Before he was Soham Swami, he was "Professor Banerjee," the first man in India to wrestle wild tigers with his bare hands. But his most dangerous opponent wasn't a beast; it was the .
Unlike ascetic traditions that demonize money, the treats financial literacy as a moral duty. He argues that poverty of the mind is worse than poverty of the wallet. He provides simple, brutal advice: "Do not buy what you cannot pay for twice. Do not lend money you need to survive. Do not trust a business partner who avoids eye contact." These are not deep economic theories; they are common sense rules that people forget in moments of greed. Common Sense Soham Swami Book
Swami offers a shockingly practical test for marriage or partnership: "Spend three days fixing a broken faucet together. If you don't hate each other by day three, you might survive." The principle is that love is easy; collaboration under stress is the real test. Before he was Soham Swami, he was "Professor
His writing is sharp, witty, and unapologetically direct. He challenges superstition, blind faith, and intellectual laziness with the precision of a surgeon. He argues that poverty of the mind is
Enter Soham Swami’s masterpiece: .