Wednesday, July 15, 2026

All together.

 Dṛṣṭi shows us the path.

Viveka helps us choose the right path.

Dhairya gives us the courage to face the obstacles on that path.

Dhṛti keeps us walking when the journey becomes long.

Pragalbhatā enables us to act with confidence and dignity.

Krishna instills all these qualities in Arjuna.

He gives him dṛṣṭi by revealing the larger purpose.

He awakens viveka by removing his confusion.

He inspires dhairya by urging him not to succumb to weakness:

क्लैब्यं मा स्म गमः पार्थ...

"Yield not to weakness, O Partha." (Bhagavad Gita 2.3)

He strengthens his dhṛti to persevere in his duty.

Finally, Arjuna acts with pragalbhatā, declaring:

नष्टो मोहः... करिष्ये वचनं तव।

"My delusion is destroyed... I shall act according to Your word." (Bhagavad Gita 18.73)

these five Sanskrit words together form a beautiful philosophy of life:

Dṛṣṭi – See clearly.

Viveka – Choose wisely.

Dhairya – Face life courageously.

Dhṛti – Persevere steadfastly.

Pragalbhatā – Act confidently.

Pragalbhatā

 Pragalbhatā – Confidence Guided by Wisdom 

We often admire confidence. We encourage children to be confident, leaders to be confident, and ourselves to "believe in ourselves." Yet confidence alone can be dangerous. History is filled with confident people who were confidently wrong.

The Sanskrit word Pragalbhatā (प्रगल्भता) has a deeper meaning than mere self-confidence. It is poised confidence—born not of ego, but of clarity, character, and conviction. It is confidence that has first passed through the refining fire of viveka, discernment.

The Bhagavad Gita beautifully illustrates this through Arjuna. At the beginning of the war, he possessed immense skill but had lost confidence. His bow slipped from his hands, his mind was clouded, and doubt overwhelmed him. Krishna did not simply tell him, "Be confident." Instead, He patiently restored Arjuna's understanding. He awakened his viveka. Only then did confidence return.

True confidence does not begin with the words, "I can."

It begins with the realization, "I know what is right."

Confidence built on pride seeks applause. Confidence built on wisdom seeks Dharma.

This is why the greatest souls are often humble. Their confidence does not come from believing they are greater than others. It comes from trusting that when they walk the path of righteousness, they are never alone.

As devotees often remind themselves:

ईश्वरः अस्ति मम शक्तिः

"Īśvaraḥ asti mama śaktiḥ"

God is my strength.

Such confidence does not boast. It serves.

In our own lives, we face moments when we must speak an uncomfortable truth, defend someone who is treated unfairly, decline what is unethical, or choose the harder but nobler path. Knowledge tells us what to do. Viveka confirms it. But only pragalbhatā enables us to act.

Confidence is therefore not the absence of fear. It is the courage to do what is right despite fear.

Perhaps that is why confidence shines most brightly when it is quiet. It needs no display, no validation, and no audience. It simply does what must be done.

Pragalbhatā is not the loud voice that says, "Look at me." It is the steady heart that says, "I shall do what is right."

Dhṛti – the strength to endure.

Dṛṣṭi – the vision to see clearly.

Viveka – the wisdom to choose rightly.

Pragalbhatā – the confidence to act.

Together, they describe the inner journey from understanding to action.


Bonds redefined.

 That is an even more profound question. The scriptures often show that Dharma does not always require severing a relationship. Sometimes it requires remaining in the relationship while refusing to participate in its adharma. Krishna himself demonstrates this balance.

Here are some examples:

Vidura and Dhritarashtra

Vidura remained in the Kuru court despite knowing its flaws. He repeatedly advised Dhritarashtra against injustice, refused to support wrongdoing, and even left the court temporarily when insulted. He did not abandon his family, but neither did he compromise his principles.

Bhishma and Duryodhana

Bhishma stayed bound by his vow to the Kuru throne. He repeatedly warned Duryodhana, refused to kill the Pandavas when he had the chance, and openly declared that Dharma was on their side. His life illustrates the painful complexity of duty and attachment.

Hanuman and Ravana

Hanuman entered Ravana's court with respect, urged him to return Sita, and gave him every opportunity to choose righteousness. Only after Ravana refused did war become inevitable. Hanuman opposed the wrongdoing, not the person.

Krishna and Dhritarashtra

Krishna never cut ties with Dhritarashtra. He visited him, spoke respectfully, and made repeated peace efforts. Even after the war, Krishna continued to honor the aged king.

Rama and Kaikeyi

Rama never rejected Kaikeyi after she demanded his exile. He obeyed the exile without resentment and, on returning to Ayodhya, treated her with the same reverence as before. He rejected neither her nor his duty.

Krishna and Shishupala

Shishupala repeatedly insulted Krishna. Yet Krishna patiently forgave him again and again, honoring a promise to Shishupala's mother. Only after the agreed limit was crossed did Krishna act.

These examples reveal an important principle:

Do not support adharma.

Do not become adharma yourself through hatred or vengeance.

Continue to wish for the other person's transformation if possible.

Separate only when remaining would itself become participation in adharma or prevent you from fulfilling your own Dharma.

Krishna's life consistently shows this progression:

Understand.

Counsel.

Be patient.

Set clear boundaries.

Continue to show compassion.

Only if Dharma leaves no alternative, accept separation or confrontation.

This may be one of the deepest lessons of the Bhagavad Gita: detachment is not indifference, and compassion is not compliance. One can love deeply without enabling adharma.

Bharata and Kaikeyi provide one of the finest examples of refusing adharma without severing a relationship.

When Bharata returned to Ayodhya and learned that Kaikeyi had demanded Rama's exile and secured the throne for him, he was devastated.

His response is remarkable:

He strongly condemned her actions. He did not soften the truth or justify her out of filial affection.

He refused the kingdom, declaring that it rightfully belonged to Rama.

He went to the forest to bring Rama back, showing where his loyalty lay.

Yet, he never ceased to be Kaikeyi's son. He did not disown her or deny her the respect due to a mother.

After Rama's return, Bharata continued to treat Kaikeyi with dignity, allowing repentance and reconciliation to heal the relationship.

Bharata teaches us a profound lesson:

Love does not require agreement. Respect does not require approval. One may reject a loved one's actions without rejecting the person.

This beautifully complements Krishna's teaching in the Bhagavad Gita. Dharma is not merely choosing between people; it is choosing rightly while preserving compassion whenever possible.

A concise way to express Bharata's example is:

Bharata neither obeyed Kaikeyi's adharma nor abandoned Kaikeyi's motherhood. He rejected her decision, not his duty as her son.

This is perhaps one of the clearest scriptural models for handling difficult relationships: firm in principle, gentle in affection; unwavering in Dharma, yet free from bitterness.

When to severe.

 In the Hindu tradition, especially in the epics and the Bhagavad Gita, Sri Vishnu (through his incarnations, especially Krishna and Rama) teaches that relationships are sacred—but Dharma is more sacred still. A bond is to be preserved as long as it supports righteousness. When it becomes destructive to Dharma, one may have to let it go.

Here are a few examples:

Krishna and Arjuna (Bhagavad Gita) Krishna asks Arjuna to fight against his own grandsire Bhishma, his teacher Drona, cousins, and relatives. Arjuna's attachment to family clouded his understanding. Krishna reminds him that when affection opposes Dharma, one must choose Dharma.

"Better to perform one's own duty imperfectly than another's perfectly." (Bhagavad Gita 3.35)

Prahlada and Hiranyakashipu Prahlada never hated his father, but he refused to obey him when the command opposed devotion to Vishnu. Blood relationship did not override the higher relationship with the Divine. Vishnu appeared as Narasimha to protect Prahlada.

Vibhishana leaving Ravana Though Ravana was his elder brother, Vibhishana repeatedly advised him to return Sita. When Ravana rejected Dharma, Vibhishana left Lanka and surrendered to Rama. Rama accepted him immediately, showing that standing with righteousness is never betrayal.

Bali and Vamana When King Bali's guru, Shukracharya, advised him to break his promise to Vamana, Bali refused because truth and Dharma were higher than personal gain or even obedience to one's teacher.

The principle emerging from these stories is subtle:

Do not sever a bond because of hurt, anger, pride, or inconvenience.

Do not abandon people simply because they disagree with you.

But if maintaining the relationship requires abandoning truth, justice, compassion, or devotion to God, then Dharma comes first.

Even when a bond must end, it should end without hatred. Krishna never teaches revenge; he teaches detachment with compassion.

A beautiful way to express it is:

Love the person. Reject the adharma. If the two cannot coexist, step away from the adharma without bitterness toward the person.

This reflects Krishna's own life. He loved many who opposed him, gave them repeated opportunities to change, and only when every path of reconciliation had failed did he permit separation or confrontation. Dharma was never sacrificed to preserve appearances or relationships.

Bound.

 The final meeting between Karna and Gandhari, often referred to as the antim samvad (last dialogue), is a moving episode found in later retellings, regional traditions, and dramatic adaptations of the Mahabharata. It is not part of the Critical Edition of the Mahabharata.

The essence of the dialogue is profound:

Gandhari meets Karna before the great war.

She knows he is Duryodhana's greatest support and recognizes his nobility.

She appeals to him to prevent the impending destruction by leaving Duryodhana or making peace.

Karna respectfully refuses. He acknowledges that Duryodhana's path may not be righteous, yet he says gratitude (ṛṇa) binds him. When the world mocked and rejected him, Duryodhana gave him honor, friendship, and a kingdom. Karna cannot abandon him in his hour of need.

Gandhari blesses Karna despite knowing he fights on the losing side and laments that dharma itself seems divided among the warriors.

The dialogue highlights one of the Mahabharata's deepest dilemmas:

Bhishma is bound by his vow.

Drona is bound by obligation.

Karna is bound by gratitude.

Gandhari is bound by motherhood.

Krishna alone is bound only by dharma.

This is why the Mahabharata is not a story of heroes and villains alone. It is a story of noble people trapped by conflicting duties.

Karna's tragedy is summed up in a single thought:

"I know where dharma stands, yet I cannot abandon the hand that lifted me when the world cast me aside."

Whether or not these are his exact canonical words, they capture the spirit of Karna's character and explain why he remains one of the most admired and tragic figures in the Mahabharata.

DVD

 Dhṛti (धृति) – Steadfastness, inner firmness, courage, and the ability to remain calm and unwavering in the face of difficulties. It is the strength to persevere.

Dṛṣṭi (दृष्टि) – Vision, perception, or the way we see the world. It is not merely eyesight, but clarity of outlook and the ability to see truth beyond appearances.

Viveka (विवेक) – Discernment or wisdom; the capacity to distinguish between right and wrong, permanent and temporary, truth and illusion. In Vedanta, it is one of the highest spiritual qualities.

Dhṛti, Dṛṣṭi, and Viveka: The Three Gifts of the Bhagavad Gita 

The Bhagavad Gita is not merely a discourse on war. It is the transformation of a confused human being into an awakened one. This transformation unfolds through three priceless gifts: Dhṛti (steadfastness), Dṛṣṭi (vision), and Viveka (discernment).

When Arjuna first stands on the battlefield of Kurukshetra, he has lost all three. His mind is shaken, his vision is clouded by attachment, and his judgment is overwhelmed by emotion. He drops his Gandiva and declares that he cannot fight.

Krishna does not begin by commanding Arjuna to act. He first restores what has been lost.

He gives Arjuna Dṛṣṭi—the vision to see beyond the immediate battlefield. He reveals the immortality of the Self, the nature of duty, the workings of karma, the path of devotion, and finally the Universal Form. Arjuna's narrow view expands into a cosmic vision.

With this vision comes Viveka—the ability to discriminate between the eternal and the temporary, between attachment and duty, between emotion and righteousness. Arjuna begins to understand not merely what he feels, but what is right.

Finally, Krishna awakens Dhṛti—the inner firmness to live according to that understanding. Wisdom without courage remains unused. Vision without steadfastness cannot become action. Strength rooted in knowledge enables Arjuna to rise, lift his Gandiva once more, and perform his duty without selfish attachment.

The Gita therefore offers a timeless progression:

Krishna gives Dṛṣṭi.

Dṛṣṭi awakens Viveka.

Viveka strengthens Dhṛti.

Dhṛti expresses itself in righteous action.

At the end of the dialogue, Arjuna declares:

"My delusion has been destroyed. My memory has been restored through Your grace. I stand firm, free from doubt, and I shall act according to Your word." (Bhagavad Gita 18.73)

That single verse reflects the entire journey—from confusion to clarity, from clarity to discernment, and from discernment to steadfast action.

The dialogue between Krishna and Arjuna is, therefore, not only an ancient conversation. It is the journey every seeker must undertake—from Dṛṣṭi to Viveka, and finally to Dhṛti, until knowledge becomes character and wisdom becomes action.



Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Five.

 Raja Ravi Varma’s depiction of Vishnu’s avatars was important because he transformed sacred mythology into a modern and widely recognisable visual language.


He painted the first five avatars of Vishnu and later returned repeatedly to Rama and Krishna, depicting them across several different narratives from India’s epics and Puranic traditions.


Through oil painting, he gave these divine figures a dramatic and human presence. Through chromolithographs, the images moved beyond palaces and private collections into homes, shrines and public spaces across India.


The paintings created the imagery; the prints carried it into popular memory, shaping how generations came to visualise Vishnu’s avatars.