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Sameer Gudhate Presents the Book Review of The Aware Being Code: A Journey from Survival to Soul, from Lust to Liberation by Sachin Sharma

  • Writer: Sameer Gudhate
    Sameer Gudhate
  • 27 minutes ago
  • 3 min read

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There are books you read.


And then there are books that read you.


I wasn’t expecting that kind of encounter when I opened The Aware Being Code late one night, intending to sample just a few pages before sleep. But somewhere between the author’s quiet invitation and the mirror it held up to parts of myself I rarely sit with, I found myself wide awake at 3 a.m., staring at the ceiling, asking questions I didn’t know I needed to ask. Questions about purpose. About the wounds we carry silently. About the masks we craft so carefully that after a while, we forget who’s underneath.

 

Sachin Sharma — a seeker, teacher, and someone who has clearly travelled through the chaos and come back with maps — writes with a sincerity that feels like a steady hand on your shoulder. There’s no preaching, no thunderous declarations, no superiority wrapped in spiritual jargon. Instead, his presence feels like sitting across from someone who has been through fire and learned how to walk through it barefoot. Someone who speaks not from ego, but from lived truth.

 

The heart of the book is a journey — not outward, but inward — structured beautifully in five phases: Clarity, Alignment, Purpose, Flow, and Legacy. Each phase feels like a stepping stone placed exactly where you need to land next. It’s a rhythm, a progression, not a lecture. And the magic of it lies in how gently it sneaks up on you. One moment you’re reading about breathwork or childhood memory patterns, and the next you’re standing inside your own forgotten story, seeing it lit differently.

 

The writing is simple. Not simplistic — simple. Clean like still water. Honest like the silence after a storm. Every chapter feels like walking into a room that smells faintly of incense and old books, where sunlight falls in quiet golden strips between swaying curtains. The sentences breathe. They don’t rush you. Some land like soft prayers, some like a punch in the ribs, and some hover in the space between what you know and what you’re afraid to admit.

 

One moment that stayed with me was the idea that awakening isn’t something to chase, something distant and Himalayan, reserved for monks in saffron robes. It’s already inside us, waiting beneath the noise — like a song you forgot you used to love. You don’t become awakened; you return to what you always were. That idea hit me like a bell struck in a quiet temple. Long after the words ended, the vibration remained.

 

The practical tools woven throughout — for breath, emotions, relationships, and aligning purpose — are not theoretical exercises; they sit in the body. They make you move, feel, breathe differently. I found myself pausing often, closing the book just to sit with a thought, or letting a memory rise that I’d neatly buried under “busy” and “later.”

 

If there is a single glowing strength here, it is the balance: spirituality without pretension, psychology without heaviness, practicality without dryness. Another strength is the perspective it offers high achievers — those constantly striving, performing, proving — reminding them that the truest victory is inner stillness. If I had to gently point out a weakness, it would be that a few sections feel so introspective that they require slow reading; this isn’t a book you sprint through. But maybe that’s intentional. Maybe transformation shouldn’t be swallowed in one bite.

 

Reading The Aware Being Code felt like walking barefoot on cool grass at dawn — the world quiet, the air honest, your breath finally visible. It reminded me of the importance of pausing. Of listening. Of remembering that liberation isn’t fireworks and mountaintops — sometimes it’s simply the release of a knot in your chest you’ve pretended wasn’t there.

 

Who should read this? Anyone tired of merely surviving. Anyone standing at the crossroads of confusion and longing. Anyone who has succeeded on the outside but feels a strange emptiness inside. Anyone who wants a life of clarity, alignment, purpose, flow, and legacy — words that don’t just decorate the cover, but carve themselves into you.

 

When I closed the last page, I felt something shift. Not dramatically, not like a cinematic sunrise — but like a door gently opening somewhere deep within.

Maybe that’s the real code.Not instructions.Not answers.But a return.

 

If your soul has been whispering and you’re ready to finally listen, pick up The Aware Being Code. Read it slowly. Read it honestly. And when you’re done, don’t be surprised if the world looks different — not because it changed, but because you did.

 

Liberation, after all, begins the moment we remember who we truly are.

 

Go ahead — begin your return. ✨

 

 

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