Monday, July 13, 2026

Wonder stuck.

 Infinite Expressions of Creation 

Every creation of God can be seen in countless ways. The same sky that blazes under the summer sun becomes gentle at dawn, dramatic with rain clouds, radiant at sunset, and majestic beneath a canopy of stars. One person finds joy in the rain, another longs for sunshine. The same creation evokes different feelings, different experiences, and different purposes.

So it is with every aspect of nature. Mountains inspire adventure in some and devotion in others. Rivers provide water, sustain life, inspire poetry, and shape civilizations. Trees offer shade, fruit, medicine, shelter, and beauty. Every creation serves many purposes, revealing new dimensions to those who observe with wonder.

The human body itself is a marvel beyond imagination. Every heartbeat, every breath, every nerve, every cell functions with astonishing precision. The bodies of birds, animals, insects, and marine life display an intelligence and design that continue to amaze scientists. However brilliant mankind may become, no one has ever created a living body that can equal the perfection, adaptability, and self-sustaining nature of God's creation.

Then there are human faces. Billions have lived on this earth, yet no two faces are exactly alike. Every fingerprint is unique. Every voice has its own identity. Such infinite variety arising from the same Creator is itself a miracle.

Every day, new discoveries reveal dimensions of creation that were previously unknown. What we call inventions are often not the creation of something entirely new, but the discovery and application of laws, materials, and principles that already existed within God's universe. Man invents by understanding; God creates by bringing into existence.

The more we observe creation, the more we realise that it is inexhaustible. Every sunrise is familiar, yet never identical. Every season returns, yet brings something new. Every flower blooms according to its nature, yet no two are precisely the same.

Creation is an endless revelation of divine wisdom. The more we learn, the more we discover how much remains beyond our understanding. Wonder, therefore, is not the beginning of knowledge alone—it is also the beginning of gratitude.



Play learning.

 When Play Creates Livelihood.

Children do not always know when they are learning. To them, it is simply play. Yet, the games and activities that fill their tiny hands often shape the adults they become.

A few years ago, while visiting the United States, I watched children in a daycare centre immersed in art and craft. They were weaving colourful plastic strips similar to those used for making baskets, creating decorative items, working with shells, beads, paper, and other simple materials. It was fascinating to see that these were not merely classroom activities to keep children occupied. They were learning skills that people around the world use to earn a livelihood.

It made me reflect on our own approach to early childhood education. Much of it revolves around alphabet recognition, numbers, block stacking, and identifying shapes and colours. These are undoubtedly important, but creativity that produces something tangible often receives less attention.

Art is much more than painting a picture. It teaches patience, concentration, coordination, imagination, and problem-solving. More importantly, it nurtures confidence. A child who can create something with his or her own hands discovers the joy of transforming an idea into reality.

Our own traditions understood this well. Children once grew up watching elders weave baskets, make flower garlands, stitch clothes, mould clay, create rangoli, embroider fabrics, carve wood, and craft toys. Learning happened naturally at home. These skills not only preserved culture but also became sources of income for countless families.

In today's rapidly changing world, where technology is reshaping careers, creative skills are becoming even more valuable. Handmade products, sustainable crafts, and artistic entrepreneurship continue to provide opportunities across the globe.

Perhaps we should look at play differently. Not every game needs to end when childhood ends. Some games become passions. Some passions become professions. And some simple crafts learned with tiny fingers one day become the hands that support a family.

When we encourage children to create, we are not merely keeping them busy. We are planting seeds of imagination, dignity, self-reliance, and possibility.

Sometimes, play becomes purpose. Sometimes, purpose becomes livelihood.

HRVS

 Haridas sampradaya and

The Radha Vallabh Sampradaya is distinctive among Vaishnava traditions in that many of its followers, especially in the traditional Vrindavan lineage, do not observe the Ekādaśī fast in the customary Vaishnava way. 

The reasoning given within the tradition is theological rather than a rejection of Ekādaśī itself. Their emphasis is on prema-bhakti (the path of divine love for Śrī Rādhā and Śrī Rādhāvallabha). They hold that loving service (sevā) to the Divine Couple takes precedence over ritual austerities such as fasting. Thus, if fasting were to interfere with offering food to the Lord or with devotional service, they give priority to loving service. 

This is quite different from traditions such as:

Śrī Vaiṣṇavism, where Ekādaśī is widely observed, though the level of fasting varies.

Gaudiya Vaishnavism (including ISKCON), where avoiding grains on Ekādaśī is strongly emphasized.

Pushtimarg, which also has its own distinctive Ekādaśī practices. 

One of the beautiful aspects of Sanātana Dharma is that different sampradāyas may emphasize different disciplines while sharing devotion to the same Supreme Lord. One tradition may stress vrata, another sevā, another nāma-saṅkīrtana, yet all seek union with the Divine through their respective paths.

So, haridasas and  Radha Vallabh Sampradaya does not generally observe the Ekādaśī vrata in the usual Vaishnava manner, that is a recognized feature of that tradition, rooted in its own understanding of loving devotion rather than in disregard for Ekādaśī. 




A priceless gift.

Before you begin reading, pause for a moment and ask yourself: If someone deposited ₹10 lakh into your account every morning, would you spend it wisely? Most of us would. Yet every dawn, life deposits something far more precious into our hands—24 hours. Unlike money, whatever is not used today is gone forever. We cannot save it, borrow it, or earn it back.

Time: The Invisible Currency of Life

Every human being is born with unequal wealth, unequal opportunities, unequal talents, and unequal circumstances. Yet there is one gift that arrives with absolute fairness.

Time.

The emperor cannot buy another hour. The beggar cannot ask for yesterday to return. The scholar cannot store tomorrow, and the child cannot hurry adulthood.

Time is the only currency that is distributed equally to all.

We speak of spending time, wasting time, saving time, and making time—as though it were money. But time is far more valuable than money. Money lost can be earned again. Time spent is gone forever.

A farmer understands time through the seasons. A doctor watches time heal wounds that medicine alone cannot. A mother sees time transform an infant into an adult. A sculptor knows that masterpieces are carved one patient stroke at a time. A spiritual seeker discovers that even karma ripens only in time.

In the Bhagavad Gita, Sri Krishna reveals a truth that has echoed through the centuries:

"Kālo'smi" — "I am Time."

Time is not merely the ticking of a clock. It is the silent force through which creation unfolds, relationships deepen, wisdom matures, and civilizations rise and fall.

Perhaps that is why the old Birbal riddle is so memorable. Eleven different questions seemed to have nothing in common, yet every answer was the same: Time. What can a king not buy? Time. What does a careless person waste? Time. What heals? Time. What reveals truth? Time. What changes everything? Time.

The questions were different because life presents time in different forms. The answer remained one because time is the invisible thread that binds every experience together.

We often say, "I don't have time." In reality, we all receive the same twenty-four hours. The difference lies not in the amount of time we possess, but in the wisdom with which we invest it.

Treat time as your most valuable currency. Spend it on learning, on family, on kindness, on prayer, on meaningful work, and on moments that enrich the soul.

For one day, when we look back on life, we will not count the money we earned. We will remember how we spent the time we were given.

For time is life's only invisible currency—precious, impartial, and impossible to replace.



Sunday, July 12, 2026

☀️ Beyond Colour – The Colourless Light

 Every colour has a story.

When we began this journey, colours were simply shades that delighted our eyes. As we travelled together, they became teachers. Each colour quietly unfolded a lesson that has guided humanity for centuries.

Red taught us courage, sacrifice, and the pulse of life.

Orange inspired renunciation, wisdom, and the fire that transforms.

Yellow filled us with knowledge, optimism, and the warmth of the morning sun.

Green reminded us that every ending is followed by renewal, and that life flourishes when we nurture it.

Blue lifted our gaze to the limitless sky and the infinite ocean, teaching us serenity and boundless possibility.

White reflected purity, truth, and peace.

Silver shone with quiet excellence, reminding us that humility often sparkles more brightly than pride.

Grey encouraged balance, patience, and thoughtful understanding.

Brown grounded us in the earth, teaching gratitude for the soil that sustains every living being.

Pink softened our hearts with kindness, compassion, and unconditional love.

Purple invited us to seek wisdom beyond the visible and discover the richness of the spirit.

Black revealed that darkness is not to be feared, for every dawn is born from the night, and the deepest mysteries often hold the greatest light.

Finally, the Rainbow gathered every colour into one magnificent arc across the sky, reminding us that beauty lies not in sameness but in harmony. Every colour has its place. Every person has a purpose. Every life has something unique to contribute.

Nature never paints with a single colour. It celebrates diversity in every flower, bird, mountain, river, and sunset. So too should we celebrate the many colours of human thought, culture, talent, and character. When we respect each other's differences, the world becomes brighter.

May we carry these colours not merely in our surroundings but in our hearts—red in our courage, green in our hope, blue in our calmness, pink in our compassion, brown in our humility, silver in our character, purple in our wisdom, black in our resilience, and the rainbow in our acceptance of one another.

For in the end, the most beautiful colours are not those we see with our eyes, but those we express through our lives.

"Life is God's canvas, and each of us is a unique colour upon it. Alone we are beautiful; together we become a masterpiece. May our thoughts be bright, our actions colourful, and our hearts forever open to the rainbow within every soul." 🌈




Another view too.

We began with colours that delighted our eyes. Along the way, they became teachers. Green taught us renewal. Blue showed us infinity. Yellow reminded us of joy. Red inspired courage. White whispered peace. Black revealed depth. Silver reflected quiet achievement. Grey offered balance. Brown grounded us in the earth. Pink softened us with compassion. Purple lifted our spirit. And the rainbow reminded us that life's greatest beauty lies not in one colour but in the harmony of many.

Nature has never painted the world in a single shade. Every sunrise, every flower, every bird, every mountain and every human heart carries a different colour. Together they create the masterpiece called life.

May we learn not only to admire colours but to live their values—bringing hope where there is despair, kindness where there is hurt, wisdom where there is confusion, and love wherever we go. For the truest rainbow is not in the sky, but in the character we build and the lives we brighten.


Light – The Mother of All Colours

Not white. Not colourless.

Light.

Why?

Because every colour we've explored—blue, white, yellow, green, red, saffron, orange, gold, black, purple, pink, brown, grey, silver, and the rainbow—exists only because of light.

When light passes through a prism, it reveals the spectrum. When there is no light, colours disappear. Every colour is distinct, yet none exists independently of light.

Spiritually, this is a beautiful metaphor.

The Vedas speak of the Divine not merely as an object to be seen, but as Light itself.

"Tamaso mā jyotir gamaya."

Lead me from darkness to light.

The Upanishads speak of the light that illumines the sun, the moon, and the stars—the light of consciousness itself.

In the Bhagavad Gita, Sri Krishna says:

"Among luminous things, I am the radiant sun."

And in our temples, every worship concludes with ārati—the offering of light. We don't merely look at the flame; we receive it with reverence, drawing it to our eyes as a reminder that the highest light must also illuminate our hearts.

We began by admiring colours in nature.

We discovered that each colour carries a lesson.

But now we realise that behind every colour is one light.

Just as humanity appears in countless languages, cultures, and traditions yet shares one common humanity, creation appears in countless colours yet springs from one source.

Thus ends the colour series.

"May we learn to see beyond the colours that distinguish us and recognise the one Light that unites us all."



Beyond colour lies character. Beyond appearance lies purpose. Beyond what we see lies what we become. If each colour has taught us one virtue, then together they paint the portrait of an awakened human being. The true rainbow is not only in the sky—it shines through a life filled with courage, compassion, humility, wisdom, resilience, hope, and love.




 

🌈 Rainbow – Unity in Diversity

 "A rainbow teaches us that beauty is not found in one colour alone. Every shade has its place, every hue has its purpose. Likewise, humanity shines brightest when our differences come together in harmony. Nature paints the sky with a rainbow; we can paint our world with kindness, compassion, and unity."

Rouble Nagi, one of India's leading contemporary artists, transformed the idea of art from something admired in galleries into a force for social change. Through the Rouble Nagi Art Foundation, she has painted entire neighbourhoods, schools, and public spaces in vibrant colours, bringing hope, dignity, and a renewed sense of belonging to thousands of families. Her work demonstrates that colour is not merely decorative—it has the power to uplift communities, inspire confidence, and remind people that every life deserves beauty. In her hands, the rainbow became more than a natural phenomenon; it became a symbol of inclusion, joy, and transformation.




a rainbow is not just seen in the sky—it can be created on earth through compassion, creativity, and collective effort.

What if a paintbrush could transform homes, educate children, and rebuild dignity?

Rouble Nagi answered that question with action.

An acclaimed contemporary artist, she refused to let art stay confined to galleries. Instead, she took it to the streets, slums, and villages of India — turning walls into hope and colour into change.

Through the Rouble Nagi Art Foundation, her vision became a movement:

▪ 1.5 lakh+ homes transformed with colour under the Misaal Mumbai & Misaal India initiatives

▪ 800+ learning centres established for underprivileged children

▪ Thousands of women and youth skilled through art, education, and vocational training

Rouble proved that art isn’t just decoration — it’s education, sanitation, dignity, and social transformation. From painting slums to building classrooms, she used creativity as a tool for nation-building.

Her work gave children their first classroom, women their first skill, and communities their first sense of pride. She didn’t just paint walls. She painted futures.

This remarkable journey — from celebrated artist to social reformer — has now earned her global recognition with the 2026 Global Teacher Prize.

Life's lessons from live demonstrations. 


🩶 Silver – The Quiet Light

SILVER – The Quiet Brilliance of Humility

Silver does not seek attention like gold. It shines with quiet dignity, reflecting light without overpowering it. Gentle, graceful, and enduring, silver reminds us that true worth does not always announce itself. It is often found in those who work silently, serve selflessly, and let their actions speak louder than words.

In Indian tradition, silver has always held a special place. It adorns temple lamps, sacred vessels, and offerings to the Divine. It symbolizes purity, sincerity, and auspiciousness. Unlike gold, which signifies prosperity, silver speaks of simplicity, calmness, and inner contentment.

Nature too celebrates silver. The moon bathes the earth in silvery light. Dewdrops sparkle like tiny silver pearls on a blade of grass. Rivers shimmer beneath the moon, and the silver lining of clouds reminds us that hope is never far away.

Silver also represents achievement earned through perseverance. A silver medal is not a sign of defeat but of excellence, discipline, and the courage to compete. It reflects countless hours of dedication and the determination to keep striving.

In our own family, silver has a special memory.  granddaughter Kadambari, at just eleven years of age, won a silver medal in an inter-school Under-14 soccer tournament. That medal is far more than polished metal—it is a symbol of hard work, resilience, teamwork, and the confidence to dream beyond one's years. It reminds us that every sincere effort shines, whatever the colour of the medal.




Silver teaches us a profound lesson: not every light has to dazzle. Some lights quietly illuminate the path for others.

"Silver reminds us that greatness is not measured by how brightly we shine, but by how faithfully we reflect goodness, humility, and perseverance. Quiet excellence leaves a lasting glow."