ThinQproduct philosophy
During my childhood, I would hold a book in my left hand and read it as I ate with my right hand. Like children these days do with mobile phones.
As I grew up, I started writing poetry. Long walks in the nights, alone in the hills and forests, trying to imagine things—all that led me to write. I never cared who would read it, I just went within myself and created things that brought joy to me. It made me so meditative — not because I was meditating, but because I was making something. I didn’t know anything about mindfulness or flow states, but I knew how it felt.
The world around me was different. They were more involved with life than I was. I was a kind of silent observer. One thing I observed that hit me hard was how people suffered for the things that didn’t require any suffering at all.
So, I began searching for a method that elevated people out of this suffering, studying and practising different philosophical methods—eastern and western—to find an answer. (I did all these while working and wrote an unpublished novel too.)
Years later, working as a language specialist at Google and Yahoo, I noticed the same thing. Completing a task (a real, concrete one) felt more liberating than any spiritual practice I had read about or tried.
The Book
But I was still exploring. I distilled all my study and practices, wrote this book named The Magic of Devotion.
It was the result of over a decade of study and practice of different spiritual methods. As I was writing this book, I used to think that it was the best method for anyone looking for a contented life. Something that would end human suffering.
After I published this book, something profound happened inside me. I felt that this was not the method for all. Because a large number of people across the world live without knowing anything about spirituality, personal development and all the mind stuff. Even among those interested, people rarely practice them for more than one hour per day.
While I was working at creating one method, I was indirectly collecting evidence for another one.
The Realization
Later, at a start-up where I worked, the founders built a unicorn in just 4 years, and that was my final wakeup moment. I closely observed the founders, as they sat closer to my cubicle, their enthusiasm and energy levels—I felt that this is the way.
Here’s the uncomfortable truth I encountered:
Nobody practices spirituality for 8 hours a day, but everyone works for at least 8 hours.
Everyone builds, makes, finishes, creates — every single day. If there is a path to growth, to focus, to a life well-lived, it has to run through that — through the work itself, not around it.
I remembered how writing poetry, finishing tasks—how these creations brought the true fulfillment for me.
I seriously started contemplating and studying in this area, and the result is:
thinQproduct
So what is Think + Product?
People’s minds are cluttered with thinking about other people — social comparison, opinions, and imagined judgments. What if they could focus their minds on creating something?
directed thinking → less noise → more peace + better output.
When you focus on creating something – an invention, a service business or a book you’re writing, whatever it is, your focus is on how to make it better, you begin to go within, draw ideas and inspiration from there, no external opinions bothering.
It’s that inner calling to go deeper within and create things: that’s what changes the quality of your thinking, your creation and your life. No amount of money or fame can fill the otherwise emptiness.
The Philosophy of Action
ThinQproduct exists to protect that original instinct — the craving to create things — and to give it a place to grow.
This is not a productivity blog. It is not a mindset platform. It is a philosophy of action, built for people who want to create something real.
If that’s you, you’re in the right place.
— Raghavendra
What you build rebuilds you