Beta, let me ask you something simple.
When you breathe out, does the tree ask why you are giving it carbon dioxide? When the rain falls, does it check who deserves to get wet?
Nature gives without accounting. Without expectation. Without keeping a record.
This is not a modern idea about generosity. This is what the Vedas built an entire civilization on.
The Rigveda opens with a hymn to Agni — fire. And fire, the rishis said, is the perfect model of giving. It gives light to everyone who comes near. It gives warmth to everyone who needs it. It does not withhold heat from the undeserving. It burns itself completely in the act of serving.
The Vedic word for this is Rita — cosmic order. Rita is not a rule imposed from outside. It is the nature of reality itself. The planets maintain Rita. The seasons maintain Rita. The rivers maintain Rita.
And human beings maintain Rita through yajna — sacrifice, offering, giving.
The ancient Vedic community was not built on competition. It was built on contribution. Every person contributed to the common fire. Every act of service maintained the cosmic balance. To withhold your contribution was not just selfishness — it was a disturbance of the cosmic order itself.
When Divine Care Foundation feeds a hungry child through Mission Annapurna, it is not doing charity. It is restoring Rita. It is one part of the universe caring for another part, the way the rain cares for the soil, the way the sun cares for the seed.
You are not above the person you serve. You are not below them. You are the universe taking care of itself.
This is the Vedic understanding of service. This is what we are doing here.