The Aware Being Code by Sachin Sharma

Nov 18, 2025

The Aware Being Code: A Journey from Survival to Soul, from Lust to Liberation is a transformational self-help and spiritual awakening book that blends Vedic wisdom, yogic science, and modern psychology.

More than a guide, this book is a return map — reminding high achievers, seekers, and spiritual professionals that awakening is not a distant goal, but a natural return already stirring within.

As you read, you remember.
As you remember, you return.
And as you return, your liberation begins.

Author Interview

Your book is structured around five phases — Clarity, Alignment, Purpose, Flow, Legacy. Could you walk us through how you arrived at this framework and why these five specifically?

The five phases came from observing transformation — not as theory, but as lived reality. During my years in corporate leadership and later in deep inner work, I noticed that every meaningful change follows a predictable rhythm.

It always begins with Clarity — the moment we finally see what is real and what is noise. Once clarity emerges, we naturally move toward Alignment, where our thoughts, emotions, and actions begin to point in the same direction. As alignment strengthens, our Purpose reveals itself not as something to pursue, but as something that has been quietly waiting within us. This inner harmony leads to Flow, where life stops resisting us and starts moving through us effortlessly. And finally, Legacy, the stage where our personal growth becomes a light for others.

These phases are universal. They appear in healing, in entrepreneurship, in leadership, and in spiritual awakening. I didn’t choose these five; I discovered them repeating in every human journey I studied and eventually, within myself.

You mention practical tools for breath, body, emotions, and relationships. Could you share a specific exercise or tool that has transformed you personally, and why it matters?

The most transformative practice for me has been “The Awareness Pause.” It is beautifully simple: before reacting to anything — a message, emotion, conflict, or decision — pause and take three conscious breaths.

These three breaths create space between stimulus and response. They interrupt old emotional patterns and bring awareness into the moment. Over time, this practice softened my reactions, dissolved unnecessary stress, and improved both my decisions and my relationships.

It matters because real awakening is not found in long meditations; it is found in these small, everyday moments where awareness replaces automatic behavior. The Awareness Pause is a doorway — tiny, but powerful — that brings mindfulness into daily life without effort or complexity.

A big theme is uncovering one’s Dharma or life purpose, and healing childhood wounds that keep one restless. Why do you believe childhood healing is so central to spiritual awakening and inner peace?

Because our childhood never ends — it becomes the emotional foundation on which our adult life stands. Most people are not suffering because of current events; they are suffering because old wounds are still shaping their present choices.

Childhood experiences form our beliefs about love, safety, identity, and self-worth. If these experiences were painful or incomplete, they create patterns of fear, overthinking, and self-doubt that follow us into adulthood.

Without healing these early impressions, it becomes very difficult to sit peacefully, meditate deeply, or understand our real Dharma. The unhealed child keeps interrupting the awakened adult.

When we heal childhood wounds, we release energy that was stuck for years. This frees our emotional, mental, and spiritual system to rise into clarity and inner peace. Childhood healing is not about revisiting the past — it is about liberating the present.

For high achievers, spiritual professionals or seekers who might feel they “should be further ahead” — what message does your book bring to them about the nature of awakening?

High achievers often measure spirituality the same way they measure success — through milestones, timelines, and comparison. But awakening doesn’t follow the logic of achievement; it follows the rhythm of readiness.

My message to them is simple: You are not late. You are human. Awakening unfolds when your inner system is prepared to hold truth without resistance. Trying to “speed up” awareness actually slows it down, because striving is itself a form of ego tension.

The Aware Being Code invites high achievers to relax their grip. They don’t need to chase depth — they need to allow depth.

When you stop trying to be enlightened, awareness begins to operate naturally. Awakening is not about becoming more — it is about becoming real.

In your view, what is the difference between awakening as a goal and awakening as return, and how does that shift influence how we live daily life?

When awakening is seen as a goal, it becomes something outside us — something to chase, achieve, or compare. This creates pressure, frustration, and a subtle spiritual ego.

But when awakening is understood as a return, everything changes. We begin to see that awareness is not a destination — it is our original nature. We are not becoming something new; we are returning to what we already are.

This shift makes daily life lighter, gentler, and more conscious. Work becomes meditation, relationships become mirrors, and mistakes become teachers. We stop fighting life and start participating in it.

Awakening as return removes the struggle. It invites ease, authenticity, and a deep sense of belonging to ourselves.

What would you like a reader to feel, know or do after finishing your book — how should their life or understanding be different?

I want the reader to close the book and sit quietly for a moment — not to think, but to feel. To feel a gentle recognition inside… a sense that something has come home.

If they feel lighter, clearer, and more centered — my work is done. If they begin responding instead of reacting… If they begin seeing emotions and relationships with a little more awareness… If they feel a deeper alignment with who they truly are… then this book has fulfilled its purpose.

Ultimately, The Aware Being Code is not written to give more information. It is written to awaken the deeper intelligence already living within every human being. I don’t want the reader to become someone new — I want them to remember who they already are.

Author’s Closing Note

The Aware Being Code has grown from lived experience — from years of deep observation, inner reflection, healing, and a sincere search for truth. Every insight in this book emerged from real moments of awakening, real challenges, and real transformation.

My intention with this work is to invite the reader into a gentle remembering — a remembering of their innate clarity, their inner strength, their natural wisdom. Awareness is not something distant; it is something already quietly alive within each one of us, waiting to unfold.

As readers move through these pages,
I hope they experience moments where their breath softens…
where their mind becomes clear…
where something inside them says, “Yes, this feels like home.”


If a reader finds themselves feeling more grounded,
making decisions with ease,
seeing relationships with deeper understanding,
or simply sensing a calm presence within —
then the book has fulfilled its purpose.


My hope is for every reader to step into their own wholeness…
to experience themselves with a renewed sense of clarity,
to feel aligned with their true path,
and to walk life with a quiet confidence that comes from inner awareness.

This book is an offering — a companion for those who are ready to explore consciousness with honesty, depth, and openness. And I am grateful for every individual who chooses to walk this journey of awareness through these pages.

– Dr. Sachin Sharma
Author – The Aware Being Code

Available on: Amazon.in | Flipkart | WFP Store


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