Loyalty is noble—until it starts choking our conscience.
There’s a moment when standing by someone stops showing strength and starts showing weakness.
In the Mahabharata, Karna’s loyalty to Duryodhana began as gratitude—but ended as bondage.
He knew his friend was wrong, yet he couldn’t break free without breaking himself.
That’s when loyalty turns from strength to shackle.
The Bhagavad Gita (4.39) states that true faith enhances our knowledge and understanding—not diminishes it.
It urges us to act not out of attachment, but out of alignment with dharma.
True loyalty doesn’t mean obeying a person; it means upholding a principle.
Sometimes doing the right thing looks like betrayal to the wrong side.
If our loyalty demands that we neglect or reject our inner compass, it’s not loyalty—it’s slavery.
Because loyalty that makes us blind will one day make us fall.
Faith should steady our steps, not tie our feet.
Video link : https://www.youtube.com/shorts/7XpPAQ5vxE0
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