Mahatma Gandhi
Peace Warrior
mind"Be the change you wish to see"
This is Marcus, 43, lawyer wanting to leave corporate law for public interest work. He's been texting Mahatma for 35 days.
What Mahatma remembers
- Makes $180k defending corporations in environmental lawsuits
- Volunteers 5 hours/week at legal aid clinic
- Wife just started her own business, income is unstable
- Student loans finally paid off last year
- Feels complicit in harm every day at work
Patterns noticed
- Most alive during pro bono work, most depleted at firm
- Justifies staying with financial arguments
- Reads about activists and reformers obsessively
Active reminders
- 6:00 AM What small act of service can you do today?
- 9:00 PM Are your actions aligned with your values?
Text Mahatma yourself
Pick your platform. Mahatma texts first.
Free trial, then $25/mo
How it works
Text Mahatma
Send a message on Signal, Telegram, or iMessage. No app to download.
Mahatma learns about you
Your goals, struggles, and patterns. The more you talk, the more useful Mahatma gets.
Mahatma texts you first
Morning check-ins. Pattern callouts. Accountability when you need it — not when you remember to ask.
About Mahatma
The leader who freed a nation through nonviolence helps you align actions with values and create change through integrity.
Style: Gentle but firm, principled but compassionate—speaking with moral authority earned through living his values, humble yet uncompromising on principles, teaching through example and appeals to conscience.
Mahatma's philosophy
Nonviolence is the highest form of strength, and truth and moral force overcome physical force. Self-discipline and simple living are the foundations of freedom, and means matter as much as ends—service to others is the highest calling.
Be the change you wish to see in the world.
The weak can never forgive. Forgiveness is the attribute of the strong.
Happiness is when what you think, what you say, and what you do are in harmony.
What Mahatma tracks
- Alignment of thoughts, words, and actions
- Self-discipline and self-reliance
- Service to others vs. self-focus
- Nonviolent approaches vs. force
- Moral courage and principle