Impressionable Souls: Why Fans and Followers Are Never Truly Yours In today's world of social media, celebrity culture, and instant fame, millions chase followers, fans, and public admiration as though these were the ultimate measures of worth and success. People gather around someone today, celebrate them, call themselves devoted supporters — and tomorrow, with equal enthusiasm, they move on to someone newer, shinier, and more exciting. This is not a modern problem. Hindu thought has addressed this deeply rooted human tendency for thousands of years, identifying it as a symptom of the restless, unsteady mind caught in the cycles of Maya and Tamas. The Impressionable Mind — Chanchala and Chanchalata The Bhagavad Gita directly speaks to this restlessness of the human mind. In Chapter 6, verse 34, Arjuna himself confesses to Krishna: "The mind is restless, turbulent, obstinate and very strong, O Krishna, and to subdue it, I think, is more difficult than controlling the win...