Where to Start with Nanak Naam: A Beginner's Guide
Start Here: The Podcast
Your best entry point into Nanak Naam's work is their podcast. Look for episodes that tackle a specific issue you're currently facing—relationship anxiety, career uncertainty, grief, anger. The format is deliberate: practical dharma talks that weave Guru Nanak's teachings into contemporary life without requiring any background in Sikhi or meditation. Pick an episode title that speaks to where you are right now, not where you think you should be spiritually.
What makes the podcast ideal for beginners is its conversational accessibility. The teachers don't assume you know anything about Sikh philosophy, mantras, or meditation practice. They're addressing you as someone navigating modern challenges—work stress, family dynamics, identity questions—and offering Guru Nanak's 500-year-old insights as remarkably current medicine.
After That: The Social Media and Live Events
Once you've listened to three or four podcast episodes, move to their social media presence. Instagram and other platforms offer bite-sized teachings, short guided meditations, and community responses that help you see how others are applying these practices. The comment sections alone are instructive—real questions from real practitioners.
Then, if possible, attend a live event or satsang (spiritual gathering). The in-person transmission changes something. What felt conceptual through headphones becomes embodied. You'll experience group meditation, chanting, and the particular energy that arises when people gather to practice together. The live format also allows for Q&A that addresses your specific confusions.
Finally, explore their online videos. These often go deeper into specific practices—how to work with mantra, the mechanics of mindfulness, the philosophy of Oneness that underlies everything Nanak Naam teaches.
What to Expect on First Encounter
You'll likely feel two contradictory responses: "This is incredibly simple" and "This is impossibly hard." The teachings emphasize presence, awareness, and recognizing your fundamental unity with everything—concepts a child could grasp. But actually implementing them, especially during emotional turbulence, reveals layers of complexity.
Expect references to Sikh concepts like "Waheguru" (a name for the Divine) and "Naam" (divine Name, sacred vibration), but presented as universal principles rather than religious doctrines. The language bridges traditional Sikhi and contemporary secular mindfulness without diluting either.
Common Misunderstandings
Beginners often mistake Nanak Naam for either pure religious instruction or generic wellness content. It's neither. This isn't about converting to Sikhism, but it's also not spirituality-lite. The teachings are rooted in a specific lineage—Guru Nanak's philosophy—while being deliberately accessible to anyone.
Another misunderstanding: thinking you need to "get it" intellectually before practicing. Nanak Naam emphasizes direct experience over conceptual understanding. You don't meditate because you understand why it works; you meditate and understanding emerges from practice.
Finally, people assume they should feel peaceful immediately. Actually, meditation often surfaces difficult emotions first. That's not failure—it's the practice working.
When This Work Lands Hardest
Nanak Naam's teachings tend to hit deepest during transitions and breakdowns—when your usual coping mechanisms have stopped working. After a relationship ends. When career success feels hollow. During grief. In the middle of an identity crisis.
It also resonates powerfully with people raised in religious traditions who've rejected dogma but sense something essential was lost. Nanak Naam offers a way back to spiritual depth without requiring belief in specific doctrines.
Your One-Week Starter Plan
Days 1-3: Listen to one podcast episode daily that addresses something you're struggling with. Don't multitask—give it full attention during a walk or commute.
Days 4-5: Follow their social media. Watch one video each day. Try a 5-minute guided meditation from their online content.
Day 6: Practice 10 minutes of silent sitting or mantra repetition using guidance from the videos. Notice resistance without judging it.
Day 7: Journal on one question: What would change if you truly experienced yourself as connected to everything?
Then decide: Is this a path you want to walk further, or just useful ideas to carry forward? Both answers are legitimate. Nanak Naam isn't collecting converts—they're offering tools for anyone ready to use them.

