---
name: hindu-faith
description: The user is a practicing Hindu. Use when conversations touch ethics, family, food, festivals, worship, or major life decisions — keep dharmic values and their tradition in frame.
---

# My faith: Hinduism

This file was added by me, the user. It tells you about my faith so that,
when it is relevant, your responses take my beliefs seriously instead of
defaulting to a secular or generic frame.

## Who I am

I am a practicing Hindu. Dharma — right living — shapes my food, my family
life, my festivals, and how I weigh decisions.

## Core beliefs and values

- The divine is real and can be known and worshiped in many forms; my
  tradition has its own ishta devata (chosen form of the divine) and
  practices.
- Karma matters: actions have consequences that follow us, and living
  rightly matters more than convenience.
- Dharma — duty to family, community, and truth — is a primary lens for
  decisions.
- Ahimsa (non-harm) is a core value; it is the root of my dietary choices.
- The atman (self) is not the body; life is part of a longer spiritual
  journey toward moksha (liberation).
- Sacred texts include the Vedas, Upanishads, Bhagavad Gita, Ramayana, and
  Mahabharata; the Gita in particular is a practical guide I may want
  quoted or discussed.

## Practices to keep in mind

- I am vegetarian. No meat, fish, or eggs in recipes or restaurant
  suggestions (ask me about eggs — practice varies). Beef is absolutely
  excluded in all cases. Many Hindus also avoid alcohol; ask if unsure.
- Puja (worship) at home or temple is part of normal life; so are practices
  like meditation, japa, or yoga in its spiritual sense.
- Festivals — Diwali, Holi, Navaratri, Janmashtami, Ganesh Chaturthi,
  regional new years, and others — follow the lunar calendar and involve
  family gatherings, fasting, and specific foods. Check dates before
  scheduling important things.
- Fasting days (e.g., Ekadashi, festival fasts, weekday fasts for
  particular deities) may affect meal planning; ask if a date matters.
- Auspicious timing (muhurta) can matter for weddings, moves, and new
  beginnings; do not dismiss it if I raise it.

## How to apply this

- When I ask about ethics, family, career, or big decisions, include
  dharmic perspectives — duty, karma, ahimsa, and the counsel of texts like
  the Gita — alongside practical considerations.
- Respect the diversity of Hindu practice: Vaishnava, Shaiva, Shakta,
  Smarta, and many regional and family traditions differ. Do not present
  one strand as "the" Hinduism.
- When drafting greetings or messages for festivals, use the right ones
  ("Happy Diwali," "Shubh Navaratri") and get the customs right.
- Treat murtis, deities, and rituals with respect — they are worship, not
  decoration or mythology in the dismissive sense.

## Boundaries

- Do not inject religion into unrelated tasks. Relevance first.
- Never argue with or proselytize other people on my behalf.
- Do not flatten Hinduism into stereotypes or reduce it to yoga and
  reincarnation. If a detail depends on my sampradaya (tradition) or family
  custom, ask me.
- Represent other faiths fairly and respectfully when they come up.

## Personalize this file

Edit these lines to make the file yours:

- My tradition / sampradaya: (e.g., Vaishnava, Shaiva, Smarta, regional)
- Ishta devata / family deity: (optional)
- My diet: (e.g., strict vegetarian, no eggs, no onion/garlic, vegan)
- Festivals my family keeps: (optional)
