Eight incidents. One ancient life. Lessons that are more relevant now than ever.
There is a paradox at the heart of the modern mental health crisis among youth. Never before have young people had access to more information, more connection, more opportunity and yet rates of anxiety, depression, loneliness, and existential emptiness are at historic highs. Something is missing. Not technology, not therapy, not awareness but a certain quality of inner ground. A place to stand.
Adi Shankaracharya, the 8th-century philosopher-monk who walked the length of India, debated its greatest minds, and composed some of the most luminous texts in human history all before the age of 32, lived that inner ground completely. His life was not one of privilege or ease. It was full of loss, opposition, physical hardship, and impossible choices. What made him extraordinary was not the absence of difficulty, but the quality of his response to it.
"An exquisite thinker, a brilliant intellect, personality scintillating
with the vision of Truth, A heart-throbbing with industrious faith and an
ardent desire to serve the nation, sweetly emotional and relentlessly logical;
in Shankara the Upanisads discovered the fittest Spiritual `General’"
- Swami Chinmayananda
To understand what Adi Shankaracharya achieved, you have to picture the India he was born into. By the 500BCE, the spiritual landscape was fragmented, traditions existed, but often without clarity. Different schools of thought competed for influence, rituals were performed without deeper understanding, knowledge was not always accessible, even the “educated” were caught in ego, competition, and the need to be right. The result was a kind of collective mental overload: too many voices, too much confusion, and very little inner grounding. Many had even converted to Buddhism.
It’s not very different from what many young people experience today, constant noise, pressure to conform, and a struggle to find clarity and emotional stability.
And then ask yourself: What would you do?
Because back then, there were no social media movements. No viral content. No digital communities.
Into this environment came a young monk from Kerala, who responded, not with anxiety or reaction, but with remarkable clarity and mental strength. Not with outrage. Not with anxiety. But with extraordinary inner clarity and mental steadiness.
By the age of sixteen, he had already begun articulating a vision that would cut through confusion. Not by rejecting tradition—but by bringing back its essence. Not by attacking others, but by restoring clarity, logic, and direct understanding.
Here are eight incidents from his life , real, documented, deeply human, and what each one has to say to the young person navigating the world today.
1. He lost his father at five — and did not let it define him
Shankara lost his father, Shivaguru, when he was just five years old. Raised solely by his mother Aryamba in the small village of Kaladi in Kerala, he grew up without the conventional anchor of a father figure. And yet he showed extraordinary composure and intellectual hunger from his earliest years.
The modern parallel: Many young people today grow up in broken families, through death, divorce, emotional absence, or dysfunction. This often creates a fracture in their sense of self, a wound they carry quietly into adult life.
The lesson: Shankara did not let his circumstances write his story. He turned inward early, cultivating a sense of identity rooted not in what he had or had not, but in something far more stable, Consciousness itself.
His life tells us: the absence of what should have been there does not have to be the absence of who you can become.
2. He mastered the Vedas by eight — not through genius, but through depth of attention
By the age of eight, Shankara had mastered all four Vedas , texts that take most scholars decades of dedicated study. He was initiated into brahmacharya and began studying under local teachers with a hunger that was insatiable.
"The missionary in Acharya Sankara not only understood and realized the Vedas - ''Revelations'' of the Scriptures, but he constantly lived endeavouring to expound, revive, and revitalize them. He made popular that the very basis of our national life is a sacred philosophy, which was not borrowed but had sprung from the very genius of Bharat."
- Swami Chinmayananda
The modern parallel: Today's youth live in the most distracted environment in human history. Social media fragments attention into seconds. Deep work feels almost impossible. Many young people feel perpetually behind, perpetually scattered, perpetually unable to reach the kind of knowledge or skill they sense they are capable of.
The lesson: Shankara's early mastery was not supernatural, it was the product of undivided attention, applied young, without the noise we now take for granted. The capacity to go deep on one thing, to resist the pull of the shallow and the immediate, is itself a superpower available to anyone willing to reclaim it.
Focus is not a gift. It is a practice.
3. He chose his calling against his mother's wishes — and never stopped loving her
Shankara's mother Aryamba fiercely opposed his desire to become a monk. She was a widow, and he was all she had. According to tradition, while bathing in the river Purna, a crocodile seized his leg. He cried out that he was dying and begged his mother to grant him permission to take sannyasa so he would not die without fulfilling his dharma. She relented. He took sannyasa. The crocodile released him. He left in search of his Guru, promising his mother that he would return when she needs him.
The modern parallel: Youth frequently face the painful tension between following their own calling and meeting parental or social expectations, whether it is choosing an unconventional career, a different way of life, or simply asserting who they truly are. Many abandon their purpose for approval. Others abandon their relationships for freedom. Few find a way to hold both.
The lesson: Shankara loved his mother with extraordinary depth , as his later return to her deathbed would prove. But he understood that authentic purpose cannot be postponed indefinitely for someone else's comfort.
Honouring your dharma is not a betrayal of those who love you. It is the deepest gift you can give them.
4. He walked hundreds of miles as a child to find a mentor — and found one
After receiving his mother's permission, the young Shankara walked from Kerala to Omkareshwar, on the banks of the Narmada river in search of his guru, Govinda Bhagavatpada. This was a journey on foot through forests, across mountains, and through unfamiliar territories, undertaken by a child monk with nothing but conviction. He studied under Govinda Bhagavatpada, who was waiting for Shankara to arrive.
The modern parallel: Many young people want mentors but wait passively for them to appear. Others scroll endlessly for the right online course, the right influencer, the right podcast, without ever truly seeking or committing to a teacher. The search itself becomes a substitute for the journey.
The lesson: Shankara did not wait for his guru to find him. He moved. He sacrificed comfort for growth and journeyed into the unknown because he believed that real knowledge required real pursuit. Mentors sense students who are already in motion.
Shankara sacrificed comfort for growth.
5. He wrote his masterwork before he was sixteen — without waiting to be ready
With the permission of His Guru, he wrote his first commentary on Vishnu Sahasranama. After reading it, Govinda Bhagavatpada was thrilled and told him that he did not need his permissions anymore. Shankara's literary output was staggering in its range and beauty. On one hand, Shankara wrote rigorous philosophical commentaries, the Bhashyas on the Brahmasutras, the Upanishads, and the Bhagavad Gita, that remain the definitive intellectual articulation of Advaita Vedanta. On the other, he composed some of the most devotionally tender poetry in the Sanskrit tradition. His Soundaryalahari, a hymn of 100 verses to the Goddess, is a masterpiece of devotional literature. His Shivanandalahari, Bhaja Govindam, Kanakadhara Stotram, and dozens of other compositions bring the formless Brahman into intimate, personal, singing relationship through form, through Shiva, Vishnu, Devi, Subrahmanya, and Ganesha. This integration of nirguna (formless) and saguna (with form) worship was itself a profound healing. It made room for every kind of seeker, from the intellectual to the devotional, under one vast philosophical tent. He produced this work before the age of sixteen. These writings have shaped Indian thought for over a millennium.
"From Masculine prose to soft feminine songs, from marching militant verses to dancing songful words, be he in the halls of the Upanisad Commentaries or in the temple of Brahmasutra expositions or in the amphitheatre of his Bhagwad-gita discourses or in the open flowery fields of his devotional songs, his was a pen that danced itself to the rhythm of his heart and to the swing of his thoughts"
- Swami Chinmayananda
The modern parallel: Youth today are told they need more degrees, more experience, more credentials before they can contribute anything of value. The myth of the perfect moment paralyses creation. Waiting to be ready is the most common way of never beginning.
The lesson: Shankara did not wait for recognition before he wrote. He did not wait for a title, an institution, or a platform. He wrote because he had something to say, and he said it with everything he had. Youth should create now , write, build, teach, make, intensely and earnestly.
The work done young, becomes the foundation that lasts.
6. He was stumped mid-debate — and found a creative way forward rather than collapsing
Shankara's revival of Sanatana Dharma was not a single act but a vast, coordinated effort across every dimension of spiritual and cultural life. Philosophically, he defeated the leading Buddhist scholars of his time in open shastrartha, public debate across the length of India. These were not casual conversations. They were formal intellectual contests, witnessed by communities, conducted in Sanskrit, and argued over days and weeks. Shankara entered these debates not with aggression but with the luminous precision of Advaita Vedanta, the teaching that the Ultimate Reality is One Undivided Consciousness which is our true nature and that the world was an illusory appearance of this Reality. His arguments showed Vedic wisdom to be deeper, more complete, and more universal than Buddhism. He prevailed consistently, winning scholars and communities back to the Vedic fold.
One of his famous debates was with Mandana Mishra, a mimamsaka(ritualist). The debate lasted weeks, with Mandana's wife Ubhaya Bharati serving as the judge. Shankara prevailed over Mandana but Ubhaya Bharati then challenged Shankara on the subject of erotic love and intimate relationship, areas where he, as a celibate monk, had no lived experience. Faced with a genuine gap in his knowledge, he did not bluff, collapse, or concede defeat. He asked for a pause, and found a way to gain that experience before returning to complete the debate.
The modern parallel: Imposter syndrome is epidemic among young people. The fear of being exposed for not knowing something, in class, in a job interview, in a relationship, causes many to avoid bold thinking, honest conversation, and intellectual risk altogether. The performance of certainty has replaced the practice of learning.
The lesson: Shankara did not pretend to know what he did not know. He acknowledged the gap honestly and then addressed it creatively. This is not weakness, it is what genuine intellectual confidence actually looks like. The pretense of knowing everything is fragile.
The willingness to say "I don't know this yet" — and then go find out — is unbreakable.
7. He wept for his mother — and broke the rules to honour her
Though Shankara had taken sannyasa, the vow of complete renunciation, he returned to Kaladi when his mother Aryamba was dying. His local Brahmanas refused to assist with the funeral rites since he had formally renounced family life. Shankara performed the cremation himself, inspite of the opposition from the Brahmanas, breaking monastic convention out of love and duty. He also composed the Matru Panchakam, five verses of tender grief for his mother, among the most humanly beautiful lines he ever wrote.
The modern parallel: Many young people in pursuit of ambition, independence, or a spiritual ideal suppress emotion behind a performance of strength. Grief is rushed. Love is rationalized away. Relationships are managed rather than felt. The pressures of productivity and self-optimization leave little room for the kind of unguarded sorrow that makes us fully human.
The lesson: Shankara, the greatest renunciate of his age, the man who had argued that the phenomenal world is mithya, wept for his mother and broke rules to honour her. He showed us that emotional depth and spiritual strength are not opposites. To grieve fully, to honour love, to be moved by what is beautiful and transient, this is not weakness. It is wholeness.
No philosophy worth following can ask you to be less than whole.
8. He built four institutions before he was thirty-two — and they still stand today
Shankara also built the institutional infrastructure for Dharma to endure beyond his own lifetime. He established the four Amnaya Mathas at Sringeri (south), Dwarka (west), Puri (east), and Badrinath (north), each presided over by one of his four principal disciples: Sureshvaracharya, Hastamalaka, Padmapada, and Totaka. These were not merely monasteries. They were universities of the spirit, centres of philosophical debate, Vedic learning, sannyasa training, and community service. Each Matha was assigned a specific Veda, a specific Upanishad, and a specific Mahavakya (great Vedic saying) to preserve and transmit.
They are still functioning today, over 1,200 years later.
Shankara also created the Dashanami Sampradaya, the ten-named monastic order that organised India's Sannyasis into a coherent, disciplined, and philosophically grounded institution. Before Shankara, the sannyasa tradition was fragmented and often confused with Buddhist or heterodox movements. The Dashanami order gave it structure, identity, and doctrinal clarity. The monks trained under this system became the carriers of Vedic wisdom into every corner of the subcontinent.
"A great organiser, a far-sighted diplomat, a courageous hero and tireless
servant of the country, selfless and unassuming, this mighty angel strode up
and down the length and breadth of the country, serving his motherland
and teaching his countrymen to live upto the dignity and glory of Bharat."
- Swami Chinmayananda
The modern parallel: Today's youth are frequently measured and measure themselves, by personal metrics: followers, salary, rankings, likes. The idea of building something that serves others and outlasts the self feels abstract, premature, or simply out of reach. Purpose is often reduced to personal success.
The lesson: Shankara built for centuries, not for quarters. He thought not about what he would gain but about what would endure. At an age when most of us are still trying to figure out our next move, he was laying institutional foundations. The invitation to youth to ask, seriously and early:
What am I building that will stand when I am gone?
He single-handedly revived Sanatana Hindu Dharma — and brought a civilisation back to itself
What Shankara accomplished in 32 years is, by any measure, one of the most astonishing civilisational recoveries in human history. He found a tradition in decline and left it renewed, organised, philosophically defended, geographically anchored, poetically alive, and institutionally equipped to survive for millennia. He did not do this with armies or political power. He did it with clarity of understanding, force of argument, depth of devotion, and an extraordinary capacity to hold simultaneously the intellectual and the devotional, the universal and the particular, the formless and the form.
The modern parallel: Today’s youth are confronting a set of civilisational challenges rooted in rapid cultural, technological, and intellectual shifts: identity fragmentation caused by exposure to conflicting global and inherited value systems; an overload of information without corresponding depth of understanding; and a growing attention crisis that weakens focus, reflection, and critical thinking. Heritage is either reduced to ritual without meaning or engaged with in fragmented, decontextualised ways. At a societal level, discourse around culture and religion has become increasingly polarised and reactive, shaped more by group identity and digital amplification than by inquiry or insight.
The lesson for youth: Shankara teaches us that the most lasting revolutions are not political but philosophical. They begin with someone who understands reality more clearly than those around them, who can articulate that understanding with precision and beauty, and who has the stamina to carry it through debate, through creation, through institution-building, through sheer physical presence, into every corner of the world they inhabit. Civilisations are not saved by armies alone. They are saved by the Youth who refuse to let the best of what humanity has understood disappear from the earth.
A final thought: the integration he lived
What runs through every one of these eight incidents is something that contemporary mental health conversations are only beginning to recover , the integration of apparent opposites.
Shankara was fierce and tender. Intellectually fearless and emotionally open. Deeply purposeful and capable of grief. He pursued the infinite and wept at the finite. He renounced the world and walked every inch of it. He was a philosopher of the highest abstraction and a son who cremated his own mother.
This integration of strength and softness, rigor and compassion, purpose and love, ambition and humility is not a personality type or a talent. It is what happens when a human being genuinely knows who they are.
That knowing is what Shankara's philosophy calls Atma Jnana, Self-knowledge. Not self-help, not self-optimization, not self-branding. Self-knowledge. The recognition that beneath every role, every achievement, every failure, every identity the world assigns you, there is something that remains unshaken, aware, and whole - Consciousness. Advaita.
"Let the Sankara Jayanthi be an occasion for the nation to feel the necessity to make a deep and serious study of the Bharatiya culture. It is the duty of everyone to impart what little he knows to all those who are around him - not merely by words but by the inescapable eloquence of the unity of his actions, the glory of his own self-sacrifice, the beauty of his own love, and the glow of his own charity in life.
There is no way to revive a county in its human values other than this - and this we may call the 'Sankara's Technololgy'. Let this be the sacred occasion, the auspicious hour, in the cultural history of our country that when we, the self-exiled children, decide to come back home to the Bharata view of life. To achieve this will be the greatest tribute that we can truly pay to Sri Acharya Sankara, one of the first mighty Missionaries in Hinduism." - Swami Chinmayananda
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