
Real Talk on Life, Money
& Everything In Between
Unfiltered wisdom on relationships, finance, health, career, and personal growth — from India's most honest podcast.
936+
Episodes
56.3M
Total Views
6
Topics
100%
Unfiltered
Explore by Topic
Dive into the topics that matter most to you
Relationships & Love
Insights on building healthy relationships, navigating love, marriage, dating, and understanding emotional dynamics between partners.
Money & Finance
Smart money strategies, investing wisdom, mutual funds, stock market insights, and building wealth for financial freedom.
Education & Career
Career growth strategies, education insights from Harvard and beyond, communication skills, and professional development tips.
Health & Wellness
Evidence-based health advice, fitness routines, nutrition science, weight loss strategies, and holistic well-being practices.
Self-Growth & Mindset
Transform your mindset with lessons on discipline, habits, confidence, motivation, and becoming the best version of yourself.
Spirituality & Manifestation
Explore the power of manifestation, meditation, prayer, subconscious mind techniques, and spiritual practices for a fulfilling life.
Podcast Episodes
Long-form conversations with experts & thought leaders


Warning : this Podcast will Change how you see your Life Forever ft. col Rajeev. Bharwan

Para Sf Commando Breaks Down Like Never Before : I've Never Cried In My Life...@ShivenderKanwar

Rich People Don't Want You to Know This! Ft. Abhishek Kar @AbhishekKar

Soul, Karmic debt & Purpose of your life : 44 Lessons You Must Learn First | @KavyalSedanni

Try This for 72 Hours and Your Body will Start Healing Diseases on its Own | Ft. Ryan Fernando
Solo Videos
Divya's unfiltered takes, tips & life lessons

13 Life Lessons I Wish I Knew In My 20s

13 Lessons I Learned at Harvard To Move 10x Faster in Life

5 Communication SECRETS of Top 1% Elite (I learned at Harvard)

9 Lessons I Learned At Harvard To Earn Respect INSTANTLY (Used by Top 1%)

7 Lessons I learned at Harvard (they changed my life)

42 Years of Life Advice in 12 Minutes
Shorts
Quick hits of wisdom & bite-sized clips

4.3M views
Nine Exams, Endless Writing - The Real UPSC Grind

4.1M views
This Amitabh Bachchan Scene Explains How the Rich Buy Assets

3.0M views
Celebrity Diet Privilege | Divya Jain

3.0M views
His Name Is Enough | Divya Jain

2.7M views
A 14-Year-Old's Breakup: The Reality of Young Love

2.4M views
Don't give your loyalty freely❤️🩹

2.0M views
Special Forces Officer: Your Mind is Holding You Back From Greatness @monkswarriors

1.6M views
The right woman brings calm, growth, and honesty.
From the Blog
Deep dives and written guides
11 Signs of a Toxic Relationship You Should Never Ignore
Most people don't realize they're in a toxic relationship until the damage is already done. Here are 11 warning signs backed by real conversations on the Divya Jain Podcast.
5 Money Habits That Keep You Middle Class Forever (And How to Break Free)
Your money is like a bucket of water. If there are holes in this bucket, no matter how much you pour, it won't fill. These holes are the habits keeping you stuck.
9 Life Lessons from Harvard That Will Change How You Think
What Harvard teaches you isn't about memorizing more facts. It's about how to think under pressure, how to decide when nothing is clear, and how to respond when life doesn't give you perfect answers.
In the News
Featured across India's top publications
For Safeducate CEO Divya Jain, boxing is not just a sport — it is her most powerful tool for meditation, focus and mental clarity. The London School of Economics alumna, who runs one of India's largest logistics skilling initiatives having trained over 250,000 students in eight years, describes boxing as deeply meditative. 'If you are running, you can let your mind wander, but that's not true for boxing. In boxing, if you stop looking, you are going to get a whack,' she explains. This constant requirement for attention and presence is what drew her to the sport over two-and-a-half years ago. When the pandemic hit in 2020, Jain set up a boxing ring at her home so she could continue training. 'What I love is that you leave everything aside and just concentrate on the skill, and are aware of the now. Boxing has really helped me sharpen my brain. If I box, I have a better day,' she says. Beyond personal practice, Jain is also promoting boxing among young girls, training them at her home ring. 'We identify young girls from underprivileged backgrounds and train them,' she shares, extending her commitment to empowerment beyond the corporate sphere. Jain chose not to join the family business — logistics giant Safexpress — instead forging her own path with Safeducate. The recipient of the 2018 ASEAN Young Woman Achiever Award, she also co-founded Seekho in early 2021, a video-first platform where young professionals and college students can learn from industry experts and mentors. Her approach to boxing mirrors her approach to business: strategic, focused, requiring complete mind-body coordination, and always staying alert to what comes next. The discipline and mental sharpness she gains from boxing directly translates into her leadership of multiple ventures.
In this India Today video feature, Divya Jain explains her groundbreaking approach to skills training through container schools — fully functional classrooms built from repurposed shipping containers deployed at logistics hubs across India. The video showcases these innovative learning spaces in operation, demonstrating how discarded industrial containers have been transformed into equipped training facilities with practical laboratories and state-of-the-art resources. Jain explains the genesis of the concept: since shipping containers carry enormous costs for return transport, millions of them are simply abandoned. She saw an opportunity to centrally fabricate these containers into mobile schools that only need electricity to operate. The container school initiative, which was inaugurated by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in July 2015, has become one of Safeducate's most recognized innovations. These schools have been established in locations including Binola (Haryana), Chhapra (Bihar), Ambala (Haryana) and Amritsar (Punjab), training over 10,000 candidates. The model addresses multiple challenges simultaneously: it reaches workers in remote areas where building traditional schools would be impractical, operates at significantly lower costs, and maintains direct connection to the industry by being located where the logistics workforce already operates. In the video, Jain discusses how container schools democratize access to quality vocational training, removing geographical and economic barriers that prevent logistics workers from upgrading their skills. The initiative represents Safeducate's commitment to innovation-driven solutions for India's massive skills gap in the logistics sector.
In a deeply personal and revealing conversation on The Divya Jain Podcast, former Miss Universe Sushmita Sen opened up about the terrifying heart attack she suffered while filming the third season of her hit Amazon Prime series Aarya. Gulf News reports on the key revelations from the podcast episode, where Sen described the harrowing experience of suffering a massive cardiac event on set and the extraordinary decision she made to remain fully conscious during her subsequent angioplasty procedure. Sen explained that she chose not to be sedated because she fundamentally dislikes losing consciousness, and this decision — which stunned her medical team — ultimately played a role in her survival. By staying awake during the stent operation, she could communicate with her cardiologists, monitor her own body's responses, and maintain an active role in her medical care at a moment when her life hung in the balance. The actress shared that the heart attack struck without warning during an intense period of filming, forcing her to confront her mortality in the most visceral way possible. She described moments where she believed her story was over — that she would not survive to see her daughters grow up or continue her career. Sen's openness about the experience on Divya Jain's podcast broke important taboos around discussing health vulnerabilities, particularly cardiac health in women. The interview revealed her remarkable resilience: not only did she survive the heart attack, but she returned to complete filming of Aarya Season 3, channelling the raw emotion of her near-death experience into her performance.
News18's health and fitness section covers Sushmita Sen's detailed account of her heart attack and subsequent stent operation, as shared on The Divya Jain Podcast. The article focuses specifically on Sen's revelation that she was conscious throughout the entire stent operation — a medical detail that captured widespread attention and admiration. The former Miss Universe explained that her decision to remain awake during angioplasty was rooted in her deep personal conviction about maintaining awareness and control, even in the most extreme circumstances. The piece explores the medical context of her experience: angioplasty is typically performed with the patient under local anesthesia, but Sen's insistence on full consciousness meant she could observe and feel every aspect of the procedure as doctors threaded a catheter through her blood vessels to place a stent in her blocked artery. Her ability to remain composed during such an intense medical intervention speaks to extraordinary mental discipline. News18's coverage positions Sen's experience within the broader context of women's cardiac health — a critically underreported area where women often present with atypical symptoms and face delays in diagnosis and treatment. Sen's heart attack occurred without the classic warning signs many people associate with cardiac events, making her story particularly relevant for health awareness. The article details how the actress recovered from the procedure and returned to filming Aarya Season 3, demonstrating resilience that inspired her medical team, production colleagues and millions of fans. Her interview on Divya Jain's podcast has become a significant contribution to public health conversations about cardiac awareness in India.
Outlook India's International Women's Day special celebrates women leaders who have demonstrated extraordinary vision, resilience and impact across diverse sectors. Among the featured profiles, Divya Jain is recognized for her pioneering work in transforming India's logistics workforce through Safeducate and her role as a champion of women's entrepreneurship. The article highlights how Jain built one of India's largest vocational training organizations from the ground up, overcoming the unique challenges of being a woman leader in the heavily male-dominated logistics industry. Her journey — from working in her family's logistics business to founding Safeducate and later co-founding Seekho — exemplifies the entrepreneurial spirit and determination that the feature celebrates. The piece positions Jain alongside other accomplished women from business, social enterprise, arts and public service who have broken barriers and created lasting impact. The celebration underscores the ongoing importance of recognizing female achievements while also highlighting the continued need for progress toward gender parity in leadership positions. Jain's inclusion among these women leaders reflects her dual impact: not only has she built successful businesses, but she has also created economic opportunities for thousands of women through Safeducate's training programmes and championed women's empowerment through the 'Because She Can' initiative. The feature serves as both a tribute to current women leaders and an inspiration for the next generation of women entrepreneurs in India.
The Quint highlights the most emotionally powerful moment from Sushmita Sen's appearance on The Divya Jain Podcast — her confession that during her heart attack, she genuinely believed her story was over. The former Miss Universe described the existential terror of thinking that her life as a mother, actress and public figure had reached its final chapter. This moment of confronting mortality — the belief that death was imminent — represents the psychological core of Sen's heart attack experience, going beyond the physical medical emergency to reveal the profound emotional and spiritual impact of such a crisis. The article explores how Sen processed this near-death moment and what it meant for her sense of identity and purpose. Having built a life defined by bold, unconventional choices — winning Miss Universe at 18, becoming India's first celebrity single adoptive mother with daughters Renee and Alisah, building a successful career on her own terms — the possibility that her narrative was ending felt particularly cruel. Yet it was precisely this fear that fueled her determination to survive, to stay conscious during angioplasty, and to fight her way back to health. The Quint's coverage captures how Sen's vulnerability in sharing this dark moment has resonated with audiences far beyond her existing fan base. By admitting that she thought her story was over, she gave voice to the universal fear of mortality while simultaneously demonstrating that survival is possible even when hope seems lost. Her subsequent recovery and return to filming Aarya Season 3 transformed the narrative from one of despair to one of triumph.
About The Divya Jain Podcast
The Divya Jain Podcast brings you honest, no-filter conversations with experts, entrepreneurs, military leaders, doctors, and thought leaders from across India and the world. Whether you're navigating your first relationship, building your career, trying to get healthier, or exploring spirituality — there's an episode here for you. With over 936 episodes covering topics from mutual fund investing to manifestation techniques, from military discipline to marriage advice, this is your one-stop destination for practical life wisdom.