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.


