questions with real answers, not philosophical summaries.
What makes myScriptures different
What no other scripture tool does
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The whole canon, not one text
Every question is matched against the full Vedic corpus — four Vedas, ten principal Upanishads, eighteen Mahapuranas. The right scripture for your situation is the one that gets found, whatever text it lives in. Not just the most famous. Not just the most cited.
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Personal and cosmic — both dimensions
Every reading moves in two registers: what the scripture reveals about the cosmic order, and what it means for you, specifically, in this situation right now. The tradition makes no sense at all if it stays in the abstract. Neither does a reading that is only personal.
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Sadhana, not just insight
The Vedic tradition is embodied practice — not intellectual knowledge. Every reading closes with three concrete sadhana — practices you can begin this week to live the teaching rather than merely understand it. Something changes in the body, not just the mind.
The canon
Four thousand years of
transmission

Every reading selects from the text most precisely suited to your situation — not the most famous, but the most true for this moment.

The Four Vedas
Rigveda · Samaveda · Yajurveda · Atharvaveda
The foundational transmission — received by the Rishis in deep meditation. Hymns of cosmic law, chanted melody, ritual knowledge, and the healing of the body. The oldest continuous spiritual literature on earth.
The Principal Upanishads
Brihadaranyaka · Chandogya · Katha · Mundaka · Mandukya · Taittiriya · Isha · Kena · Prashna · Aitareya
The forest teachings on the nature of the self, consciousness, and liberation — the philosophical summit of the Vedic tradition. Where the tradition turns inward and asks what the self truly is.
The Mahapuranas
Bhagavata · Vishnu · Shiva · Devi Bhagavata · Markandeya · Agni · Brahma · Vayu · Garuda
The mythic and cosmological transmission — encoding dharmic wisdom in the language of story, relationship, and devotion. The Puranas address the forces that shape a human life: time, karma, divine will, ancestral pattern.
The Dharmashastra Tradition
Manusmriti · Yajnavalkya Smriti · Arthashastra · Dharmasutras
The tradition's guidance on duty, right action, the stages of life, and the navigation of dharmic conflict. Relevant when your question touches vocation, family, relationships, and the architecture of how a life should be lived.
The reading structure
Five sections.
One complete answer.

Every myScriptures reading follows the same five-part structure — moving from scripture to practice, from the cosmic to the personal.

I
The Scripture
The specific text, tradition, and verse reference. Sanskrit in Devanagari. Roman transliteration. A rendering of the meaning in plain English — not a quote from a copyrighted translation, but the Rishi's own faithful prose.
Up to 60 words
II
What It Reveals
The scripture's meaning brought into direct contact with your specific situation. Names you once, warmly. Not a generic interpretation — a response to what you actually described.
Up to 90 words
III
The Deeper Teaching
The cosmic or dharmic truth this scripture illuminates — the universal principle at work beneath your particular situation. Wide, unhurried, rooted. This section steps back from the personal and speaks of the nature of existence.
Up to 80 words
IV
What This Means For You
Three sentences. Grounded in the present. What you can see differently or do differently because of what this scripture has shown you — real orientation, not vague encouragement.
3 sentences · up to 50 words
V
One Practice
Three numbered sadhana — concrete practices you can begin today or this week. Not advice. Not thinking. Embodied actions that create lived experience of the teaching.
3 practices · up to 40 words each
How it works
numiVeda's Intelligence
and the Rishi's voice

myScriptures is not a search engine and not a chatbot. It is a system built to do one thing with precision: find the right scripture for your situation, and bring it into contact with your life.

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Selection across the full canon
numiVeda's Intelligence reads your situation and moves through the entire Vedic and Puranic corpus — not alphabetically, not by keyword, but by resonance. The verse that surfaces is the one most precisely suited to the nature of your question, not the most well-known.
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Interpretation, not reproduction
The system never reproduces copyrighted translations. It synthesises the interpretive traditions — devotional, philosophical, yogic, Vedantic — and renders the scripture's meaning in the Rishi's own prose. The wisdom is the tradition's. The voice is its own.
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Non-fatalistic framing
The tradition does not speak in prophecy. numiVeda's Intelligence is trained never to tell you what will happen — only what is. Readings empower, orient, and ground. They do not predict or prescribe. The Rishi holds a mirror; the choice of what to do with what you see is yours.
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Sadhana generation
The three practices at the close of every reading are not generic suggestions. They arise from the specific teaching of the specific verse selected for you — concrete, this-week actions that create embodied rather than merely intellectual contact with the tradition.
Sample reading
A seeker asks about belonging
"I have lived in three countries and never felt I truly belong anywhere. I have built a good life but there is a homesickness I cannot locate. I don't know what I am homesick for."
Chandogya Upanishad · 6.8.7
तत् त्वम् असि
tat tvam asi
That which you seek — you already are.
What It Reveals

The Chandogya Upanishad's Mahavakya — one of the four great utterances of the tradition — is not a comfort. It is a diagnosis. The homesickness you are describing is real. It is the ache of the Atman, the innermost self, which recognises that no geography, no community, no achievement can be its home — because its home is prior to all of those things.

The Deeper Teaching

The tradition distinguishes between the self that accumulates — experiences, identities, addresses — and the self that witnesses. The witness does not belong to any place because it is the ground in which all places arise. The longing you feel is not a wound to be healed. It is the first movement of Viveka, the faculty of discernment, beginning to separate what you are from what you have collected.

Full readings also include What This Means For You and three morning practices rooted in this specific teaching.

The full tradition
The tradition does not
soften what is hard

The Vedic canon does not offer easy comfort. It offers something more durable: an honest account of the nature of existence, including its shadow dimensions.

Kala — the teaching on time
The Puranas and the Atharvaveda address time as a force — Kala, the great devourer. Loss, ending, the irreversibility of what has passed. The tradition does not pretend these are illusions. It addresses them directly, and teaches what remains when everything that can be taken has been taken.
Prarabdha — karma already in motion
The tradition distinguishes between karma that can still be altered and karma that has already begun to unfold. Prarabdha is what is in motion. The Rishi does not offer escape from this — it offers clarity about what is yours to act on and what belongs to the unfolding. The difference between these two is everything.
Tamas — the weight of inertia
The Samkhya philosophy underlying much of the Vedic tradition names Tamas — the quality of heaviness, inertia, and obscuration — as a real force in the psyche and in matter. The tradition has a precise account of what creates it, what sustains it, and what cuts through it. This is not metaphor. It is a clinical map.
Is this for you?
myScriptures is not for everyone
You have a real situation you cannot resolve by thinking harder
You want predictions or fortune-telling
You want wisdom rooted in a living tradition, not generic positivity
You want someone to confirm what you have already decided
You are willing to hear something you did not expect
You want a daily verse with no connection to your actual life
You sense the Vedas hold something for you, but don't know where to begin
You are looking for religious instruction or ritual prescription
Getting started
Three steps to
your reading
1
Describe your situation honestly
In plain words — no Sanskrit required, no spiritual background needed. The Rishis answered real seekers in their real confusion. Bring what is actually weighing on you, not the polished version. Specificity is what allows the right scripture to surface.
2
numiVeda's Intelligence searches the full canon
The system moves through four Vedas, ten Upanishads, eighteen Puranas, and the Dharmashastra tradition — matching the nature of your situation to the scripture most precisely suited to it. This typically takes 20–40 seconds.
3
Receive scripture, insight, and practice
Your reading arrives in five sections: the verse in Sanskrit, what it reveals about your situation, the deeper cosmic teaching, what it means for your life right now, and three concrete practices to begin this week. Then sit with it. The reading is not the end — it is the beginning.
Seekers speak
From those who have
asked the Rishi
★★★★★
"I brought a question about my father that I had been carrying for fifteen years. The Katha Upanishad passage it surfaced — and the way it was brought into contact with what is actually between us — I had to put my phone down and sit quietly for a while."
★★★★★
"I have read the Upanishads. I thought I understood them. myScriptures showed me the gap between understanding them intellectually and understanding what they actually say about something I am living right now. That gap is enormous."
★★★★★
"The practice section is what stayed with me. I have been doing one of the three sadhana every morning for two weeks. It is the first spiritual practice I have been able to sustain — because it arose from something that was already real in my situation."
★★★★★
"I asked about grief. It went to the Rigveda's hymn on dissolution and the Bhagavata Purana — not to tell me grief was an illusion, but to tell me what grief is for. I have never read anything that honoured the experience and also held it inside something larger."
★★★★★
"I expected something philosophical and distant. What I received was direct — the Atharvaveda verse it chose, the way the Rishi connected it to my actual anxiety about the future, the three practices at the end. Three weeks later I am still doing the second one every evening."
Questions
Before you ask the Rishi
The entire canon — Vedas, Upanishads, Puranas, and the Dharmashastra tradition — is available for every question. The scripture that best speaks to the specific nature of your situation is the one selected. You don't choose, and you don't need to know the difference between the texts. The selection is part of what the Rishi does.
Any genuine life situation — relationships, career, purpose, grief, fear, identity, family, belonging, decisions, doubt, creative work, the body, the soul. The Vedic tradition addressed all of these. Questions that are purely factual, predictive, or technical are outside what scripture can address.
No background is needed. You describe your situation in plain language. The Sanskrit is included for those who want it, but every reading is written to be understood by anyone — with or without familiarity with Hindu philosophy or Vedic thought.
The sources are Vedic — so the answers are rooted in the Hindu philosophical tradition. But the wisdom is universal, and many seekers from other traditions find it deeply relevant. Readings never prescribe religious practice or ritual unless specifically asked. The Rishi speaks of the nature of existence and the soul — not religious observance.
Yes, where the seeker's question calls for that dimension. The Devi Bhagavata Purana, the Lalita Sahasranama, and certain Agama texts are part of the corpus. Questions about feminine energy, shakti, devotion to the Goddess, cycles of creation and dissolution, and certain healing traditions may draw from these sources naturally. The tradition is wide — the Rishi follows where your question leads.
Usually 20–40 seconds. The system searches the full canon before composing the reading, which takes slightly longer than a simple text generation — the selection step is real, not decorative. The reading then streams in section by section as it is composed.
Yes. The Rishi will draw from a different text each time, since the tradition offers multiple angles on any genuine question. You may find the Katha Upanishad speaks to one dimension of a situation, and the Bhagavata Purana speaks to another. Asking the same question twice is not repetition — it is depth.
Credits
2 credits per reading.
One wallet. All apps.
Sanskrit verse with Devanagari, transliteration, and meaning
Full five-section reading — scripture to practice
Searches across Vedas, Upanishads, and Puranas
Three concrete sadhana practices per reading
Three follow-up question suggestions
Full reading history saved to your account
Starter
₹199
5 credits
2–3 readings
Top-Up
₹299
10 credits
5 readings
Best Value ✦
₹499
20 credits
10 readings
Power
₹999
50 credits
25 readings

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