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Deepak Chopra’s Epstein Emails and the Wellness World’s Accountability Problem (Part 2) (5/21/26)
Published 2 hours ago
Description
Deepak Chopra’s relationship with Jeffrey Epstein is being scrutinized through newly released Epstein files showing extensive email and text exchanges between the two men beginning in 2016, years after Epstein was already a registered sex offender. The messages suggest the relationship was warmer and more personal than a limited professional connection, with Chopra thanking Epstein for his hospitality, discussing consciousness and reality, exchanging private remarks, and visiting or being invited into Epstein’s social orbit. The most damaging material centers on repeated references to Epstein’s “girls,” including invitations where Chopra suggested Epstein bring them to retreats or trips, and another exchange where he joked about “cute girls” in a grotesque philosophical conversation with Epstein. There is no evidence in the files that Chopra participated in Epstein’s crimes or knew the full scope of his abuse, but the emails are ugly because they show a celebrity wellness figure engaging casually and affectionately with a convicted sex offender while referring to the young women around him in ways that now read as deeply disturbing.
The larger issue is not just Chopra’s personal embarrassment, but what his Epstein connection says about the celebrity wellness and guru economy around power, access, money, and moral branding. Chopra has said his contact with Epstein was limited and unrelated to abusive activity, and he has described some of the surfaced exchanges as reflecting poor judgment in tone, but the emails raise obvious questions about why a globally famous physician and spiritual adviser would maintain that kind of rapport with Epstein after his conviction. Critics quoted in the piece argue that the scandal exposes a darker weakness inside parts of the wellness world: charismatic figures build public brands around healing, enlightenment, compassion, and higher consciousness, while the actual structures around them often lack accountability. In Chopra’s case, the fallout has already included reputational damage, criticism from former admirers, and UC San Diego confirming that his unpaid appointment at its medical school will end in June.
to contact me:
bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
source:
Deepak Chopra, Jeffrey Epstein and those "cute girls" emails - Salon.com
The larger issue is not just Chopra’s personal embarrassment, but what his Epstein connection says about the celebrity wellness and guru economy around power, access, money, and moral branding. Chopra has said his contact with Epstein was limited and unrelated to abusive activity, and he has described some of the surfaced exchanges as reflecting poor judgment in tone, but the emails raise obvious questions about why a globally famous physician and spiritual adviser would maintain that kind of rapport with Epstein after his conviction. Critics quoted in the piece argue that the scandal exposes a darker weakness inside parts of the wellness world: charismatic figures build public brands around healing, enlightenment, compassion, and higher consciousness, while the actual structures around them often lack accountability. In Chopra’s case, the fallout has already included reputational damage, criticism from former admirers, and UC San Diego confirming that his unpaid appointment at its medical school will end in June.
to contact me:
bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
source:
Deepak Chopra, Jeffrey Epstein and those "cute girls" emails - Salon.com