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.
















