Friday, June 12, 2026

Sauti.


Recitation of mahabharata depicted in the above picture.

Ugraśrava was the son of Lomaharshana (also called Romaharshana), a disciple of Vyasa.

His role in Indian tradition is remarkable:

He was a learned storyteller and custodian of sacred history.

He visited many holy places and listened to the recitations of sages.

At the forest of Naimisharanya, he narrated the Mahabharata to the sages assembled under Shaunaka.

Much of what we know today from the Mahabharata comes through this chain:

Vyasa → Vaishampayana → King Janamejaya → Ugraśrava Sauti → Shaunaka and the sages → the world.

In a sense, if King Parikshit created the occasion for the Bhagavata Purana, and King Janamejaya created the occasion for the Mahabharata's recitation, it was Ugraśrava Sauti who preserved and spread these treasures for future generations.

Without such narrators, many of India's greatest spiritual and philosophical works might never have reached us. He represents a noble tradition: not merely creating knowledge, but faithfully preserving and transmitting it for the benefit of humanity.

He also is known for thenarating Shiva puran Padma puran etc. 

Lineage noble.

 a beautiful way of looking at the lineage.

Often we remember only the warriors and the battles, but each generation served a different purpose in preserving dharma and wisdom.

Arjuna lived as the ideal disciple, friend, and instrument of the Divine. Through his questions on the battlefield, humanity received the Bhagavad Gita.

Abhimanyu demonstrated courage, duty, and sacrifice. Though his life was brief, it became an eternal lesson in valor and commitment.

Parikshit, standing at the threshold of death, asked the most important question a human being can ask: "What should a person do when death approaches?" His sincere inquiry gave the world the Bhagavata Purana.

Janamejaya, driven by a desire to understand the past and the workings of fate and dharma, listened to the narration of the Mahabharata from Vaishampayana. Because of his questions, the epic was preserved and transmitted to future generations.

One could say that Arjuna gave humanity the questions that revealed the Gita, Parikshit gave humanity the questions that revealed the Bhagavatam, and Janamejaya gave humanity the questions that preserved the Mahabharata. Even Abhimanyu, through his heroic example, taught lessons that words alone could never convey.

The image of "blind men before a huge elephant" is particularly apt. The Mahabharata is so vast that no single person can grasp it completely. We see it today because these generations not only lived nobly but also asked, listened, remembered, and transmitted. Their curiosity was itself a form of service to humanity.

Perhaps that is one of the hidden teachings of this lineage: great souls do not merely leave behind achievements; they leave behind questions worthy of being asked for thousands of years. Through those questions, wisdom continues to flow long after they have departed.

Human being is for ever indeted to this great lineage. 

Thursday, June 11, 2026

Observation.



photograph captures that sacred in-between hour when night has not fully left and day has not yet arrived. The crescent moon still keeps watch, while the eastern sky quietly gathers light. The clouds seem to be folding up the darkness and making room for dawn.

Night, gathering its errands,

quietly departs.

The moon signs the last page

of darkness.

Clouds sweep the corridors of the sky,

and far beyond the horizon

Day waits patiently,

holding a basket of light.


The night does not flee;

it simply completes its service.

Having guarded the world in silence,

it bows before the coming dawn.

The moon withdraws like a temple lamp

after the ārati is done,

and the Lord unveils another day

for those willing to see His miracle.

Looking at this scene, one is reminded that in nature there is no conflict between night and day. One gracefully yields to the other. Perhaps that is why dawn feels so peaceful—it is cooperation written across the sky. 

 Sky is a beautiful slate and nature is an expert artist every minute it puts up a new scene. Some times it too makes a mistake and we see how it erases what was displayed. Making place for a perfect picture. Which of course no camera can capture. 

 perhaps nature's "mistakes" are not mistakes at all. The cloud that hides the mountain, the mist that blurs the valley, the sudden shower that obscures the sunset—each seems to erase a masterpiece, only to reveal another one moments later.

The sky is God's blackboard,

and the clouds are His chalk.

Every moment a new picture appears,

drawn with light, shadow, wind, and color.

We admire one scene and wish to keep it,

but the Artist smiles and wipes it away.

Not because it was imperfect,

but because another beauty is waiting to be born.

And how true that no camera can fully capture it. A camera records the image; it cannot record the cool breeze, the scent after rain, the call of a distant bird, the feeling of wonder, or the quiet joy in the heart of the observer.

Perhaps that is why nature's greatest gallery has no walls and no permanent exhibits. Every painting exists only for a moment. The privilege is not to possess it but to witness it.

The sky never repeats itself.

Every sunrise is an original,

signed by the same Artist.

The farewell of night.


The breaking of dawn or rather the awakening of dawn.

The Awakening
Night has finished its watch.
The moon has departed, the stars have withdrawn, and now the sun appears—not with a trumpet blast, but with a quiet promise.  the world seems to be holding its breath between sleep and activity. The trees are awake before the roads. The birds are awake before the people. The light is awake before the heat.
The sun is not yet a blazing ruler of the sky. It is a gentle guest, peering through a veil of mist, as though asking permission to enter.

This one is the awakening.
The earth stretches its limbs.
The trees whisper among themselves.
The birds rehearse the day's first songs.
The mist gathers its belongings and departs.
And the sun, still soft with sleep,
opens one golden eye upon the world.
the window frame. It turns the scene into a painting, reminding us that every morning we are invited to an exhibition that has never been shown before and will never be shown again.
And perhaps that is why dawn is so moving. It is not merely the arrival of light. It is creation happening once more before our eyes.
Every dawn is God's way of saying,
"The story is not finished.
Here is another page." 

So many things happening quietly. A flock of birds fly past the yet awakening sun on their mission. For a second they turn towards the sun and pay their obeisance, just a flicker if one does not notice you may miss it a fraction of a second. It's beautiful to watch this truly is bliss.  Koti koti dhandavath pranams for nature's beauty.

https://youtu.be/ZpnMTMMZTfw?si=MWmctn7NQLz7ZVxW

Blue mountains in the above video.

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Words

 Delightful  words are beautiful not merely because of their sound, but because they carry an entire philosophy, emotion, or way of seeing life within them.

Here are a few from different languages:

Word

Language

Meaning

In that order. 

Aloha

Hawaiian

Love, peace, compassion, and the sharing of life's breath.

Sukha

Sanskrit

Ease, happiness, well-being, a state where life flows smoothly.

Ananda

Sanskrit

Bliss; joy arising from the deepest level of being.

Karuna

Sanskrit/Pali

Compassion for all beings.

Ubuntu

Zulu/Xhosa

"I am because we are." Human interconnectedness.

Saudade

Portuguese

A tender longing for someone or something absent.

Meraki

Greek

Putting your soul, creativity, and love into what you do.

Komorebi

Japanese

Sunlight filtering through leaves.

Wabi-sabi

Japanese

Beauty in imperfection and impermanence.

Ikigai

Japanese

A reason for being; what makes life worth living.

Fernweh

German

Longing for distant places one has never visited.

Serendipity

English

Finding something wonderful unexpectedly.

Eunoia

Greek

Beautiful thinking; a well-disposed mind.

Hiraeth

Welsh

Longing for home, perhaps a home that never existed.

Mångata

Swedish

The shimmering road of moonlight across water.

Gezellig

Dutch

Warmth, coziness, and pleasant togetherness.

Among Sanskrit words, many are exceptionally musical and profound:

Satyam — Truth

Shivam — Auspiciousness

Sundaram — Beauty

Prema — Divine love

Shraddha — Faith born of the heart

Bhakti — Loving devotion

Moksha — Liberation

Shanti — Peace

Madhuram — Sweetness

Anugraha — Grace

Many people consider the phrase "Satyam Shivam Sundaram" among the most beautiful ever uttered: Truth, Auspiciousness, Beauty.

For sheer sound and meaning together, my personal shortlist would be:

Ananda (Bliss)

Karuna (Compassion)

Ubuntu (Human interconnectedness)

Saudade (Tender longing)

Komorebi (Sunlight through leaves)

Shanti (Peace)

Aloha (Love and shared life)

Prema (Divine love)

And perhaps one of the most beautiful words of all is simply "Grace." In Sanskrit, Anugraha. A small word containing the idea that the universe gives us more than we deserve.

 words like Ananda, Karuna, Bhakti, Prema, and Anugraha may resonate especially deeply—they are not merely concepts but experiences that saints have spent lifetimes trying to describe.

What makes a word beautiful is often that it carries a meaning that takes an entire sentence to explain. India's languages are especially rich in such words.

Indian Languages

Sarba (சார்பு) – Tamil

Dependence, support, belonging, refuge.

In a devotional context, it can suggest complete reliance on God.

Kainkaryam (கைங்கர்யம்) – Tamil/Sanskrit tradition

Loving service offered without expectation of reward.

A cherished word in the Sri Vaishnava tradition.

Gamse (ગમશે) – Gujarati

"It will please," "you will like it."

A gentle, optimistic word that implies future delight.

Bhalo (ভালো) – Bengali

Good, kind, beautiful, wholesome.

Bengalis use it for everything from health to character to beauty.

Irike (ಇರಿಕೆ) – Kannada

Being, presence, existence.

Related to the simple but profound fact of "being there."

Santosha (ಸಂತೋಷ) – Kannada/Sanskrit

Contentment, one of the greatest spiritual virtues.

English

Serendipity

A fortunate discovery made by accident.

Grace

Divine favor, elegance, kindness, blessing.

Belonging

The feeling of being accepted and at home.

Mellifluous

Sweetly flowing in sound.

Spanish

Duende

An almost magical artistic inspiration or soulfulness.

Querencia

A place where one feels safe, strong, and truly at home.

Sobremesa

The pleasant conversation that continues after a meal.

Portuguese

Saudade

Deep longing mixed with love and remembrance.

Often called one of the world's most beautiful words.

Greek

Agape (ἀγάπη)

Selfless, unconditional love.

Meraki (μεράκι)

Doing something with one's whole heart and soul.

Eudaimonia (εὐδαιμονία)

Human flourishing; a life well lived.

Latin

Caritas

Charity, love, benevolence.

Veritas

Truth.

Concordia

Harmony of hearts and minds.

Russian

Тоска (Toska)

A deep spiritual longing or yearning.

Famously described by Russian writers as difficult to translate.

Душа (Dusha)

Soul.

Russians often speak of a person with a "beautiful soul."

Japanese

Komorebi (木漏れ日)

Sunlight filtering through leaves.

Yūgen (幽玄)

A profound awareness of the mysterious beauty of existence.

Ikigai (生き甲斐)

A reason for living.

German

Fernweh

Longing for faraway places.

Geborgenheit

A feeling of warmth, safety, and being cared for.

Arabic

Baraka (بركة)

Divine blessing that increases goodness.

Sakina (سكينة)

Inner peace bestowed by God.

Hebrew

Shalom (שלום)

Peace, completeness, wholeness, harmony.

Persian

Mehr (مهر)

Love, affection, kindness, and sunlight all in one word.

Delbar (دلبر)

One who carries away the heart.

For a devotee, some of the most beautiful words ever spoken may be:

Bhakti – devotion

Prema – divine love

Karuna – compassion

Anugraha – grace

Kainkaryam – loving service

Shanti – peace

Ananda – bliss

These are not merely words; they are destinations. Saints spend lifetimes trying to transform them from vocabulary into experience.



Week

 The popular Navagraha verse:

Bhānuḥ Śaśī Bhūmisuto Budhaśca

Guruśca Śukraḥ Śani Rāhu Ketavaḥ ।

Kurvantu Sarve Mama Suprabhātam ॥

Meaning:

Bhānuḥ – the Sun

Śaśī – the Moon

Bhūmisutaḥ – Mars (the son of Bhūmi, Mother Earth)

Budhaḥ – Mercury

Guruḥ – Jupiter (Bṛhaspati)

Śukraḥ – Venus

Śaniḥ – Saturn

Rāhu

Ketu

"May all these celestial powers make my morning auspicious."

The days of the week are named after the seven visible grahas:

Sanskrit

English Day

Bhānu-vāra / Ravi-vāra (Sun)

Sunday

Soma-vāra / Śaśi-vāra (Moon)

Monday

Maṅgala-vāra (Mars)

Tuesday

Budha-vāra (Mercury)

Wednesday

Guru-vāra / Bṛhaspati-vāra (Jupiter)

Thursday

Śukra-vāra (Venus)

Friday

Śani-vāra (Saturn)

Saturday

Notice that Rāhu and Ketu are included among the Navagrahas, but no weekday is named after them.

It is fascinating that many languages preserve the same planetary connection. For example, English Sunday (Sun), Monday (Moon), and even Saturday (Saturn) directly reflect the same ancient planetary tradition.

The little verse thus quietly recites the very celestial beings after whom our week is organized of how deeply astronomy, spirituality, and daily life were woven together in ancient thought.

Journey, final.

 The final journey of the Pandavas and Draupadi is one of the most moving episodes of the Mahabharata. It is called the Mahaprasthanika Parva—the Great Departure.

After the departure of Lord Krishna and the destruction of the Yadava clan, Yudhishthira realized that the age of heroes had ended. The purpose for which the Pandavas had come to earth was complete. They crowned Parikshit king, renounced their kingdom, royal garments, and wealth, and set out on a pilgrimage toward the Himalayas and beyond.

The travelers were:

Yudhishthira

Bhima

Arjuna

Nakula

Sahadeva

Draupadi

A faithful dog who accompanied them.

As they climbed the icy heights, one by one they fell.

Draupadi Falls First

Draupadi was the first to fall. Bhima asked why such a noble and devoted queen should fall.

Yudhishthira replied that although she loved all five husbands, in her heart she had shown a special preference for Arjuna. That slight partiality was considered a human imperfection.

Many modern readers interpret this compassionately. Draupadi's life was filled with sacrifice. Her fall is not necessarily a condemnation but a reminder that even great souls carry traces of human attachment.

The Brothers Follow

Sahadeva fell because of pride in his wisdom.

Nakula fell because of pride in his beauty.

Arjuna fell because of pride in his prowess as a warrior.

Bhima fell because of pride in his strength and his love of food.

Yudhishthira alone continued onward, refusing to abandon the dog that followed him.

The Dog's Secret

At the gates of heaven, Indra invited Yudhishthira into his celestial chariot. But Yudhishthira refused to enter unless the dog could come too.

The dog then revealed himself as Dharma, Yudhishthira's divine father, who had been testing him.

A Deeper Interpretation

Many spiritual teachers see this journey symbolically.

The Himalayas represent the ascent of the soul toward the Divine. The falls do not mean the Pandavas failed. Rather, each sheds the last traces of earthly identity—beauty, knowledge, power, strength, attachment—before the soul reaches its highest state.

In this view, Draupadi's fall is not a punishment but the laying down of the final burden of human emotion. The Pandavas and Draupadi had fulfilled their earthly mission. Their journey was complete.

 After Krishna's departure, the Pandavas felt that the force that had guided and united their lives had withdrawn from the world. Draupadi had been the heart of their family, and Krishna had been its soul. With Krishna gone, the age of the Pandavas naturally came to its close.

Many devotees therefore see the Mahaprasthana not as a tragic ending, but as a homecoming—the return of great souls who had completed the work for which they descended to earth.

The Flame of Wisdom and Dharma





Draupadi is often discussed in terms of the unusual circumstances of her marriage, but one of its great consequences is sometimes overlooked: she became a powerful force for the unity of the Pandavas.

The five brothers were very different personalities.

Yudhishthira was calm, philosophical, and devoted to Dharma.

Bhima was passionate, powerful, and direct.

Arjuna was heroic, disciplined, and accomplished.

Nakula was graceful and refined.

Sahadeva was wise and thoughtful.

Such different individuals could easily have developed rivalries. History is full of royal families destroyed by jealousy among brothers. Kingdoms have been lost because one brother desired more power, more wealth, or greater recognition than another.

Yet among the Pandavas we see remarkable unity.

Draupadi helped sustain that unity.

She belonged to all five, yet she favored none in a way that created division. She respected Yudhishthira's authority, admired Arjuna's prowess, appreciated Bhima's fierce loyalty, and valued the virtues of Nakula and Sahadeva. Each brother felt honored rather than excluded.

Because of this, no enemy could easily sow seeds of discord.

Duryodhana and Shakuni tried many strategies against the Pandavas, but they never succeeded in turning one brother against another. The bond among the brothers remained stronger than political intrigue.

Draupadi's role in this should not be underestimated.

She shared in their triumphs and hardships alike. During exile, she suffered alongside them. When one brother felt pain, she did not exploit it to gain influence with another. Her concern was always for the welfare of the entire family.

This is an important distinction. A lesser person might have used affection, influence, or grievances to create factions. Draupadi did the opposite. She strengthened the collective identity of the Pandavas.

In many ways, she was the emotional center of the family.

Just as Krishna was the spiritual center of the Pandavas, Draupadi was often their unifying domestic center. The brothers had different temperaments, but their love, respect, and responsibility toward Draupadi continually reminded them that they stood together.

One could even say that the Pandavas possessed six strengths:

Yudhishthira's Dharma

Bhima's strength

Arjuna's skill

Nakula's grace

Sahadeva's wisdom

Draupadi's power to unite them

Without that unity, the Pandavas would merely have been five capable brothers. With it, they became an unbreakable force capable of withstanding exile, humiliation, war, and loss.

That is one reason Draupadi deserves to be remembered not only as a queen or devotee, but also as a builder of harmony—a woman whose presence helped ensure that the Pandavas remained one family, one purpose, and one heart.

Among the many remarkable personalities of the Mahabharata, Draupadi stands out not merely as a queen, not merely as the wife of the Pandavas, and certainly not merely as a woman who endured hardship. She shines as one of the most intelligent, courageous, and spiritually mature figures in the entire epic.

Modern discussions often focus on the injustices she suffered. While those events are undeniably important, they do not define her greatness. Draupadi's true glory lies in the nobility with which she responded to every challenge.

Born from the sacred fire of King Drupada's yajna, Draupadi entered the world as a symbol of purity, strength, and purpose. Throughout her life she displayed qualities that continue to inspire seekers of truth—wisdom, dignity, devotion, courage, and unwavering commitment to Dharma.

One of the most fascinating aspects of Draupadi's character is her intellect. She was not a silent observer of events. She thought deeply, questioned boldly, and spoke fearlessly whenever Dharma was at stake.

During the years of exile, she engaged in profound discussions with Yudhishthira. Seeing the Pandavas suffer in the forest while unrighteous men occupied the throne, she raised difficult questions. Why should the righteous endure injustice? Does patience have limits? When does forgiveness cease to be a virtue and become weakness?

These were not the complaints of a bitter person. They were the sincere inquiries of a thoughtful and intelligent woman seeking to understand the workings of Dharma in a complex world.

What makes Draupadi exceptional is that she used her intelligence responsibly. She did not manipulate. She did not scheme. She did not seek power over others. Instead, she used her sharp mind to challenge complacency, awaken courage, and encourage righteous action.

Yudhishthira never dismissed her concerns. The Mahabharata presents their conversations as respectful dialogues between two noble souls exploring profound moral questions. In this sense, Draupadi was not merely a companion to great men; she was herself a great thinker.

Her courage was equally extraordinary. In the royal assembly, surrounded by kings, elders, and warriors, she stood alone and asked questions that no one else dared to ask. Her inquiries exposed the moral failure of the entire court. She demonstrated that true strength is not found in physical power but in moral clarity.

Yet for all her intelligence and courage, Draupadi remained deeply devoted to Lord Krishna. Their relationship is one of the most beautiful friendships in sacred literature. Krishna protected her not merely because she needed protection, but because she possessed a heart devoted to truth and righteousness.

Even after enduring humiliation, exile, and war, Draupadi did not allow bitterness to consume her. She continued to uphold her duties and remained steadfast in her commitment to Dharma. Her life teaches us that suffering need not harden the heart. It can instead reveal hidden reserves of faith, wisdom, and strength.

Draupadi should therefore be remembered not as a victim of circumstances but as a victor over them. She transformed pain into courage, adversity into wisdom, and trial into spiritual growth.

Like a flame rising upward regardless of the winds around it, Draupadi's life reminds us that a noble soul remains steadfast amidst every storm.

For this reason, she remains one of the brightest lights of the Mahabharata—a woman of intellect without manipulation, strength without cruelty, devotion without weakness, and courage without arrogance.

Draupadi's wisdom, moral courage, and spiritual depth  It presents her as a role model whose questions arose from a sincere search for Dharma, not from anger or resentment.

Draupadi's twin brother was Dhrishtadyumna.

His story is fascinating because, like Draupadi, he was not born in the ordinary way.

Born from the Sacred Fire

King Drupada had been humiliated by his former friend and teacher Drona. Burning with the desire to defeat Drona, Drupada performed a great yajna.

From the sacrificial fire emerged first Dhrishtadyumna, fully grown and armed. A divine voice proclaimed that he was destined to kill Drona.

Soon afterward emerged Draupadi, radiant and extraordinary. Thus brother and sister were born from the same sacred fire and for the same divine purpose.

A Strange Twist of Fate

Although Dhrishtadyumna was destined to kill Drona, Drupada still sent him to learn warfare from Drona himself.

Drona knew the prophecy.

He knew this young prince was destined to be his killer.

Yet he taught him all the arts of war without holding back.

This episode is often cited as an example of Drona's greatness as a teacher. He placed duty above personal fear.

Commander of the Pandava Army

During the Kurukshetra war, Dhrishtadyumna became the supreme commander of the Pandava forces.

This was a tremendous responsibility. Even though warriors such as Arjuna and Bhima were greater fighters individually, Dhrishtadyumna was entrusted with directing the entire army.

He fought bravely throughout the war and played a major role in many battles.

The Death of Drona

On the fifteenth day of the war, Drona became virtually unstoppable.

To disarm him, Krishna devised a strategy involving the death of an elephant named Ashvatthama. Hearing Yudhishthira's ambiguous statement, Drona believed his son had died.

Overwhelmed with grief, Drona laid down his weapons and entered meditation.

At that moment Dhrishtadyumna fulfilled the prophecy and killed him.

This act remains controversial. Some view it as a violation of warrior ethics; others see it as the unavoidable fulfillment of destiny in a war where Dharma itself was under threat.

His End

After the war, tragedy struck.

While the victorious Pandavas were away from camp, Ashwatthama attacked at night seeking revenge for his father's death.

Dhrishtadyumna was among those killed in the sleeping camp.

Thus the son who had been born to kill Drona was eventually killed by Drona's son.

Brother and Sister

There is a beautiful symmetry between Dhrishtadyumna and Draupadi.

Both emerged from the sacred fire.

Both were born for a divine purpose.

Dhrishtadyumna embodied the warrior aspect of that purpose.

Draupadi embodied the moral and spiritual aspect.

Dhrishtadyumna helped bring about the military victory of the Pandavas. Draupadi helped preserve their unity, courage, and commitment to justice.

Together, the twins of Panchala were among the most important figures in the unfolding of the Mahabharata. One wielded weapons; the other wielded moral strength. Both were instruments in the restoration of Dharma.