Look at today’s society. Weak leaders, corrupt politicians, restless youth, families breaking apart. Children who grow up without discipline, without purpose, without respect. Everyone asks: why are today’s children so lost? The answer is simple. Because their parents have forgotten the dharmic way of creating and raising them.
In Sanatan Dharma, children were never treated as accidents. They were seen as a sacred responsibility. Their birth was prepared through yajna, prayer, mantra, and tapas. Their childhood was shaped by stories of Rama and Krishna, by the discipline of Gurukul, by the example of dharmic parents. That is why Bharat produced Arjunas, Abhimanyus, Krishnas, Ramas, and Shivajis. Children were given the fire of dharma before they even opened their eyes.
But look at today. Conception is rarely intentional. Parents think of pleasure, not responsibility. Pregnancy is treated casually. Instead of filling the womb with Gita and Ramayana, the unborn child hears television, gossip, and stress. Instead of sattvic food and pure thoughts, the child absorbs anger, fear, and distraction.
And after birth? Instead of Gurukul, children are raised by screens. Instead of hearing the stories of Arjuna and Hanuman, they hear advertisements and empty songs. Instead of discipline, they are given indulgence. Instead of dharmic pride, they are fed shame, confusion, and forgetfulness of their roots.
How then can we expect warriors of dharma to emerge? How can we expect leaders like Rama or Shivaji? Children cannot grow into what they have never been shown. A mother who does not live like Jijamata cannot raise a Shivaji. A father who does not live with discipline cannot raise an Arjuna. Parents who live without dharma cannot produce children with dharma.
Sanatan Dharma teaches that society reflects its rulers, and rulers reflect their families. Today’s corruption, today’s weakness, today’s brokenness—these are not accidents. They are the result of how children are created and raised. Accidental births produce accidental leaders. Accidental parenting produces accidental societies.
And yet, there is hope. Because just as weakness is inherited, so too can dharma be revived. If parents once again prepare their wombs with Garbh Sanskar, if they raise their children with stories of courage, discipline, and devotion, then within one generation, Bharat will rise again. Children are not lost by nature. They are lost because their guides are lost. If parents become dharmic again, children will find their way.
Krishna said: “If you call me, I will come.” But today, who is calling? Which mother is praying for a Rama? Which father is preparing for a Shivaji? Which family is raising an Arjuna? Until we answer this, children will remain lost, and society will remain broken.
The choice is clear. If we want children of strength, we must be parents of dharma. If we want leaders of light, we must live as examples of light. A lost generation is not fate—it is a warning. And it is one we can still reverse.
If this message opened your eyes, type in the comments: Jai Shree Krishna.
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