The Root Before the Root: Overcoming the Energy of Craving in Hindu Thought Every action a human being takes is preceded by an invisible movement — a craving, a pull, an inner hunger that arises before the hand reaches out, before the foot takes a step, before the word leaves the mouth. We do not simply eat what harms us, desire what destroys us, or commit what we later regret. Long before the act, an energy has already taken root within us. This energy is what Hindu wisdom identifies as Trishna — intense craving — and its older, subtler cousin, Vasana, the latent impressions and desires embedded deep within the subconscious layers of the mind. Hindu philosophy does not merely look at what a person does. It looks beneath the doing, to the wanting. And then beneath the wanting, to the seed of the wanting. This is what the ancient seers meant when they described the layered nature of human suffering — there is a cause beneath the cause, and therefore, a cure beneath the cure. What th...