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Community — The Sixth Pillar

H1: Community — The Sixth Pillar


Opening paragraph


The Community pillar on SaiSankalpam is about sangha — the gathered spiritual and human company that holds individual practice in place. We have inherited, in modern life, an almost-religious belief that everything important must be done alone, in solitude, through individual effort. The Indian tradition disagreed. The Sai Baba lineage I write from depends, fundamentally, on the local mandir, the gathered seekers, the council of elders, the neighbours who notice when your lamp doesn’t light at dawn. Community is not the soft, social part of life. It is the structural scaffolding that makes the other five pillars possible.


The clinical observation


Forty years of practice has shown me, perhaps more clearly than anything else, that isolation kills. Not metaphorically — clinically. Patients with no close community have higher rates of depression, anxiety, hypertension, diabetes, dementia, and recovery failure across nearly every diagnosis. The medical literature now confirms what village elders have always known: humans are not built for solitary living.

The Indian joint family, which urban modernity dissolved in two generations, was not merely a real estate arrangement. It was a community technology — multiple adults sharing childcare, elders embedded in daily life, three meals a day eaten with people, and nobody, ever, fully alone with their own mind for too long. We have lost much of that. The result is the loneliness epidemic that fills my consulting room — patients whose primary symptom, beneath every medical complaint, is simply that they are not held by anyone.

I write this pillar because rebuilding community at the local, practical, lived level is one of the most important interventions available to an Indian household right now. And almost nobody is writing about it from inside the lineage that already has the practices to do it.


The core teaching


1. Find your nearest mandir / temple / sangha. Go weekly. Not necessarily for the rituals — though those help. For the predictable, weekly gathering of humans who share something with you. The Sai Baba mandirs in Karnataka, the temples in your locality, the small gatherings in someone’s home — these are the connective tissue your nervous system needs. Just showing up does most of the work.

2. Know your neighbours by name. Modern apartment living has nearly destroyed this. Reverse it deliberately. Know the name of every household on your floor, your street, your immediate vicinity. Greet them daily. Help when help is needed. This is not social politeness — it is a public-health intervention.

3. Cultivate one or two deep friendships across decades. Most adults stop making new deep friends after their twenties. This is a mistake. But more important: the friends you already have — tend them. Across decades. A monthly call, an annual visit, a remembered birthday — small acts that signal “you are still in my life” — these are the friendships that will be there when your spouse dies, when your career ends, when your body fails.

4. Have a council of elders. Three to five wise people — older than you, who have seen more — that you check important decisions with. Could be your father’s sister, an old teacher, a senior colleague, a respected mandir elder. Big decisions get clearer when consulted with those who have already lived through the consequences of similar choices. Modern individualism treats this as weakness. The Indian tradition treats it as wisdom.

5. Be a community-builder, not just a community-receiver. Communities atrophy when everyone treats them as something to receive from. They flourish when even a few members treat them as something to give to. Host a monthly satsang at your home. Start a weekly walking group in your neighbourhood. Volunteer to coordinate the Sai mandir’s quarterly gathering. The community you receive from is the community you also build.


Common stuck points


ConcernWhere to start
Moved to a new city and feel lonelyBrowse related articles
Have no close friends as an adultBrowse related articles
Don’t feel connected at the mandir / templeBrowse related articles
Online community feels hollowBrowse related articles
Want to start a sangha but don’t know howBrowse related articles
Family is overseas, community fell apartBrowse related articles
Live in a city with no devotional communityBrowse related articles
Children growing up without grandparents nearbyBrowse related articles

Three practices to start this week


Practice 1: The Sunday morning home gathering. Once a week, on a fixed day at a fixed time, gather at your home for one hour. Could be three friends, could be the household plus one neighbour. A small ritual — light a lamp, share tea, read one short text, sit silently for five minutes. No agenda. No teacher-and-student. Just gathered humans. Six months of this becomes the most healing practice in your week.

Practice 2: The weekly neighbour visit. Once a week, spend 15 minutes in genuine conversation with a neighbour — across the threshold of their home, not just a hallway nod. Take a small offering — fruit, sweets, the morning paper if they don’t get it. Build, deliberately, over months, the kind of community where people notice when you don’t come down for two days.

Practice 3: The monthly elder check-in. Once a month, call or visit one elder — a parent, an uncle, an old teacher, a senior figure in your community. Not for a reason. Not when you need something. Just because they are old, you are not yet, and the line between you should not weaken. The Indian tradition’s reverence for elders was not sentiment; it was a structural way to hold wisdom across generations.


Recommended starting posts


Sangha & Spiritual Community

Local & Neighbourhood

Family Across Distances

When You’re Starting Over


How Community connects to the other pillars


Community is the soil. The other five pillars are what grows in it.

Health is harder to maintain in isolation — the body holds tension that only company releases. Wealth is more fragile alone — community is the informal safety net that has caught Indian families for centuries. Relationships within the household deepen when there are friends and elders outside the household to witness them. Knowledge stays theoretical until it is debated, sharpened, and lived out in community. Service has nowhere to flow without people to receive it.

Without community, the other five pillars become solitary disciplines, exhausting to sustain. With community, they become a way of life.

This is why Sai Baba’s lineage placed the mandir at the centre of the tradition — not a building, but a gathering point. The teaching itself required company.

5-card row linking to the other pillars:

Trusted external sources


For research and reflection on belonging, loneliness, and the practice of community in modern life, these are the references I trust.

Authoritative websites

Worthwhile YouTube channels



A note on online community


Most modern community is online — WhatsApp groups, Telegram channels, Facebook reunions, Zoom satsangs. Some of this is genuine connection. Most of it is the digital echo of connection.

The Indian tradition is not against online community — every adaptation of sangha across the centuries has used the available technology. But the test is whether your online community translates into someone actually showing up at your door when you fall ill. If it does, it is real. If it does not, it is something else — and something else has its limits.

Build online community deliberately. But never let online community substitute for the people who live within walking distance. The body needs both. The mind needs both. The lineage knew this; we are now relearning it the hard way.


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