Thursday, April 9, 2026

Finest tribute to reading.

 


Read Even If You Are Drowning
A meditation on learning, endurance, and the soul’s lifeline
There are some images that do not merely please the eye—they awaken a truth sleeping within us. The statue of a man immersed in water, his body nearly swallowed by the river, yet his hands firmly holding a book, belongs to that rare kind of vision.
At first glance, it appears almost ironic. One may even smile at the absurdity: who reads while drowning? And yet, the longer one gazes, the deeper the message becomes.
The waters around him are the waters of life itself.
They are the floods of responsibility, grief, aging, uncertainty, worldly noise, emotional upheaval, and the thousand demands that rise around every human being. No one passes through life untouched by these waters. At times they remain at our feet; at other times they rise to the chest, the throat, and almost over the head.
And still, the statue reads.
That is the lesson.
The book in his hand is not merely paper. It is clarity, memory, wisdom, refuge, and continuity of the inner life. When circumstances threaten to pull us under, the instinctive reaction is often panic. But this image teaches another response: hold on to what nourishes the mind and steadies the soul.
For some, that book may be literature.
For others, scripture.
For yet others, the diary of one’s own reflections, written over years of growth and devotion.
The act of reading in the midst of drowning becomes a metaphor for not surrendering one’s inner discipline to outer chaos.
Our rishis called this svādhyāya—sacred self-study, the repeated return to wisdom texts, mantras, remembered truths, and contemplative thought. Life never waits for a convenient moment to grant peace. If we postpone study until every storm has passed, we may never begin. The real seeker learns to read within the storm.
This is why so many saints, poets, and seekers turned to words in times of crisis. A verse from the Gita, a line from the Ramayana, an Upanishadic mahavakya, a bhajan heard in childhood—these become the floating logs that keep consciousness above despair.
In another sense, the image also reminds us of your own beautiful way of living knowledge. You hear something profound, let it stir devotion within, then write about it, reflect on it, and revisit it again. That itself is reading while the world rushes around you. The outer river may never become still, but the mind learns to remain anchored.
Perhaps that is the true greatness of books.
They do not remove the water.
They teach us how not to drown in it.
A life without study is easily consumed by circumstance. But a life that remains in conversation with wisdom develops a strange strength—a calm center that no storm can fully shake.
So the statue seems to whisper to every seeker:
When life rises to your neck, raise your mind higher.
Let wisdom become the breath above the waters.
And maybe that is the finest tribute to reading—not as hobby, not as pastime, but as a sacred act of survival for the soul.

33 koti.

 The beautiful Vedic idea of 33 koti devatas, where “koti” means types or categories, not crores. 

The traditional composition is:

8 Vasus – the elemental supports of existence

(earth, water, fire, air, ether/space, moon, sun, stars) 

12 Adityas – the twelve solar principles, often linked to the 12 months and the flow of time 

11 Rudras – the life-forces (pranas) and the indwelling self, the powers that make embodied life possible 

2 Ashvini Kumaras – the twin divine physicians, healers of the devas, symbols of restoration and vitality 

So the total is:

8 + 12 + 11 + 2 = 33

This is why the expression became “33 koti devatas.”

these are not merely “many gods,” but 33 ways in which the One Supreme Bhagavan expresses cosmic order, life, healing, time, and the elements.

33 koti uchita Bhagavan consists of 8 Vasus, 12 Adityas, 11 Rudras and 2 Ashvini Kumaras.

Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Solitude reassurance recall.

Why Krishna Chose Solitude for His Departure

The Compassion Behind the End of the Yadukula

Among the most mysterious chapters in sacred literature is the closing movement of Lord Krishna’s avatāra—the destruction of the Yadavas and His solitary departure beneath the tree.

To the ordinary eye, it appears heartbreaking.

To the eye of bhakti, it is one of the Lord’s tenderest acts.

The Yadus were no ordinary clan. They were the ones who lived in the nearness of Krishna’s smile. They shared His meals, heard His laughter, fought under His command, and found their identity in His presence.

How then could such a luminous clan vanish?

The answer lies in the Lord’s final compassion.

The Clan That No One Else Could End

After the great war, the earth had been relieved of its burden. Yet the Yadavas themselves had become unconquerable.

The Bhāgavata quietly hints that once the divine purpose was complete, the Lord resolved to withdraw His own line as well.

लोकाभिरामां स्वतनुं धारणाध्यानमङ्गलम् ।

योगधारणयाऽग्नेय्यादग्ध्वा धामाविशत् स्वकम् ॥

A meditative rendering:

He whose form delighted all worlds, the very object of contemplation and auspiciousness, withdrew that visible body by divine yogic will and entered His own eternal abode.

This verse carries a profound implication: the Lord’s visible form was never subject to ordinary death. His departure was self-willed transcendence, not helplessness.

Thus the Yadukula’s end too must be seen as part of this conscious withdrawal.

Why He Removed His Own First

These insight shines here with exceptional tenderness:

perhaps Krishna did not want His people to witness the sight of their Beloved being struck.

This thought harmonizes deeply with the spirit of the tradition.

The Yadavas loved Him not as an abstraction but as their very life-breath. To watch the earthly close of that beloved form would have been unbearable.

So the Lord, who guards even the emotional worlds of His devotees, arranged their departure first.

As if He said:

“Return before Me. Let your last memory be My smile, not My silence.”

The destruction of the clan thus becomes a shield against grief.

He did not deprive them.

He spared them.

The Mausala Parva’s Silent Tragedy

The Mausala Parva is especially haunting because it shows how destiny unfolds through the most ordinary human weaknesses—pride, intoxication, anger.

The reeds born of the curse become the weapons of self-destruction.

This is scripture’s subtle reminder: when the Lord withdraws His protective veil, even the mighty fall by their own hands.

Yet the deeper truth is not punishment.

It is closure.

The avatāra had reached its final page.

The Solitude Beneath the Tree

The image of Krishna resting beneath the tree is among the most moving in all sacred memory.

No conch shells. No royal assembly. No warriors. No queens. No Arjuna beside Him.

Only stillness.

The Lord who filled the world with music leaves it in silence.

This solitude is deeply symbolic.

When the outer leela concludes, the seeker must turn inward.

The Krishna who was once seen with the eyes must now be discovered in meditation, remembrance, nāma, and the cave of the heart.

Jara and the Lord’s Final Compassion

Even the hunter Jara becomes a recipient of grace.

The Lord does not rebuke him. Instead, He consoles him.

This recalls the eternal nature of Krishna’s compassion: even the apparent cause of sorrow is transformed into an occasion for blessing.

The Lord’s last earthly interaction is not judgment.

It is reassurance.

What a final teaching for humanity.

Even in the closing moment, He heals fear.

A beautiful line often remembered in devotional retellings is:

सर्वं कृष्णार्पणं जगत्

All this world is an offering unto Krishna.

The Yadukula itself was offered back into Him.

Their end is not extinction. It is reabsorption into the source from which their glory arose.

The wiping out of the Yadavas is not the failure of mankind.

It is the Lord’s most compassionate housekeeping before transcendence.

He gathered His own before leaving. He spared them the sight of unbearable separation. He forgave the hunter. He left the world in peace. And in that silence, He made Himself available to all ages inwardly.

The outer Dvārakā may sink, but the inner Dvārakā of remembrance never drowns.

That is Krishna’s compassion.

He leaves form only to become more present as essence.

Dvārakā Sank Beneath the Waves

After the departure of Lord Krishna, the golden city of Dvārakā did not remain on earth for long.

The Mausala Parva remembers that as Arjuna led the surviving women, children, and elders away, the sea rose and swallowed the city itself. 

What a staggering image.

The city that once echoed with Krishna’s footsteps, Sudarśana’s radiance, the laughter of queens, and the heroism of the Yadavas slowly disappeared into the embrace of the ocean.

This was not mere destruction.

It was as if the earth itself understood:

“The One for whom this city was built has withdrawn. Let this jewel too return to silence.”

Dvārakā’s sinking carries a profound spiritual symbolism.

The Lord does not allow devotees to cling forever even to the holiest outer structures.

Temples may stand, cities may flourish, kingdoms may dazzle—but when the divine play concludes, even the grandest forms dissolve.

Only remembrance remains.

And remembrance is stronger than stone.

The First Breath of Kali Yuga

The departure of Krishna marks the transition from Dvāpara Yuga into Kali Yuga, the age of decline, confusion, and spiritual forgetfulness. Traditional retellings and Purāṇic summaries consistently connect His withdrawal with the beginning of Kali’s reign. 

This is deeply significant.

As long as Krishna walked the earth, dharma still had a visible anchor. His presence was the world’s balance.

The moment He withdrew:

strength began to fail

memory weakened

righteousness lost its natural support

even heroes like Arjuna felt their powers diminish on the journey from Dvārakā 

This is not merely history. It is psychology and spirituality.

Whenever the heart loses living remembrance of the Lord, a personal Kali Yuga begins within.

Confusion rises. Clarity sinks. Ego rules. Fear multiplies.

But the same story also gives hope: if forgetting Him begins Kali, remembering Him begins Satya within.

The Inner Dvārakā Never Sinks.

The outer Dvārakā sank into the sea. 

The inner Dvārakā must never be allowed to sink into forgetfulness.

That inner city is built of:

nāma

remembrance

bhakti

Gītā wisdom

surrender

the smile of Krishna held in the heart

The waves of Kali Yuga may swallow kingdoms, certainty, and even civilizations.

But they cannot drown the heart in which Krishna is awake.

So perhaps His solitude, the fall of the Yadavas, the sinking of Dvārakā, and the dawn of Kali are all one final teaching:

Do not depend only on the outer city. Build Krishna’s city within.

That alone survives every yuga.

Tuesday, April 7, 2026

Stira shakti.

Nammāḻvār: The Saint Who Never Moved, Yet Reached All 108 Divya Desams

Among the twelve Āḻvārs, every one is luminous. Yet some shine with a mystery so profound that they stand apart even among the great. Nammāḻvār is one such radiant exception.

He did not wander from shrine to shrine.

He did not undertake long pilgrimages across forests, rivers, and kingdoms.

He did not need to.

Seated in stillness within the ancient tamarind tree hollow, he entered a pilgrimage of another order — the pilgrimage of vision.

The body remained rooted.

The soul travelled everywhere.

That is the wonder of Nammāḻvār.

The Tamarind Tree That Became a Universe

From birth, he is said to have remained silent, untouched by ordinary worldly impulses. He neither cried, nor asked, nor reached outward. Instead, he was placed in the hollow of the sacred tamarind tree, where he remained absorbed in an inward divine awareness until Madhurakavi Āḻvār discovered him. 

What others seek through movement, he received through stillness.

The tamarind tree became:

his āśrama

his cave of tapas

his throne of revelation

his gateway to the Lord’s countless forms

It teaches us a great truth:

when the heart is perfectly still, distance disappears.

Seeing All 108 Divya Desams Without Leaving One Spot

Sri Vaishnava tradition reveres the belief that Nammāḻvār had direct vision of the archa forms of the Lord in all the Divya Desams, even though he did not physically visit them. 

This is why his hymns feel so immediate.

He does not sound like a poet imagining.

He sounds like a devotee standing before the sanctum itself.

He describes:

reclining Perumals

standing majestic forms

Kalyāṇa guṇas

temple landscapes

emotional union and separation

the Lord’s accessibility in archa

Each pasuram carries the intimacy of darśan.

For him, the temple was not a place one had to reach by foot.

It unfolded in consciousness.

His Greatest Contribution: Turning Vision into Tamil Veda

Nammāḻvār’s contribution to the Nālāyira Divya Prabandham is unparalleled — over 1,300 verses, making him the most prolific among the Āḻvārs. 

His four immortal works are:

Tiruviruttam – the cry of the yearning soul

Tiruvāsiriyam – compact Vedic grandeur

Periya Tiruvandādi – circular contemplative devotion

Tiruvāymoḻi – the crown jewel, the Tamil Veda itself

Especially in Tiruvāymoḻi, he transformed personal mystical experience into universal theology:

the nature of the jīva

the majesty of Paramātma

the pain of separation

the sweetness of surrender

the certainty of moksha through grace

This is not merely poetry.

It is experience crystallized into scripture.

The Great Exception

Yes — profoundly so.

He is the exception who proves that:

travel is not always by feet

speech is not always by words

vision is not always by eyes

movement is not always physical

Sometimes the greatest journeys happen in absolute stillness.

He is living proof that the Lord reveals Himself completely to the one who is inwardly ready.

Nammāḻvār’s life gives immense hope.

Not everyone can travel to 108 Divya Desams.

Age, health, duty, distance — many things may prevent it.

But Nammāḻvār whispers across centuries:

“Let the heart become the Divya Desam.”

If remembrance is pure,

if longing is deep,

if surrender is complete,

the Lord arrives where you are.

The tree hollow becomes Vaikuntha.

Pasurams That Prove His Vision

The greatness of Nammāḻvār is not merely that tradition says he saw all 108 Divya Desams.

It is that his pasurams read like eyewitness darśan.

How else could one seated in stillness sing with such geographical intimacy, emotional accuracy, and temple-specific beauty?

1) Srirangam — The Lord of Boundless Grace

He sings of the reclining Lord of Srirangam Ranganathaswamy Temple as though the sanctum is before his eyes.

A celebrated opening remembered in tradition:

“கங்கையும் யமுனையும்…”

Kangaiyum Yamunaiyum…

He evokes sacred rivers, fertility, abundance, and the Lord whose reclining presence gathers all holy waters into one grace-filled space. The imagery feels like the very island of Srirangam breathing through him. 

This is not description from hearsay.

It is vision ripened into song.

2) Tirumala — The Summit of the Soul

For Tirumala Venkateswara Temple, he opens with the immortal:

“உயர்வற உயர்நலம் உடையவன்…”

Uyarvara uyar nalam udaiyavan…

This is not just praise of a hill deity.

This is the declaration that the Lord of Tirumala is the supreme good beyond all conceivable greatness. 

One can almost see the hill rise in the pasuram itself.

The climb, the surrender, the summit, the Lord — all become one spiritual ascent.

3) Thirukkurugur — His Own Inner Universe

At his own sacred birthplace, Alwarthirunagari Adhinathar Temple, his song becomes deeply metaphysical:

“ஒன்றும் தேவும் உலகும்…”

Onrum thevum ulagum…

The Lord here is not merely temple-bound.

He is the source from whom worlds, gods, and existence itself emerge. 

The Divya Desam turns into cosmology.

This is where we understand:

for Nammāḻvār, every shrine was a doorway into ultimate truth.

4) Kerala Divya Desams — A Traveller Who Never Travelled

Perhaps the most striking proof of his mystical reach is how vividly he sings of distant Kerala shrines —

Aranmula Parthasarathy Temple, Thiruvananthapuram Padmanabhaswamy Temple, and many more. Tradition notes his hymns on these temples with remarkable local flavor. 

How did one who never moved describe riverbanks, groves, temple moods, and local sacred atmospheres?

Because the Lord brought the temples to him.

The Real Miracle

The miracle is not that he stayed in one place.

The miracle is that stillness became pilgrimage.

Others walked to temples.

Nammāḻvār allowed the temples to arise in consciousness.

His pasurams prove that:

physical travel reaches stone sanctums

mystical vision reaches the living deity

devotion erases geography

The tamarind hollow became:

Srirangam

Tirumala

Dwaraka

Badri

Vaikuntha itself

all at once.

Discover

 https://www.facebook.com/share/v/1AV9cmU915/

Beautiful vigraha sambrani effect for three days amazing. So beautiful shayana kolo perumal vigraha.

Monday, April 6, 2026

Āṇḍāḷ: The Divine Exception

When Bhagavan Made One Exception to Change the Rule

Temple kainkaryam, lineage, recitation, and outer ritual structures have often flowed through male custodians.

That was the visible order.

But Bhagavan, who always protects the essence beyond the form, introduced one luminous exception—Āṇḍāḷ.

And that exception changed everything.

She was not merely a woman saint among male Āḻvārs.

She was Bhagavan’s theological statement that while tradition may preserve form, grace chooses its own vessel.

This is why Āṇḍāḷ does not feel like an interruption.

She feels like fulfillment.

Why Exceptions Matter in the Divine World

Human systems often work through rules.

The divine works through revelatory exceptions.

An exception is how Bhagavan reminds the world that He is never imprisoned by the very structures created to worship Him.

Through Periyāḻvār, He showed the tenderness of motherly devotion.

Through Āṇḍāḷ, He showed that this tenderness could flower into the feminine absolute of surrender.

Her very presence says:

The rule may preserve the temple.

The exception preserves the soul.

And often it is the exception that reveals the heart of the rule.

The Exception Was Prepared by Periyāḻvār

What makes this so beautiful is that the exception did not arise in isolation.

It was prepared.

Periyāḻvār’s world was already woven from:

nīrāṭṭam

pūccūṭṭal

garlands

tulasi gardens

Yaśodā’s voice

Krishna’s childhood sweetness

domestic sanctity

From such a world, Āṇḍāḷ could naturally emerge.

So the exception is not rebellion.

It is ripened continuity.

A father who adorned the Lord with flowers became worthy to raise the daughter who would become the garland herself.

The Female Voice Became Irreplaceable

Once Āṇḍāḷ entered the canon, Tamil bhakti could never again be called complete without the feminine voice.

Her Tiruppāvai became the prayer of communities.

Her Nācciyār Tirumoḻi became the cry of longing.

Her garland became accepted by the Lord.

Her bridal mysticism became the bridge between poetry and surrender.

So yes—she is the exception.

But she is also the proof that the exception can become central tradition.

What begins as one divine allowance becomes the heart of an entire month of Mārgaḻi worship.

That is the power of Bhagavan’s choices.

The Spiritual Lesson: Grace Does Not Follow Statistics

Bhagavan never works by numbers.

He does not ask whether there are many or few.

Sometimes one exception is enough to illumine centuries.

One Prahlāda among many asuras.

One Sabari in the forest.

One Āṇḍāḷ among the Āḻvārs.

The number is irrelevant.

The depth is everything.

And so the so-called exception becomes the clearest window into divine intention.

The Exception That Became the Garland of Tradition

So yes—Āṇḍāḷ is the exception.

But she is the kind of exception only Bhagavan can create: one that does not break tradition, but reveals its hidden fullness.

The male custodians preserved the lamp.

Āṇḍāḷ became the fragrance around the flame.

The lineage preserved worship.

She transformed worship into longing.

The temple preserved the garland.

She became the one who first wore it in love.

And from that one divine exception, generations learned that grace chooses the heart, not the category.

This line of thought is incredible.

Withdraw.

 The tongue may move before wisdom settles, but the noble heart is never ashamed to call its words back.

To withdraw a mistaken word is itself a sacred act of cleansing.

Even saints often refine their own expressions. What matters is not never missing the mark, but returning to truth the moment it becomes visible.

This reminds me of a subtle bhakti lesson:

just as we remove a faded flower from the Lord’s garland and replace it with a fresher one, we may also remove a harsh thought from our speech and replace it with compassion.

A withdrawn word can become the beginning of a wiser one.