The Premise

Coincidence? Perhaps. But consider the synchronicity.

When St Andrews formalised the 18-hole course in 1764, even the year itself whispered the number’s vibration: 1+7+6+4 = 18. The Bhagavad Gita unfolds across 18 chapters, mirroring the 18 days of the Kurukshetra war. Golf is played through 18 holes. Three ancient structures. One sacred number.
Golf Gita is not a commentary on the Gita, nor a technical guide to golf. It is a parallel paradox — a humble exploration of the mystical thread that weaves both together.
“Every fairway unfolds like sacred text, each swing a reflection, each round a sacred dialogue where the human spirit confronts its higher nature.”

— From the Preface

02

The Inner War

Every round is Kurukshetra — the battlefield is within.

03

The Sacred Number

18 holes, 18 chapters, 18 days — one divine architecture.

04

The Five Elements

Earth, water, fire, air, and space — golf is played through all five.

05

Ego and Surrender

The scorecard does not lie — and neither does the Gita.

06

The Inner Caddie

Buddhi — higher intuition — knows the shot before ego interferes.

07

Liberation

Mokṣa in golf is not a trophy. The score is a record, not a verdict.

From the Preface

“Before the First Tee, every golfer arrives believing they are here to play a game. Very few realise they have entered a battlefield. Ancient wisdom once spoke of a battlefield called Kurukshetra. Today, it wears grass instead of dust, flags instead of war cries. The round has always been the divine scripture. We simply forgot how to read it.”

Welcome to a game you thought you knew.