Sunday, May 10, 2026

Another p Padi.

Among all the boons asked of the Lord, the most moving are not those seeking heaven, powers, liberation, or wealth — but those asking only for proximity. Not even proximity as kings or sages, but as dust, stone, bird, servant, river, lamp, or threshold.

The devotees of Bharata chose not merely salvation, but a relationship.

And yes — the choice of Kulasekhara Alvar is among the most tender of them all.

He did not ask: “Make me king.” “Grant me moksha.” “Give me Vaikuntha.”

He asked:

“Let me become the step at Your temple …”

The famous Padiyāy Kidandhu yearning.

Not even inside the sanctum.

Not even among the privileged.

Just the threshold.

Why?

Because everyone who enters the temple touches the step.

The tired.

The joyous.

The weeping.

The sinner.

The saint.

The child running in excitement.

The old woman leaning on a stick.

The scholar chanting Vedas.

The flower seller carrying garlands.

The padi receives all.

And above all — the Lord’s devotees step upon it.

Kulasekhara perhaps understood a secret: to serve the devotees is greater than standing near the Lord in pride.

There is also another exquisite layer.

A threshold belongs neither fully to the outside world nor to the sanctum. It is the meeting point between samsara and divinity. The padi witnesses transformation. One enters burdened and emerges lighter.

So the Alvar asks to become eternal witness to grace itself.

How extraordinary that a king desired to become a stone.

The Many Choices of the Devotees

The bhakti tradition is filled with such astonishing choices. Each reveals the inner nature of the devotee.

Hanuman — The Choice of Eternal Service

Hanuman could have attained liberation immediately after the events of the Ramayana.

Instead he chose:

“May I remain wherever the name of Rama is sung.”

He chose continuity over completion.

Others sought freedom from rebirth.

Hanuman sought repeated opportunities to hear “Rama.”

Thus he becomes Chiranjeevi — eternally living.

The outcome?

Hanuman becomes present everywhere devotion arises. In Indian imagination, no sincere chanting of Rama Nama is complete without Hanuman listening invisibly nearby.

He becomes the bridge between ages.

Andal — The Choice of Divine Marriage

Andal refused earthly marriage altogether.

Her choice was radical: “I belong only to Him.”

Not metaphorically. Literally.

She wore the garlands before they were offered to the Lord, imagining herself already united with Him. What would have been considered transgression became sanctified by devotion itself.

Her outcome was not symbolic sainthood but mystical union.

Tradition says she merged into Srirangam Ranganathaswamy Temple itself.

She did not wish merely to worship the Lord. She wished to belong to Him.

Thus Andal represents the soul that cannot endure separation.

Tondaradippodi Alvar — The Choice of Dust

His very name means:

“Dust beneath the feet of devotees.”

Not even dust beneath the Lord’s feet.

Dust beneath the devotees’ feet.

What humility!

He dissolves individuality itself.

Outcome?

His songs radiate extraordinary sweetness because ego has vanished almost completely. In bhakti, the smaller one becomes, the greater the fragrance.

Tiruppaan Alvar — The Choice of Vision

Tiruppaan Alvar did not ask for position, role, or even liberation.

He only wished to behold the Lord.

And once he saw Srirangam Ranganathaswamy Temple Ranganatha fully, he declared:

“These eyes that have seen Him shall see nothing else.”

The outcome?

Vision itself became liberation.

For some devotees, seeing once is enough for eternity.

Mirabai — The Choice of Love Above Society

Meera chose Krishna over kingdom, convention, and even personal safety.

Her choice carried suffering: ridicule, opposition, exile.

But the outcome was immortality through song.

A queen disappeared; a voice remained.

Today millions sing her bhajans without caring which royal house she belonged to.

Love outlived history.

Nammalvar — The Choice of Silence and Inner Absorption

As a child, Nammalvar is said to have remained under the tamarind tree in silence, uninterested in ordinary worldly engagement.

He chose inward immersion.

The outcome?

An outpouring of mystical poetry so profound that later acharyas called his works the Tamil Veda.

Silence became revelation.

Bharata — The Choice of Absence

Bharata’s choice is subtle and heartbreaking.

He could have ruled Ayodhya comfortably.

Instead he chose: “I shall govern only in Rama’s name.”

He placed Rama’s sandals upon the throne.

The outcome?

He became perhaps the purest example of self-effacing love in the Ramayana. Bharata teaches that true devotion does not seek visibility.

He ruled — yet refused ownership.

Lakshmana — The Choice of Wakefulness

Lakshmana chose sleepless vigilance for Rama and Sita during exile.

His devotion expresses itself not in poetry but in alertness.

The outcome?

He becomes the archetype of tireless seva.

Some devotees worship by singing.

Some by protecting.

Sabari — The Choice of Waiting

Sabari’s path was astonishingly simple: wait for Rama.

Years passed.

Her guru had died.

Yet she continued preparing every day.

Outcome?

The Lord Himself came to her hut.

Bhakti repeatedly teaches: those who wait with love are never abandoned.

The Deep Secret Behind These Choices

Most devotees did not seek God as philosophy.

They sought a place in His world.

A role.

A relationship.

A way to remain connected.

One becomes a servant.

One becomes a bride.

One becomes a friend.

One becomes a singer.

One becomes dust.

One becomes a threshold.

And perhaps this is why these stories move us so deeply.

Because they reveal that before the Infinite, the ego naturally melts into poetry.

The Mystery of Becoming Small

There is a paradox in bhakti.

The nearer the devotee comes to God, the less important the self becomes.

Kings wish to become stones.

Poets wish to become birds.

Warriors wish to become servants.

Saints wish to become dust.

Yet through this self-erasure they become immortal.

Kulasekhara’s “padi” still lives in memory centuries later.

Not because it was grand.

Because it was humble beyond measure.

And perhaps that is why the Lord allows such devotees to endure forever in human hearts.

The Kulasekhara Padi in all South Indian temples is indeed associated with the threshold very close to the sanctum — the entrance to the garbhagriha itself, is revered to kulashekar padi. devotees stop at that sacred line. Priests cross beyond it into the innermost chamber where the Lord resides.

So Kulasekhara Alvar’s prayer was not: “Let me remain somewhere in the temple premises.”

It was:

“Let me remain forever at the very doorway of the Lord’s presence.”

He wished to remain where:

the fragrance of tulasi and sandal constantly emerged,

the lamps flickered against ancient stone,

the sound of bells and Vedic chanting flowed outward,

and where the first glimpse of the Lord overwhelmed devotees.

The Kulasekhara Padi became the meeting point between mortal longing and divine vision.

And as you beautifully noted, in older times devotees often came much closer to the sanctum than modern temple regulations usually permit. Temple worship was deeply physical and intimate:

closer darshan,

touching thresholds,

receiving garlands directly,

hearing the priest’s whisper,

seeing the Lord in oil-lamp light rather than from a distance behind barricades.

The devotee’s relationship with the deity was familial, immediate, almost domestic.

That is why Kulasekhara’s wish is so moving. He did not ask merely to “see” the Lord occasionally. He wished never to leave that charged atmosphere around the garbhagriha.

There is another subtle insight here.

The garbhagriha literally means “womb chamber.”

It is the still center of the cosmos in temple architecture: dark, silent, contained, eternal.

The deity radiates outward from there like consciousness itself.

And Kulasekhara asks to become the threshold to that mystery.

Not inside — because humility prevents him from claiming that place.

Not outside — because separation is unbearable.

So he chooses the in-between.

The eternal nearness.

Perhaps only a true lover understands that even a doorway near the Beloved is enough for eternity.

That is why the name Kulasekhara Padi survived centuries. It is not merely architecture anymore; it is crystallized devotion.

Pairs.

 These pairs are beautiful examples of how Sanskrit-derived words in Hindi carry subtle shades of meaning. They may look similar, but each has its own emotional and contextual flavor.

Aamantran (आमंत्रण) vs Nimantran (निमंत्रण)

Both mean invitation, yet the tone differs.

Aamantran — A warm calling

Derived from the root “mantra” with the prefix “aa” meaning “towards oneself.”

It carries the sense of:

welcoming,

calling someone near,

inviting with openness and affection.

It can even be broad or public.

Example:

Sabko aamantran hai — Everyone is invited.

A saint giving aamantran to devotees for satsang.

It feels expansive and embracing.

Nimantran — A formal or specific invitation

The prefix “ni” gives a sense of directedness or particularity.

This often implies:

a personal invitation,

ceremonial invitation,

invitation with responsibility or obligation.

Example:

Wedding card = vivah nimantran patra

A king inviting a guest formally.

It feels more intentional and dignified.

A simple way to remember:

Aamantran → “Come, all are welcome.”

Nimantran → “You are specially invited.”

In temples and bhakti traditions:

The Lord gives aamantran to all souls.

But the devotee feels he has received a personal nimantran from the Divine.

Aarambh (आरंभ) vs Prarambh (प्रारंभ)

Again, both mean beginning or commencement, but with different shades.

Aarambh — The act of beginning

Simple, direct beginning.

Used for:

starting an action,

initiating something,

commencement in a general sense.

Example:

Path ka aarambh hua — The lesson began.

Yatra ka aarambh.

It is plain and immediate.

Prarambh — A deliberate or significant commencement

The prefix “pra” intensifies the meaning:

forward movement,

auspicious initiation,

purposeful beginning.

Often used for:

important undertakings,

sacred ceremonies,

literary or philosophical contexts.

Example:

Mahotsav ka prarambh.

Gita path ka prarambh.

It carries gravity and momentum.

Simple distinction:

Aarambh → starting something.

Prarambh → inaugurating something meaningful.

There is also a poetic progression hidden in these words:

Aamantran opens the door.

Nimantran seats the guest with honor.

And:

Aarambh is the first step.

Prarambh is the conscious journey.

Indian languages preserve not only meaning, but mood, relationship, and reverence within prefixes themselves.

Yes — Sanskrit and the Indian languages are full of such twin-words where a tiny prefix changes the emotional color, dignity, depth, or direction of the meaning.

These are not merely vocabulary differences; they reveal how delicately thought itself was classified.

Here are some beautiful examples.

Darshan (दर्शन) vs Nirikshan (निरीक्षण)

Darshan

To behold with reverence.

One sees not merely with the eyes, but with the heart.

Mandir mein Bhagavan ka darshan.

Seeing a saint.

Nirikshan

Observation, inspection, examination.

School ka nirikshan.

Inspecting details carefully.

One is sacred seeing.

The other is analytical seeing.

Shravan (श्रवण) vs Shravanam (श्रवणम्)

Shravan

Simply hearing.

Shravanam

Listening as a spiritual discipline.

One of the Navavidha Bhakti forms.

Not all hearing becomes Shravanam.

Gaman (गमन) vs Agaman (आगमन)

Gaman

Going away, movement.

Agaman

Arrival, coming toward.

The direction changes with the prefix.

Vichar (विचार) vs Chintan (चिंतन)

Vichar

Thought, consideration, discussion.

Chintan

Deep contemplation, meditative reflection.

A scholar may do vichar.

A sage lives in chintan.

Smriti (स्मृति) vs Samsmriti (संस्मृति)

Smriti

Memory.

Samsmriti

Recollected remembrance filled with emotion and depth.

Like remembering a departed saint or one’s childhood temple.

Katha (कथा) vs Pravachan (प्रवचन)

Katha

Narrative, sacred storytelling.

Pravachan

Structured spiritual discourse or exposition.

A grandmother gives katha.

A learned acharya gives pravachan.

Bhakti (भक्ति) vs Anurakti (अनुरक्ति)

Bhakti

Devotion.

Anurakti

Attachment infused with love and longing.

Bhakti can be disciplined.

Anurakti melts boundaries.

Kripa (कृपा) vs Anugraha (अनुग्रह)

Kripa

Compassion, mercy.

Anugraha

Grace bestowed consciously and transformatively.

Kripa comforts.

Anugraha changes destiny.

Jnana (ज्ञान) vs Vijnana (विज्ञान)

Jnana

Knowledge.

Vijnana

Realized, discriminating, experiential knowledge.

The Bhagavad Gita itself distinguishes the two.

Mouna (मौन) vs Nishabdata (निशब्दता)

Mouna

Silence undertaken consciously.

Nishabdata

Absence of sound.

A forest at midnight may have nishabdata.

A sage radiates mouna.

Prema (प्रेम) vs Sneha (स्नेह)

Prema

Love in its expansive, often divine sense.

Sneha

Tender affectionate warmth.

Motherly affection is often sneha.

Radha’s love is prema.

Tyaga (त्याग) vs Vairagya (वैराग्य)

Tyaga

Renunciation of something.

Vairagya

Inner detachment from craving itself.

One can perform tyaga externally

without attaining vairagya internally.

One of the wonders of Sanskrit is that prefixes like:

pra → forward, intense, exalted

ni → inward, downward, specific

anu → following, subtle

vi → distinction, separation, analysis

sam → completeness, togetherness

aa → toward, near

transform the emotional architecture of words.

It is almost as though the language was designed not merely to communicate thoughts — but to classify states of consciousness.

Saturday, May 9, 2026

Significance

 There is something deeply moving in those moments when the Lord, after all the dazzling alankarams, jewels, garlands, silks, crowns, pearl-studded umbrellas, and temple music, finally retires for the night.

The lamps dim. The bells soften. The priests close the sanctum doors. And the Lord who carried the universe through the day… “rests.”

Why?

Does the Infinite require sleep? Does the Eternal grow tired? Does the One who sustains galaxies need a few hours of silence?

The answer given by our temples is beautiful: No — He does not need rest. We need Him to rest.

For in temple worship, especially in the great Vaishnava traditions, the Lord agrees to live among us as one of us. This is the mystery of saulabhya — divine accessibility.

He wakes. He bathes. He eats. He dresses. He listens to music. He grants darshan. He goes in procession. He returns. And finally, He reclines.

Not because He is bound by human limitations — but because love always chooses nearness over majesty.

The mother playing with her child becomes a child herself. Likewise, the Supreme Being accepts human rhythms so that devotees may feel: “He lives with us.”

That is why temple rituals are not mere procedures. They are a divine daily life.

And what tenderness there is in the Lord “retiring” for the night!

The same Lord whom the Vedas call beyond time and decay is gently put to sleep with lullabies. Silk coverings are removed. Heavy jewels are loosened. The grandeur of kingship is set aside. The deity is adorned in lighter garments. In many temples, milk or light food is offered before sleep. Soft music replaces majestic drums.

The message is profound: Even God accepts simplicity at the end of the day.

All power eventually returns to stillness.

And then there are the keys.

Ah, those two keys hanging from the waist of the Lord — such a small detail, yet overflowing with meaning.

In many South Indian temples, especially in forms like Rajagopalaswamy Temple Rajagopalan or certain Vishnu deities, the Lord is seen with keys tied at the waist or hanging from a chain.

Outwardly, they symbolize guardianship. He is the keeper of the temple treasury. The protector of prosperity. The Lord of the household of the universe.

But devotees see much more.

One key is said to open material well-being — the other, spiritual awakening.

One guards the outer sanctum — the other unlocks the heart.

One belongs to Lakshmi — the other to Narayana.

Some even say: One key locks away our ego, the other opens the doors of grace.

The Lord wearing keys at His waist is also symbolic of responsibility. A king carries authority. A householder carries keys. And the Lord willingly becomes both.



He becomes not merely the ruler of heaven, but the caretaker of our ordinary lives.

He safeguards: our joys, our homes, our fears, our children, our memories, our final hopes.

And yet, after all this grandeur and responsibility, He remains ever youthful.

Generation after generation, devotees come and go. Kings vanish. Empires disappear. Languages change. Streets alter. Dynasties fade.

But the Lord remains astonishingly young.

Why?

Because divinity does not age through time — it renews itself through devotion.

Every devotee who stands before Him with tears, music, flowers, or prayer gives Him fresh youth. Bhakti keeps God eternally young in the human heart.

That is why the deity seen by a grandmother decades ago appears just as radiant to her grandchild today.

The Lord never grows old because love never grows old.

This is perhaps the greatest wonder of temple culture: The timeless chooses to enter time daily, without ever becoming bound by it.

He performs the rhythm of human life, yet remains untouched by decay.

He sleeps — yet never ceases protecting.

He reclines — yet sustains the cosmos.

He removes His jewels — yet loses none of His splendour.

He appears as our own — yet remains the Infinite.

Friday, May 8, 2026

Varsha ritu.

 The Hindi literary world has a fascinating tradition of describing the six Indian seasons not merely as changes in weather, but as moods of the soul. Among the poets who painted the monsoon — Varsha Ritu — with astonishing beauty are Padmakar and Ratnakar.

 their poetry, the rainy season becomes more than clouds and thunder — it becomes a spiritual experience.

Varsha Ritu — The Season that Awakens Memory

In Indian thought, the rains are never merely meteorological.

Summer exhausts the earth. Dust settles on leaves, rivers shrink, birds grow silent. Then suddenly the sky darkens. Wind changes direction. The fragrance of wet earth rises like forgotten devotion returning to the heart.

This is why poets saw Varsha Ritu as:

reunion after separation,

grace after suffering,

and divine compassion after spiritual drought.

The peacock dances not because it has reasoned about rain, but because it feels its arrival.

Bhakti poets often said the soul should respond to God exactly like that peacock.

Padmakar’s Monsoon — Ornamented Splendour

Padmakar belonged to the ornate Riti tradition of Hindi poetry. His descriptions are lush, jeweled, musical. In his hands, clouds become royal processions.

He describes:

lightning as golden ornaments,

clouds as elephant armies,

thunder as celestial drums,

and rain as pearls descending from heaven.

Nature itself appears dressed for celebration.

Padmakar’s poetry often creates movement:

rivers swelling,

creepers trembling,

women waiting near balconies,

lovers looking toward distant roads.

The emotional undercurrent is viraha — longing.

The rains intensify remembrance. Every drop becomes a messenger.

One can almost hear a pause over such verses, savoring each image, to feel not only the poetry but the rasa hidden inside it.

Ratnakar’s Monsoon — The Inner Rain

Ratnakar approaches the rains differently.

Where Padmakar dazzles the eye, Ratnakar often touches the heart more directly.

In his verses:

clouds become symbols of divine mercy,

rain becomes grace,

and the parched earth becomes the yearning devotee.

The chataka bird waiting for a single pure raindrop from the sky is a favorite Indian metaphor. Ratnakar uses such imagery beautifully: the true seeker does not drink from every pond of worldly pleasure; he waits only for the rain of the Divine Name.

Here the monsoon becomes spiritual philosophy.

Why Monsoon Poetry Touches India So Deeply

India experiences rain dramatically.

Before the monsoon:

heat burns,

lakes dry,

cattle suffer,

and fields crack.

Then suddenly life returns.

So poets naturally saw in rain:

Krishna returning to Vrindavan,

Rama returning to Ayodhya,

the Guru returning to the disciple,

or forgotten devotion returning to the heart.

This is why so many bhajans, ragas, and poems are linked to the rainy season:

Megh Malhar,

Miyan ki Malhar,

the songs of Meerabai,

the monsoon verses of Kalidasa in Meghaduta,

and later Hindi poets like Padmakar and Ratnakar.

When spiritual speakers quote classical poetry, they are doing more than literary appreciation. They are reconnecting modern listeners to an older Indian sensitivity — a world where:

seasons carried emotion,

clouds carried philosophy,

and rain carried remembrance of God.

such poetry not as scholarship alone, but as a doorway into bhava — devotional feeling.

One may first admire the imagery.

the drought within,

the waiting within,

and the rain one secretly longs for.

Ultimately, Varsha Ritu in Indian poetry symbolizes one eternal truth:

The soul cannot remain dry forever.

Sooner or later, the clouds gather, the fragrance rises, the heart softens, and grace begins to fall.

Just as the earth turns green after rain, the human heart too becomes fertile after remembrance of the Divine.

The coming of Varsha Ritu — the rainy season — has inspired poets across Sanskrit, Braj, Awadhi, and Hindi literature. Among the great masters who painted the monsoon with brilliance are Padmakar and Jagannathdas Ratnakar.

Their poetry does not merely describe rain. It makes the clouds move before our eyes, lets peacocks cry in distant groves, and awakens longing, devotion, romance, and remembrance.

Padmakar on Varsha Ritu

Padmakar was renowned for lush imagery, musical language, and emotional richness. His descriptions of the monsoon are filled with movement and colour.

Verse 1

घन घमंड नभ गरजत घोरा।

प्रियहीन डरपत मन मोरा॥

The proud clouds thunder fiercely across the sky.

Separated from the beloved, my heart trembles in fear.

Though simple, the verse captures a classic Indian poetic mood — viraha (longing in separation). The rain that delights the world becomes unbearable for one who waits for a loved one.

Verse 2

दादुर बोलत बन बन माहीं।

नाचत मोर, पपीहा गाहीं॥

Frogs croak through the forests,

Peacocks dance, and the papiha birds sing.

The whole world seems awakened. Nature itself becomes musical during Varsha Ritu. One can almost hear the sounds rising from wet earth and dark groves.

Verse 3

चमकति चपला चहुँ दिसि छाई।

जलद घटा घनघोर सुहाई॥

Lightning flashes in every direction,

And dense rain-clouds spread their beautiful darkness.

Padmakar loved contrasts — darkness and brilliance, thunder and fragrance, longing and joy. The monsoon sky becomes both frightening and enchanting.

Ratnakar on Varsha Ritu

Jagannathdas Ratnakar often wrote with delicacy and emotional depth. His monsoon verses carry refinement and inner feeling.

Verse 1

बरसन लागे बदरिया सावन की।

भीजत डारन, भीजत पात॥

The monsoon clouds of Shravan begin to pour.

Branches are drenched, leaves are drenched.

The beauty here lies in simplicity. Rain does not discriminate. Everything receives it equally — trees, leaves, pathways, hearts.

Verse 2

उमड़ि घुमड़ि घन आए गगन में।

जागी प्रीति पुरानी मन में॥

Clouds gather and swirl across the sky,

And old love awakens once more in the heart.

This is quintessential Indian aesthetics. Rain revives memory. Forgotten emotions bloom again like parched earth receiving water.

Verse 3

कोयल मौन भई अब वन में।

बोलत दादुर ताल तटन् में॥

The cuckoo has now fallen silent in the forests,

While frogs call loudly beside the ponds.

A subtle seasonal transition is shown here. Spring belongs to the cuckoo; the rainy season belongs to frogs, thunder, and peacocks.

The Deeper Symbolism of Varsha Ritu

Indian poets rarely described seasons merely for decoration. The rainy season symbolized:

reunion after separation,

divine grace descending upon earth,

awakening of dormant emotions,

fertility and abundance,

and sometimes the soul yearning for God.

In Bhakti poetry especially, dark rain clouds often remind devotees of Krishna himself — Shyama, the dark-hued Lord.

The peacock dancing before thunder becomes the devotee dancing before divine presence.

The thirsty chataka bird waiting for a drop from the heavens becomes the soul waiting for grace.

And the earth, cracked by summer heat, becomes the human heart waiting for compassion.

One notices that both Padmakar and Ratnakar do not merely “describe weather.” They transform rain into emotion. In their poetry, clouds are messengers, lightning is memory, thunder is longing, and wet earth becomes poetry itself.

Tuesday, May 5, 2026

NACHIYAR::

When the Lord Becomes Nachiyar: And When Writing Becomes Worship

At the sacred precincts of Parthasarathy Temple, there are moments when the Lord does not stand as the majestic ruler of the universe, nor as the charioteer of Kurukshetra, nor even as the playful cowherd of Brindavan.

Instead, He appears… as Nachiyar.



Look at this beauty. Who can explain this. 

Adorned in the gentle grace of the divine consort, He softens His presence, reshapes His expression, and enters a realm that is at once intimate and profound. This is the Nachiyar Thirukkolam—a form that invites not awe, but closeness.

But why would the Lord, who is complete in Himself, choose such a form?

The Echo of Andal’s Love

In the Sri Vaishnava tradition, the word Nachiyar immediately brings to mind Andal—the young saint whose devotion did not remain within the bounds of ritual, but blossomed into longing, poetry, and surrender.

She did not stand before the Lord as a distant devotee.

She approached Him as a bride approaches her beloved.

Her verses in the Tiruppavai and Nachiyar Tirumozhi are not merely compositions—they are lived emotion.

And in response to such devotion, the Lord does something extraordinary:

He does not merely accept her love—

He enters it.

In taking on Nachiyar Thirukkolam, the Lord reflects Andal’s inner world.

He becomes the very bhava she embodied.

A Theology of Nearness

This form quietly overturns our usual understanding of divinity.

We often think:

The devotee seeks

The Lord grants

But here, the boundary dissolves.

The devotee becomes one with her longing

The Lord becomes one with that longing

It is no longer a relationship of distance, but of shared identity.

The message is subtle, yet powerful:

There is no role the devotee assumes that the Lord is unwilling to share.

Adornment Beyond Ornament

In temples, alankaram is an act of love.

The Lord is adorned with:

fragrant garlands

intricate jewels

silks that shimmer with devotion

Yet Nachiyar Thirukkolam is different.

Here, the adornment is not merely external.

It is emotional, philosophical, and deeply reciprocal.

The Lord is not just decorated—

He is transformed by devotion itself.

When Writing Becomes Alankaram

There is another space where such adornment happens quietly—

not in sanctums of stone, but in spaces of reflection.

A blog, when approached with sincerity, becomes more than a collection of words.

It becomes a place where the Lord is remembered, revisited, and gently offered back to the world.

Each thought becomes a flower.

Each insight, a strand in the garland.

In this sense, writing is not separate from worship.

It is a continuation of it.

Just as Andal wove her longing into poetry,

the devotee today may weave understanding into words.

And something subtle happens in this process:

The one who writes is no longer just observing devotion—

but quietly entering it.

A Mirror of Mutual Belonging

Nachiyar Thirukkolam tells us:

The Lord is not distant

He is not untouched by human emotion

He does not remain unchanged by love

Instead, He mirrors it.

And perhaps, in a much smaller way, so does the act of writing about Him.

When we reflect on His stories, His forms, His meanings—

we do not merely describe Him.

We participate in the tradition that has, for centuries,

sought not just to see the Divine,

but to feel, live, and share Him.

In Triplicane, when the Lord appears as Nachiyar,

He seems to whisper:

“If you come to Me with love,

I will not remain apart from it.”

And somewhere, in the stillness of reflection,

the devotee responds—not in ritual alone, but in remembrance, in writing, in offering:

“Then let these words be my garland.”

 Andal’s words themselves become part of the alankaram.

When Andal Speaks… the Lord Listens

The beauty of Nachiyar Thirukkolam becomes even more luminous when we listen to Andal herself. Her verses are not distant poetry—they are living currents of longing.

From the Tiruppavai

“Koodarai vellum seer Govinda…”

In this celebrated verse, Andal speaks not of renunciation, but of celebration with the Lord—

of adorning, of sharing, of belonging.

She says, in essence:

“We will wear ornaments, we will rejoice, we will be with You.”

This is not a devotee standing apart.

This is a soul that has already entered divine companionship.

From the Nachiyar Tirumozhi

Here, her voice deepens into yearning—almost unbearably intimate.

“Vaaranam aayiram soozha…”

She dreams of her divine wedding—every detail vivid, every emotion real.

For Andal, the Lord is not an abstraction.

He is:

awaited

imagined

experienced

Her devotion crosses from prayer into participation.

The Turning Point

And it is here that the mystery unfolds.

When such devotion reaches its peak,

the Lord does not remain the receiver.

He responds—not just through grace,

but through identification.

At places like Parthasarathy Temple,

when He appears in Nachiyar Thirukkolam, it is as though He is saying:

“Your longing is no longer yours alone—

I have made it Mine.”

For the Devotee Who Writes

When we read Andal, something stirs.

When we reflect, something deepens.

And when we write, something is offered back.

In that offering, however small, there is a quiet echo of her path.

Not the intensity perhaps—

but the direction.

Andal adorned the Lord with her longing.

The Lord adorned Himself with her love.

And somewhere in between,

we gather a few words, a few thoughts—

and offer them, trembling yet hopeful,

as our own small garland.

 let us sit quietly with Andal’s own words—slowly, gently—so they can be felt, not just read.

A Garland of Andal’s Words

1. The Joy of Belonging — Tiruppavai

“Koodaarai vellum seer Govinda…”

“O Govinda! Your grace conquers even those who oppose You.

We shall unite with You, wear ornaments, rejoice, and celebrate together.”

Bhava:

This is not a plea—it is certainty.

Andal is not asking, “Will You accept me?”

She is saying, “We are already Yours.”

This is the same spirit echoed when the Lord takes Nachiyar Thirukkolam—

a celebration of togetherness, not distance.

2. The Intimacy of Calling — Tiruppavai

“Unthanodu uravel namakku ingu ozhikka ozhiyadhu…”

“Our relationship with You can never be broken—here or anywhere.”

Bhava:

This is one of Andal’s boldest declarations.

Not devotion based on merit.

Not a bond dependent on ritual.

But an unbreakable belonging.

And when the Lord appears as Nachiyar, He seems to affirm:

“Yes… this bond is Mine too.”

3. The Dream of Union — Nachiyar Tirumozhi

“Vaaranam aayiram soozha…”

“I saw a dream—elephants in thousands, auspicious sounds everywhere—

my wedding with the Lord unfolding in divine splendor.”

Bhava:

This is not imagination—it is experience in the heart.

Andal lives her devotion so completely that it becomes reality within.

In Nachiyar Thirukkolam, the Lord steps into that inner world and says:

“Your dream… I have accepted as truth.”

4. The Pain of Separation — Nachiyar Tirumozhi

(Paraphrased essence from her longing verses)

“If He does not come, what use are these eyes, this life, this breath?”

Without the Lord, everything loses meaning.

Bhava:

Here devotion reaches its most intense point—

where separation itself becomes unbearable.

And it is precisely such devotion that draws the Lord closer—

so close that He does not remain separate at all.

How This Completes the Circle

Andal longs for the Lord

She declares belonging

She dreams union

She suffers separation

And then…

At Parthasarathy Temple,

the Lord appears as Nachiyar.

The circle closes.

The devotee becomes one with the Lord.

And the Lord becomes one with the devotee.

She called Him with certainty.

She claimed Him with love.

She dreamed Him into her very being.

And in the end,

He did not remain the distant Divine.

He came closer…

so close,

that He became her.

That is Andal’s gift: her words do not end when the verse ends… they continue within us.


Sunday, May 3, 2026

Silence to Saraswati.

The Transformation of Kalidasa: From Silence to Saraswati

Tradition tells us that Kalidasa was not born a scholar. In fact, he is often described as a simple, even unlettered man—one who lived close to nature, untouched by the refinements of learning.

Through a series of circumstances (sometimes narrated with a touch of gentle irony), he was married into a learned household. His lack of knowledge soon became evident, and he was humiliated for it. That moment of humiliation, however, became the turning point of his life.

Broken, he turned in surrender to Goddess Kali—the fierce mother who destroys ignorance.

The Grace that Transforms

Standing before the goddess, Kalidasa did not ask for wealth or power. He asked for vidya—true knowledge.

Moved by his sincerity, the Mother is said to have blessed him. In some retellings, she touched his tongue; in others, she simply cast a compassionate glance. What followed was nothing short of miraculous.

The silent man became a poet.

The unlettered became a master of language.

The ordinary became eternal.

The First Words

It is said that his first utterance after receiving divine grace was not ordinary speech, but poetry—flowing, refined, and filled with meaning.

From that moment, works of astonishing beauty emerged:

The tenderness of Shakuntala

The longing of the cloud-messenger

The majesty of royal lineages

The delicate interplay of nature and emotion

His poetry did not merely describe the world—it revealed its inner music.

Kashmir and the Poet’s Vision

Though not a king of Kashmir, Kalidasa’s poetic vision travels across the land, touching mountains, rivers, forests, and cities with equal intimacy.

His descriptions of the Himalayas, the northern landscapes, and the celestial beauty of nature are so vivid that one feels he must have walked those paths, breathed that air, and stood in silent wonder.

Kashmir, often described as paradise on earth, fits naturally into the kind of world Kalidasa evokes—a world where nature itself becomes poetry.

Kalidasa may never have worn a crown, but his words carry a different authority—the authority of truth felt deeply and expressed beautifully.

Kings rule for a time.

Poets like Kalidasa rule across ages.

His kingdom is not bound by geography.

It lives wherever beauty is felt, wherever language seeks to rise above the ordinary, wherever devotion turns into expression.

There is something profoundly reassuring in this story.

Learning may come late.

Grace may arrive unexpectedly.

But when it comes, it can transform completely.

Kalidasa’s life, whether read as history or as sacred legend, whispers a quiet truth:

When humility meets grace, even silence can become poetry.

Let us now step into the poetry the living voice of Kalidasa—and see how that legendary grace seems to shine through his words.

What is striking is this: his poetry does not sound “learned” in a dry sense. It feels revealed—as though knowledge has ripened into direct vision.

1. The Awakening to Speech

(Raghuvamsha – Invocation)

One of the most celebrated opening verses in Sanskrit literature:

वागर्थाविव संपृक्तौ वागर्थप्रतिपत्तये ।

जगतः पितरौ वन्दे पार्वतीपरमेश्वरौ ॥

Meaning:

“I bow to Parvati and Shiva, the parents of the universe, who are united like word and meaning, so that I may attain mastery over both.”

Reflection

This is no ordinary invocation. Kalidasa does not merely pray for skill—he seeks the union of word and meaning.

If we recall the legend of his transformation, this verse feels like a direct echo of that grace:

Speech (vāg) is no longer separate from truth (artha)

Expression is no longer effort—it is alignment

It is as though the Goddess has not just given him words, but made him one with meaning itself.

2. Seeing the Divine in Nature

(Kumarasambhavam – Himalaya description)

“The Himalaya stands as the measuring rod of the earth,

stretching like a divine soul between heaven and earth.”

Here, the mountain is not geography—it is presence.

Only a transformed vision sees like this:

Nature is no longer inert

It becomes sacred, conscious, expressive

This is the mark of grace: the world is not described—it is revealed.

3. The Language of Longing

(Meghaduta – The Cloud Messenger)

In Meghaduta, an exiled Yaksha sends a message to his beloved through a cloud.

“O cloud, when you pass over her,

speak gently—she is fragile with longing.”

This is not just poetry—it is empathy refined to its highest degree.

How does one imagine:

the path of a cloud,

the emotions of a distant lover,

the tone in which a cloud must “speak”?

Such tenderness suggests a heart softened, expanded—perhaps by suffering, perhaps by grace.

The man who once knew nothing now understands everything that can be felt.

4. The Stillness of Love

(Abhijnanasakuntalam)

In Abhijnanasakuntalam, when King Dushyanta first beholds Shakuntala, his response is not mere attraction—it is wonder:

“Is she a creation of the Creator’s first thought?

Or has beauty gathered itself into a single form?”

This is the language of darshan—not seeing, but beholding.

Here again, we sense:

humility before beauty

astonishment before creation

This is not the arrogance of intellect.

It is the reverence of one who has received vision.

5. The Signature of Grace

Across all his works, certain qualities quietly repeat:

Effortless elegance

Harmony between inner feeling and outer expression

A deep reverence for nature, love, and dharma

A sense that beauty is not created—but uncovered

These are not easily “learned.”

They feel bestowed.

If the legend of Goddess Kali blessing Kalidasa is read symbolically, these verses become its living proof.

Before grace:

Words are separate from meaning

The world is fragmented

After grace:

Word and meaning unite

The world becomes poetry

Kalidasa’s works are not just literature.

They are what happens when knowledge becomes vision.

RCM

 There are scriptures one studies, and there are scriptures one lives with. The Ramcharitmanas belongs to the latter. Composed by Goswami Tulsidas, it is not merely a retelling of the story of Lord Rama—it is a continuous stream of devotion, where poetry becomes prayer and narrative becomes दर्शन.

Yet, within this vast ocean, there are certain stretches where the waters seem especially luminous—where devotion rises, pauses, and reveals its deepest truths.

Let us walk through these  portions as seekers.

1. The Sacred Beginning: Where the Name Becomes the Path

The Mangalacharan does not merely begin the text—it prepares the heart. Tulsidas bows to all that is sacred: the remover of obstacles, the giver of wisdom, the guiding Guru, and finally, the Lord Himself.

But here lies a subtle and powerful shift. Tulsidas gently leads us from the form to the Name—from Rama to Ram Naam. He suggests that the Name is accessible, ever-present, and compassionate in ways even the divine form may not always appear to be.

In these opening verses, one feels a door quietly opening: spirituality is not distant; it is already within reach.

2. The Birth of Rama: When the Infinite Becomes Intimate

The Ram Janma is not described as a mere event—it is a celebration that touches every layer of existence. The cosmos rejoices, the city of Ayodhya blossoms, and yet, at the center of it all, there is a child.

This is the genius of the Manas: the infinite takes on intimacy. The Supreme becomes someone who can be cradled, sung to, and loved without fear.

Devotion here is not awe—it is affection.

3. Sita Swayamvara: Strength Guided by Grace

The court of King Janaka is filled with kings, pride, and anticipation. The great bow of Shiva Dhanush stands as the silent judge.

When Rama lifts and breaks it effortlessly, it is not merely a display of strength. It is the quiet assurance that true power does not announce itself—it reveals itself only when the moment is right.

And as Sita garlands Rama, destiny completes its circle.

Here, dharma, grace, and love converge into a single, unforgettable moment.

4. Bharata: The Devotion that Refuses a Throne

If one were to seek the purest expression of devotion in the Manas, it would be found in Bharata.

When Rama is exiled, Bharata is offered the kingdom. But what unfolds instead is a storm of grief, humility, and unwavering love. He does not merely reject the throne—he questions the very idea of ruling in Rama’s absence.

His journey to Chitrakoot, his tears, his surrender—these are not acts of weakness. They are the strength of a heart that knows its truth.

Bharata does not want Rama’s kingdom.

He wants Rama.

And in that longing, he becomes one of the greatest devotees in all of sacred literature.

5. Chitrakoot: Where Love Meets Duty

The meeting of Rama and Bharata is not dramatic—it is deeply human. Words struggle, tears speak, and silence carries meaning.

Each tries to give the other what he himself desires least:

Rama offers the throne. Bharata offers it back.

In the end, dharma prevails, but not without revealing the cost of righteousness.

This episode leaves behind a quiet understanding:

True love does not possess—it upholds.

6. Shabari: The Simplicity that Surpasses Ritual

In the forest lives Shabari, unknown to the world, but known to her Lord.

She has waited for years, holding onto a promise. When Rama finally arrives, she offers Him berries—tasting each one first to ensure it is sweet.

By every rule of ritual purity, this is improper.

By every measure of devotion, it is perfect.

Rama accepts them with joy.

In this gentle exchange, the Manas declares something revolutionary:

God looks not at what is offered, but at the love with which it is given.

7. Sundara Kanda: The Courage of Faith

If the Manas has a beating heart, it is the Sundara Kanda.

Here, Hanuman rises—not just in physical strength, but in spiritual awareness. As he leaps across the ocean, faces trials, finds Sita, and sets Lanka aflame, one truth becomes clear:

Hanuman does not act for himself.

He acts as an instrument.

Every obstacle bends before his devotion, because his ego has already bowed.

For countless devotees, this section is not just read—it is relied upon. In times of doubt, it becomes strength. In times of fear, it becomes assurance.

8. The Fall of Ravana: When Knowledge Without Humility Fails

The battle with Ravana is grand, but its message is subtle.

Ravana is no ordinary villain. He is learned, powerful, and devoted in his own way. And yet, he falls.

Why?

Because knowledge without humility becomes arrogance.

Power without surrender becomes destruction.

In his fall, we are reminded that the true enemy is not outside—it is within.

9. Rama Rajya: A Vision Beyond Time

The Manas concludes not just with victory, but with harmony. The description of Rama’s reign is not merely political—it is spiritual.

In Rama Rajya:

Justice is natural

Compassion is instinctive

Life moves in balance

It is less a historical reality and more an eternal aspiration—a reminder of what the world can be when guided by dharma.

The greatness of the Ramcharitmanas lies in this: it does not ask us to admire its characters—it invites us to find ourselves within them.

In Bharata, we see longing.

In Shabari, simplicity.

In Hanuman, strength through surrender.

In Rama, the ideal we strive toward.

And slowly, almost imperceptibly, the story begins to turn inward.

The journey is no longer from Ayodhya to Lanka.

It is from the mind to the heart.

And there, in that quiet inner space, the Name continues to echo—

Ram… Ram… Ram…