
Deep conversations for a complicated world
Why conversations matter
We live in a splintered world that is oddly over-analysed and poorly integrated. For many of us living in the city, life is an endeavour that is compartmentalised into neat silos that rarely interact with each other. Work sits in one box. Social life in another. Personal relationships somewhere else entirely. The state of the world? That’s background noise. Until it isn’t. (I mean, have you seen the AQI in all the major cities in India?)
But deep down, we know that this separation is an illusion, a convenience. We live within a larger, living system: the air, water, soil, collective choices, and the lives built around them. And in that system, we are both the beneficiaries and active participants of well-being.

We're at a crossroad - India is rapidly developing without integration and we are caught in the middle.
Real change doesn't come from treating our inner and outer worlds as separate projects. What surrounds us conditions our bodies, our attention, and our choices. In turn, our behaviour, repeated daily, shapes the world right back.
In a world crowded with competing narratives, the real challenge is not access to information, but the ability to organise it into something usable, and act on it.
And the first step is to have meaningful conversations.

Inner work meets collective consciousness

Our work engages present realities without pretending there are easy answers. We know that clarity doesn’t arrive fully formed; it grows through conversation, and participation.
We ask what it would mean to grow without exhausting the ecosystems and the people that sustain it - us! That means situating our challenges within wider contexts, unraveling their nuances and formulating a cohesive thought process that builds value.
We are interested in small, practical acts that are accessible, repeatable, and capable of creating a productive life for us over time. Not grand solutions, but everyday shifts that accumulate.
Change moves through the self, shapes communities, scales into society, and plays out within nature and then feeds back again.
Yoga, sustainability and their interplay
Deep Things rests on two disciplines that are often spoken about separately, and just as often misunderstood. We bring them together as lenses to view to how life is lived, organised, and sustained.

Yoga, for us, is not a lifestyle label. It is It is a practical framework for observing the self. It helps make behaviour visible, giving us a way to work with inner patterns through regulation, reflection, and discernment. In conversation, this allows us to craft our internal environment.
Sustainability, for us, is not limited to environmental outcomes. It is the outward lens that asks how individual actions accumulate, how policies shape behaviour, and how development choices redistribute risk, comfort, and cost, often unevenly. Sustainability grounds our discussions in material reality.
Held together, yoga helps us understand why we act as we do, and sustainability helps us see what those actions produce at scale. This intersection is where our conversations take shape.
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