A small home for a few tools drawn from traditions that have stood the test of time. Offered in forms meant to be used, not just read about.
Available now
-
Anubhuti — Sanskrit for inner experience — is a small, free, self-led companion for working with Dr. Edward Bach's 38 flower remedies.
Bach was an English physician working in the 1930s. He believed emotional patterns shape our lives as much as anything else, and that ordinary people — without medical training — should be able to use his system on themselves and the people they care about. The remedies are gentle, safe, and designed for the layer of feeling: fear, doubt, grief, exhaustion, anger, loneliness, self-criticism, and the everyday shades within those.
There are three ways in, depending on the time and depth you have right now:
- By the situation (about 2–3 minutes) — When you already know what's pressing. Sixteen everyday moments — sleeplessness, grief, a stuck decision, family tension, and others — each with the three to seven remedies most often called on. Quickest when you can name what's going on.
- By scanning all 38 remedies (about 5–10 minutes) — The most popular way to begin. Read each as a one-line description and tick anything that rings true; most people finish with three or four that feel like you, today. Recognition rather than diagnosis.
- The 20-question assessment (about 20–25 minutes) — The most thorough. Concrete questions about your week, your body, and how you react to things. The seven emotional families do the matching for you in the scoring; the result is a written reading you can save as a PDF.
In the works
-
JyotiṣaA companion reading from classical Indian astrology.
-
Vijñāna Bhairava112 techniques for direct experience, drawn from the classical text.