Saturday, December 6, 2025

Silent mind.

 A little girl once asked the sage,

“Master, tell me, if you will—

How does one silence the restless mind?

How does it learn to be still?”


Patanjali smiled like dawn unfolding,

Soft as moonlight on a hill.

He asked her, “Child, how do you stop

Your trembling hand’s small thrill?”


She shook her hand and then released it,

Letting quiet gently fill.

“By not shaking it,” she whispered—

Innocence revealing skill.


“Just so,” the ancient sage replied,

“The mind is shaken by your will.

You follow thoughts like scattered birds,

And wonder why they will not still.”


“Let thoughts arise, let thoughts subside—

Do not chase each passing drill.

The lake reflects the moon again

When waters cease to ripple and spill.”


“Silence is not something made,

Nor forged by effort, force, or skill.

It blooms when you stop stirring it—

A lotus on a windless rill.”


“So stay,” he said, “as the quiet seer,

Not the storm you try to kill.

Calmness is your native home—

Return, and let the heart refill.”


The girl bowed low before the sage,

Her eyes serene, her breath now still.

For she had learned the secret truth:

The mind is silent when you are still.



The Sage’s Answer to the Simplest and Deepest Question

There is a story often whispered in the yogic tradition—soft, luminous, and simple. It is about Maharishi Patanjali, the great compiler of the Yoga Sutras, and a little girl whose heart carried the same question that troubles even the greatest seekers:

“How does one silence the mind?”

She asked it with all the clarity that only a child can carry. No philosophy, no heavy theory—just a direct question from the center of innocence. Patanjali looked at her, and a smile slowly spread across his face, the kind of smile that holds both compassion and knowing.

Instead of answering, he asked her:

“Child, how do you stop your hand from trembling?”

The girl lifted her little hand, shook it playfully, and then stopped.

She looked up and said, almost surprised by her own simplicity:

“By not shaking it.”

Patanjali nodded. In her answer was the essence of yoga.

The Mind Shakes Because We Shake It

He told her, with a voice as calm as still water:

“Just as the hand trembles only when you move it,

the mind becomes restless only when you participate in its movements.”

Thoughts arise.

Desires pull.

Emotions swirl.

And we follow every one of them, as though each thought were a command, each fear a truth, each desire an instruction.

Patanjali explained:

“The mind is not noisy by nature.

It is noisy because you keep stirring it.”

He pointed to a pot of clear water beside him.

“See this water?

When it is shaken, the moon’s reflection breaks into a thousand pieces.

When it is still, the moon reveals itself effortlessly.”

The girl leaned over and saw the truth of his words for herself.

The moon was there—not something to be created, only something to be revealed.

Silence Is Not Created — It Is Allowed

Patanjali then uttered one of the gentlest teachings ever given:

“Silence is not something you manufacture.

It appears when you stop disturbing it.”

This is the heart of yoga.

The mind need not be conquered, suppressed, or fought.

It only needs to be left alone for a moment, allowed to settle like dust in a sunbeam.

He told her:

“Do not chase every thought.

Do not argue with every emotion.

Do not follow every desire.

Let them arise and let them pass.

You remain the seer.”

In the Yoga Sutras, this is expressed as:

“Drashtuh svarupe avasthanam

— The seer rests in its own nature.”

The little girl did not know Sanskrit, but she knew truth when she heard it. Her eyes widened with a soft understanding—the kind that does not come from the mind, but from the heart.

Stillness Is Our Nature

Patanjali concluded:

“Calmness is your true nature.

Noise is the movement you add.

Return to your nature.”

In those few lines lies the entire science of inner peace—the whole architecture of the yogic path. The girl bowed, touching her small hands to the earth, and went away with a lightness in her step, carrying a wisdom that even adults struggle to grasp.

For in that brief interaction, Patanjali had shown her—and us—something profound:

**The mind becomes silent not by force,

but by ceasing to disturb it.**

Silence is not a destination.

It is home.


Sacred space.

 In every traditional Indian home, the temple is the quiet flame around which life arranges itself. It is the place where we begin our mornings, return after every joy or sorrow, and remind ourselves of the divine presence that walks with us. To keep this sacred corner pure and radiant is not merely a ritual—it is a way of honouring the unseen grace that protects and nourishes the family. This article gathers the essential rules and gentle customs followed across generations to maintain a sanctified home temple.

Rules for a Home Temple: Creating a Sacred Space.

A home temple is more than a corner for worship—it is the quiet centre of a family’s spiritual life, a place where the mind naturally softens, thoughts become gentle, and the heart remembers what truly matters. Our ancients called it the gṛha-devatā-sthāna, the residence of grace within the home. The following essential guidelines help preserve the sanctity, purity, and divine ambience of this sacred space.

1. Choosing the Right Location

The scriptures speak of the north-east, the Īśānya direction, as the most auspicious for a home shrine. If this is not possible, the east or north-facing directions are equally harmonious.

The devotee ideally faces east or north while worshipping.

Avoid placing the temple beneath a staircase, against a bathroom wall, or directly on bedroom floors.

The space should be calm, clean, and naturally lit.

A temple placed with such care becomes a zone of positive vibration, offering quiet strength to everyone at home.

2. Keeping the Space Pure and Sattvic

Purity (śauca) is the foundation of worship.

Keep the area uncluttered and serene.

No footwear, no leather, and no distracting objects around the altar.

Wipe the space daily; cleanse it thoroughly once a week.

Avoid storing unrelated items like keys, medicines, or papers in the shrine.

A pure space invites a pure mind—this is the essence of the home temple.

3. Guidelines for Idols and Pictures

Idols are not mere art pieces; they are symbolic vessels through which devotion flows.

Ensure idols are whole and undamaged. Anything chipped, cracked, or broken should be respectfully immersed in water or placed beneath a sacred tree.

Do not overcrowd the altar. Keep only as many idols as you can lovingly attend to.

Idols should face east or west, never directly south.

Keep saumya (peaceful) forms of deities at home unless you are trained in the worship of Ugra or tantric forms.

Each idol should be placed at a respectful height—never below waist level.

4. Caring for the Deities

A simple, sincere daily routine is enough to nourish the divine presence.

Offer a lamp, a basin of fresh water, and a flower or tulasi.

Chant one small mantra or a few verses from the Gita, Vishnu Sahasranama, or any stotram dear to you.

Consecrated (prāṇa-pratiṣṭhita) idols require daily worship; if not feasible, choose unconsacrated (śilpa) idols which are easier to maintain.

What matters is not elaborate ritual but consistency and love.

5. Lamp and Fire Practices

Lighting the lamp is lighting the inner awareness.

Use ghee or sesame oil for purity and calmness.

Keep the lamp base clean and the wick pure.

Do not place lamps near curtains or enclosed shelves.

Never blow out the lamp—snuff it gently with a flower or fingers.

The lamp is the symbol of knowledge; treat it with reverence.

6. Offerings: Water, Flowers, and Naivedya

Keep only fresh water for the Lord; change it daily.

Remove wilted flowers the same day.

Naivedya should never be tasted or smelled before offering—it is the Lord’s portion first.

These simple rules cultivate humility and devotion.

7. Atmosphere of the Shrine

Let the temple be a place of quietness.

Chanting, bells, and prayers should be offered with a gentle, respectful tone.

Avoid loud conversations, arguments, or distractions around the shrine.

A peaceful home temple blesses the entire household with an unseen grace.

8. Personal Conduct During Worship

Bathe or at least wash hands and feet before entering the altar area.

Wear clean clothes.

Approach with a still mind and a grateful heart.

When the devotee is pure, the space naturally becomes divine.

9. Care of Sacred Texts

If scriptures are kept in the shrine:

Place them on a clean shelf or cloth; never directly on the floor.

Cover them with clean cloth when not used.

Treat them with the same reverence as the deities.

Sacred words too are sacred presence.

10. A Short Daily Worship Routine (5 Minutes)

Even the busiest day can offer this simple sequence:

1. Light the lamp.

2. Offer water.

3. Place a flower or tulasi.

4. Chant your chosen mantra (e.g., Om Namo Nārāyaṇāya, Om Namah Śivāya, Rama Rama, or Krishna Sharanam).

5. Sit silently for a minute, allowing the mind to soften.

Just five minutes of sincere presence can transform the vibration of the entire home.

11. What Not to Keep in the Shrine

Tradition clearly advises against:

Broken idols or torn pictures.

Mixing too many traditions in a small space (e.g., fierce forms with peaceful Vaishnava deities).

Keeping idols below waist level.

Placing ancestor photos with the deities—give ancestors their own separate shrine.

These guidelines preserve the dignity and sacredness of the worship area.

The Temple as a Living Presence

A home temple is not merely a structure of wood and brass—it is a living presence. The more gently we care for it, the more subtly it cares for us. In homes where a lamp is lit daily, where a soft prayer echoes every morning, where the space is kept pure, the atmosphere becomes naturally uplifting. Calmness grows, clarity strengthens, and every family member enjoys the quiet blessings that flow from such a sacred corner.

May your home temple continue to radiate peace, devotion, and divine grace to all who enter your home—and your heart.

“दीपो ज्योतिः परंब्रह्म दीपो ज्योतिर्जनार्दनः।

दीपो हरतु मे पापं दीपज्योतिर्नमोऽस्तु ते॥”

“The lamp is the light of the Supreme Brahman; the lamp is the light of Lord Janardana.

May this sacred light remove my inner impurities. Salutations to the divine flame.”

Virat p

King Pareekshit knows he has just a week to live, and he does not want to waste the time available to him. So he asks sage Suka how he should spend the little time left for him in the world. How should he meditate? And what should his focus be? Suka says dhyana can be on the sthula or sukshma forms of Godhead. Focusing on the sukshma form is difficult, explained Valayapet Ramachariar in a discourse. So the best way to begin dhyana is to concentrate on the Supreme form of Lord Krishna, that is on Vishnu as Virat Purusha. This is the form in which the entire Universe is held in His body. This is the Viswarupa form which Arjuna was privileged to see on the battlefield. Suka describes parts of the Lord’s body, and talks about how everything that we see as large is a mere part of His body. He begins by talking of the netherworld. Patala constitutes the bottom of the feet of Virat Purusha, rasaatala his heels, mahaatala His ankle, and talaatala His shanks. His knees are Sutala, the thighs are vitala and atala. His hips are maheetala. The sky is His navel.

 Svarga loka is His chest, mahar loka His neck. Satya loka is His head. Indra and the other devas are His arms, the ten directions His ears, the Ashvini kumaras are His ears, the rivers are His veins. Suka says dhyana should begin with concentrating on such a gigantic form of Vishnu. When everything in the Universe is found as a mere part in His body, one gets an idea of His all encompassing nature. The fact that He is the Supreme Brahman gets reinforced in our minds. He is the antaryami of the entire world. In other words, He is the soul, and the Universe the body. Dhyana of course requires control of the senses, for without control of the indriyas, the mind will lose its ability to do dhyana with unwavering attention.

Friday, December 5, 2025

Timeless.

 “When the heart stays true and the effort unwavering, the world around you begins to shift in quiet harmony—

paths open, moments align, and unseen hands gently lift you toward the destiny your spirit has chosen.”

When you wish good things for others good comes back to you multifold.

Kattumannar Koil Nāthanār Utsavam – A Festival of Grace, Memory, and Divine Kinship

Kattumannar Koil, known traditionally as Veeranarayanapuram, is a sacred site where devotion is not merely practiced—it is inherited. Here, the majestic Nātha Nārāyaṇa Perumal reigns as the compassionate guardian of the land, and it is here that the luminous lineage of Nathamuni, Yamunacharya, and the early Acharyas blossomed. Every year, the Utsavam of the Lord turns this historic temple into a living stream of tradition, music, and profound spiritual remembrance.

The Temple and Its Timelessness

Kattumannar Koil holds a unique place in the Vaishnava world. This is the land where:

Sri Nathamuni revived the Nalayira Divya Prabandham through sheer tapas and devotion.

The sacred tunes of the Divya Prabandham were once again brought into the living stream of worship

The bond between the Lord and His devotees is felt not just in rituals, but in the very air that flows through the mandapams.

Each utsavam here carries echoes of this heritage. It is not just a festival—it is a reminder of how the Lord Himself guides the preservation of knowledge and devotion.

The Utsavam: A Journey of Grace

1. Dwajarohanam – The Invitation to the Divine

The utsavam begins with the hoisting of the Garuda flag, symbolizing that the doors of heaven and earth are now connected. Devotees believe that when the flag is raised, Perumal’s glance extends outward, blessing every corner of the region.

2. Daily Processions – The Lord Among His People

For the following days, Perumal emerges in various vahanams, each revealing a different facet of His glory:

Garuda Sevai – the most anticipated day, when the Lord seated on Garuda seems almost eager to meet His devotees.

Hanumantha Vahanam – signifying steadfast courage.

Yanai and Kudhirai Vahanam – symbols of royal majesty.

Sesha Vahanam – echoing Vaikuntha itself.

Pushpa Pallakku – where Perumal appears like a fresh monsoon cloud resting on a bed of flowers.

The streets of Kattumannar Koil transform into a river of chanting, especially “Namo Nārāyaṇāya” and verses from the Divya Prabandham, the very hymns Nathamuni restored.

The Presence of the Acharyas

A distinct and soul-lifting feature of this utsavam is the remembrance of Sri Nathamuni, Yamunacharya (Ālavandār), and the early Acharyas whose lives were intertwined with this sacred town.

On certain days, Perumal graciously visits the Avatara Sthalam of Nathamuni. The feeling is profoundly intimate—almost like a father visiting the home of His beloved son.

This symbolic meeting reminds devotees:

That knowledge is never separate from grace.

That the guru is the bridge to the divine.

That devotion, once sung, never disappears—it waits patiently to be rediscovered, as Nathamuni rediscovered the Prabandham.

Dolotsavam – The Swing of Compassion

One of the most delicate ceremonies is the Dolotsavam, where Perumal gently sways on an ornately decorated swing. The soft movement symbolizes the rhythm of divine compassion—constant, gentle, and deeply reassuring.

Many devotees offer personal prayers during this time, for it is believed that as the Lord sways, He smoothens the troubles of the sincere heart.

The Grand Finale: Teerthavāri

The utsavam concludes with the Teerthavāri at the temple tank. Perumal, accompanied by the Acharyas’ utsava murtis, blesses the waters before returning to the sanctum. The act symbolizes:

The purification of the environment

Renewal of community bonds

And the cleansing of the devotee’s inner world

As the Lord re-enters the garbhagriha, the town feels a beautiful silence—an afterglow of divine presence.

The Essence of the Utsavam

The Kattumannar Koil Natha Nārāyaṇa Utsavam is not merely a celebration—it is a living reminder that devotion is a continuum.

It teaches:

That tradition is preserved not by memory alone but by love.

That the Lord moves among His devotees just as freely today as He did centuries ago.

That every sincere chant—whether sung by Nathamuni, by a temple priest, or by a solitary devotee at home—becomes part of the same sacred stream.

This utsavam is, in many ways, a yearly renewal of a divine promise:

“Where My devotees gather, remembering My name, I shall be there—fully, tenderly, eternally.”

Thursday, December 4, 2025

Tailo dhara.

Sanātana Dharma and Paramparā: The Eternal Flow of Wisdom

Sanātana Dharma—often rendered as the “Eternal Way”—is not merely a religion or a set of commandments. It is a living, breathing stream of wisdom that has flowed across millennia, nourished by countless sages, seers, teachers, and householders who lived its ideals. At the heart of this unbroken continuity lies Paramparā, the sacred lineage of knowledge transmission that keeps the eternal truths alive from one generation to the next.

The relationship between Sanātana Dharma and Paramparā is inseparable. If Sanātana Dharma is the vast, timeless ocean, Paramparā is the river that brings its waters to us—pure, life-giving, and constantly renewing.

Sanātana Dharma: That Which Never Fades

The term Sanātana means eternal, ageless, and perpetual. Dharma means the underlying law, the cosmic order that sustains life—ethics, duty, truth, harmony, and the principles that guide right living.

The Mahābhārata beautifully describes this living dharma:

“Dhāraṇāt dharma ityāhuḥ”

—“That which upholds all existence is called Dharma.”

Sanātana Dharma is not a doctrine that began at a particular time or place. It is the recognition of principles that have always existed—truth, compassion, austerity, selflessness, purity of heart, and the pursuit of the Ultimate Reality.

The Rig Veda reminds us of its vastness:

“Ekam sat viprā bahudhā vadanti”

—“Truth is one; the wise express it in many ways.” (Rig Veda 1.164.46)

This foundational understanding allows Sanātana Dharma to embrace diversity while upholding unity. It invites inquiry, debate, contemplation, and personal transformation. It does not demand belief—it encourages realization.

Paramparā: The Golden Chain of Transmission

The profound principles of Sanātana Dharma were never meant to remain abstract. They were meant to be lived. And to be lived, they had to be transmitted correctly—from master to disciple, from parents to children, from community to community. This sacred flow is Paramparā.

The Bhagavad Gītā declares the timelessness of this transmission:

“Evaṁ paramparā-prāptam imaṁ rājarṣayo viduḥ”

—“This wisdom was received through the lineage of teachers, and the royal sages understood it so.” (Gītā 4.2)

Paramparā is not simply teaching; it is the careful passing of inner experience, dharma, and values in a manner that transforms the listener. It embodies:

Guru–Śiṣya tradition

Veda adhyayana and chanting lineages

Family traditions of worship and conduct

Regional and cultural practices woven around dharma

Commentarial traditions and philosophical schools

Each lineage is a lamp lit from another lamp, ensuring that the flame never dies.

Why Paramparā Matters

The ancient seers recognized that truth, though infinite, requires guidance to be realized. Books can inform, but a living teacher transforms.

The Chāndogya Upanishad emphasizes the vital need for a teacher:

“Ācāryavān puruṣo veda”

—“Only one who has a teacher truly knows.” (Chāndogya Upanishad 6.14.2)

A genuine lineage preserves:

Authentic interpretation of scriptures

Precision of Vedic chanting

Purity of rituals

Ethical conduct

Spiritual discipline

The spirit rather than merely the words

Paramparā also prevents distortion. It ensures the wisdom remains alive, not fossilized.

The Living Flow of Dharma through Generations

Sanātana Dharma has survived not just centuries but aeons because it adapts without losing its core. This is possible only because Paramparā is flexible enough to interpret Dharma according to time, place, and circumstance (Deśa–Kāla–Pātra).

The Manusmṛti acknowledges this adaptive nature:

“Dharmo hi teṣām adhyātmaṁ yaḥ pūrvaiḥ sanātanaḥ kṛtaḥ”

—“The Dharma followed by the ancients is indeed the eternal Dharma.” (Manusmṛti 2.6)

The wisdom is ancient, but its expression is dynamic.

Thus, the same Veda that was taught in forest hermitages thousands of years ago continues to shape modern households today—in the form of values, rituals, prayers, and ethical choices.

The Role of the Individual: Becoming a Link in the Chain

Every seeker becomes both a receiver and a giver. The Gītā reminds us:

“Saṁskārān amṛtatvaṁ āpnuyāt”

—“Through noble impressions one attains immortality.”

The impressions we absorb from tradition, and the impressions we pass on, shape the future of Sanātana Dharma.

You do not need to be a scholar or a priest to contribute. Living a life of sincerity, truth, and compassion itself becomes a continuation of Paramparā. Teaching children to chant a simple prayer, lighting a lamp with devotion, writing and sharing insights are all profound acts of preservation.

Sanātana Dharma and Paramparā in Our Times

In an era where life moves quickly and distractions are many, Paramparā becomes more precious than ever. It reminds us that:

We belong to something timeless

Wisdom is richer when shared

Knowledge becomes sacred when lived

The past is not a burden but a guide

Our actions are part of a larger cosmic harmony

Sanātana Dharma does not ask us to reject the modern world. It asks us to live with depth, awareness, and reverence while being part of it.

The Eternal River Never Stops Flowing

Sanātana Dharma is not a relic frozen in history. It is the pulse of existence itself—eternal, inexhaustible. Paramparā is its lifeline, carrying its spirit across ages, shaping civilizations, and touching countless hearts.

As long as even one person reflects, practices, and shares this wisdom with sincerity, the river of Dharma continues to flow.

Or as the Vedas say:

“Satyam eva jayate”

—“Truth alone triumphs.”

When truth is shared, lived, and passed on, it becomes timeless.

That is the beauty of Sanātana Dharma and the blessing of Paramparā.

Tuesday, December 2, 2025

Solitude is a laboratory for discovering consciousness

 “Alexander David Neel”. She was a French-Belgian explorer, writer, Buddhist scholar, and the first Western woman known to have entered the forbidden city of Lhasa, Tibet, in the early 20th century.

 Alexandra David-Néel?

Born: 1868 in Saint-Mandé, France

Died: 1969 at age 100

Background: Opera singer, anarchist activist, Buddhist practitioner, linguist, and prolific travel writer

Spoke Tibetan fluently and studied Buddhist philosophy deeply.

She is best remembered for her extraordinary travels across Asia, especially her journey to Tibet.

Her Tibet Expedition

In the early 20th century, Tibet—especially its capital, Lhasa—was closed to foreigners. Entering without permission was dangerous and illegal for non-Tibetans.

The Journey (1911–1924)

David-Néel spent years wandering across Sikkim, India, Nepal, Bhutan, China, and Tibet, studying Buddhist practices.

She lived for a time in a Himalayan cave at 4,000 meters, practicing meditation and learning Tibetan customs.

She traveled with her adopted son and companion, the young Sikkimese lama Aphur Yongden.

Disguised Entry into Lhasa (1924)

She entered Lhasa in January 1924 disguised as a Tibetan pilgrim, smudging her skin with soot and wearing yak-wool clothing.

They walked about 2,000 km through winter snows.

They successfully reached the Potala Palace, staying several weeks before slipping back out toward India.

This made her one of the first Westerners — and the first Western woman — to reach Lhasa.

Alexandra David-Néel wrote more than 30 books, including:

“My Journey to Lhasa” (1927)

“Magic and Mystery in Tibet”

Her works popularized Tibetan Buddhism and culture in the West and greatly influenced spiritual seekers, explorers, and scholars.

My Journey to Lhasa is Alexandra David-Néel’s most famous travel narrative, published in 1927. It recounts her extraordinary, perilous journey—largely on foot—into the forbidden city of Lhasa, Tibet, in 1924, after years of wandering across the Himalayas.

My Journey to Lhasa 

1. Background of the Journey

Tibet was closed to foreigners at the time; entering Lhasa without official permission was illegal and dangerous.

Alexandra David-Néel had already spent more than a decade in Asia studying Buddhist philosophy, learning Tibetan, and mastering local customs.

Her intention:

 To reach Lhasa not as an intruder, but as a pilgrim deeply immersed in Tibetan culture.

 2. The Trek to Lhasa

The book describes:

Harsh Conditions

Freezing winter temperatures

Remote mountain passes

Scarcity of food

Encounters with wolves, snowstorms, and unfriendly patrols

Disguise

David-Néel traveled disguised as:

A Tibetan beggar woman / pilgrim

She darkened her skin with soot and yak butter

She wore rough Tibetan clothing

She spoke fluent Tibetan, helping her pass unnoticed

This was essential because foreigners were routinely expelled or imprisoned.

Companion: Yongden

She was accompanied by:

Lama Aphur Yongden, her adopted son and closest traveling companion

Skilled in local customs and spiritual practices

Protected and guided her throughout the journey

Their relationship is central to the story.

 3. Arrival in Lhasa (1924)

After months of travel covering roughly 2,000 kilometers, often sleeping in caves or makeshift shelters, they reached:

The Jokhang Temple (Tibet’s spiritual heart)

The Potala Palace, seat of the Dalai Lamas

They stayed in Lhasa for several weeks without being discovered as foreigners.

Her account of:

City life

Monastic rituals

Markets

Pilgrims

is vivid and respectful, showing her deep admiration for Tibetan culture.

4. Themes in the Book

Spiritual Discipline

She describes meditation techniques, ascetic practices, and encounters with hermits and yogis.

Cultural Observation

Rich details on Tibetan daily life, religious practice, and philosophy.

Adventure and Survival

Crossing icy passes, hiding from guards, and enduring starvation are told with calm humor and remarkable resilience.

 5. Why the Book Matters

One of the earliest and most detailed Western accounts of Tibet before modernization.

Demonstrates her respect and sympathy for Tibetan culture.

Showcases a pioneering woman defying gender and political barriers.

Blends anthropology, travel writing, and spiritual exploration.

Key Ideas & Paraphrased Quotes from My Journey to Lhasa

1. On determination

She writes that the idea of reaching Lhasa had become an inner calling—something she felt compelled to attempt no matter the cost.

2. On travel hardship

She describes moments when exhaustion and hunger nearly overwhelmed her, yet she and Yongden pushed forward because “turning back was impossible.”

3. On disguise

She remarks that, once she fully adopted the appearance and manner of a Tibetan pilgrim, she felt herself “becoming part of the landscape, no longer a foreigner.”

4. On Tibetan hospitality

She reflects that poor villagers who had almost nothing still shared food and warmth generously, teaching her humility.

5. On reaching Lhasa,,

She conveys a quiet, profound feeling when she first saw the Potala rising above the city—an emotion deeper than triumph, more like entering a long-imagined dream.

6. On the spiritual atmosphere

She describes how certain rituals, chants, and monastic practices filled her with a sense of ancient wisdom and inner stillness.

Major Characters & Figures She Met

1. Lama Aphur Yongden (her adopted son & companion)

Role: Her closest traveling partner throughout the Himalayan journey and into Lhasa.

Importance: Interpreter, protector, expert in Tibetan customs, and a spiritual companion.

Presence in the book: Central figure in almost every chapter.

2. Hermits and Yogis (unnamed individuals)

Alexandra meets several ascetics living in caves or isolated huts.

They share meditation techniques, spiritual insights, and mystical stories.

Some demonstrate yogic heat practices (tummo), which impressed her deeply.

3. Tibetan Pilgrims

While crossing mountains, she spends time with groups of poor pilgrims.

They unknowingly “validate” her disguise by treating her as one of them.

She learns folk beliefs, songs, and pilgrimage rituals from them.

4. Village Hosts & Families

Many Tibetan villagers give her and Yongden food, shelter, and guidance.

Their kindness is a major theme of the book.

She often comments on their generosity despite poverty.

5. Border Guards & Patrols

She and Yongden repeatedly encounter suspicious officials or patrols.

These interactions are tense because discovery could lead to imprisonment or expulsion.

Quick thinking and perfect disguise allow them to pass unnoticed.

6. Lhasa Residents

Once inside Lhasa, she interacts with:

Shopkeepers

Monks at the Jokhang Temple

Pilgrims at the Barkhor

Ordinary people who never suspect she is foreign

These encounters give the book its vivid portrayal of daily life.

7. High Lamas & Religious Teachers (from earlier travels)

Though not met in Lhasa, she describes spiritual teachers from Sikkim, Tibet, and Nepal whose teachings prepared her for the journey.

Why Hermits and Yogis Matter in David-Néel’s Journey

For Alexandra, these encounters were not exotic curiosities—they were central to her spiritual training. She spent years seeking out yogis, meditators, ascetics, and wandering sages who lived in extreme solitude. These figures shaped both her worldview and the philosophical depth of My Journey to Lhasa.

 1. Hermits in Caves: Masters of Isolation

Throughout Tibet and Sikkim, she visited hermits who lived in caves, sometimes for decades.

Characteristics of these hermits

They practiced radical solitude

Survived on minimal food

Often slept on bare rock or yak skins

Used meditation to overcome physical discomfort

What she learned

She wrote (paraphrased) that isolation stripped away illusions, revealing the mind’s raw workings. One hermit emphasized that a cave is not an escape but a mirror.

Why it impressed her

David-Néel believed these hermits represented a living link to ancient Buddhist discipline—humans who devoted their entire lives to inner exploration.

 2. Yogis Practicing Tummo (Yogic Heat)

Some of her most striking encounters involved tummo, a practice where yogis generate heat through meditation.

What she witnessed

Yogis sitting half-naked in snow, melting it around them

Practitioners drying wet sheets on their shoulders in freezing wind

Breathing patterns that created measurable warmth

Her reaction

She approached these events from both a spiritual and scientific angle—fascinated by how mental training could affect the body so dramatically.

3. Wandering Ascetics and “Sky-Goers”

She met ascetic yogis who wandered freely through mountains, sometimes described as “sky-walkers” in Tibetan lore.

Traits

Avoided villages

Traveled with almost nothing: a staff, bowl, and blanket

Spoke cryptically or poetically

Claimed to live beyond conventional fear and desir

Their teachings to her

They stressed non-attachment—not as philosophy but as a lived reality.

One teaching she paraphrases: “He who owns nothing carries everything.”

4. Magicians, Mystics, and Practitioners of Rituals

While she was always skeptical of superstition, she encountered yogis who:

Performed healing rites

Used chanting to induce altered states

Claimed clairvoyance or precognition

Practiced “lung-gom,” a legendary long-distance trance walking technique

The “lung-gom” runner

One famous encounter involved a mysterious runner who seemed to move with supernatural speed and rhythmic trance. She observed the technique closely, noting:

A consistent breath pattern

A slight forward lean

A trance-like gaze

She interpreted it not as magic but as the result of extreme mental discipline.

5. The Hermit-Teachers Who Shaped Her Training

Before entering Tibet, Alexandra spent long periods learning from hermits in Sikkim and Tibet.

Teachings she received

Advanced meditation techniques

Visualization practices

Empty-mind discipline

The nature of illusion

Rituals and philosophical debates

Why they trusted her

She spoke Tibetan fluently, lived simply, and approached their teachings with humility rather than romanticism.

6. The Practical Role of Hermits and Yogis in Her Lhasa Expedition

Many hermits and yogis helped her not only spiritually, but materially:

They taught her how to:

Survive extreme cold

Move undetected

Blend in as a pilgrim

Read terrain and avoid patrols

Perform Tibetan rituals convincingly

Some even blessed her journey or gave her objects (amulets, rosaries) to help her maintain her disguise.

7. How These Encounters Influenced Her Philosophy

David-Néel came to believe:

The limits of the body are largely mental

Solitude is a laboratory for discovering consciousness

Tibetan yogic practices preserve ancient psychological techniques

Freedom requires mastery over one’s own mind

These lessons permeate My Journey to Lhasa, shaping her calmness, courage, and unconventional approach to danger.

There is actually some real convergence — and some tension — between what Alexandra David-Néel described from her encounters with Tibetan hermits and yogis, and what modern scientific research on Tummo (and related Tibetan yogic practices) supports.  a comparison, showing where her accounts align with current findings — and where skepticism or reinterpretation may apply.

What Her Descriptions That Modern Research Supports

• Inner-heat / Cold-resistance via Meditation & Breathwork

David-Néel recounts yogis generating heat in freezing Himalayan conditions — for instance, sitting scantily clad in snow or cold caves and still staying warm. 

Modern studies confirm that Tummo meditation can indeed raise body temperature. A landmark study published in 1982 found that experienced practitioners could increase skin temperature (fingers and toes) by up to ~8 °C during a meditative session. 

More recent research (for example a 2013 study) documented elevated core body temperature — not just peripheral warmth — among monastic Tummo meditators. 

The physiological mechanism appears to involve both somatic components (controlled breathing / “vase-breathing”) and neurocognitive components (meditative visualization, focused mental imagery) — echoing how David-Néel described the combination of breath, visualization, and mental discipline. 

Conclusion: On the claim that Tibetan yogis can generate internal heat and resist cold through meditation/breathwork — there is credible scientific evidence. What once seemed miraculous to when David-Néel wrote is now partially validated under controlled conditions.

What Remains Speculative or Unproven — Where Tradition and Science Diverge

• Visions of “Mystical Powers,” Levitation, Super-human Abilities

David-Néel describes more extraordinary phenomena: she reports meeting ascetics and “yogis” who — in her words — seemed to move like “balls bouncing,” run extremely fast, or even float/trance-walk over difficult terrain (as in the tradition called Lung-gom-pa). 

Modern research, however, does not support claims of levitation, supernatural speed, or paranormal ‘magical’ powers. Scholarly and scientific sources treat such accounts as anecdotal, unverified, or folkloric. 

Some skepticism arises even within Tibetan-Buddhist studies: the very existence of large numbers of “flying lamas” or lung-gom-pa runners is debated. 

Conclusion: While internal-heat and breath-control effects are physically measurable and scientifically reproducible to extent, dramatic claims — levitation, supernatural speed, magic — remain unproven and are generally regarded with skepticism.

What Modern Physiology and Neuroscience Adds — Insights That David-Néel Couldn’t Provide

Because David-Néel was a traveler and observer, her accounts lacked the ability to measure physiological changes. Modern science adds:

Objective temperature measurement: showing core temperature increase, not just subjective warmth. 

Neural correlates: EEG studies reveal changes in brainwave patterns (alpha, beta, gamma) during Tummo practice; increases in alpha power correlated with more significant temperature rises. 

Mechanistic hypotheses: Researchers propose that the heat comes from enhanced metabolic activity: oxygen consumption, mitochondrial activity, and thermogenesis via brown fat activation — all triggered by breathing and breath-retention patterns. 

Health / psychophysiological implications: Some suggest potential benefits: improved cold-resilience, possibly improved immune response, stress regulation, enhanced cognitive performance. 

In short: modern research treats Tummo not as “magic,” but as an advanced physiological feat — a blend of breath-control, mental focus, and body regulation.

What This Comparison Means for Understanding Tibetan Yogis — and David-Néel’s Legacy

David-Néel’s writings remain valuable ethnographic and experiential records, giving early Western readers a rare window into Himalayan ascetic life. What seemed mystical to many then has, in part, become scientifically plausible.

But not all of her claims are confirmed. The mystical/spiritual interpretations — levitation, trance-speed, magical “powers” — largely remain in the realm of anecdote and folklore.

Modern science reframes practices like Tummo as very sophisticated mind–body techniques. The “heat generation” is not supernatural, but a result of controlled breathing, metabolic regulation, and mental focus.

For students of mysticism or meditation — this may present an appealing bridge between tradition and modern physiology: these aren’t just spiritual legends, but human potentials potentially accessible through disciplined practice.






Monday, December 1, 2025

Legend.

 Legend, thy name will be remembered for the ones who believed Veda are the breath of ParaBrahm: 


He 19 year old is Devavrat Mahesh Rekhe, he chanted 25 lakhs of Pada of Shukla Yajurveda in its most complex formulae known as ‘Dandak Kram’, continuously for 50 days and without seeing the book. History has been created in Kashi, at the vallabharama saligram Sangveda vidyaalay, Kashi. 


This has happened second time in the history of many hundred years. This is what Tapasya is looks like, his father-grandfather all initiated and excelled in the tradition. Such men are born of pious mothers. 

https://www.facebook.com/share/v/173jkt8DwW/

Vedas and dharm shastras are the eternal


truth.

In Dandak-Krama, each pair is followed by a distinct pause or “daṇḍa” (a break).
This makes the recitation slower, more emphatic, and highly precise.

It is used when a reciter wants:
extra clarity in phonetics,
stronger training for memory,
to reinforce sandhi-rules,

ritual correctness before higher forms like Jatā or Ghana.
Krama-pāṭha becomes Dandak-krama by adding the pause (॥) after each krama pair.

1. MĀDHYANDINA ŚĀKHĀ – DANDAK-KRAMA EXAMPLE

Mantra used: Śukla Yajurveda – Mādhyandina Saṃhitā 1.1
“īśe tvā…” (the first mantra)

Saṃhitā-pāṭha

īśe tvā dhenūpate iva…

Pada-pāṭha

īśe । tvā । dhenūpate । iva । …

Krama-pāṭha

īśe-tvā
tvā-dhenūpate
dhenūpate-iva

Dandak-Krama

(Each pair ends with a daṇḍa pause)
īśe-tvā ॥
tvā-dhenūpate ॥
dhenūpate-iva ॥

The straight “break” after each krama pair is what makes it daṇḍa-krama.


2. KĀṆVA ŚĀKHĀ – DANDAK-KRAMA EXAMPLE

Mantra used: Śukla Yajurveda – Kāṇva Saṃhitā 1.1
“sanno devīr abhiṣṭaye…”

Saṃhitā-pāṭha
sanno devīr abhiṣṭaye…
Pada-pāṭha
saḥ । naḥ । devīḥ । abhiṣṭaye । …
Krama-pāṭha
saḥ-naḥ
naḥ-devīḥ
devīḥ-abhiṣṭaye

Dandak-Krama (Kāṇva)
saḥ-naḥ ॥
naḥ-devīḥ ॥
devīḥ-abhiṣṭaye ॥

The structure is identical to ordinary Krama, but the pause after each pair differentiates Dandak-krama.

3. A MORE COMPLETE EXAMPLE (Mādhyandina Śākhā)

Mantra: Vāj. Saṃhitā 22.1 – “agniṃ īḷe purohitam”
(This is very commonly taught.)

Saṃhitā
agniṃ īḷe purohitam
Pada
agniṃ । īḷe । purohitam ।
Krama
agniṃ-īḷe
īḷe-purohitam

Dandak-Krama

agniṃ-īḷe ॥

īḷe-purohitam ॥

4. A MORE COMPLETE EXAMPLE (Kāṇva Śākhā)

Mantra: Kāṇva Saṃhitā 2.1 – “agnirmūrdhā divaḥ”

Saṃhitā

agnir mūrdhā divaḥ

Pada

agniḥ । mūrdhā । divaḥ ।

Krama

agniḥ-mūrdhā
mūrdhā-divaḥ

Dandak-Krama

agniḥ-mūrdhā ॥

mūrdhā-divaḥ ॥

Key Features of Dandak-Krama (Summarized)
Same word pairs as Krama-pāṭha

A clear pause after each pair
Used traditionally in:
Śukla Yajurveda Mādhyandina
Śukla Yajurveda Kāṇva
Helps reinforce:
Sandhi rules
Pronunciation precision
Memory strengthening
Preparation for Jatā and Ghanapāṭha