EnduranceFinder
All Races
Every discipline, every distance
Marathons
26.2 miles of glory
Triathlons
Swim, bike, run
Cycling
Gran fondos & road races
Trail Running
Off-road & mountain races
Ultras
Beyond the marathon distance
Virtual Races
Race from anywhere
Popular Destinations
New YorkBostonChicagoLondonTokyoCape Town
Glossary
Endurance terms & definitions
Elite Athletes
Pro athlete profiles
Training Tips
Plans, workouts & coaching
Race Guides
Course previews & strategy
Gear Reviews
Shoes, bikes & race-day kit
Athlete Stories
Community race reports
Wisdom
Words from endurance legends
AI Discovery
How AI powers your experience
Blog
Latest from EnduranceFinder

“Swim 2.4 miles, bike 112 miles, run 26.2 miles — brag for the rest of your life.”

— Ironman Motto

All RacesEvery discipline, every distance
Marathons26.2 miles of glory
TriathlonsSwim, bike, run
CyclingGran fondos & road races
Trail RunningOff-road & mountain races
UltrasBeyond the marathon distance
Virtual RacesRace from anywhere
Popular Destinations
New YorkBostonChicagoLondonTokyoCape Town
GlossaryEndurance terms & definitions
Elite AthletesPro athlete profiles
Training TipsPlans, workouts & coaching
Race GuidesCourse previews & strategy
Gear ReviewsShoes, bikes & race-day kit
Athlete StoriesCommunity race reports
WisdomWords from endurance legends
AI DiscoveryHow AI powers your experience
BlogLatest from EnduranceFinder
EntrarCadastrarWhy EnduranceFinder?
  • Browse All Races
  • Marathons
  • Half Marathons
  • Triathlons
  • Cycling
  • Ultras
  • Trail Running
  • Swimming
  • Obstacle Races
  • All Categories →
  • Boston
  • Chicago
  • New York City
  • San Francisco
  • Los Angeles
  • Denver / Boulder
  • Austin
  • Seattle
  • Berlin
  • London
  • Todas as cidades →
  • For Race Directors
  • For Timing Companies
  • For Running Clubs
  • For Cycling Organizations
  • For Triathlon Clubs
  • For Trail Race Organizers
  • For Charity Races
  • For OCR & Adventure Races
  • For Swim & Open Water
  • AI Platform
  • Pricing
  • Case Studies
  • Recuperação de carrinho abandonado
  • Precificação dinâmica inteligente
  • Categorias de ingressos
  • Eventos recorrentes
  • Custom Questions
  • Sistema de afiliados
  • Lista de espera / Notificar
  • Scanner de ingressos
  • Widget incorporável
  • Event Syndication
  • Integrations
  • Todos os recursos →
  • About EnduranceFinder
  • Blog
  • AI Discovery
  • Training Guides
  • Race Guides
  • Help Center
  • Contact Us
  • Careers
  • Press
  • Termos de Serviço
  • Política de Privacidade

Races

  • Browse All Races
  • Marathons
  • Half Marathons
  • Triathlons
  • Cycling
  • Ultras
  • Trail Running
  • Swimming
  • Obstacle Races
  • All Categories →

Destinos

  • Boston
  • Chicago
  • New York City
  • San Francisco
  • Los Angeles
  • Denver / Boulder
  • Austin
  • Seattle
  • Berlin
  • London
  • Todas as cidades →

Para Race directors

  • For Race Directors
  • For Timing Companies
  • For Running Clubs
  • For Cycling Organizations
  • For Triathlon Clubs
  • For Trail Race Organizers
  • For Charity Races
  • For OCR & Adventure Races
  • For Swim & Open Water
  • AI Platform
  • Pricing
  • Case Studies

Recursos

  • Recuperação de carrinho abandonado
  • Precificação dinâmica inteligente
  • Categorias de ingressos
  • Eventos recorrentes
  • Custom Questions
  • Sistema de afiliados
  • Lista de espera / Notificar
  • Scanner de ingressos
  • Widget incorporável
  • Event Syndication
  • Integrations
  • Todos os recursos →

Empresa

  • About EnduranceFinder
  • Blog
  • AI Discovery
  • Training Guides
  • Race Guides
  • Help Center
  • Contact Us
  • Careers
  • Press
  • Termos de Serviço
  • Política de Privacidade
EnduranceFinder
© 2026 EnduranceFinder. Todos os direitos reservados.
Inspiration

Sage Warrior Path: Reconciling Loveand Action in Crisis

Valarie Kaur
Valarie Kaur
Apr 8, 2026
5 min read
Watch · 7
TLDR: In a short video filmed at the base of a towering tree in California's Giant Forest, spiritual teacher and author Valarie Kaur describes the origin story of her book Sage Warrior, explaining how a devastating wildfire that nearly consumed a sacred place became the catalyst for her to journey back to Punjab and unearth the wisdom of her Sikh ancestors. At the heart of that wisdom lies the path of the Sun Sabahi—the sage warrior—a framework that unites the sage's vision of love with the warrior's commitment to action, a teaching she now offers to readers seeking courage and clarity in a world that feels like it is ending.

Read · 5 sections

What Inspired the Search for Ancestral Wisdom?

Kaur opens by sharing a simple moment: signing her first paperback copy of Sage Warrior at the foot of a massive ancient tree in the Giant Forest, while visitors nearby asked what book she was holding. But this casual book event carries enormous weight, because the tree itself—and the place—holds the key to understanding why she wrote the book in the first place.

Years earlier, Kaur and her family had visited this forest for the first time, standing in the presence of what she describes as "a beautiful sacred place to be with these ancient trees." Within weeks of leaving, a wildfire surrounded the forest. The tree survived, but the experience marked a turning point. Kaur recalls: "I really tasted the ash in my mouth" as a convergence of crises—wildfires, climate disasters, the pandemic, racial reckonings, and what she calls "authoritarian capture in our country and across the world"—created a sensation that the world itself was collapsing.

That accumulated weight became the emotional and spiritual catalyst. As she states plainly: "You write the book that saves your own life." The wildfire forced a question that drove her back to her roots: her ancestors, the first Sikh gurus and communities, had faced moments when the world felt like it was ending. How did they survive? How did they summon courage? How did they keep showing up with love?

What is the Path of the Sage Warrior?

The answer Kaur unearthed from her ancestral tradition is the path of the Sun Sabahi—or in English, the sage warrior. This is not a historical artifact or an abstract philosophy, but a living framework for moving through crisis with both vision and commitment.

Kaur distills the teaching into two essential capacities. "The sage sees through the eyes of love," she explains, "and the warrior puts that love into action." This is the reconciliation at the heart of the book: wisdom without courage to act remains incomplete, and action without the grounding of love becomes hollow or destructive. The sage warrior holds both.

This teaching draws from the lived example of her Sikh ancestors, who faced persecution, displacement, and existential threat. Rather than offering escapism or passivity, the path of the sage warrior asks: How do we see clearly through love? And how do we translate that vision into sustained, brave action in the world?

How Does Return to Place Deepen the Teaching?

Kaur emphasizes the significance of returning to the Giant Forest to launch the paperback edition of her book. "Coming back here is coming back to where the journey to write this book began," she says. This is not nostalgia or sentiment; it is an acknowledgment that place, especially sacred place, holds the memory and the catalyst for spiritual work.

The fact that her husband carried the heavy box of books down the mountain and back up again is presented not as an anecdote but as a symbol of commitment. The book itself becomes a physical object tethered to the place where the inner work began—a reminder that transformation is not purely internal but is embodied, placed, and shared.

What is the Intention Behind Sharing This Book?

Rather than positioning the book as a definitive answer or a self-help tool, Kaur articulates a more nuanced hope. She describes the paperback as "light enough for you to put in your bag and to take to your sacred places." The book is meant to be portable, to travel with readers to the places where they find silence and groundedness—their own versions of the Giant Forest.

Her invitation is specific: "May you read in places where you can get really quiet. May the wisdom in this book touch the wisdom in you, and may you share that wisdom with the people next to you." This is not about individual enlightenment but about collective awakening. The wisdom in the book is meant to activate the wisdom already present within the reader, and that activation is then shared outward—creating what she calls the possibility to "make each other brave."

The closing blessing—"May we make each other brave"—reframes the entire enterprise. Bravery is not a solo achievement but a mutual gift we offer one another. In a time when the world feels like it is ending, courage is not something you find in isolation; it is something you kindle together.

Where to Go From Here

For readers drawn to this teaching, the path forward has several dimensions. First, consider what place holds sacred significance for you—where you feel the presence of something larger, older, or wiser than yourself. Return to it, or visit it intentionally, as a way of grounding your own spiritual search. Second, reflect on how the dual vision of the sage warrior applies to your own life: Where are you called to see more clearly through love? And where are you being asked to put that love into action, even amid crisis? Finally, practice Kaur's closing invitation seriously: identify one person or community to whom you might offer courage, and consider how wisdom—not just information, but lived understanding—might be shared between you. The path of the sage warrior is not solitary; it is activated in relationship.

]]>

Transcript

[0:00] So, we opened this box of books right

[0:02] here, and the people next to us started

[0:05] to ask, "What book is that?" And I got

[0:07] to sign my first paperback of this book

[0:10] here

[0:11] at the foot of this tree in the giant

[0:14] forest. It was very special.

[0:16] It was very special.

[0:18] Um you might ask why my husband carried

[0:22] a very heavy box of books down this

[0:23] mountain and now is carrying the rest

[0:25] back up the mountain, and it's because

[0:28] the journey to write this book began

[0:30] right here. It began at the foot of this

[0:32] tree a few years ago. We were here with

[0:34] our children for the first time, and it

[0:36] was just such It is such a beautiful

[0:38] sacred place to be with these ancient

[0:40] trees. Just a few weeks after we left,

[0:44] there was a wildfire that surrounded

[0:45] this forest, and the tree still stands,

[0:48] but my goodness, it was the first time I

[0:50] really tasted the ash in my mouth

[0:51] between the wildfires and the climate

[0:54] disasters and the pandemic and the

[0:56] racial reckonings and the authoritarian

[0:58] capture in our country and across the

[1:00] world, it felt like the world was

[1:02] ending.

[1:03] Doesn't it feel like that sometimes?

[1:07] You write the book that saves your own

[1:08] life.

[1:09] And that fire really is what

[1:14] began my journey back to India, back to

[1:17] Punjab to unearth the wisdom of my

[1:20] ancestors, the first Sikh ancestors. How

[1:22] did they survive when it felt like the

[1:24] world [music] was ending? How did they

[1:26] summon the courage? How did they find a

[1:29] way to keep showing up with love? And

[1:32] what was unearthed, what I rediscovered,

[1:36] was the path of the Sun Sabahi, the path

[1:38] of the sage warrior.

[1:40] The sage sees through the eyes of love,

[1:42] and the warrior puts that love into

[1:43] action.

[1:45] So, you see, coming back here is coming

[1:48] back to where the journey to write this

[1:49] book began, and it feels really, really

[1:52] special to be here.

[1:54] My hope is that this book is now light

[1:57] enough for you to put in your bag and to

[2:00] take to your sacred places. May you read

[2:03] in places where you can get really

[2:04] quiet. May the wisdom in this book touch

[2:07] the wisdom in you, and may you share

[2:09] that wisdom with the people next to you.

[2:10] May we make each other brave.

[2:13] I'm really, really grateful.

[2:16] Thank you for going on the journey with

[2:17] me.

Valarie Kaur
AuthorValarie Kaur

Watch more from Valarie Kaur on YouTube.

View profileWebsite
Explore Topics
Sage-warriorAncestral-wisdomSikh-spiritualityCrisis-resilienceLove-action

Got Questions?

Frequently Asked Questions

In the Sikh tradition that Kaur reclaims, the sage warrior (Sun Sabahi) is one who sees through the eyes of love and puts that love into action. The sage holds the wisdom to perceive clearly; the warrior has the courage to act on that vision in the world, especially in times of crisis and oppression.
Kaur was inspired to write the book after a wildfire threatened a sacred forest where she had taken her family. Amid converging crises—wildfires, the pandemic, racial reckonings, and authoritarian threats—she felt moved to journey back to Punjab and unearth how her Sikh ancestors had summoned courage and maintained love when the world seemed to be ending.
Kaur invites readers to take the book to their own sacred places and read in quiet spaces where they can deeply reflect. The wisdom is meant to activate the wisdom already within you, and then be shared with others around you—creating mutual courage and collective awakening rather than individual enlightenment.
Begin by cultivating the sage's capacity to see through the eyes of love—perceiving situations and people with clarity and compassion. Then ask yourself where you are being called to put that love into action, whether through resistance, care, creativity, or community work, especially in the face of systems or crises that feel overwhelming.
According to Kaur's exploration of Sikh history, her ancestors survived persecution and existential threat by combining clear vision (seeing through love) with sustained action rooted in that love. They found ways to keep showing up courageously and compassionately, even when the world felt like it was ending.
The Giant Forest is the specific place where Kaur's spiritual journey toward writing the book began years ago. Returning there to sign the first paperback copies created a full-circle moment, grounding the book's teachings in the exact physical location that sparked her search for ancestral wisdom.

Continue Reading

More on Inspiration

View All
The 10 Best Upcoming Endurance Races to Register for in Spring 2026
Training

The 10 Best Upcoming Endurance Races to Register for in Spring 2026

Discover the top 10 endurance races worth registering for this spring 2026, featuring obstacle challenges, expert insights, and complete rac…

1 min read
Trail Running vs Road Racing vs Triathlon: How to Choose Your Endurance Discipline
Race-guides

Trail Running vs Road Racing vs Triathlon: How to Choose Your Endurance Discipline

Trail running, road racing, or triathlon? Discover which endurance discipline matches your goals, personality, and lifestyle with this compr…

1 min read
Where to Race This Year: The Ultimate State-by-State Guide to Endurance Events
Race-guides

Where to Race This Year: The Ultimate State-by-State Guide to Endurance Events

Discover the best states and regions for endurance racing. From California's triathlons to New Zealand's IRONMAN courses, find your perfect …

1 min read
How EnduranceFinder Connects 500,000 Athletes With Your Race — Without Paid Advertising
Training

How EnduranceFinder Connects 500,000 Athletes With Your Race — Without Paid Advertising

Most race directors spend thousands on digital advertising to fill registration spots. EnduranceFinder's discovery platform puts your race i…

1 min read

Keep exploring

Continue your journey

More wisdom and gatherings from across the BrightStar directory.

More Articles

Browse the full library of teachings, interviews, and guides.

Back to all articles →

Teachers & Artists

Explore the lineages, musicians, and guides of the conscious world.

Explore artists →

Find an Event

Kirtan, retreats, sound baths, breathwork, festivals — happening soon.

Browse events →
Never miss a raceCreate Free Account
Organize a race?Try the Demo