There was a time when I thought spirituality and creativity belonged in separate worlds.
Spirituality was something people spoke about using complex words, ancient concepts, and ideas that often felt distant from everyday life.
Creativity was something people associated with artists, writers, musicians, filmmakers, and entrepreneurs.
And ordinary life existed somewhere in between.
Over the years, I discovered that these worlds were not separate at all.
In fact, some of the most profound spiritual lessons I learned had nothing to do with sitting in a meditation hall or reading spiritual books.
They showed up while raising a family.
While building creative projects.
While navigating uncertainty.
While learning new skills.
While trying to understand myself.
And while creating a life that felt aligned.
Like many people, I stumbled upon spirituality unexpectedly.
I wasn’t looking for a spiritual path.
I wasn’t searching for enlightenment.
I wasn’t trying to become a teacher.
I was simply trying to understand life.
The more I explored, the more I realized something interesting.
Many spiritual concepts are incredibly powerful.
But they are often hidden behind language that feels intimidating, complicated, or inaccessible to everyday people.
I would often come across ideas that were genuinely transformative, but the way they were presented made them feel distant from real life.
And that never felt right to me.
Because if an idea has the power to transform a person’s life, shouldn’t it be accessible?
Shouldn’t it be easy to understand?
Shouldn’t it help ordinary people navigate ordinary challenges?
At one point, someone told me that spirituality had become one of the biggest industries in the world.
That there were endless opportunities to build courses, programs, memberships, certifications, and communities around it.
While there is absolutely nothing wrong with people teaching what they know, I realized that wasn’t the path I wanted to follow.
I didn’t want people to depend on me.
I wanted people to trust themselves.
I didn’t want to create more complexity.
I wanted to create clarity.
I didn’t want to make people feel that they were missing something.
I wanted them to recognize that much of what they were looking for was already within them.
That realization eventually led to the creation of the Without Trying Framework.
Not as a business idea.
Not as a product strategy.
But as a way of simplifying what I had learned.
The framework emerged from a simple observation.
Many of the things we struggle with in life become difficult because we try to force them.
We force creativity.
We force productivity.
We force happiness.
We force confidence.
We force clarity.
We force success.
And the harder we force them, the further away they often seem.
Yet when I looked back at the most meaningful experiences in my own life, I noticed a different pattern.
The things that transformed my life most deeply rarely arrived through force.
They arrived through awareness.
Through observation.
Through alignment.
Through understanding.
Through noticing patterns.
And through trusting the process long enough for clarity to emerge.
That observation became the foundation of the Without Trying Framework.
Since then, I have used the framework to explore many different areas of life.
Not because life can be reduced to a formula.
But because certain patterns repeat themselves again and again.
Whether we are talking about creativity, motherhood, solitude, personal growth, writing, or adapting to a rapidly changing world, the same deeper principles often appear beneath the surface.
The goal of these books is not to tell you what to think.
The goal is not to give you another set of rules.
And the goal is certainly not to make you dependent on another system.
The goal is to help you see your own life more clearly.
To help you recognize patterns you may have overlooked.
To help you trust your own experience.
And to help you move forward with greater ease, clarity, and confidence.
Most importantly, I wanted to remove the jargon.
I wanted to take ideas that often feel complicated and translate them into everyday language.
The kind of language that a parent can understand.
An artist can understand.
An entrepreneur can understand.
A student can understand.
A homemaker can understand.
A creator can understand.
Because wisdom becomes truly valuable only when it becomes usable.
That is why the Without Trying Framework exists.
And that is why these books exist.
Explore the Without Trying Framework Series
The series currently includes:
• Without Trying – A 3-Step Framework for Presence & Inner Clarity
• Live From a State of Bliss – A 3-Step Path to Joy, Presence & Emotional Freedom
• The Art of Living in Solitude – A 3-Step Framework for Returning to Yourself
• Navigating Motherhood With Grace – A Gentle Framework for Mothers
• How to Write a Book Without Trying
• The Art of Staying Aligned in a Changing World
• Find Your Creative Superpower Without Trying
And this is only the beginning.
Each book explores a different area of life through the lens of the Without Trying Framework.
Join the Conversation
The Without Trying Framework continues to evolve through real-life experiences, questions, and conversations.
Is there an area of life you would like to see explored through the framework?
I would love to hear from you.
Leave a comment below and share your thoughts.
If you would prefer to share privately, you are welcome to reach out through the Contact Us page.
Your suggestion may inspire a future book in the series.
Thank you for being part of this journey.
— Bhawana Verma
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