There is a difference between neutrality and clarity.
In times of harm, staying neutral is not wisdom.
It is often a reflex born from fear. A survival strategy we learned to avoid conflict, to keep the peace, to stay safe in a system that never truly protected us. Staying neutral in times of harm can be a spiritual bypass.
But true healing and spirituality calls us into embodied presence.
And presence asks us to return to what is true as a soul having a human experience. 
This is the moment Arjuna found himself in.
Arjuna is the central figure in the Bhagavad Gita, an ancient sacred text from India written over two thousand years ago. The Gita is a poetic and philosophical dialogue that takes place on the eve of a great battle. Arjuna, a warrior and prince, stands on the battlefield and sees that the people on both sides are his own kin, family, elders, beloved teachers. Overwhelmed by sorrow and confusion, he drops his bow and refuses to fight.
And who among us hasn’t felt that?
We look at the world, at the polarization, at the cruelty hiding in policy and posture, and we feel that same collapse.
It is easier to say, I rise above it. Easier to call it all an illusion and return to stillness.
But in the myth, Krishna, Arjuna’s charioteer and a divine embodiment, does not say, “Yes, stay still.”
He says, “Remember who you are.”
He reminds Arjuna that while the soul is beyond form, we are also in form.
And what we do here matters.
Finding your inner compass is part of healing.
Not to choose a side out of ideology or outrage but to remember what really matters. To remember what is sacred.
It is possible to reject harm without becoming harmful.
It is possible to take a stand without feeding division.
It is possible to live in truth without needing to call others evil.
This is not about enemies. It is about choosing the side of life. The side of liberty. The side of dignity. The side of soul and humanity.
When Arjuna picked up his bow again, it wasn’t to destroy. It was to act in alignment with dharma or true purpose. Not to serve the ego craving power but to serve what restores balance.
This is exactly the moment Arjuna stood in. The moment when the soul is asked not to escape the discomfort, not to fix or control the unfolding, but to remember that the battlefield itself can be the sacred ground and the site of transformation. Standing up and standing firm for human life beyond yourself. 
And just like Arjuna, you don’t need to have all the answers. You just need to remember who you are. The one who doesn’t walk away from love even when it hurts. The one who is learning how to embrace the discomfort of transformation and not resist it.
That is what this time is asking of us collectively. And it also applies to your personal trials of loss and transformation that arrive to awaken your true self and evolve your soul.
Love is not passive. It protects.
Spirituality is not silence. It sees clearly and takes action when necessary.
Compassion does not mean looking away.
There comes a time when choosing not to choose becomes its own kind of harm.
And that time is now.
There is a deeper kind of bravery. One that does not fight against but moves toward what is true. It comes from remembering what is sacred and letting that remembrance shape how we live. From this ground we can rise beyond the illusion of good and evil and still act with courage, clarity, and heart in service of a world where systems care for people rather than use them for selfish gain.