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The dream you’re chasing might not be yours

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It was close to 11 PM in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. I was done. I’d woken up at 7, worked non-stop for ten hours, and I was burned out in the way only founders understand — that bone-deep kind of tired where the only thing you want in the world is the pillow. 

But I had one more call on my calendar. It was with Srikumar Rao — an MBA professor and, at the time, just one of the many American authors Mindvalley was publishing. Back then, these late-night calls with US-based authors were normal for me.

I was dreading this one. My only job was to run through the items on the agenda, be polite, and get off the phone so I could sleep.

What I wasn’t expecting was that the man on the other end of the line was about to become one of the most profound influences in my life. And it would begin with a poem.

A few minutes into the call, Rao paused and said, “Hey Vishen, is everything okay? You sound stressed.”

I wasn’t about to admit it. “No, no, it’s all good. It’s just kind of late over here, but I’m happy to talk.”

He paused again. “Hang on. Let’s stop for a second. May I read you a poem?”

My first thought, honestly: I do not have time for this. It was the last thing in the world I wanted. But Rao was an important connection, and I didn’t want to be rude. 

So I asked, trying to hide my frustration, “How long is it?”

“Just listen,” he said.

And then he read me these words. I’m going to share them in full. Read them once. Then read them again. Notice what happens in your body:

When I run after what I think I want, my days are a furnace of distress and anxiety; 
If I sit in my own place of patience, what I need flows to me, and without any pain. 
From this I understand that what I want also wants me, is looking for me and attracting me. 
There is a great secret in this for anyone who can grasp it.
— Rumi

When he finished, I didn’t say anything for a moment. I don’t think I could.

Then Rao explained what the poem was really about. He said: Vishen, if you were truly doing what is in your dharma — what your soul came here to do — you wouldn’t be experiencing this level of stress.

Dharma

Dharma is a Sanskrit word that doesn’t really translate cleanly into English. It’s something like your soul’s duty. Your cosmic role. The path your life is meant to move along if nothing is interfering with it. In the Indian traditions, it’s the quiet understanding that you came here to do something specific, and when you’re doing it, the universe seems to open doors for you. When you’re not, doors close. Things get heavy. The work that used to energize you starts to feel like dragging a boulder uphill.

Here’s what Rao was really telling me that night, hidden inside a thirteenth-century poem: the stress I was feeling wasn’t a time management problem. It wasn’t a productivity problem. It wasn’t even a business problem.

It was a signal.

A signal that somewhere in my life, I was chasing something that wasn’t actually mine. Running after what I thought I wanted. And as Rumi said — when you do that, your days become a furnace of distress and anxiety. Not because you’re lazy. Not because you’re not working hard enough. But because you’re pouring your finite, precious life force into a goal your soul never actually signed up for.

It took me two years to really understand what Rao had handed me on that call. But when I finally did, it rearranged my entire life.

I know this painfully, because I got it catastrophically wrong

Years before that call with Rao, I had what on paper was one of the greatest experiences of my young life.

I was a computer science major at the University of Michigan, and I had been selected for the Microsoft internship. This was the mid-nineties. Working for Microsoft back then was like working for Apple or Google today. I was one of about 1% of applicants who’d made it in. I was part of a gifted cohort. And during that internship, I was invited — along with the other interns — to Bill Gates’ home.

It was the most beautiful home I had ever seen in my life.

I remember standing there, in Bill’s house, thinking about my grandfather, who had believed in me so deeply. My parents, who had sacrificed so much to put me through an American education. Everything had worked. Everything. The Malaysian kid had made it to the top of the mountain the world had told him to climb.

And I felt nothing.

Not nothing exactly. I felt impressed with myself. I felt proud. I felt validated. But underneath all of that — in the quiet place Rumi was pointing at — there was an unmistakable feeling of: this isn’t mine.

I lasted eleven weeks at Microsoft before I got myself fired.

As I boarded the taxi out of Sea-Tac Airport, part of me felt like a complete failure. But another part of me was quietly, almost embarrassingly, elated. Because for the first time in years, I could feel what my own soul actually wanted. And it wasn’t that.

I just didn’t have the language for it yet. I wouldn’t get that language until Rao read me Rumi, years later.

The two kinds of wanting

Here’s the distinction Rumi was pointing at, and what it’s taken me two decades of building Mindvalley to fully metabolize:

There are two completely different kinds of wanting, and most of us can’t tell them apart.

The first comes from ego. It arrives with urgency. It says: I need this so I’ll finally have enough. I need this to prove something. I need this before someone else gets there first. Ego desire carries the signature of who you’re trying to become for other people. When you sit with it quietly — no phone, no distractions — it feels like tension. Like performance. Like rehearsing a version of yourself for an audience.

The second comes from soul. It doesn’t feel like hunger. It feels like recognition. Like remembering something you already knew. It carries the signature of who you already are. When you sit with it, it feels like relief. Like exhaling. Like coming home to a house you didn’t know you’d left.

Same outward behavior — a person working hard, building, striving. Completely different engine underneath.

And here’s the uncomfortable truth: the manifesting industry has spent forty years teaching us to visualize harder, affirm louder, and vision-board bigger — without ever asking whether the thing we’re trying to pull into our lives is actually ours in the first place.

You cannot manifest your way out of a life that isn’t yours.

What the science says

Harvard psychologist Dan Gilbert spent his career studying something called affective forecasting — the way we predict how future achievements will make us feel. His landmark research, laid out in his book Stumbling on Happiness, shows that we overestimate the emotional payoff of our goals by 200 to 300%. 

Our “psychological immune system” levels us out far faster than we expect.

Translation: if you’re chasing a goal because of how you think it will make you feel when you get there, you are almost certainly wrong about the feeling. And you’re burning years of your finite life to find out.

This is what standing in Bill Gates’ house at twenty-one taught me in my body — years before I had the research to name it. I had achieved the thing. And the thing did not deliver the feeling I’d been promised it would deliver.

Because the goal wasn’t mine.

How to tell them apart in your body

Here’s what I’ve learned to feel for, and what I now teach people in our work at Mindvalley.

Ego desire arrives with urgency and tightness. Your jaw clenches. Your shoulders creep up. There’s a constant hum of not enough underneath the ambition. You check metrics obsessively. You compare yourself to peers and feel either superior or crushed — never at peace. You fantasize about the announcement of the achievement more than the achievement itself. When you finally get it, there’s relief for about 11 days. Then the goalposts move.

Soul desire shows up differently. It’s warm and expansive. It lives in your chest, not your jaw. You think about it and feel energy, not anxiety. You’d do the work even if nobody watched. It doesn’t need external validation to feel real — though validation may come. And when you achieve it, there’s a quiet yes that doesn’t fade. Not euphoria. Something deeper. Alignment.

Try this right now. Pick a goal you’re currently pursuing. Close your eyes for ten seconds. Feel into it.

Does it feel like reaching or remembering?

That’s your answer.

The voice you’re running on

Read this slowly and be honest. No judgment.

Ego desires feel like:Soul desires feel like:
“What will they think of me?”“This is who I’m here to become.”
“I just need to prove I can do it.”“This feels light, easeful, right.”
“More. Bigger. Faster.”“Peace and ambition? Yes, please.”
“Once I get this, I’ll finally have enough.”“I am already enough. This is just expression.”
“I need to catch up.”“I am exactly where I need to be.”
“I’ll rest when I’ve made it.”“Rest is part of how I create.”
“If I slow down, someone takes my place.”“What’s meant for me cannot miss me.”
“I need to be the best.”“I need to be the most honest.”
“Why isn’t it happening faster?”“It’s already happening — I can feel it.”

Now notice what those voices produce in real life. Actual goals. Actual sentences you say to yourself or post on Instagram:

Ego desire (sounds like):Soul desire (sounds like):
“I need to hit $1M in the next 6 months.”“I want to build something that outlives me.”
“I need to become a doctor so my parents are proud.”“I want to heal people because it lights me up.”
“I need a bigger house than my neighbor.”“I want a home where my family feels safe and creative.”
“I need 100K followers to be taken seriously.”“I want to share ideas that help people think differently.”
“I need to prove I’m successful before my reunion.”“I want to wake up excited about my work every day.”
“I need to be the best in my industry.”“I want to do work that feels honest and alive.”

Notice the pattern.

Ego desires are about proving, comparing, and arriving. Soul desires are about expressing, contributing, and becoming.

One is driven by not enough. The other is driven by who I am.

Why this is the real reason manifesting stops working

When you try to manifest from ego, your visualization gets contaminated. 

The vision board says freedom and abundance. But the nervous system underneath is broadcasting: I’m not enough, please validate me, I need this to prove I matter.

The universe — or your reticular activating system, if you prefer the neuroscience frame — responds to the signal, not the words. And the signal of ego desire is fear, dressed up as ambition.

This is why so many high-performing, spiritually-curious, smart people I meet are stuck. They’ve read the books, done the vision boards, listened to the podcasts. And the manifestation engine keeps sputtering. 

They assume they’re doing the technique wrong.

They’re not. The technique is fine.

The goal is the problem.

The shift isn’t about wanting less. It’s about wanting clean. Wanting from wholeness instead of lack. Creating from alignment with your dharma instead of from anxiety about your image.

When you do that — when the want is actually yours — Rumi’s second stanza kicks in. “What you need starts to flow to you. Without any pain. Because what you want also wants you.”

Someone who gets this at a level that startled me

Regan Hillyer, a master manifester, on stage with Vishen

The first time I met Regan Hillyer, she was one of the few CEOs I’d met who was genuinely, from-the-bones calm. Not performed calm. Not “I meditate so I’m zen” calm. The kind of calm that comes from knowing exactly which of her desires are hers, and which ones she’s quietly released.

She calls her method Energetic Architecture — aligning your internal state so precisely with your actual desires that the external results become almost inevitable.

What I love about her work is that she skips the usual visualization theater and goes straight to the body. She’ll ask you to name your biggest goal, then ask where in your body you’re holding it. Chest, warm, expansive? That’s the soul. Jaw, shoulders, clenched fists? That’s ego dressed up.

Her program, The Art of Manifesting, won Mindvalley’s Most Popular Program in 2024 — which tells me a lot about how hungry people are for this exact conversation right now.

The field where soul-led creation actually happens

Mindvalley Manifesting Summit 2026

There’s something that shifts when you put hundreds of people in the same space, all of them doing the real work of stripping away the goals that aren’t theirs and reconnecting with the ones that are.

The noise quiets. The field shifts. And the desires that emerge in that room come from a completely different place than the ones you’d write down alone in your journal with Instagram open in the next tab.

That’s what we’re creating with the Manifesting Summit. May 15–17, 2026. Free. Live.

This isn’t another “visualize your dream life” workshop. It’s the environment where soul-led creation actually happens, surrounded by teachers and seekers who know the difference between grasping and genuine desire, and can help you feel the difference in your body, not just understand it in your head.

Regan will be there. So will some of the deepest thinkers on conscious creation I’ve ever shared a stage with. And we’ll be going places most personal growth events are too polished to go.

If you read that table and recognized your own voice in soul desires more than you’d like to admit, this is the field you need to be in.

Step into the field.

With love,

Vishen Lakhiani signature

P.S. If this news stirred something in you — Leave your comment. I read every single one. 

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Vishen

Vishen is an award-winning entrepreneur, speaker, New York Times best-selling author, and founder and CEO of Mindvalley: a global education movement with millions of students worldwide. He is the creator of Mindvalley Quests, A-Fest, Mindvalley University, and various other platforms to help shape lives in the field of personal transformation. He has led Mindvalley to enter and train Fortune 500 companies, governments, the UN, and millions of people around the world. Vishen’s work in personal growth also extends to the public sector, as a speaker and activist working to evolve the core systems that influence our lives—including education, work culture, politics, and well-being.

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78 Responses

  1. I fear I am too late and too stuck in my mindset and ways to be able to separate my negativity from the positive. I try so many times but each time I tend to float back to the negative(way of framing everything). Could be that over 65 years of life starting in a non-functioning family (looking back it was more like a sentence) and friends that were more like frienamies than even aquaintenances has skewed my ability to hold onto a positive attitude for anything. I have tried too many times to be able to count, to get to a calm place to work from and I know I have made it into the mindframe a bit every once in a while, but I kick myself out in trying to allow it to pass into me. It doesn’t help that we did not properly prepare for a normal retirement, having the need for travel as recreation (my wife’s desire). Coulda, woulda, shoulda saved up for our retirement by investing properly and it is even worse in that my wife had a stroke 5 years ago and in now residing in the hospital, waiting placement in a facility that can handle her needs. It definately does not help now, not having enough to pay the bills and losing muscle mass due to malnutrition.

  2. Yes I hear the universe telling me all the time or my soul telling me this is not what u were put here on earth to do.
    And it true .I just dont know how to do it .

  3. Shuuuuu, l am honestly lost for word😭, all l can say is thank you, for not keeping such gold to yourself… truly mind blowing. I need to read this article again🔥

    1. En realidad no se cual es el propósito de mi ser
      Soy jubilada tengo 55 años de edad
      Quiero crear un ingreso extra para pagar la universidad de mi hija y mis gastos médicos

      He tomado cursos de finanzas, pero al parecer ya soy muy vieja para eso
      No hay mucho tiempo para esperar el reingreso de inversiones porque primero debo pagar una deuda

      Así es que me siento perdida no se cual es mi pasión
      Aunque encuentro deleite en el crochet, la carpintería, Cortez y confección de ropa, dibujar y pintar, la jardinería, conocer más sobre salud y bienestar integral
      De todo no encuentro nada

      Me encantaría que la información del 15 de mayo tuviera traducción al español

      Gracias

  4. The trouble for me is not the ego vs the soul. It’s what do I do with thoughts I’m not letting go of about “what ifs”? Letting go of what I thought were passions but didn’t have the tools to pursue or try them; how to get over that and now there are no new dreams/passion in my heart or even the mind. I’m not even dreaming them up… 😩. Good article.

  5. These words of wisdom came when I needed them most. I have been struggling with meditation, and I realize my ego is thwarting my goals. The ego vs soul scenarios really resonated within me. The comparison between the two can work as a barometer for me to tell which perspective I’m working from. Thank you. The post was short and sweet are is greatly appreciated.

  6. That poem you shared that you recieved on the phone, stirred something deep in me. Thank you, this was what I needed this morning… Wow 😮

  7. I got chills.

    Almost everyday I thank the universe for sending me a sign, something unexpected so I know I’m co-creating my destiny with the Universe. Today here was my sign.

    I have been tapping more and more into the law of resonance and identity over the past month as it aligns with my own work. Now I receive the assignment, yes assignment, with this summit. The Universe works in the most magnificent, mysterious ways… Thank you, thank you, thank you.

    I have been part of the Mindvalley community on and off for many years and have taken Reagan’s The Art of Manifesting course. I think Universe says I’m ready to “remember” even more. 😉

    Thank you for sharing this Vishen. 💖
    PS… Universe has sent me synchronicities through each one of your emails you’ve shared along the way. 🌌🙏

  8. This really resonated on a deep level. The distinction between ego-driven desire and soul-led alignment is something many of us feel, but rarely articulate this clearly. The idea that stress can be a signal — not of doing too much, but of doing what isn’t truly ours — is powerful. That question, “does it feel like reaching or remembering?”, is one I’ll carry forward.

  9. This really resonated on a deep level. The distinction between ego-driven desire and soul-led alignment is something many of us feel, but rarely articulate this clearly. The idea that stress can be a signal — not of doing too much, but of doing what isn’t truly ours — is powerful. That question, “does it feel like reaching or remembering?”, is one I’ll carry forward. – Hema

  10. Hey Vishen, this news letter caught me at a particularly low moment: a project I’ve been working on for 3 years seems to be unraveling. Without it, I feel lost and useless. It has been my whole Focus for more than 48 months and it aches to be without it.

    And then I read your blog post…….

    Maybe I really am misaligned, I don’t feel my goals in a warm peaceful place, would love to see your thoughts and recommendations.

  11. Your message is exactly what I needed today. I in the middle of a painful individuation process – peeling off layers of my old self. Today reading your message led me to raise my “temperature” to the next level. I am feeling so much love for my creator that my body cannot handle it!! Rumi’s last stanza brought me to my knees. Thank you Vishen

  12. This…”Dharma is a Sanskrit word that doesn’t really translate cleanly into English. It’s something like your soul’s duty. Your cosmic role. The path your life is meant to move along if nothing is interfering with it. In the Indian traditions, it’s the quiet understanding that you came here to do something specific, and when you’re doing it, the universe seems to open doors for you. When you’re not, doors close. Things get heavy. The work that used to energize you starts to feel like dragging a boulder uphill.” I’ve been trying to explain this for years…and then when you really don’t pay attention then the path/universe actively pushes back until you either get it right or …..well, I’ve never reached or.

  13. My soul is screaming loudly at me as I am on an unplanned journey. I never ever thought I would be here. My goals were totally different but after banging my head against the wall and the door shutting on me enough times. I quit, I pivoted my whole life to completely different career and state. And this journey has been transformative to say the least but the transformation has felt natural like something I was meant to do but I didn’t know it until about 6 years ago. The stress I encountered on the ego journey is all the way gone. I now have a founders exhaustion but I also have a founders energy and excitement and I am able to relax and enjoy the ride…thank you for the email Vishen. It was a nice reminder that we all struggle to find our path and even when youre on the path – the real work we have to do is align our self with our SOUL.

  14. I love this so much. I feel like I’ve followed my dharma pretty well for so long – escaping a childhood of poverty, traveling the world, savoring being a teacher, business owner, life coach, writer. Living life on my own terms. Not to impress anyone, not to be successful, just to be. To live my very best life.

    Then, somehow, I got off the path these last few years. I wrote a book that people said was transforming their lives, that Deepak Chopra said could “change our world” and suddenly I felt the need to promote it more, to not “leave the baby on the doorstep” as Jack Canfield called it.

    Soon it was feeling stressful to do social media posts, to get the book into more locations, to “try harder” to get it into more hands. The resistance and reluctance were tangible, as if I were pushing a rock uphill. And the natural momentum of the book (Soul Primer, The Building Blocks of Happiness) stalled. The more I tried, the more it felt stuck.

    Weirdly, I felt SO in alignment writing this book, and have been so blessed by the personal stories of its impact. And yet, it seems out of alignment to promote it.

    Vishen, your post came through at the perfect time: Just this morning I was thinking, “Was the most important thing, in writing it, simply, for me?” And, “Is it even relevant that others discover it?”

    Then I asked myself, “What do I really care about most?” The instant answer was, “To live my very best life and to help others do the same, in order to create our very best world.”

    So, I am confused. How can I be in alignment to write a book and to have great joy in watching it change lives while, simultaneously, be out of alignment in promoting it to get it into more hands?

    I’d love your thoughts on this. (I am definitely not motivated by fame or money. Truly. Don’t care. Maybe that’s blocking me?)

    Warmly, Cate

  15. Wow, this did “stir” something in me. As I was reading this, I could feel my heart area warm and expandingish. Very interesting. Following the bread crumbs… Thank you for your message as well as making this a free event. Appreciate it. 🤍✨

  16. Lets commit to Rumi inspired childhoods, Rumi inspired politicians, Rumi grade companies, Rumi guiding space exploration, Rumi on every curiculum in every school and Rumi framed poetry in every kitchen around the world.

  17. Vishen, thank you for sharing this. I have been confused about what to pursue- the way you break down ego desire vs soul desire makes so much sense.

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