A Darvesh Once Said… About Commerce

The Indian Darvesh speaks about where commerce and trade have lost the path.
Commerce without Truth is like the King without Clothes

The Soul of the Deal

What happens when we forget that the soul of a venture matters more than its valuation?

“It is not the numbers, nor the noise, but the truth behind them that gives life to what we build.”
The Indian Darvesh

The Light That Endures

There are two kinds of light in this world:
One that seeks the spotlight,
And one that simply illuminates.

The former dazzles. The latter endures.
But these days, too many are chasing brilliance in bulbs, forgetting the sun.

In today’s world of fast-funding and flash fame, something subtle but dangerous has happened. The focus has shifted — from building value to chasing valuation, from listening to the unheard to amplifying the already loud, from creating something meaningful to simply marketing it better.

This, dear reader, is not a rant. It is a reminder. A whisper from within — from the quiet voice that always knew the difference between noise and meaning.

Helping Isn’t the Same as Letting Lead

You’ll often hear:
“We do invest in health, education, rural finance. We do help the underprivileged.”

Maybe.
But there’s a difference between helping people, and truly trusting them.                                                         

There’s a difference between helping the poor and letting them lead.

There’s a difference between giving someone a chance to speak and truly listening to what they have to say.

There’s a difference between following rules and doing what’s right.

And these differences matter.

Because rules without heart are just showpieces.
Because honesty cannot be added later like a missing ingredient.
Because ticking boxes doesn’t make anyone trustworthy.
Because no matter how pretty your presentation is, it cannot hide what’s missing in your intention.

The Dangerous Normalization of Wrong

Time and again, we see people with questionable histories being funded again.
Founders who once brought chaos to their companies return with new names and new decks, only to be funded again.
Why?

Because they promise speed.
Because they speak the language of the boardroom.
Because the system cares more about profits than about principles.

Many investors do walk away from bad companies. But not because they see the wrong. They walk away because the math doesn’t work.
Not because the founder is dishonest, but because the numbers don’t add up.

That is not integrity.
That is just playing safe.

The Forgotten Power of Saying No

True integrity is saying no even when the plan looks profitable — because the person behind it doesn’t feel right.

It is having the courage to walk away not because the model doesn’t scale, but because the values don’t.

Integrity is not about how good your business plan looks.
It is about whether your foundation has a spine.

We don’t need more dashboards.
We need more people who ask, “Should we?” instead of just “Can we?”

Growth That Comes From Soul

Let’s pause and look at the brands that truly endured — IKEA, Ford, Disney, Volvo.
None of them began by chasing investors.

They built slowly. Organically.
They focused on making something worth talking about.
They earned trust, not clicks.
They created stories, not just slogans.

Today, most startups skip the making and jump straight to the marketing.
They want to scale before they’ve even served.
And so they pay influencers, buy endorsements, chase trends — but forget to build trust.

The problem isn’t just with the investors.
It is with the very idea of success we have started to believe in.

Elesaar: A Different Path

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