Saturday, July 11, 2026

Dignity of human freedom.

 "Yathecchasi Tathā Kuru" — The Dignity of Human Freedom 

"Iti te jñānam ākhyātaṁ guhyād guhyataraṁ mayā; vimṛśyaitad aśeṣeṇa yathecchasi tathā kuru."

"Thus have I imparted to you the most profound wisdom. Reflect upon it fully, and then act as you choose." (Bhagavad Gita 18.63)

These may be the most astonishing words spoken in the entire Bhagavad Gita.

After eighteen chapters of profound teaching—covering the nature of the Self, karma, bhakti, jñāna, yoga, and the Supreme Reality—Sri Krishna does not end with a command.

He does not say, "Now you must obey Me."

He does not say, "I am God. Therefore, do as I say."

Instead, He says:

"Reflect upon everything I have said, and then act as you choose."

In that one sentence, Krishna reveals something extraordinary about the relationship between God and humanity.

The Lord does not seek slaves.

He seeks individuals who understand, reflect, and willingly choose dharma.

This is the dignity He grants every human being.

Freedom is one of God's greatest gifts.

Without freedom there can be no love.

Without freedom there can be no devotion.

Without freedom there can be no righteousness.

A machine can obey.

A human being can choose.

That choice gives meaning to every moral act.

Krishna therefore teaches before He asks.

He reasons before He requests.

He answers every one of Arjuna's doubts patiently and compassionately.

Only after removing confusion does He leave the decision where it has always belonged—with Arjuna himself.

This is not weakness.

It is supreme confidence in truth.

Truth does not fear questions.

Truth does not require force.

Truth invites understanding.

The Bhagavad Gita is therefore not a book of commands. It is a dialogue.

Krishna never silences Arjuna's questions. On the contrary, He welcomes them. Every chapter grows out of Arjuna's doubts.

The Lord becomes the perfect teacher because He respects the student's freedom.

This principle extends far beyond the battlefield of Kurukshetra.

Every parent faces it.

Every teacher experiences it.

Every spiritual guide understands it.

Advice may be offered.

Wisdom may be shared.

Experience may be explained.

But another person's choice cannot be made for them.

The consequences of that choice, too, become their own teacher.

Even God does not compel virtue.

He illumines the path.

He strengthens those who seek Him.

He accompanies them through success and failure.

But the step forward must be taken by the individual.

That is why the Gita remains eternally relevant.

Every morning life places before us our own Kurukshetra.

Every decision asks us to choose between convenience and conscience, between selfishness and service, between ego and surrender.

Krishna still whispers the same words to every heart:

"Reflect deeply... and then act as you choose."

The freedom is ours.

The responsibility is ours.

And when we freely choose dharma, that choice becomes the highest expression of our humanity—and our devotion.



Free Will and Dharma 

 Why Did Sri Krishna Not Prevent the Mahabharata War? — Free Will and Dharma 

This question has echoed through the centuries.

If Sri Krishna is God, why did He not simply stop the Mahabharata war? Why allow millions to perish? Why permit the destruction of an entire generation?

The answer lies in two profound principles that run throughout the Mahabharata: free will and dharma.

God grants every human being freedom to choose.

That freedom is sacred. Without it there can be no virtue, no love, no devotion, and no moral responsibility. A person who is forced to do good is not truly righteous; he is merely obedient.

Sri Krishna never took away that freedom.

Instead, He became a guide.

He advised.

He warned.

He pleaded for peace.

He went to Hastinapura as a messenger, asking not for a kingdom but for merely five villages. Even this humble proposal was rejected.

Duryodhana's famous response revealed the depth of his obstinacy:

"I will not give them land enough to fit the tip of a needle."

Krishna could have displayed His divine power and imposed peace. But peace enforced by power would not have transformed the hearts of those who rejected dharma. It would only have delayed the conflict.

The Mahabharata teaches that God does not destroy free will, even to prevent evil. Instead, He ensures that every choice bears its rightful consequence.

This is the law of karma.

For years, adharma had accumulated in the Kuru court. The attempted poisoning of Bhima, the burning of the lac house, the deceitful game of dice, the humiliation of Draupadi, and the repeated refusal to honour justice were not isolated incidents. Each was a choice.

Kurukshetra was not the cause of destruction; it was its culmination.

Krishna's role was never to erase the consequences of human actions. His role was to uphold dharma when all other efforts had failed.

As He declares in the Bhagavad Gita:

"Whenever righteousness declines and unrighteousness rises, I manifest Myself."

Notice that He does not say He will prevent every conflict. He says He will restore dharma.

Sometimes dharma is restored through teaching.

Sometimes through compassion.

Sometimes through forgiveness.

And sometimes, when every avenue for peace has been exhausted, through the painful consequences of human choices.

Even Arjuna was not commanded to fight blindly.

Krishna explained.

He reasoned.

He answered every doubt.

Only then did He say:

"Reflect fully on what I have taught you, and then act as you choose." (Bhagavad Gita 18.63)

These remarkable words reveal the heart of the Gita. Even after imparting divine wisdom, Krishna leaves the final decision to Arjuna.

The Lord guides; He does not coerce.

This truth extends beyond the Mahabharata.

Every day we exercise free will—in our words, our actions, and our relationships. Dharma is not imposed from outside. It is chosen from within.

The Mahabharata reminds us that civilization is shaped not by one dramatic event but by countless daily choices. Justice neglected, truth compromised, pride encouraged, and greed tolerated gradually lead to conflict.

Sri Krishna did not fail to prevent the war.

Humanity failed to heed His counsel.

The Lord remained what He has always been—a compassionate guide, offering wisdom, preserving freedom, and ensuring that, in the end, dharma prevails.

That is why the Mahabharata is not merely the story of an ancient war. It is the story of every human heart, where free will and dharma meet every single day.



A Dialogue Between Grief and Dharma 

 Gandhari and Sri Krishna: A Dialogue Between Grief and Dharma 

The smoke of Kurukshetra had barely settled. The battlefield was strewn with the bodies of kings, warriors, sons, brothers, and friends. Victory belonged to the Pandavas, but joy belonged to no one.

Into this desolate landscape came Gandhari.

The queen of Hastinapura had chosen to blindfold herself throughout her married life, sharing the darkness of her husband Dhritarashtra. Now that darkness was complete. One hundred sons had fallen. A mother's world had come to an end.

When Sri Krishna stood before her, Gandhari did not see Him with her eyes, but she saw Him with the intensity of her sorrow.

"Could you not have stopped this?" was the question hidden within every word she spoke.

She knew Krishna was no ordinary prince. She knew He possessed the wisdom, influence, and power to prevent the destruction. Yet He had allowed events to unfold.

Sri Krishna listened.

He did not argue with a grieving mother. He did not remind her immediately of Duryodhana's envy, the deceitful game of dice, the humiliation of Draupadi, the repeated rejection of peace, or the many opportunities given to choose righteousness. Compassion listens before it explains.

Then Krishna gently reminded her of a truth that is difficult for every generation to accept.

The seeds of Kurukshetra were not sown in eighteen days. They had been planted over many years through unchecked pride, jealousy, injustice, and attachment.

Again and again, wise counsel had been ignored.

Bhishma advised.

Vidura warned.

Drona cautioned.

Even Krishna Himself came as a messenger of peace, asking only for five villages. That too was refused.

Dharma never destroys suddenly. Adharma slowly prepares its own destruction.

Gandhari understood this, yet the pain of motherhood overwhelmed philosophy.

In that unbearable grief, she uttered a curse.

Just as the Kuru dynasty had perished before Krishna's eyes, so too would the Yadava clan one day destroy itself. Krishna accepted her words without anger or resistance.

Why?

Because He knew that the Yadavas too had begun to decline through pride and arrogance. Gandhari's curse would merely become one of the instruments through which destiny unfolded.

The Lord neither clung to His own dynasty nor altered the law of karma for personal attachment.

This dialogue teaches that even the greatest devotees can question God in moments of overwhelming sorrow. The scriptures do not hide human emotions. They acknowledge them with remarkable honesty.

Krishna's silence was not indifference.

His presence was not helplessness.

He had offered every opportunity for peace. But Dharma never removes human freedom. People are free to choose their actions, but they cannot choose the consequences of those actions.

Gandhari's grief remains one of the most moving moments in the Mahabharata because it reminds us that suffering often asks questions that logic alone cannot answer.

Krishna's response reminds us that the Divine stands beside us even in our darkest moments, yet the moral order of the universe cannot be suspended—not even for those whom He loves.

The conversation between Gandhari and Krishna is therefore not about blame. It is about responsibility.

When anger is nourished, when greed is tolerated, when injustice is ignored, and when wise counsel is rejected, society itself walks toward its own Kurukshetra.

The battlefield is only the final chapter. The real war begins much earlier—in the human heart.

That is the enduring lesson of Gandhari's dialogue with Sri Krishna.



Friday, July 10, 2026

Maori.

 The Māori ceremonial welcome is called a Pōwhiri. It is a traditional ceremony used to welcome visitors onto a marae (meeting place) or to mark important occasions. It is  performed by the local Māori community.

A typical pōwhiri includes:

Karanga – the ceremonial call of welcome, usually by women. It invites visitors onto the marae and acknowledges both the living and those who have passed away.

Waiata – songs sung to support the speakers and express unity.

Whaikōrero – formal speeches of welcome and response.

Hongi – the touching of noses and foreheads. It symbolizes the sharing of the "breath of life" and signifies that visitors are no longer strangers but part of one community.

Haka (sometimes included) – a powerful posture dance expressing strength, respect, and emotion. It is not always a challenge; it can also be a sign of welcome and honor.

The overall meaning of the ceremony in English is something like:

"We welcome you. We acknowledge our ancestors and yours. We come together in peace and friendship. By sharing our breath and our words, we become one people for this gathering."

Although the words vary with each ceremony, the central message is always one of peace, respect, hospitality, and the forging of a lasting relationship between the hosts and the visitors.

In a ceremonial welcome or haka:

Open hands, sweeping motions, and rhythmic gestures emphasize the meaning of the chant or song.

The movements express mana (dignity, authority, spiritual presence), respect, and welcome.

The synchronized hand actions help tell a story, much like gestures in classical Indian dance traditions such as Bharatanatyam or Kathakali, where hand movements reinforce the meaning of the lyrics.

Facial expressions, eye movements, and body posture are equally important. Wide eyes and expressive movements convey sincerity, strength, and deep emotion.

Choti si aasha

That is a beautiful way to put it, and there is a deep traditional truth behind it.

In the Indian understanding, Sāma Veda is the Veda of melody, intonation, and musical rendering. The Ṛg Vedic mantras become sung in the Sāma tradition, so it is often seen as the fountainhead of Indian music. That is why many people say all music has its seed in the Sāma Veda.

What you are saying about taking a verse and fitting it into rāga and tāla also points to something very real: Sanskrit verse, especially Vedic and classical verse, already carries an internal rhythm—syllabic balance, cadence, pauses, stress of sound, and flow. When that is placed against a rāga and beat cycle, it often settles naturally into musical form rather than sounding forced. In that sense, the verse is not being “made musical” from outside; its music is being uncovered.

At the same time, if one were to be technically strict, modern Carnatic and Hindustani rāga systems evolved over centuries, so not every present-day rāga can be directly traced in a one-to-one way to the Sāma Vedic chants. But the larger statement still stands beautifully:

Indian music does not begin with entertainment; it begins with sacred sound.

The Veda was not merely recited—it was intoned, measured, breathed, and lived. From that came the instinct that sound itself can carry devotion, order, memory, and transcendence.

In our tradition, music is not an invention added later to prayer; it is woven into sacred utterance itself. The Sāma Veda stands as the great testimony to this truth. It reveals that sound, when rightly intoned, is not merely pleasing to the ear but elevating to the spirit.

It is often said that all songs originate from the Sāma Veda. The statement is not merely poetic; it points to the intimate relationship between mantra and melody in the Indian tradition. If one takes a verse and gently places it within the framework of rāga and rhythm, one often discovers that it fits with surprising naturalness. The verse already carries within it a pulse, a cadence, and a hidden musical architecture. The rāga does not impose music upon it; it reveals the music that was always there.

This is perhaps the distinctive genius of our civilization: sound was never treated as a casual ornament. It was sacred, measured, and transformative. Before music became performance, it was prayer. Before it became art, it was worship. In that sense, the roots of Indian music lie not in the concert hall but in the Vedic vision of sound, with the Sāma Veda shining as one of its most luminous sources.

Example. 

Krishnastakam can be set to this verse. From samaveda. Pancha chamaram Chanda. 

Aye ho mere zindagime bollywood song too.

Another choti si aasha can be set to the verse below

From bhjaga prayatam Chanda.

Mango mania.

 India is home to roughly 1,500 varieties of mangoes, with key regional cultivars dominating different parts of the country. Prime varieties include the fragrant Alphonso from Maharashtra, the sweet Kesar from Gujarat, and Banganapalli (or Safeda) from Andhra Pradesh. 

The most popular mango varieties found across India, broken down by their primary growing regions.

West India:Alphonso (Hapus): Grown primarily in the Ratnagiri and Sindhudurg districts of Maharashtra. Known as the "King of Mangoes," it features smooth, golden-yellow skin, fiberless saffron flesh, and a rich, sweet taste.Kesar: Primarily cultivated in the Junagadh district of Gujarat. These bright orange-yellow mangoes have a distinct floral aroma and are incredibly sweet. South India:Banganapalli (Benishan): Hailing from Andhra Pradesh, this large, obliquely oval mango has smooth, pale-yellow skin and a sweet, meaty texture with no fiber.Totapuri: Known for its distinct parrot-like, curved beak tip. Grown heavily in Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh, it has a tangy flavor and is excellent for processing and salads.Badami (Karnataka Alphonso): Grown in Bagalkot and other parts of Karnataka, this variety shares the rich, sweet flavor and smooth, buttery texture of the Alphonso.Imam Pasand: A highly sought-after, premium fruit from the southern states, famous for its large size and rich, citrusy sweetness. North India:Dasheri: Originating from Malihabad in Uttar Pradesh. It is long, slightly curved, and features smooth skin and intensely sweet, aromatic flesh.Langra: Cultivated largely around Varanasi. This green-skinned mango retains its green hue even when fully ripe and is prized for its fiberless pulp and strong, spicy-sweet flavor.Chausa: Grown in North Indian regions like Punjab and Haryana. These large mangoes are incredibly soft, juicy, and sweet. East & Northeast India:Himsagar: A popular variety from West Bengal. It is medium-sized, yellowish-green, and known for its thick, extremely sweet pulp.Jardalu: A delicate, light-yellow mango native to Bihar with a very distinct and pleasant honey-like aroma. 

Mango Mania: 40 Mango varieties that define the flavors of India

Mango Mania: 40 Mango varieties that define the flavors of India. When it comes to mangoes, India is the land of · Alphonso. Let's start with the crème de la cr...

Alphonso the coastal king from Maharashtra sun kissed royalty. Intensely sweet with rich honey and citrus notes, smooth creamy and fiber free, thick  saffron hued pulp with iconic aroma.

Malgova the royal indulgence from Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh, luscious sweet with creamy flavour, smooth rich pulp, completely fiberless thick rich mango.

Sandhura the honey pot from Maharashtra, Kerala and Karnataka,ultra juicy soft pulp, honey like sweetness with gentle tang, smooth fiber free texture.

Badami the golden twin from Kerala and Karnataka. Rich sweetness with honey and apricot notes, creamy buttery pulp, low fiber melt in mouth texture, fragrant and delightfully smooth.

Raspuri/ pairi the noble prince from Karnataka. Bold sweet tangy tropical flavour, extremely juicy soft pulp, strong unmistakable mango aroma favorite of juice lovers.

Banganapalli the crown jewel from Andhra Pradesh. Smooth sweet and endlessly snackable, thick golden yellow juicy pulp, naturally sweet with mild tangy undertones, soft bite and fiber free texture.

Imam pasand the nawabs secret from Tamil Nadu. Complex  fragrant and unforgettable, buttery silk flavour, deep sweetness with lime coconut and spice notes, thin skin but abundant pulp.

Kesar the saffron soul from Maharashtra. Fragrant rich and beautifully balanced, smooth velvety pulp, honey sweet flavour with citrus lift, intensely aromatic.

Mallika the maharani from Karnataka. Soft indulgent and quietly luxurious, honeyed sweetness with citrus twist, creamy dense pulp, completely fiberless.

Kesar kutch the golden oasis from Gujarat.  Same kesar charm, slightly sharper personality, dense yet juicy bite,intensely sweet with gentle tang, creamy buttery pulp.

Langra the emerald emperor from Uttar Pradesh. Green outside sweet inside, sweet tangy and deeply aromatic, creamy juicy pulp, thin seed generous flesh.

Neelam the seasons after party, late summer legend from Tamil Nadu.  Intensely sweet with floral notes smooth dense pulp, completely fiber free texture.

Dasheri the court favorite from Malihabad. Elegant fragrant and perfectly juicy, soft buttery pulp, honey sweet flavour with floral aroma, smooth fiberless texture.

Chausa the monsoon magician from Malihabad. Squeeze slurp repeat, deep honey sweetness, ultra juicy pulp, smooth buttery bite.

Himsagar the eastern star from west Bengal. No fiber no fuss, rich custard like texture, intensely sweet honey flavour.



Divya Desam Vimanams 


Chola Nadu Tirupatis – 40

Thiruvarangam — Pranavakara Vimanam

Thirukkozhi (Uraiyur / Nichulapuri) — Kalyana Vimanam

Thirukarambanur — Udyoga Vimanam

Thiruvellarai — Vimalakruti Vimanam

Anbil — Taraka Vimanam

Thiruppernagar (Koviladi / Appakudathan) — Indra Vimanam

Thirukkandiyur — Kamalakruti Vimanam

Thirukkoodalur (Aaduthurai Perumal Koil) — Suddha Satva Vimanam

Thirukkavithalam (Kapisthalam) — Gaganaakruti Vimanam

Thiruppullabhoothangudi — Sopanam Vimanam

Thiru Aadhanur — Pranavakara Vimanam

Thirukkudanthai (Kumbakonam) — Vaideeka Vimanam

Thiru Vinnagar (Oppiliappan Koil) — Shuddhananda Vimanam

Thirunaraiyur (Nachiyar Koil) — Hema Vimanam

Thirucherai — Sara Vimanam

Thirukkannamangai — Utpala Vimanam

Thirukkannapuram — Utpalaavataka Vimanam

Thirukkannangudi — Utpala Vimanam

Thirunagai (Nagapattinam) — Soundarya Vimanam

Thanjai Mamani Koil — Soundarya Vimanam,manikooda vimanam,

Vedasundara vimanam.

Nandipura Vinnagaram (Nathan Koil) — Mandara Vimanam

Thiruvelliyankudi — Pushkalaavartaka Vimanam

Therazhundur — Garuda Vimanam

Thiruchirupuliyur — Nanda Vardhana Vimanam

Thalaichanga Nanmathiyam — Chandra Vimanam

Thiruindhalur — Veda Chakra Vimanam

Thirukkavalampadi — Vedaamoda Vimanam

Kazhi Cheerama Vinnagaram (Sirkazhi) — Pushkalaavartaka Vimanam

Thiru Arimeya Vinnagaram — Ucchisringa Vimanam

Thiruvan Purushottamam — Sanjivi Vigraha Vimanam

Thiruchsemponsei Koil — Kanaka Vimanam

Thirumanimadakkoil — Pranava Vimanam

Thiruvaikuntha Vinnagaram — Ananda Satya Vartaka Vimanam

Thiruvali – Thirunagari — Ashtakshara Vimanam

Thiruthevanarthogai — Sopana Vimanam

Thiruthetriambalam — Veda Vimanam

Thirumanikkoodam — Kanaka Vimanam

Thiruvellakulam (Annan Koil) — Tattvadyotaka Vimanam

Thiruparthanpalli — Narayana Vimanam

Chidambaram – Thiruchitrakoodam — Satvika Vimanam

Nadu Nadu Tirupatis – 2

Thiruvahindrapuram — Chandra Vimanam

Thirukkovilur — Srikara Vimanam

Thondai Nadu Tirupatis – 22

Thirukachchi Athigiri — Punyakoti Vimanam

Thiru Ashtabhujam (Attabuyakaram) — Gaganakruti Vimanam

Thiruththanka — Srikara Vimanam

Thiruvelukkai — Kanaka Vimanam

Thiru Neeragam — Jagadeeswara Vimanam

Thiruppadagam — Patra Vimanam

Nilathingal Thundam — Purusha Sukta Vimanam

Thiru Ooragam — Sarasrikara Vimanam

Thiruvekka — Vedasara Vimanam

Thirukkaragam — Vamana Vimanam

Thirukkarvanam — Pushkala Vimanam

Thirukalvanur — Vamana Vimanam

Thiruppavalavannam — Pravala Vimanam

Parameswara Vinnagaram — Mukunda Vimanam

Thiruputkuzhi — Vijayakoti Vimanam

Thirunindravoor — Utpala Vimanam

Thiruevvul — Vijayakoti Vimanam

Thiruvallikeni — Ananda Vimanam

Thiruneermalai — Thoyagiri Vimanam

Thiruvidandai — Kalyana Vimanam

Thirukadalmallai (Mahabalipuram) — Gaganakruti Vimanam

Thirukkadigai (Sholingur) — Simha Ghoshtakruti Vimanam

Malai Nadu Tirupatis – 13

Thirunaavaay — Veda Vimanam

Thiruvithuvakkodu — Tatvakanchana Vimanam

Thirukkatkarai — Pushkala Vimanam

Thirumoozhikkalam — Soundarya Vimanam

Thiruvallavazh (Srivallabha Kshetram) — Chaturanga Kola Vimanam

Thirukkadithanam — Punyakoti Vimanam

Thiruchitraru — Jagajyothi Vimanam

Thiruppuliyur (Kuttanadu Thiruppuliyur) — Purushottama Vimanam

Thiruvaranvilai (Aranmula) — Vamana Vimanam

Thiruvanvandur — Vedalaya Vimanam

Thiruvananthapuram — Hema Kuta Vimanam

Thiruvattaru — Ashtanga / Ashtakshara Vimanam

Thiruvanparisaram (Tirupatisaaram) — Indra Kalyana Vimanam

Pandya Nadu Tirupatis – 18

Thirukkurungudi — Panchaketaka Vimanam

Sri Varamangai (Vanamamalai / Nanguneri) — Nandavardhana Vimanam

Nava Tirupati

Srivaikuntham — Chandra Vimanam

Thiruvaragunamangai — Vijayakoti Vimanam

Thirupuliyangudi — Vedasara Vimanam

Thirutholaivillimangalam (Irattai Tirupati) — Kumuda Vimanam

Thirukulandai (Perungulam) — Ananda Nilaya Vimanam

Thirukolur — Srikara Vimanam

Then Thirupperai — Patra Vimanam

Thirukkurugur (Azhwar Tirunagari) — Govinda Vimanam

Other Pandya Nadu Divya Desams

Srivilliputhur — Vimalaakruti Vimanam

Thiruthangal — Deva Chandra Vimanam

Thirukkoodal (Madurai) — Ashtanga Vimanam

Thirumaliruncholai — Somasundara Vimanam

Thirumogur — Ketaki Vimanam

Thirukkottiyur — Ashtanga Vimanam

Thiruppullani — Kalyana Vimanam

Thirumeyyam — Satyagiri Vimanam

Vada Nadu Tirupatis – 12

Thiru Ayodhi — Pushkala Vimanam

Naimisharanyam — Srihari Vimanam

Thiruprithi (Joshimath) — Govardhana Vimanam

Kandamennum Kadinagar (Devaprayag) — Mangala Vimanam

Thiruvadari (Badrinath) — Tapta Kanchana Vimanam

Salagramam — Gagana Vimanam

Vadamadurai (Mathura) — Govardhana Vimanam

Thiruaaypaadi (Gokulam) — Hema Kuta Vimanam

Dwaraka — Hema Koota Vimanam

Singavelkundram (Ahobilam) — Guhai Vimanam

Thiruvenkatam (Tirumalai) — Ananda Nilaya Vimanam

Thiruparkadal — Ashtanga Vimanam

Paramapadam

Paramapadam (Thirunadu)

Total structure

Chola Nadu – 40

Nadu Nadu – 2

Thondai Nadu – 22

Malai Nadu – 13

Pandya Nadu – 18

Vada Nadu – 12

Paramapadam – 1

Grand Total: 108 Divya Desams.