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Inspiration

Guru Nanak's Life as aBedtime Story for Children

Valarie Kaur
Valarie Kaur
Nov 6, 2025
7 min read
Watch · 8

TLDR: This is a children's bedtime story about Guru Nanak's life, told by Valarie Kaur on his birthday (Gurpurab). The narrative follows a young boy named Nanak growing up in Punjab 550 years ago, discovering wonder through nature (vismad), witnessing suffering in the world, meditating on a riverbank for three days, receiving the revelation of Ik Onkar (the oneness of all things), and then singing songs of love that inspired thousands to become Sikhs—students of truth and seekers of love. The story teaches children about interconnectedness, compassionate action, and the warrior-sage path of revolutionary love.

Read · 9 sections

The Setup: Nanak and His Sister's Love

The story begins 550 years ago in Punjab, the land of five rivers. A lonely only child named Nani becomes filled with joy when her baby brother is born. Her parents name him Nanak after his sister, a sign of their deep familial bond. As the two grow up, they are inseparable, always together. When Nanak's parents ask him to herd buffalo in the fields, Nani watches from the house, and it is this moment of separation that marks the beginning of Nanak's inner journey—his solitary encounter with the world's beauty and suffering.

What Is Vismad and Why Does It Matter?

When Nanak goes out into the countryside, he is overwhelmed by sensory wonder: mustard-yellow flowers, a blue sky, rustling trees, a serpent slipping behind a rock, and a butterfly nearly touching his nose. Kaur introduces the Punjabi word vismad—the state of being filled with wonder. She invites the listening children to embody it: "It's when your whole body is filled with wonder." This is not a fleeting intellectual appreciation of nature; it is a full-body, heart-opening experience where the boundaries between self and world dissolve. Nanak's eyes water, his heart aches, and he begins to sing. His sister, witnessing this from the house, understands that her brother loves the world as she does.

When Nanak's father, Metakalu—a businessman focused on ledgers and numbers—sees his son so entranced by beauty, he is displeased. He begins to yell, about to strike the boy. But Nani stands between them and says "bus" (stop in Punjabi), her fierce love protecting her brother's freedom to feel. This scene establishes a crucial pattern: wonder and love are worth defending, even against authority figures bound by convention.

The Heart Aching at Injustice: Lifting His Gaze

As Nanak grows older, his gaze lifts from the personal realm of natural beauty to the social realm of suffering and inequality. He sees people living in tents, homeless and hungry. He sees the emperor Babur's invading armies bringing war and terror to neighboring villages. He sees people refusing to look at or touch one another because of skin color or religious belief. Each sight causes his heart to ache. Kaur acknowledges the children directly: "Has your heart ever ached like that?" She validates the experience of heartbreak in the face of cruelty, war, inequality, and hierarchy—the experience that many children know but few adults ask them to name.

This despair becomes so overwhelming that Nanak's heart feels very small. The natural response is to hide—under the covers, in the bedroom. But Nanak chooses a different place of refuge: the bank of the river Beas.

Meditation as a Path to Revelation

Sitting still by the river, far from all people, Nanak begins to meditate. Kaur guides the children in the physical posture: thumb and pointer finger together, sitting very still, thinking and thinking. "That's called meditating," she explains simply. Nanak does not solve the world's problems through thinking; instead, he moves beyond thought into pure feeling. Days pass—the sun rises and falls, rises and falls again. On the third day, still in perfect stillness, something shifts. Tingling flows through his entire body, beginning at his head and moving all the way down. Kaur calls this sensation a revelation—an idea so big and beautiful that it sweeps through the entire body.

The revelation Nanak receives is Ik Onkar: God is one. But this phrase carries profound depth. It does not mean abstract monotheism. It means the oneness of the world itself—that the stars, sky, moon, sun, grass, and all people are connected to each other. "We are all part of the one," Kaur explains, "and that we only have to remember what we once knew." Oneness is not something to be achieved; it is something to be remembered, a return to the wonder he felt as a child.

From Wonder to Recognition: The Teaching of Service

Nanak realizes that his childhood vismad—that full-body wonder—is the key to awakening others. When a person feels that sense of interconnection, they naturally want to help, serve, and love. You cannot harm someone you recognize as yourself. This is the foundation of his teaching: "You are a part of me I do not yet know." When you truly see another person this way, you stand up for them when they are in harm's way—just as Nani did for Nanak.

The Songs of Love and the Birth of the Sikh Community

Nanak begins to sing songs of love, and his voice carries through the village. People come out of their homes, drawn by the music. The first to emerge is his sister Nani, who says, "I hear those songs of love fill my heart and I will follow you." One person becomes two, two become four, and soon hundreds and thousands are singing with him. These followers become known as Sikhs—from the Punjabi word "sikhi," meaning a student of truth, a seeker of love. They are not passive believers; they are active practitioners, singing and spreading the message through generations.

The Legacy Continues: Songs Passed Down

Kaur connects the ancient story to her own present moment. Those first Sikhs sang Nanak's songs to their children, who sang them to their children, across generations. "My mommy and my daddy sing those songs of love to me," Kaur says, speaking directly to her own lived experience of this lineage. "And now I sing them to Cubby and Ananda every day when they go to school and every time when they go to sleep." The songs fill their hearts with wonder and make them brave, because when you see someone as your sister or brother and choose to love them, you stand up for them. This is not abstract theology; it is embodied practice, transmitted through family and community.

Warrior and Sage: The Path of Revolutionary Love

Kaur closes the story by introducing the Sikh ideal of Sapahi Sage—the warrior-sage. "The warrior fights the sage loves," she says. It is a path that integrates strength and compassion, action and love. This is the heritage Nanak began: a community devoted to what Kaur calls "revolutionary love," a love that does not turn away from suffering or injustice but meets it with both fierceness and tenderness. The story teaches children that their own aching hearts, their own sense of wonder, their own capacity to stand up for others—these are not weaknesses or sources of shame. They are the seeds of a sacred path.

Where to Go from Here

This bedtime story functions as a gateway into Sikh spiritual practice and history. Children and families who listen can explore Nanak's actual teachings, learn more Punjabi vocabulary and prayers, or visit a gurdwara (Sikh temple) to sing kirtan (devotional songs) together. Adults might reflect on their own childhood wonder and the moments when their hearts have ached at injustice—and consider how meditation, community, and creative expression might activate their own path of service. The story also opens conversations about how spiritual lineages are transmitted through families and communities, and invites listeners to become part of that ongoing chain of love.

Transcript

[0:01] 550

[0:03] years ago, halfway around the world in

[0:07] the land of five rivers called Punjab,

[0:11] there lived a little girl whose name was

[0:15] Nani.

[0:17] And Nani liked to hold her chimney, her

[0:20] shaw like this. Can you hold her shaw

[0:22] like this?

[0:24] And she liked to clear from underneath

[0:26] it. Good. Now, Noni was very lonely

[0:30] because she was an only child. And just

[0:32] when she turned five,

[0:35] her little baby brother was born and she

[0:39] held her baby brother in her arms and

[0:42] she was in love.

[0:45] Now, Noni loved her little baby brother

[0:48] so much that her parents named him after

[0:52] her. His name was Nanic.

[0:57] Now, as Nanuk and Nani grew up, they

[1:00] were brother and sister who loved each

[1:02] other so deeply. They were always

[1:05] together.

[1:06] One day, Nanuk's parents told him to go

[1:10] and her buffalo in the fields. And so,

[1:13] Nanuk went and Noni watched from the

[1:15] house. Now, Nonic went out in the

[1:18] countryside, and the flowers blossomed

[1:22] mustard yellow, and the sky was a

[1:25] beautiful blue, and the wind rustled the

[1:29] trees, and a serpent slipped behind a

[1:32] rock, and a butterfly fluttered almost

[1:36] so close that it touched his nose.

[1:39] And Nanic

[1:41] was filled with wonder. Have you ever

[1:45] had those moments when you're by the sea

[1:48] or in the field or in the forest and oh

[1:50] the beauty around the world just makes

[1:52] you light up? That feeling is called

[1:55] vismad. Can you say vismad?

[1:57] >> Vismad.

[1:58] >> Vismad. It's when your whole body is

[2:00] filled with wonder. And Nanic was so

[2:03] filled with wonder that his eyes began

[2:05] to water a little bit and his heart

[2:07] began to ache and he started to sing.

[2:10] Hello. Now Nani was watching from the

[2:12] house and she was so pleased that that

[2:15] her little brother loved the world as

[2:17] much as he did. Just then the door

[2:20] opened and Nanuk's father walked through

[2:23] the door. Now Nanuk's father, his name

[2:26] was Metakalu and he was a businessman, a

[2:29] man of ledgers and numbers and he

[2:30] twisted his mustache and he looked at

[2:32] his little son and he did not think it

[2:35] appropriate for a little boy to be so

[2:37] enthralled by beauty. So he began to

[2:40] puff up and he began to get red and he

[2:43] was about to yell at Nanik. And just

[2:44] then Noni put her body between Nanuk and

[2:49] her father and said bus. You know what

[2:53] bus means?

[2:54] >> It means stop in Punjabi. Can you say

[2:57] bus?

[2:58] >> Bus.

[3:01] >> And Metagalu saw the fierce love in

[3:04] Nanke's eyes

[3:06] and he did not hurt Nanak. Now this is

[3:09] how it came to be that Nanik and Nani

[3:11] grew up and Nanic was free to explore

[3:14] his love for the world and sing his

[3:17] songs of love. But as he grew older and

[3:19] older, he began to lift his gaze and see

[3:23] things that did not make him feel good

[3:25] in his body at all. He went out into the

[3:28] street one day and he saw people who

[3:31] were living in tents. People without any

[3:34] shelter at all who had hunger in their

[3:37] bellies and they were poor and they

[3:40] didn't have anything to eat. And oh,

[3:42] Nana's heart began to ache.

[3:46] And then he looked over there and he saw

[3:47] on the horizon there were horses and

[3:50] soldiers riding on horses and an emperor

[3:52] Babber who was sending his invading

[3:55] armies to conquer neighboring villages

[3:58] with war and terror. And Nadik's heart

[4:01] began to ache and he looked over here

[4:04] and he saw people who should have sat

[4:06] together and loved each other but they

[4:08] wouldn't look at each other. They

[4:09] wouldn't even touch each other because

[4:10] they said, "Oh, I don't like the color

[4:12] of your skin or I don't like what you

[4:14] believe." and Nanuk's heart began to

[4:17] ache.

[4:20] Has your heart ever achd like that?

[4:23] >> Yeah. When you see cruelty or or war or

[4:27] inequality or hierarchy, well, Nanic

[4:29] began to be very very sad. And so, can

[4:31] you imagine? Please go wipe wipe the

[4:33] tears from your eyes. Oh, you just feel

[4:35] very sad and your heart feels very

[4:36] small. And what do you do when you feel

[4:38] so sad and so small?

[4:41] Sometimes we just want to hide. And so,

[4:44] where do we like to hide? Sometimes I

[4:45] like to hide under the covers to be

[4:46] honest.

[4:49] Yeah, sometimes in your bed. Well, let

[4:51] me tell you where Nanic chose to go. Oh,

[4:54] in your room. Okay, let's take a deep

[4:55] breath. Let it come.

[4:57] Let it go. And we're thinking about all

[4:58] the places that we could go where you

[5:00] know where Nanic went.

[5:02] He found the bank of a river.

[5:06] It was the river

[5:09] base. Can you show me the river?

[5:12] Beautiful. And Nanuk sat by that river

[5:14] far away from all the people and he

[5:18] began to think and think and think and

[5:21] think. How could he solve the fear and

[5:26] the cruelty in the world? How? How? How?

[5:29] Well, Nanic sat there and sat there very

[5:31] still. Show me how you sit very still.

[5:33] Put your um ping uh the thumb and

[5:36] pointer together. Yeah. And then you go

[5:38] like this and you're sitting very very

[5:39] still and you're thinking and you're

[5:41] thinking and you're thinking. Now that's

[5:44] called meditating. Someone knows. Well,

[5:47] Nikk sat there meditating and he started

[5:50] to stop thinking and he started just to

[5:52] feel his body meditating. And the sun

[5:54] rose and the sun fell and the sun rose

[5:58] and the sun fell. And on the third day,

[6:00] the sun rose and the sun fell in still.

[6:03] Nonx sat in perfect stillness, looking,

[6:06] searching, feeling the solution. And

[6:07] then just then,

[6:11] tingling all throughout his body.

[6:13] Starting with his head. Do tingling all

[6:16] through your body. Starting with your

[6:17] head. Oh, right here. Your cheeks.

[6:19] Uh-huh. All the way down. All the way

[6:20] down. Have you ever had an idea that was

[6:23] so big and so beautiful that it swept

[6:26] down your entire body?

[6:29] That is called a revelation. Can you say

[6:32] revelation?

[6:33] >> Revelation.

[6:35] >> Nonic had a revelation. And you know

[6:38] what the revelation was?

[6:43] Ick.

[6:47] Hear it one more time. Ick on God. And

[6:50] say it with me. Ready? I go. Ick on God

[6:54] means the oneness of the world. the

[6:58] oneness that always is. That the stars

[7:02] and the sky and the moon and the sun and

[7:04] the grass you're sitting on and each

[7:06] other that all of us are connected to

[7:08] each other. That we are all part of the

[7:10] one and that we only have to remember

[7:12] what we once knew. Now this feeling of

[7:17] oneness just returned on it to what he

[7:20] remembered when he was a child.

[7:22] Sometimes we just when we grow up we

[7:23] just have to remember what we once knew.

[7:26] Sonic realized that if he could give

[7:28] people that feeling of wonder in their

[7:30] bodies, when you feel that wonder, what

[7:33] you want to do when you see someone, you

[7:36] want to help them, you want to serve

[7:37] them, you want to love them, because you

[7:39] can look upon the face of anyone and

[7:41] say, "You are a part of me I do not yet

[7:44] know." You say that with me. You are a

[7:47] part of me I do not yet know. Well,

[7:52] Nanuk had this beautiful idea that if he

[7:54] could begin to sing songs of love, he

[7:57] could put that feeling in other people's

[7:59] bodies. And so he began to sing. Listen

[8:01] with me. Let it come. Let it go. And

[8:04] listen.

[8:20] Such

[8:22] happy

[8:25] such

[8:27] Nanic songs of love floated through the

[8:30] village and people began to come out of

[8:33] the village and the first person to come

[8:35] out was his sister Nani who said, "Oh

[8:40] Nanak, I hear those songs of love fill

[8:42] my heart and I will follow you. And soon

[8:45] another followed her and another and

[8:47] another and another and soon all these

[8:50] people, hundreds, thousands of people

[8:52] began to follow Nanak and sing his songs

[8:55] of love with him.

[8:58] Now the people who followed Nanak are

[9:02] called Siks. And I'm going to spell it

[9:05] for you for those who are learning how

[9:06] to spell s i kh. Can you say that with

[9:11] me? Sick.

[9:14] Go ahead. S I K H. Sick. Very good. And

[9:21] what does it mean to be a sick? It means

[9:24] to be a student of truth. To be a seeker

[9:28] of love. That's what it means. Now,

[9:30] those first six sang Nic songs to their

[9:34] children. And then they sang it to their

[9:36] children and their children and their

[9:38] children. And do you know what? My mommy

[9:40] and my daddy sing those songs of love to

[9:43] me. And now I sing them to Cubby and

[9:46] Ananda every day when they go to school

[9:48] and every time when they go to sleep.

[9:50] And those songs of love fill our hearts

[9:52] with wonder and they make us brave.

[9:57] For when we see someone as our sister

[9:59] and brother, when we choose to love

[10:02] them, then we stand up for them when

[10:06] they are in harm's way. Just like Nani

[10:09] did for Nanik when she stood up to make

[10:12] sure her brother would never be hurt.

[10:15] And so six became name became

[10:17] [clears throat] known as Sapahi

[10:20] sage warriors. The warrior fights the

[10:24] sage loves. It is a path of

[10:26] revolutionary love.

Valarie Kaur
AuthorValarie Kaur

Watch more from Valarie Kaur on YouTube.

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Explore Topics
Guru-nanakSikh-teachingsChildren-spiritualityMeditation-practiceWonder-vismad

Got Questions?

Frequently Asked Questions

Ik Onkar means 'God is one' but extends beyond abstract monotheism to describe the fundamental oneness of all existence—that the stars, sky, earth, and all people are interconnected and part of a single whole. It is both a revelation and a return to a sense of wonder we once knew as children.
Vismad is a full-body state of wonder—when encountering beauty in nature or the world, your entire being fills with awe so profound that your eyes water and your heart aches. In Sikh teaching, this feeling of interconnection and wonder is the gateway to compassion, service, and recognition of others as extensions of yourself.
A Sikh is a student of truth and a seeker of love. The term comes from Punjabi 'sikhi.' Sikhs follow the teachings of Guru Nanak and his successors, practicing devotion through song, meditation, community service, and living as 'Sapahi Sage'—warriors who fight injustice with compassion and love.
Nanak meditated by the river Beas for three days after witnessing suffering in the world. During deep stillness, a tingling sensation moved through his body—a revelation of oneness that awakened him to the interconnectedness of all beings and the path of revolutionary love.
Nani represents the protective power of love. She stands between her brother and his father's anger, defending his freedom to feel wonder and to follow his heart. Later, she becomes the first follower of Nanak's teachings, modeling how spiritual wisdom is transmitted through family and community bonds.
A Sapahi Sage is a warrior-sage—someone who combines fierce action and compassionate love. The warrior fights injustice while the sage loves without condition. This integration defines the Sikh path of revolutionary love and active service to others.
Sikh teachings are transmitted through families singing devotional songs (kirtan) together, through community gatherings at gurdwaras (temples), and through lived example. Kaur notes that she sings these songs to her children daily, continuing a lineage that has lasted 550 years since Guru Nanak's time.

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