Thursday, June 18, 2026

Jhari nevra seva.


In the tradition of the Pushti Marg, a Jhari or Jhariji is not merely a water vessel. It is treated as a sacred service (seva) offered to the Lord, who is regarded as a living divine child, friend, beloved, or king depending on the mood of devotion.

The vessel typically:

Contains fresh, pure water.

Has a spout from which the Lord is symbolically offered water to drink.

Is covered with a clean cloth to preserve purity and coolness.

Is prepared daily with great care and affection.

Is often accompanied by a small cup or vessel from which the Lord is imagined to partake of the water.

The term Karvadi Seva refers to the service of maintaining and offering this sacred water vessel. Devotees consider it an intimate form of personal attendance upon the Lord. Just as one would ensure that a beloved family member always has fresh drinking water nearby, the devotee ensures that the Lord's Jhari is always replenished and pure.

What makes this practice especially beautiful is the theology of Pushti Marg. The Lord is not approached as a distant deity but as a cherished member of the household. Every human need—waking, bathing, dressing, eating, resting, music, festivals, and even drinking water—is lovingly attended to through seva.

The cloth wrapping seen in your image serves several purposes:

Maintaining ritual purity.

Keeping the water cool.

Protecting the vessel.

Signifying that the contents are reserved exclusively for the Lord's service.

This practice reflects a profound devotional principle: love expresses itself through attention to the smallest details. A glass of water offered with affection becomes an act of worship.

It is reminiscent of the spirit of the Bhagavata Purana, where the highest devotion is not grand philosophy alone but caring for the Lord with the tenderness one would show a child or beloved guest. In that sense, even a simple Jhari becomes a symbol of continuous remembrance and loving service.

Rasangi.

Sage Angirasa (or Angiras) is woven throughout the Vedas, Puranas, and Itihasas. He is not remembered for one single dramatic episode, but as one of the great fountains of Vedic wisdom from whom many streams of knowledge emerged.

Angirasa Among the Mind-Born Sons of Brahma

According to the Puranas, Angirasa was one of the mind-born sons (manasa putras) of Brahma. Brahma created such sages to help populate the universe and establish dharma.

He is counted among the ancient Saptarishis (Seven Great Seers) of an early age of creation. His austerity, wisdom, and mastery over sacred fire made him one of the most revered rishis.

A Seer of the Vedas

Many hymns of the Rigveda are attributed to Angirasa and his descendants, known as the Angirasas.

The Angiras sages are especially associated with:

Sacred fire (Agni)

Vedic sacrifices (Yajnas)

Divine illumination

Mantras and spiritual knowledge

In several Vedic hymns, the Angirasas are described as discovering the hidden cows of light that had been concealed by forces of darkness. This symbolic story represents the recovery of divine knowledge from ignorance.

The Opening of the Cave of Light

One of the most beautiful Vedic legends tells how the Angiras sages, aided by Indra, broke open the cave where the Panis had hidden the celestial cows.

The cows represent:

Light

Knowledge

Wisdom

Spiritual riches

The cave represents ignorance and concealment.

Thus Angirasa and his descendants become symbols of seekers who recover truth hidden from the world.

Father of Brihaspati

One of Angirasa's most famous sons was Brihaspati, the guru of the gods.

Brihaspati inherited his father's wisdom and became:

Teacher of the Devas

Master of sacred speech

Lord of divine knowledge

Because of this lineage, Angirasa is regarded as the grandfather of much of the wisdom tradition preserved in later Hindu literature.

Angirasa and King Chitraketu

In the Bhagavata Purana, Angirasa appears in a moving story involving King Chitraketu.

Chitraketu was wealthy and powerful but had no children. Seeing his sorrow, Sage Angirasa performed a sacrifice and blessed him with a son.

However, Angirasa also warned that the child would bring both joy and sorrow.

The child was eventually poisoned by jealous co-wives, plunging the king into grief. Angirasa then returned with Narada and taught Chitraketu the impermanent nature of worldly relationships.

This event transformed Chitraketu into a great devotee and spiritual seeker.

Angirasa and Mundaka Upanishad

The famous Mundaka Upanishad begins with a lineage of wisdom:

Brahma → Atharvan → Angir → Satyavaha → Angirasa.

In this tradition, Angirasa becomes the teacher who explains the distinction between:

Lower knowledge (apara vidya)

Higher knowledge (para vidya)

He teaches that all worldly learning ultimately finds fulfillment only in the realization of Brahman.

Connection with the Atharva Veda

The Atharva Veda is sometimes called the Atharvangirasa because of its association with both Atharvan and Angirasa traditions.

Many ancient mantras and sacred rites are linked to these two great seers.

The Deeper Meaning of Angirasa

The name Angirasa is often interpreted as one associated with inner fire, radiance, and spiritual energy.

His life symbolizes:

The fire of knowledge that dispels ignorance.

The recovery of hidden truth.

The transmission of wisdom from teacher to student.

The transformation of sorrow into spiritual awakening.

If Vasishta teaches serenity, Vishvamitra teaches aspiration, and Narada teaches devotion, Angirasa teaches the power of sacred knowledge illuminated by the fire of realization.

For this reason, the Vedic tradition remembers Sage Angirasa not merely as a person of the distant past, but as one of the great torchbearers who helped bring the light of the Vedas into the world.

Utsav pyare.

One of the most beautiful aspects of the worship of Lord Vishnu in the great temples of India is that the Infinite, Formless Supreme is lovingly treated as a living divine person. The Lord who sustains countless universes allows Himself to be served as a child, a prince, a bridegroom, a king, a friend, and finally as the resting Lord of the cosmos.

This is not merely ritual. It is theology expressed through affection.

The Lord Awakens

Before dawn comes the Suprabhata Seva.

The temple doors open gently. Hymns are sung. Lamps are brought. Bells ring softly. The Lord is awakened as though He has been resting.

Devotees sing:

"O Lord, arise. The world awaits Your glance."

In great temples such as Tirumala Venkateswara Temple, the awakening ceremony is among the most cherished moments of the day.

Though He never sleeps, He allows His devotees the joy of waking Him.

The Royal Bath

The Lord is then bathed in the Abhisheka.

Water, milk, curd, honey, sandalwood, turmeric, fragrant herbs, and sacred waters are offered.

The bath symbolizes:

Purification of the devotee's mind.

Gratitude to the Lord.

Celebration of divine beauty.

After the bath He is carefully dried and adorned.

The Divine Adornment

This is the Alankara.

The Lord becomes:

A child Krishna.

A majestic Rama.

A royal Narayana.

A victorious Varadaraja.

A compassionate Venkatesha.

Crowns, jewels, silk garments, garlands, tulasi leaves, and fragrant flowers transform the sanctum into a heavenly court.

Every ornament tells a story.

The Kaustubha gem. The Vaijayanti garland. The Srivatsa mark. The conch and discus.

The devotee sees not stone but the living Lord.

The Morning Audience

Now the Lord grants Darshana.

Just as a king sits in court to hear his subjects, the Lord receives His devotees.

People come with:

Joy.

Sorrow.

Gratitude.

Questions.

Tears.

He listens to all.

No prayer is too small.

Feeding the Lord

The Lord is offered Naivedya several times a day.

Rice, fruits, sweets, butter, milk preparations, and countless regional delicacies are lovingly prepared.

The offering is not because God needs food.

Rather:

The devotee wishes that the Lord should eat before anyone else.

The food returns as Prasada, carrying divine grace.

The Lord Enjoys Music

In many temples the Lord listens to:

Vedic chanting.

Divya Prabandham.

Kirtanas.

Bhajans.

Instrumental music.

Saints such as Nammalvar, Andal, Purandara Dasa and Tyagaraja sang not to display musical skill but to delight the Lord.

The temple becomes a concert hall where the sole audience is Vishnu Himself.

The Swing Festival

The Dolotsava or Unjal Seva is especially charming.

The Lord and Lakshmi are seated on a decorated swing.

As devotees sing gently, the swing moves rhythmically.

This represents:

The tenderness of divine love.

The movement of the universe.

The peaceful companionship of the Divine Couple.

After the solemnity of royal worship, the Lord appears relaxed and approachable.

Almost like a beloved member of the family.

The Divine Marriage

One of the most emotional ceremonies is Kalyanotsava.

The wedding of the Lord and His consort is celebrated with full grandeur.

Priests chant marriage mantras.

Garlands are exchanged.

Sacred threads are tied.

Rice is showered.

Music fills the air.

The devotees become members of the wedding party.

Poets often imagine the Lord as a shy bridegroom.

Though He is the ruler of creation, He appears gentle and almost human in His divine modesty.

Lakshmi's presence transforms majesty into affection.

The Lord Goes Among His People

Perhaps the most touching ceremony is the Utsava procession.

The Lord leaves the sanctum.

He mounts various vehicles:

Garuda.

Hanuman.

Elephant.

Horse.

Serpent.

Swan.

Chariot.

The message is profound:

Not every devotee can reach the sanctum, so the Lord Himself comes out to meet them.

The streets become sacred.

Balconies become shrines.

Entire towns become temples.

The Brahmotsava

The grandest celebration in many Vishnu temples is the Brahmotsava.

Tradition says that Brahma himself first conducted this festival.

For several days the Lord appears in different forms and on different vahanas.

Each procession teaches a spiritual lesson.

The Lord is:

King.

Protector.

Teacher.

Warrior.

Friend.

Savior.

Day after day He encourages His devotees through divine presence.

It is as if heaven descends to earth.

The Evening Court

As sunset arrives, lamps are waved.

The Lord appears especially beautiful in the glow of oil lamps.

This is the time of reflection.

The day's activities are gently brought to completion.

Devotees offer gratitude for the blessings received.

The Lord Retires

Finally comes Ekanta Seva and Shayana Seva.

The Lord is offered milk.

Soft hymns are sung.

The sanctum grows quiet.

The divine bed is prepared.

The Lord is ceremonially put to rest.

The doors close.

The world sleeps under His protection.

Yet devotees know that He never truly sleeps.

As the Bhagavad Gita assures us:

While all beings rest, the Lord remains the silent witness.

The Hidden Meaning

From awakening to sleep, from childhood to marriage, from royal processions to intimate music, every temple ritual teaches one truth:

God is not merely worshipped; He is loved.

The devotee feeds Him, dresses Him, sings to Him, marries Him, takes Him on processions, rocks Him on a swing, and finally puts Him to bed.

In return, the Lord accepts these acts of affection and allows Himself to become a member of the devotee's family.

Thus temple worship is really a continuous divine drama in which the Supreme Lord willingly becomes accessible to human love.

The wonder is not that devotees serve Vishnu as a child, bridegroom, king, or friend.

The wonder is that the Lord of Vaikuntha gladly agrees to play every one of those roles for the joy of His devotees.

The Lord loves ceremonies for it brings his devotee close to him. Vying for just one glance of the decked up Lord and his consort. Pleasing st the same time fleeting too. Yes yet again the yearning comes 

Shukla4

 Bhādrapada Śukla Chaturthī, the day of Lord Ganesha's appearance, commonly celebrated as Ganesh Chaturthi. There is a well-known tradition that one should avoid looking at the moon on that night.

The Story Behind It

According to the Brahma Vaivarta Purana.

After receiving worship from the gods, Ganesha was returning home mounted on his mouse. His large belly was filled with sweets offered by devotees. The mouse suddenly stumbled on seeing a snake, causing Ganesha to fall. His belly burst open and the sweets spilled out. Ganesha calmly gathered them, tied the snake around his waist, and continued.

The Moon-god Chandra, proud of his beauty and brilliance, laughed at this sight. Ganesha became displeased at this mockery and cursed Chandra:

"Whoever sees you on this day shall be falsely accused and suffer undeserved dishonor."

Chandra realized his mistake and sought forgiveness. Ganesha softened the curse but did not entirely revoke it. The result was that seeing the moon on that particular Chaturthi would bring the possibility of false allegations, misunderstanding, or blemish to one's reputation.

Krishna and the Syamantaka Jewel

The curse is linked to a later episode involving Sri Krishna.

Krishna accidentally saw the moon on Ganesh Chaturthi. Soon afterward, he was falsely accused of stealing the precious Syamantaka Jewel. Though innocent, he had to undergo many trials to prove the truth. This incident is often cited as evidence of the curse's effect.

Because of this connection, those who accidentally see the moon on Ganesh Chaturthi traditionally recite or hear the story of the Syamantaka jewel, believing it mitigates any adverse effect.

The story carries a profound lesson:

The Moon represents beauty, pride, and superficial judgment.

Ganesha represents wisdom, humility, and inner perfection.

Chandra laughed at an outward appearance without understanding the deeper reality.

The curse teaches that those who judge hastily based on appearances may themselves become victims of misunderstanding and false judgment.

Thus the observance is not merely about avoiding the moon; it is a reminder to avoid:

Mocking others,

Judging by appearances,

Allowing pride to cloud wisdom.

Is the Moon Forbidden on every Shukla chaturthi.

 The strongest observance concerns Ganesh Chaturthi in the month of Bhādrapada. Some people extend the practice to every monthly Chaturthi, 

The custom therefore serves as both a devotional observance and a moral lesson: humility protects, while pride invites misunderstanding.

Dhara.

  The words sanātana (सनातन) and dharma (धर्म) were not coined by any single person. They are very ancient Sanskrit words that developed within the Vedic tradition over many centuries.

Dharma

The word dharma comes from the Sanskrit root dhṛ (धृ), meaning "to uphold," "to support," or "to sustain." It appears in the ancient Vedic literature, including the Rig Veda, which was composed more than 3,000 years ago. In the Vedas, dharma refers to the cosmic order, righteousness, duty, and the principles that sustain life and society. 

Sanātana

The word sanātana means "eternal," "beginningless," or "everlasting." It is also an ancient Sanskrit word found in classical Hindu scriptures. It was used as an adjective to describe eternal truths, eternal beings, or eternal principles. 

Sanātana Dharma

The phrase Sanātana Dharma means "the Eternal Dharma" or "the Eternal Way."

No known individual invented this expression. The words occur separately in ancient literature, and phrases such as "dharmaḥ sanātanaḥ" ("eternal dharma") are found in texts such as the Manusmriti and the Bhagavata Purana. 

As a collective name for Hinduism, however, "Sanātana Dharma" became especially prominent during the 19th century, when Hindu thinkers and reformers used it as a self-description instead of the foreign-derived term "Hinduism." 

Dharma: an ancient Vedic Sanskrit word, not coined by any known person.

Sanātana: an ancient Sanskrit word meaning eternal.

Sanātana Dharma: a traditional expression meaning "Eternal Dharma"; not invented by one individual, though its use as a name for Hinduism became widespread in the 19th century. 

From the traditional Hindu perspective, Sanātana Dharma is considered anādi (without beginning) and therefore not the creation of any human founder.

a profound comparison. Both the Ramayana and the Mahabharata teach Dharma, but they teach it in very different ways.

The Ramayana: Dharma as the Ideal Path

The Ramayana shows Dharma as a clear, shining road.

Rama knows his duty and follows it.

Sita knows her duty and follows it.

Lakshmana, Bharata, Hanuman—all become examples of steadfast Dharma.

The distinction between right and wrong is usually clear.

The Ramayana asks:

"When Dharma is known, can you live it?"

Rama's life becomes the answer.

The epic is therefore often called the Maryada Purushottama's journey—the perfection of righteous conduct.

The Mahabharata: Dharma in a Complex World

The Mahabharata presents Dharma amidst confusion.

Bhishma is righteous, yet supports a flawed throne.

Karna is generous, yet stands with adharma.

Yudhishthira is truthful, yet speaks a half-truth.

Arjuna hesitates between compassion and duty.

Krishna constantly guides people through situations where every choice has consequences.

The Mahabharata asks:

"When Dharma is hidden among many competing duties, how will you find it?"

The answer is not always obvious.

Thus it is said:

"What is found here may be found elsewhere; what is not found here is nowhere."

The Mahabharata is a vast laboratory of Dharma.

A Beautiful Analogy

If Dharma were a river:

The Ramayana shows the river flowing through a calm valley.

The Mahabharata shows the same river during floods, storms, rocks, and whirlpools.

The water is the same. The challenges are different.

Another Comparison

Ramayana

Mahabharata

Dharma demonstrated

Dharma debated

Ideal characters

Human characters

Clear choices

Difficult choices

Rama embodies Dharma

Krishna explains Dharma

Teaches by example

Teaches by inquiry

"Do as Rama did"

"Think as Krishna taught"

What We Gain from Both

Without the Ramayana, we might not know what Dharma looks like in its purest form.

Without the Mahabharata, we might not know how to preserve Dharma when life becomes complicated.

Together they tell us:

The Ramayana teaches us how Dharma shines.

The Mahabharata teaches us how Dharma survives.perhaps that is why India preserved both epics. One gives us the ideal, the other gives us the real. Between Rama's certainty and Krishna's wisdom lies the complete education of Dharma.



Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Exchange.

 

Folk lore or real difficult to say but a very nice incident. 

Once when Lord was playing with madhumangal and sudhama kishoriji comes and tells him that he truly troubles the gopis and threatens him that in the next birth she will be Krishna and he would be gopi and she would trouble him etc. She was truly very angry with him . Then he says why next birth they can do it the very next day. So the next day they change their dressing and both are looking so cute  the Lord dressed as kishoriji is amused to see her dressed like him. I think most of us have played this game in childhood. 
Photos are in reverse order. 








 












Age.

 The Mahabharata does not provide a complete chronological timeline with exact ages at every event. However, by combining clues from the epic, the Puranas, and traditional commentaries, scholars have constructed an approximate timeline. The numbers vary between traditions, but the following is a reasonable reconstruction.

Event

Yudhishthira

Bhima

Arjuna

Nakula & Sahadeva

Birth

Y 0

B —

A —

N&S —

Bhima born

Y 1

B 0

A —

N & S —

Arjuna born

Y 2

B 1

A 0

N & S —

Nakula & Sahadeva born

Y 3

B 2

A 1

N & S 0

Death of Pandu, return to Hastinapura

Y 15–16

B 14–15

A 13–14

N & S 12–13

Completion of education under Drona

Y 20–22

B 19–21

A 18–20

N & S 17–19

Lakshagriha episode

Y 22–24

B 21–23

A 20–22

N & S 19–21

Draupadi's Swayamvara

Y 24–26

B 23–25

A 22–24

N & S 21–23

Indraprastha established

Y 25–27

B 24–26

A 23–25

N & S 22–24

Rajasuya Yajna

Y 35–40

B 34–39

A 33–38

N & S 32–37

Dice game and exile begins

Y 40–45

B 39–44

A 38–43

N & S 37–42

End of 13-year exile

Y 53–58

B 52–57

A 51–56

N & S 50–55

Kurukshetra War

Y 53–58

B 52–57

A 51–56

N & S 50–55

Coronation after war

Y 54–59

B 53–58

A 52–57

N & S 51–56

Reign after war (36 years)

90–95

89–94

88–93

87–92

Mahaprasthana begins

Y 90–95

B 89–94

A 88–93

N & S 87–92

Final ascent to heaven

Early to mid-90s

Early 90s

Around 90

Late 80s

Some interesting observations

Yudhishthira was likely around 55 during the Kurukshetra War.

This explains his maturity, patience, and reputation as an elder statesman.

Arjuna was not a young warrior.

He was probably in his early-to-mid 50s during the war.

His feats become even more astonishing when viewed in that light.

Bhishma was extremely old.

Most traditions place him well above 120 years of age.

Krishna was younger than Yudhishthira but close in age to Arjuna.

Many traditions place Krishna around 89–90 at the time of his departure from the world, which occurred 36 years after the war.

The Pandavas spent nearly forty years ruling before exile and another thirty-six years ruling after the war.

The war occupies only a tiny fraction of their lives; most of their lives were spent learning, governing, enduring hardship, and reflecting on dharma.

The life of a Pandava in four broad stages

Youth (0–25)

Birth, education, Drona's training, escape from danger, marriage to Draupadi.

Builders of a kingdom (25–40)

Creation of Indraprastha, Rajasuya sacrifice, peak prosperity.

Years of trial (40–58)

Dice game, exile, forest wisdom, hidden life in Virata's kingdom, war.

Years of wisdom (58–95)

Rule of the empire, guidance to Parikshit, renunciation, Mahaprasthana.

This long final phase is often overlooked. The Mahabharata is not merely the story of a war. It is the story of five brothers who spent nearly a century learning what dharma means—from the innocence of childhood to the solitude of the Himalayas. The war was only the turning point; the real journey was their lifelong maturation into wisdom.

" Panchali's (Draupadi's) age during her Swayamvara?", the Mahabharata does not state her exact age.

Based on traditional reconstructions:

Draupadi was probably in her late teens, most commonly estimated at 16–20 years old.

Arjuna, who won the contest, was likely in his early twenties (around 22–24 in many traditional estimates).

Thus, Draupadi was probably a few years younger than the Pandavas, though not dramatically so.

There are several clues:

Draupadi had reached marriageable age and was renowned throughout India for her beauty and accomplishments.

Her brother Dhrishtadyumna was already a trained warrior when the Swayamvara was held.

The epic portrays her as a young woman at the threshold of adulthood rather than as a child or a mature adult.

A commonly accepted traditional picture is:

Person

Approximate age at the Swayamvara

Draupadi

16–20

Arjuna

22–24

Yudhishthira

24–26

Bhima

23–25

Nakula

21–23

Sahadeva

21–23

Of course, these are estimates. The Mahabharata is more concerned with character, dharma, and destiny than with precise chronology.

An interesting contrast is that while the Ramayana presents Sita as very young at her marriage, Draupadi appears in the Mahabharata as a confident, articulate, and politically aware young woman from the very beginning. She enters the epic not merely as a bride, but as one of its central moral and intellectual forces.