STHIRA — The Entrepreneurial Stability Framework | Amir Nair | Amanstra
STHIRA
The internal stability framework
STHIRA
Sanskrit · स्थिर · Steadiness. Stability. The unshakeable ground.

STRIDE shows you how to build the business. STHIRA is the ground you build it from. The internal operating system that keeps you clear, focused, and stable when everything around you is uncertain.

M — Mind · Mission & detachment
I — Intellect · Focus & analysis
B — Body · Action & discipline
Explore the MIB framework ↓ See STRIDE Program →
What is STHIRA

The ground beneath STRIDE.

Every founder has a method for building their business. Almost no one has a system for staying stable while building it. STHIRA is that system. It does not tell you what to do. It determines how clearly you can think, how consistently you can act, and how long you can sustain the effort before the uncertainty breaks you.

STRIDE — the external system
How to build the business
Six steps. Sequential. Time-bound. Tactical. Teaches you what to do, in what order, to reach your first paying client in 90 days.
STHIRA — the internal system
How to stay stable while building it
Two vectors. Continuous. No end date. Philosophical and practical simultaneously. Determines the quality of every decision you make inside STRIDE.
Vector 2 — Presence
M · I · B

Mind. Intellect. Body.

Three dimensions of your presence as a founder. Not a hierarchy — an interdependency. When one is misaligned, all three suffer. When all three are operating in their correct domain, the result is what the Gita calls Sthira Buddhi — stable intelligence.

M
M — Mind
The mission setter
The mind’s role in STHIRA is to set the mission — and then get out of the way. When the mind is absorbed in personal objectives (money, status, recognition), it becomes the source of agitation. Every missed target becomes a personal failure. Every slow month becomes an identity crisis.
When the mission is set beyond the self — when the goal is to solve a real problem for real people, not to achieve personal milestones — the mind becomes stable. Money becomes the byproduct, not the measure. This is what allows detached execution.
The mind’s three responsibilities
Set the mission beyond personal gain
Maintain clarity when circumstances change
Stay in the present — neither absorbed by past nor anxious about future
Signs the mind is misaligned
Every client loss feels catastrophic and personal
Revenue becomes the measure of self-worth
Comparison with other founders drives decisions
Seeking external validation before acting
I
I — Intellect
The focus engine
The intellect is the analytical faculty — capable of comparison, pattern recognition, strategic thinking, and problem-solving. But it can only operate at full capacity when the Mind has given it one clear problem to solve. A scattered mind produces a scattered intellect. A focused mission gives the intellect something to fully engage with.
This is the full-horsepower state. When the mission is clear and the niche is chosen, the intellect stops wasting energy on comparison and analysis paralysis. Every ounce of intellectual capacity goes to solving the one problem the business exists to solve.
The intellect’s three responsibilities
Niche selection — one clear market, one clear problem
Decision-making without emotional turbulence
Building systems that outlast the founder’s daily presence
Signs the intellect is misaligned
Analysis paralysis — unable to choose one direction
Constant strategy pivots without market testing
Building complexity before validating simplicity
Confusing activity with strategic progress
B
B — Body
The action instrument
The body is where everything becomes real. Strategy exists in the mind and intellect. Revenue exists in the world. The body bridges them. Wake up on time. Exercise. Meet people physically. Deliver the work. Show up consistently. Without a disciplined, fit, present body — the best strategy and sharpest intellect produce nothing.
Entrepreneurship demands more from the body than employment does. You are now responsible for generating your own energy, managing your own schedule, and sustaining performance over long periods without external structure. The body must be treated as the instrument of delivery it is.
The body’s three responsibilities
Physical discipline — sleep, exercise, energy management
Showing up — meetings, deliveries, conversations, presence
Consistent daily action regardless of motivation levels
Signs the body is misaligned
Inconsistent schedule — productive one day, paralysed the next
Avoiding the physical act of reaching out or meeting people
Substituting planning for action consistently
Physical depletion affecting decision quality
Vector 1 — Time

Past. Present. Future.

Three temporal orientations. Only one is the domain of effective action. STHIRA teaches the entrepreneur to draw from the past, plan for the future, and act in the present — without being absorbed by any of them.

Past
Memory & Experience
Draw from it — don’t live in it
The past is where your expertise lives. 20 years of corporate experience, lessons from failure, knowledge of what works. This is the raw material for T (Turn skills) and R (Rule niche) in STRIDE. It has enormous value — when processed by the intellect, not dwelt upon by the mind.
The trap Absorption. When the mind lives in the past — replaying failures, comparing to previous success, grieving the corporate salary — it cannot see the present opportunity clearly. The past becomes a prison rather than a resource.
Present · The only place action exists
Pragmatism & Clarity
Live here. Act here.
The present is the only temporal coordinate where a decision can be made and an action can be taken. Pragmatism — seeing the situation exactly as it is, without the distortion of past regret or future anxiety — is the entrepreneur’s most valuable cognitive state.
The STHIRA practice Before every important decision, ask: am I seeing this situation clearly, from the present moment? Or am I seeing it through the lens of past failure or future fear? The quality of your decisions depends entirely on the answer.
Future
Vision & Direction
Inform direction — don’t inhabit it
The future is where goals live and where systems are built (E — Execute in STRIDE). It is necessary for direction-setting. But when the mind inhabits the future — wishing, fearing, projecting outcomes it cannot control — it creates the paralysis of hallucination. The future that hasn’t arrived yet cannot be managed. Only prepared for.
The trap Obsession. The hunter mindset lives entirely in the future — always chasing the kill, always focused on what hasn’t arrived yet. This creates anxiety, erratic decision-making, and the inability to tend what exists today.
The central metaphor

The Farmer. Not the Hunter.

This is the philosophical heart of STHIRA. Two fundamentally different orientations to time, mission, and outcome. The farmer is not passive — the farmer works harder than the hunter. But the farmer’s relationship to results is completely different.

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The Farmer — STHIRA mindset
Shows up every day.
Trusts the harvest. Tends the field.
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Time orientation: Present. Plants today. Tends today. The harvest arrives in its own time.
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Mission: Beyond the self. Feeding the community, not just personal survival. The meaning is in the work.
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Relationship to failure: One bad season does not end the farm. The system continues. Next row.
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Revenue: The byproduct of consistent, purposeful daily action. Not the measure.
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Body: Shows up at dawn regardless of mood. Consistent physical presence is the non-negotiable.
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Detachment: Attached to the process. Detached from any individual outcome. This is Sthira.
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The Hunter — employment mindset
Chases the kill.
Panics when the prey escapes.
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Time orientation: Future. Always seeking the next target. The present is just a transit zone.
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Mission: Personal gain. Income, status, recognition. The meaning is in the achievement.
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Relationship to failure: One missed kill feels catastrophic. Identity is attached to results.
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Revenue: The primary goal. Every interaction measured against its immediate return.
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Body: Shows up when motivated. Inconsistent when the hunt is dry.
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Attachment: Deeply attached to specific outcomes. Reactive when they don’t arrive on schedule.
The transition from hunter to farmer is not natural for corporate professionals. Employment rewards the hunter — hit your target, get your bonus. The hunter who misses gets managed out. Entrepreneurship rewards the farmer. The daily webinar is the watering. The qualifying calls are the planting. The cohort is the field being tended. The first client — and the compounding that follows — is the harvest. You don’t chase it. You create the conditions for it to arrive. Then you tend the next row while you wait.
The STHIRA diagnostic

Which cell are you stuck in?

When a founder hits a wall — and they always do — STHIRA gives you a diagnostic question. Not a motivational answer. A diagnostic. Tap each scenario to see the STHIRA lens.

“I can’t decide which business to start. I keep going in circles.”
You’ve been thinking about this for 3 months. You’ve filled notebooks. You’ve spoken to 10 people. You still haven’t started.
Intellect Future
Your intellect is not the problem — your mind is. The mind hasn’t set a clear mission beyond personal gain, so the intellect has no anchor. It’s generating options because there’s no criteria to choose between them. Fix the mind first: what problem do you genuinely want to solve for other people? That question, answered honestly, eliminates most of the options.
“I know what to do. I’m just not doing it.”
You have the framework. You understand the steps. You write the to-do list every morning. The calls don’t get made. The posts don’t get written.
Body Present
This is a body problem, not an intellect problem. The body is avoiding the action — usually because the action involves rejection risk (outreach, presenting the offer, asking for the business). The mind’s attachment to the outcome is creating physical avoidance. The STHIRA practice: detach the action from the result. Make the outreach the goal, not the response to it. The farmer plants regardless of whether this particular seed grows.
“Every time something goes wrong, I question everything.”
One client says no. One post gets no engagement. One month’s revenue is low. And suddenly you’re wondering if you made a mistake leaving corporate.
Mind Past
The mind is attached to individual outcomes because the mission is still personal. When money, recognition, and validation are the goals, every setback is a personal failure. The STHIRA practice: restate the mission in terms of the problem you solve for others. When the mission is the work itself — not the reward for it — individual failures stop feeling existential. One bad week on the farm doesn’t mean you stop farming.
“I’m comparing myself to other founders and feeling behind.”
Someone in your network just raised money. Someone else just announced a big client. You’re on Week 3 and still haven’t had your first conversation with a potential buyer.
Mind Future
Comparison is the mind living in other people’s futures. The STHIRA question: what is the most useful thing I can do in the present moment for the people my business exists to serve? That question cannot be answered by looking at what someone else is doing. It can only be answered by being present with your own field, your own crop, your own row to tend today.
“I have too many ideas. I keep starting things and not finishing them.”
Three months in, you’ve started a newsletter, a consulting offer, a training programme, and a digital product. None are generating revenue. All are half-built.
Intellect Present
The intellect without a mission from the mind will generate endlessly — because generation feels like progress. It isn’t. The STHIRA practice: return to the mind. What is the one problem I am committed to solving? Every idea that doesn’t serve that mission is a distraction, regardless of how good it seems. The intellect’s job is to solve the mission — not to generate alternatives to it.
“I’m exhausted. I’m working harder than I ever did in corporate but earning less.”
You’re doing everything. Content, sales, delivery, admin, finance. You’re up at 11pm answering emails. Your energy is depleted. Your thinking is foggy.
Body Past
The body is in depletion. And a depleted body produces depleted thinking — which produces poor decisions — which produces worse outcomes — which produces more anxiety — which depletes the body further. This is the spiral. The STHIRA intervention is counter-intuitive: stop. Sleep. Exercise. The farmer who hasn’t slept cannot plant effectively. Your first responsibility as a founder is to treat your body as the instrument of delivery it is. Protect it accordingly.
Teaching sequence

Where STHIRA lives in each program tier.

STHIRA is not a module. It is a lens applied throughout. The depth of teaching increases with the depth of the program.

Silver — 90-Day Hackathon
Woven in, not taught separately
STHIRA principles appear as context when students hit walls
Week 1: Introduce Mind concept when teaching identity shift (S)
Week 4: Farmer vs Hunter when first outreach resistance appears
Week 7: Present-moment pragmatism when students over-analyse their offer
Week 10: Body discipline when execution falters in the final sprint
As needed: STHIRA diagnostic when a student is visibly stuck
Gold — Advanced Builder
Dedicated STHIRA module
Taught as a standalone framework in Month 4
Full MIB framework — 3-hour deep-dive session
Time vector — practical mapping to their specific business stage
Farmer vs Hunter — personal audit exercise
STHIRA diagnostic applied to each student’s current block
STRIDE·STHIRA Matrix — how their six steps map to the grid
Daily practices designed and committed to
Diamond — Done With You
Applied throughout every session
STHIRA is the diagnostic lens in every monthly review
Every monthly strategy session opens with STHIRA check-in
Business decisions reviewed through both STRIDE and STHIRA lens
Pivot decisions tested against detached execution principle
Team dynamics assessed through MIB framework
Amir’s direct coaching uses STHIRA as the primary diagnostic tool
The STHIRA practices

Six practices. Daily.

STHIRA is not a concept to understand. It is a set of practices to embody. One from each dimension of MIB, applied consistently.

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Mission restatement
Every morning, write one sentence: the problem I solve for others is ___. Not the money you want to make. The problem you exist to solve. This reorients the mind from personal gain to mission before the day begins.
MindPast → Present
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One decision, fully made
Each week, identify the one decision the intellect has been circling. Make it. Commit to it. Remove it from consideration. The intellect recovers its capacity not by making more decisions but by completing the ones it’s avoiding.
IntellectPresent
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Consistent wake time
The body’s discipline begins here. Same time every day — including weekends. Not for productivity performance. For the signal it sends: the body is the instrument of this work, and it will be treated as such. Everything else is built on this foundation.
BodyPresent
The present-moment check
Before any important conversation — a sales call, a delivery, a difficult decision — pause for 60 seconds. Ask: am I seeing this situation from the present, or through past regret or future anxiety? The quality of the conversation depends on the answer.
MindPresent
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Daily physical movement
Not for fitness. For cognitive capacity. The research is unambiguous: physical movement directly improves decision quality, emotional regulation, and sustained attention. For the entrepreneur, this is not optional. It is infrastructure.
BodyPresent
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The farmer review
Every Friday evening: what did I plant this week? Not what did I harvest — what did I plant. List the outreach made, the content published, the conversations had, the offers presented. The farmer measures effort, not outcome. The harvest is a separate ledger.
MindBodyPresent
STRIDE shows you the path.
STHIRA is the ground
you walk it from.

The external system and the internal framework. Together, they form the complete architecture of the entrepreneurial transition. Both are taught in the E2E program.