Friday, May 29, 2026

Trust that never left him.

 Three Windows into Narsi Mehta’s World


Shamaldas no Vivah — Krishna in a son’s marriage

Kunvarbai nu Mameru — Krishna in a daughter’s dignity

Hundi — Krishna in finance and obligation

This is a striking theological message.

The Divine is not absent from ordinary pressures.

God enters the domains humans often separate from spirituality:

family life, social expectation, economic uncertainty.

Perhaps that explains why Narsi Mehta remains so loved.

His stories do not begin in palaces.

They begin where many people actually live:

with bills to pay, ceremonies to conduct, reputations to preserve, and duties that seem larger than one’s means.

And into that familiar human landscape walks Krishna.

Quietly.

Reliably.

Almost as though He had always belonged there.

Shamaldas no Vivah – The Wedding of Narsi Mehta’s Son

When Krishna Became the Guardian of a Devotee’s Honour

In the lives of Bhakti saints, God often appears not only in temples and visions, but in kitchens, debts, tears, and family ceremonies. One such beloved story from the life of Narsinh Mehta is the famous “Shamaldas no Vivah” — the wedding of his son Shyamal Das (Shamaldas).

It is a story where poverty stands face-to-face with prestige… and devotion quietly triumphs.

A Saint Rich in Bhakti, Poor in Possessions

Narsi Mehta lived in Junagadh, immersed in Krishna-bhakti. His days flowed with kirtan, poetry, satsang, and remembrance of the Lord.

But worldly prosperity had not visited his house.

His family lived simply, often in scarcity.

To neighbours and critics, this seemed irresponsible. To Narsi, the greatest wealth was Sri Krishna’s name.

His son, Shamaldas, however, had reached marriageable age.

In medieval society, arranging a son’s marriage was no small matter. It demanded resources, status, gifts, and public dignity.

Narsi had little of these.

The Search for a Groom

In Vadnagar, a respected and prosperous Nagar Brahmin named Madan Mehta sought a suitable groom for his daughter.

As was customary, a family priest was entrusted with the delicate task of finding a worthy young man.

The priest journeyed from town to town.

When he reached Junagadh, some townspeople—particularly those who enjoyed mocking the saint—suggested mischievously:

"Why not see Narsi Mehta’s son?"

The suggestion carried hidden laughter.

They expected embarrassment.

"Let the priest witness that poverty-stricken singer’s household!"

An Unexpected Discovery

The priest approached Narsi Mehta’s home.

He did not find riches.

He did not find grand halls or displays of prosperity.

But he found something else.

A household marked by learning, devotion, refinement, and quiet dignity.

And when he met Shamaldas, he saw a capable and worthy young man.

The father might be poor.

But the son possessed character.

The priest returned impressed.

Against expectations, the alliance was approved.

The critics were startled.

The saint’s son was now to marry into an honoured family.

But a larger problem still waited.

The Mountain Before the Wedding

A wedding was not merely a private ceremony.

It was a public event.

There would be:

ceremonial clothing

jewellery and ornaments

gifts for relatives

a wedding procession

hospitality for guests

transport, attendants, musicians, ritual arrangements

How would Narsi Mehta manage any of this?

The question spread through society.

Some sympathised.

Others waited for failure.

A few perhaps whispered:

"Now reality will humble the dreamer."

But Narsi Mehta’s response remained unchanged.

He turned toward Krishna.

Not toward lenders.

Not toward calculations.

Toward Krishna.

The Devotee’s Appeal

Tradition remembers Narsi praying to his beloved Lord with intimate simplicity.

Not as a distant deity.

But as a companion.

A protector.

Almost as one would speak to a trusted family member.

The prayer was not:

"Make me wealthy."

It was:

"Preserve the honour of Your servant."

For Bhakti saints, honour did not mean vanity.

It meant safeguarding dharma, family responsibility, and trust.

The wedding had to be conducted.

The burden was placed at Krishna’s feet.

When the Impossible Began to Change

Then comes the miraculous heart of the story.

The humble preparations began to transform.

Needs were somehow met.

Resources appeared.

Garments, ornaments, provisions, arrangements — everything required for the ceremony emerged as if guided by unseen hands.

Different retellings narrate the wonder differently.

 Krishna Himself arrived disguised among attendants.

celestial helpers arranged the splendour.

 “Hari took charge.”

The Lord did not abandon His devotee.

The Astonishing Wedding Procession

When the wedding procession finally moved toward the bride’s town, it was no pitiable sight.

It shone with dignity and unexpected magnificence.

Beautiful attire.

Well-equipped attendants.

Ceremonial splendour.

Respectability worthy of the occasion.

The bride’s family and assembled guests were astonished.

The same people who expected ridicule now witnessed grace clothed in abundance.

No one could easily explain what had happened.

The devotees had their answer:

Krishna had attended His devotee’s son’s wedding.

More Than a Miracle Story

“Shamaldas no Vivah” is not simply about supernatural intervention.

It carries deeper Bhakti insights.

1. God Shares Human Responsibilities

Bhakti literature often presents God as deeply involved in ordinary life.

A wedding becomes sacred ground.

Family duty becomes part of devotion.

2. Poverty Does Not Define Worth

Narsi Mehta lacked wealth but not values.

The story challenges societies that measure human worth by possessions alone.

3. Devotion and Duty Can Coexist

Narsi is not portrayed as abandoning family responsibility.

Rather, he tries to fulfil it while trusting divine grace.

4. Divine Friendship

One of the most moving features of Krishna-bhakti is this sense of intimacy.

The Lord is not merely worshipped.

He becomes confidant, companion, guardian.

A Living Memory in Gujarati Tradition

The episode remains treasured in Gujarati devotional culture as “Shamaldas ka



Vivah” or “Putra Vivah.”

Alongside stories such as “Kunvarbai nu Mameru” and “Hundi,” it reveals a recurring theme in Narsi Mehta’s life:

When worldly support grows uncertain…

Krishna quietly enters the scene.

And perhaps that is why these stories endure.

They speak to anyone who has faced a duty larger than their means and wondered:

"How will this ever be possible?"

The Bhakti answer is gentle but bold:

Do what you must.

Offer what you can.

And leave room for grace.

Krishna in the Everyday Life of Narsi Mehta

A Wedding, A Daughter’s Honour, and A Financial Promise

Kunvarbai nu Mameru — When Krishna Came as a Mother’s Brother.


Among the most tender stories connected with Narsinh Mehta, none touches the heart quite like “Kunvarbai nu Mameru.”

If “Shamaldas no Vivah” speaks of a father’s anxiety over a son’s wedding…

“Kunvarbai nu Mameru” speaks of a father’s helplessness before a daughter’s honour.

It is one of the most loved episodes in Gujarati Bhakti tradition.

In Gujarat and parts of western India, “Mameru” (also called Mosalū) refers to gifts sent from the bride’s parental side—especially the maternal family—to a married daughter during important occasions, often pregnancy ceremonies or special family events.

These gifts could include:

sarees and garments

jewellery

sweets and food items

vessels and household gifts

ceremonial offerings for relatives

Beyond objects, mameru symbolised affection, family honour, and continued parental care.

For poor families, however, it could become a painful obligation.

These gifts could include:

sarees and garments

jewellery

sweets and food items

vessels and household gifts

ceremonial offerings for relatives

Beyond objects, mameru symbolised affection, family honour, and continued parental care.

For poor families, however, it could become a painful obligation.

Kunvarbai’s Difficult Situation

Narsi Mehta’s daughter Kunvarbai was married.

At an important ceremonial moment, the expected mameru had to be sent.

Society had its expectations.

Relatives watched.

Custom demanded proper presentation.

But her father, immersed in devotion and living in poverty, had almost nothing.

One can imagine the quiet distress.

A daughter does not easily ask.

A father does not easily admit inability.

Between affection and helplessness stands silence.

Gujarati retellings preserve precisely this emotional atmosphere.

Ridicule and Social Pressure

As in several Narsi Mehta stories, critics and sceptics lurk in the background.

Some regarded him as impractical.

"Songs of Krishna do not buy ornaments," they may have thought.

The occasion became not merely a family matter but almost a test.

Would the saint’s household face humiliation?

Would Kunvarbai bear embarrassment before her marital family?

The issue was larger than material gifts.

It concerned a daughter’s dignity.

Narsi Mehta did what he always did.

He turned toward his beloved Sri Krishna.

Not as a remote cosmic ruler.

But as intimate protector.

The prayer rising from this story is especially moving because it concerns neither personal comfort nor ambition.






It concerns a daughter.

A father’s concern.

A family responsibility.

Krishna Arrives

Then comes the beloved miracle.

Traditional accounts narrate that an affluent group of relatives or distinguished visitors arrived bearing abundant gifts.

Beautiful garments.

Jewellery.

Ceremonial offerings.

Everything expected — and more.

In many retellings, Krishna Himself is believed to have come in disguise, accompanied by divine attendants, fulfilling the role that family members could not.

The required mameru was performed magnificently.

Kunvarbai’s honour was preserved.

The assembled people were astonished.

Only later did devotees understand:

The mysterious benefactor was none other than Krishna.

“Kunvarbai nu Mameru” survives because it speaks to universal human emotions.

1. A Parent’s Concern

Few worries cut deeper than a parent feeling unable to fulfil a child’s need.

The story understands this pain intimately.

2. The Vulnerability of Daughters

Traditional societies often placed enormous social pressures around ceremonial dignity.

The narrative recognises this reality.

3. Divine Participation in Ordinary Life

Krishna appears not in battle or metaphysical discourse…

but in a family ceremony.

Bhakti brings God into domestic life.

4. Grace Beyond Calculation

Human resources may be limited.

Grace is not always bound by those limits.

In Indian culture, the maternal home represents warmth, belonging, unconditional affection.

In this story, Krishna becomes almost the eternal relative who ensures the devotee is never abandoned.

Indeed, some devotees affectionately interpret the episode as:

When earthly support fails, God Himself becomes the family.

Yet again our relative presence Himself. What a great devotee Narsi Mehta must be. 


The Hundi of Narsi Mehta — When Krishna Honoured a Devotee’s Signature

Among the beloved stories of Narsinh Mehta, the episode called “Hundi” is especially fascinating because it concerns something surprisingly practical:

money.

Not philosophy.

Not poetry.

Not temple ritual.

A financial instrument.

What is a Hundi?

In old India, a hundi functioned somewhat like a bill of exchange, promissory note, or banking order.

Merchants and travellers often carried a hundi rather than transporting physical wealth over dangerous routes.

One trusted person would issue the note.

Another trusted party would honour it elsewhere.

Its foundation was simple:

trust.

Pilgrims in Difficulty

According to the traditional story, a group of travellers or pilgrims required financial assistance.

They needed a reliable hundi.

Some people, perhaps mischievously, directed them toward Narsi Mehta.

Again the hidden mockery appears.

"Ask the poor bhakta!"

After all, what banker was Narsi?

He possessed no treasury.

No counting house.

No merchant network.

Only devotion.

The Impossible Signature

Yet Narsi did something astonishing.

Trusting completely in Krishna, he issued the hundi.

In effect, he wrote a promise resting not on his personal wealth but on divine reliability.

The travellers carried the document.

From a worldly perspective, failure seemed inevitable.

Who would honour such a note?

The Divine Banker

Then unfolds the miracle.

Tradition narrates that the payment was indeed honoured.

In many retellings, Krishna Himself appears in the form of a wealthy merchant or representative, settling the obligation flawlessly.

The recipients are astonished.

The transaction succeeds.

The saint’s trust is vindicated.

The mockers are silenced.

And Krishna once again protects the honour of His devotee.

A Beautiful Spiritual Symbol

The story becomes even richer when read symbolically.

A hundi works because someone believes the issuer is trustworthy.

Bhakti quietly reverses the direction.

Narsi’s “creditworthiness” lay not in accumulated wealth…

but in absolute trust in Krishna.

The saint writes upon the invisible treasury of divine grace.


Thursday, May 28, 2026

3 way lead.

 A beautiful thought — and one that echoes many wisdom traditions.

This message speaks of three gates of inner discipline:

1. Speak only what brings peace

Not silence at all costs, but speech that heals, clarifies, uplifts, or at least does not inflame unnecessarily.

In Sanskrit thought, this resembles वाक् तपस् (vāṅ-tapas), the discipline of speech.

The Bhagavad Gita (17.15) says:

अनुद्वेगकरं वाक्यं सत्यं प्रियहितं च यत्

“Words that do not agitate, that are truthful, pleasant, and beneficial…”

Notice the balance: truthful + kind + useful.

2. Listen only to what brings growth

What we hear quietly shapes our mind — conversations, books, media, company, ideas.

Indian philosophy often emphasizes satsanga — keeping company with what elevates understanding.

Just as food nourishes the body, what enters through the ears nourishes or disturbs the mind.

3. Think only what brings good

Perhaps the hardest part. Thoughts arise naturally; we cannot command every passing thought. But we can cultivate which thoughts we feed, repeat, and dwell upon.

The Upanishadic spirit often points toward this:

“As one thinks, so one becomes.”

And the last line is powerful:

“Words have power. Choose them wisely.”

Indeed, words can:

encourage or wound,

unite or divide,

teach or mislead,

awaken devotion or extinguish hope.




Stotram

Purushottama Stotram — The Lord Beyond Creation Yet Resting on the Ocean of Milk

Among the many hymns dedicated to Lord Vishnu, the Purushottama Stotram attributed to Dharmarāja (Yama) possesses a distinctive beauty. It combines the warm devotional imagery familiar to temple worshippers — the Lord reclining upon Ādiśeṣa in the Ocean of Milk, adorned with Śrīvatsa, Vanamālā, Śaṅkha, Chakra and Gadā — with lofty Vedantic language describing the Supreme as uncreated, beyond the senses, subtle, eternal, manifest and unmanifest at once.

The hymn reminds us that the Lord worshipped in temples is not merely a divine figure among many. He is Purushottama — the Supreme Person, the foundation of existence itself.

Dharmarāja Uvāca

नमस्ते भगवान् देव लोकनाथ जगत्पते ।

क्षीरोदवासिनं देवं शेषभोगानुशायिनम् ॥

Namaste bhagavan deva lokanātha jagatpate

kṣīrodavāsinaṃ devaṃ śeṣabhogānuśāyinam

Salutations to You, O Divine Lord, Master of the worlds, Lord of the universe, dwelling in the Ocean of Milk, reclining upon the couch of Śeṣa.

The hymn opens not with philosophy but with a familiar sacred image.

The Lord rests in the Kṣīra-sāgara — the Ocean of Milk. In Purāṇic symbolism, this is not ordinary water but the luminous cosmic ocean of purity and potentiality. Upon Ādiśeṣa, the endless serpent of eternity, the Lord reclines in serene sovereignty.

The universe may be restless — but the Divine rests in perfect composure.

वरं वरेण्यं वरदं कर्तारमकृतं प्रभुम् ।

विश्वेश्वरमजं विष्णुं सर्वज्ञमपराजितम् ॥

The Excellent One, worthy of choosing, giver of boons, the Creator — yet Himself uncreated; Lord of the universe, unborn Vishnu, omniscient and unconquered.

A profound paradox appears immediately:

कर्तारम् अकृतम् — “Creator, yet uncreated.”

Everything in creation has a cause.

But what is the cause of the Cause?

The hymn answers: the Supreme creates all things, yet is not Himself produced by anything else.

This echoes the Upanishadic vision of the unborn source from whom worlds arise.

नीलोत्पलदलश्यामं पुण्डरीकनिभेक्षणम् ।

सर्वज्ञं निर्गुणं शान्तं जगद्धातारमव्ययम् ॥

Dark like the petal of a blue lotus, lotus-eyed, omniscient, beyond the guṇas, peaceful, supporter of the universe, imperishable.

The Lord is suddenly described in intimate visual detail:

blue-lotus hued. Lotus-eyed. Beautiful.

Yet in the same breath:

निर्गुणम् — beyond guṇas.

How can the Lord possess form and still be nirguṇa?

Vedantic traditions explain that nirguṇa here does not mean “featureless emptiness.” Rather, it means free from the three material guṇas — sattva, rajas and tamas.

His form is not material limitation.

It is transcendental auspiciousness.

सर्वलोकविधातारं सर्वलोकसुखावहम् ।

पुराणं पुरुषं वेद्यं व्यक्ताव्यक्तं सनातनम् ॥

Ordainer of all worlds, giver of joy to all realms, the Ancient One, the Supreme Person, knowable, manifest and unmanifest, eternal.

This verse is rich with theology.

The Lord is:

पुराणम् — ancient beyond imagining.

पुरुषम् — the Supreme Person.

वेद्यम् — knowable through revelation, devotion, and realization.

व्यक्ताव्यक्तम् — both manifest and unmanifest.

He appears in consecrated temples, sacred narratives and avatāras.

Yet He also transcends all visible form.

परावराणां स्रष्टारं लोकनाथं जगद्गुरुम् ।

श्रीवत्सोरस्कसंयुक्तं वनमालाविभूषितम् ॥

Creator of the high and the low, Lord of the worlds, teacher of the universe, adorned with the mark of Śrīvatsa upon His chest and decorated with the Vanamālā garland.

Now theology becomes iconography.

The Śrīvatsa mark upon the divine chest recalls the inseparable presence of Śrī Mahālakṣmī.

The Vanamālā is not mere ornament. In devotional symbolism it represents the Lord’s loving relationship with creation — the universe itself worn like a garland.

पीतवस्त्रं चतुर्बाहुं शङ्खचक्रगदाधरम् ।

हारकेयूरसंयुक्तं मुकुटाङ्गदधारिणम् ॥

Clad in yellow garments, four-armed, bearing conch, discus and mace; adorned with necklaces, armlets, crown and ornaments.

Each emblem carries meaning:

Śaṅkha (Conch) — divine sound, awakening, protection.

Chakra (Discus) — cosmic order, time, righteousness.

Gadā (Mace) — strength, sovereignty, destruction of ignorance.

The Lord is majestic, yet every ornament becomes theology.

सर्वलक्षणसम्पूर्णं सर्वेन्द्रियविवर्जितम् ।

कूटस्थमचलं सूक्ष्मं ज्योतिरूपं सनातनम् ॥

Perfect in every auspicious mark, yet beyond all senses; changeless, unmoving, subtle, radiant, eternal.

Again the hymn presents a sacred paradox.

He is सर्वलक्षणसम्पूर्णम् — complete with every divine characteristic.

Yet:

सर्वेन्द्रियविवर्जितम् — beyond material senses.

The Upanishads often describe Brahman as:

“Without hands, yet grasping all. Without feet, yet moving everywhere.”

The Lord is not limited by bodily mechanisms.

Rather, all sensory power exists because of Him.

भावाभावविनिर्मुक्तं व्यापिनं प्रकृतेः परम् ।

नमस्यामि जगन्नाथमीश्वरं सुखदं प्रभुम् ॥

Free from being and non-being, all-pervading, beyond Prakṛti — I bow to Jagannātha, the Lord, giver of blessedness.

The hymn culminates in transcendence.

The Supreme is beyond nature (प्रकृतेः परम्).

Beyond categories.

Beyond limitation.

Yet the response of the devotee is beautifully simple:

“नमस्यामि — I bow.”

After theology, surrender.

Temple Lord and Upanishadic Absolute

One of the most striking features of this stotram is its effortless movement between two modes of speaking about God.

The Lord is:

reclining on Śeṣa,

wearing yellow silk,

holding Śaṅkha and Chakra,

and simultaneously:

unborn,

beyond guṇas,

beyond senses,

manifest and unmanifest,

eternal radiance.

There is no contradiction.

The beautiful Lord of devotion and the transcendent Brahman of Vedanta are one reality.

That is the grandeur of Purushottama.

This hymn teaches that the Supreme Lord is not confined either to abstract philosophy or visual devotion alone.

He is:

the blue-lotus Lord of the sanctum,

the cosmic ruler of the worlds,

the subtle eternal reality beyond Prakṛti,

and the compassionate refuge before whom even Dharmarāja bows.

Such is Purushottama — the Supreme Person, eternally beyond creation, yet intimately present within it.

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Radiance.

The Many illustrations of the Lord’s Divine Feet in the Nalayira Divya Prabandham

1. Thirumazhisai Azhwar — The Cosmic and Obedient Feet

For Thirumazhisai Alvar, the Lord’s feet are not merely beautiful lotus feet.

They are the feet that measured the worlds as Trivikrama.



The lifted divine foot sanctified creation itself; even Brahma worshipped it.

Yet the same Lord revealed another mystery in Kanchipuram. When Kanikannan was banished, Thirumazhisai Azhwar prepared to leave. Turning to the Lord, he commanded:

"We are leaving. Why are You still here? Fold Your serpent couch and come."

And the Lord obeyed.

Thus, in Thirumazhisai’s vision, the divine feet are both:

cosmic enough to span the universe

and

loving enough to walk behind a devotee.

2. Thiruppaan Azhwar — The Vision Beginning at the Feet

Thiruppaan Alvar gives one of the most beautiful foot-visions in the Nalayira Divya Prabandham.

In Amalanadhipiran, his eyes are captured first by the Lord’s திருக்கமலபாதம் — sacred lotus feet.

"திருக்கமலபாதம் வந்து என் கண்ணினுள்ளன ஒக்கின்றதே."

From there he ascends slowly through the divine body, limb by limb, until the entire form of Lord Ranganatha fills his consciousness.

The journey begins not at the crown, but at the feet.

3. Kulasekhara Azhwar — The Feet One Never Wants to Leave

Kulasekhara Alvar approaches the Lord’s feet with extraordinary intimacy.

He sings of Krishna’s tender child-feet — soft, delicate, lotus-like.

Elsewhere his devotion becomes architectural.

He prays to become the threshold step at Tirumala — the famous Kulasekhara Padi — so that he may forever remain near the Lord and beneath the feet of devotees entering the sanctum.

To him, proximity to the divine feet is itself liberation.

4. Nammalvar — The Feet as Refuge and Liberation

For Nammalvar, the Lord’s feet are the soul’s final refuge.

Human life is an ocean of births, attachments, and uncertainties.

The answer is śaraṇāgati — surrender at the divine feet.

Again and again, his Tiruvaymozhi presents the திருவடி as:

protection from samsara,

destruction of ego,

eternal shelter,

gateway to moksha.

The feet are not one devotional image among many.

They are the destination of existence itself.

5. Madhurakavi Azhwar — From the Lord’s Feet to the Guru’s Feet

Madhurakavi Alvar introduces a uniquely Sri Vaishnava turn.

In Kanninun Siruthambu, he does not sing directly of Vishnu.

His entire devotion centres on Nammalvar.

The path to the Supreme runs through the holy feet of the Acharya.

Thus the theology of the divine feet expands beautifully:

from Bhagavan’s feet

to the Guru’s feet.

Across the Nalayira Divya Prabandham, the Lord’s feet appear in many forms:

the cosmic foot that measured worlds,

the lotus foot that captivates the eyes,

the tender foot of the child Krishna,

the refuge sought by the weary soul,

and the sacred feet transmitted through the Guru.

For the Azhwars, the திருவடி is not merely a poetic image.

It is beauty, refuge, intimacy, surrender, and liberation — all gathered into one radiant symbol.

Podhu Nindra Ponnangazhal — Thiruvarangan — Peyazhwar

Thiruppolinda Sevadi — Thirumalirunjolai — Periyazhwar

Thuyararu Sudaradi — Kanchi Devapperumal — Nammalvar

Poovar Kazhalgal — Thiruvengadam — Nammalvar

Manitthadaththadadi — Thirumoohoor Kalameghapperumal — Nammalvar.

Malaradi — Thiruvaranvilai Pambanaiyappan

Thiruvarangan — Podhu Nindra Ponnangazhal

Azhwar: Peyazhwar

Source: Moondram Tiruvandhadhi 88

The universally available golden divine feet.

These feet do not belong to an exclusive spiritual elite. They stand open to all beings.

Why Peyazhwar calls them this:

At Srirangam, grace is public, overflowing and unrestricted.

The Lord’s feet shine not only by colour but by accessibility.

Thirumalirunjolai Azhagar – “Thiruppolinda Sevadi”

Azhwar: Periyazhwar

Source: Periyazhwar Tirumozhi 5.4.7

The resplendent sacred feet placed upon devotees’ heads.

These are royal feet.

When placed on the devotee’s head, they signify sovereignty, protection, and acceptance.

Periyazhwar’s vision is deeply parental and intimate. The Lord is majestic, yet close enough for His feet to rest upon the devotee.

Kanchi Devapperumal – “Thuyararu Sudaradi”

Azhwar: Nammalvar

Source: Tiruvaymozhi 1.1.1

The radiant feet that remove sorrow.

Perhaps among the most famous expressions in Sri Vaishnava literature.

“Thuyararu” — sorrow-destroying.

“Sudaradi” — radiant feet.

For Nammalvar, divine grace is not abstract theology; it is experiential healing.

These feet are luminosity acting as medicine.

Thiruvengadam – “Poovār Kazhalgal”

Azhwar: Nammalvar

Source: Tiruvaymozhi 6.10.4

Flower-covered or flower-like divine feet.

At Tirumala, the Lord’s feet become flowers themselves.

Softness, fragrance, beauty, tenderness — all merge into one poetic image.

The feet are what devotees adorn with flowers; yet the Azhwar says they themselves are flowers.

Thirumoohoor Kalameghapperumal – “Mani-thadath-thadadi”

Azhwar: Nammalvar

Source: Tiruvaymozhi 10.1.9

Feet like a cool, pure pond.

An unusual and deeply sensory image.

The exhausted traveller cools himself in a clear pond.

Likewise, weary souls find cooling relief in divine refuge.

The Lord’s feet are not only objects of worship — they become a spiritual landscape of refreshment.

Thiruvaranvilai Pambanaiyappan – “Malaradi”

Lotus-like, fully blossomed divine feet.

The lotus metaphor runs throughout Vaishnava literature, but each Azhwar shades it differently — beauty, tenderness, purity, transcendence, accessibility.

Azhwar  Foot Vision

Poigai  Cosmic radiant feet

Bhutath  Love-filled refuge

Pey  Seen divine feet

Thirumazhisai  Trivikrama, philosophical certainty

Nammalvar  Moksha, surrender

Madhurakavi  Guru feet

Kulasekhara  Baby Krishna feet

Periyalvar  Protective maternal devotion

Andal  Lotus feet, longing

Thondaradippodi  Servitude

Thiruppaan  Feet-upward darśan

Thirumangai  Ankleted royal feet

Monday, May 25, 2026

decoding.




The Mystical Body of Nammāzhwār: Decoding a Hidden Theology of the Āzhwārs
Among the many subtle symbolic traditions of Sri Vaishnavism is a fascinating visual concept: Nammāzhwār as the Avayavi — the whole sacred body — while the other Āzhwārs and Sri Ramanuja appear as his avayavams, the limbs and organs.
At first sight it seems a devotional artistic arrangement.
On closer reflection, it reveals a profound spiritual idea.
The Āzhwārs are many voices, many temperaments, many devotional moods — yet together they form one living body of realized devotion, unified in Nammāzhwār.
And each placement carries meaning.
Nammāzhwār — The Whole (Avayavi)
At the centre sits Nammāzhwār, serene and inwardly luminous.
This centrality is deeply fitting.
His Tiruvāymoḻi gathers philosophy, surrender, divine longing, beauty, theology and mystical experience into one grand vision.
He is not merely one saint among many.
He becomes the integrating spiritual whole.
The Eyes — The Vision of the Mudhal Āzhwārs
The eyes belong to the Mudhal Āzhwārs — Poigai, Bhūtat and Pey.
The key word here is:
“கண்டேன் — Kanden — I saw.”
Their celebrated sequence almost unfolds like stages of divine awakening.
Poigai Āzhwār — Cosmic Illumination
Vaiyam thagaliyā…
The world becomes the lamp.
Darkness must first be removed.
The journey toward divine perception begins with illumination.
Bhūtat Āzhwār — Inner Illumination
Anbē thagaliyā…
Love itself becomes the lamp.
Now vision moves inward.
Not merely sight, but seeing through bhakti.
Pey Āzhwār — Direct Vision
Then comes the ecstatic declaration:
“திருக்கண்டேன்! பொன்மேனி கண்டேன்!”
“I beheld the Divine! I beheld the golden form!”
The eyes are therefore the perfect placement.
The Mudhal Āzhwārs collectively represent the awakening of divine perception — from light, to love, to direct vision.
Tirumazhisai Āzhwār — The Neck and the Mystery of the Antaryāmi
The placement of Tirumazhisai Āzhwār at the neck is deeply suggestive.
Tirumazhisai repeatedly emphasizes the Lord as Antaryāmi — the Inner Controller, the indwelling Divine who sustains everything from within.
The neck is no ordinary bodily location.
It joins head and body.
Interior and exterior.
Thought and expression.
Seen symbolically, the neck becomes a fitting reminder of the unseen connecting Presence that supports the whole.
A remarkably elegant placement.
Periyāzhwār — The Face of Loving Devotion
The clue is unmistakable.
The saint lovingly holding child Krishna immediately evokes Periyāzhwār.
His devotion overflows with vātsalya bhāva — parental tenderness toward the Lord.
God becomes not distant majesty but beloved child.
What better symbol than the face?
The face smiles, protects, worries, delights and expresses intimate affection.
Tondaradippodi Āzhwār — The Chest of Floral Service
Flowers are his unmistakable signature.
Tondaradippodi Āzhwār dedicated his life to flower service for Lord Ranganatha.
Garlands.
Gardens.
Fragrance.
Simple, loving kainkaryam.
The chest, close to the heart, becomes an apt symbol.
For devotion does not merely think.
It blooms.
Tirumangai Āzhwār — The Navel of Expansive Devotion
The placement of Tirumangai Āzhwār at the navel is especially rich in meaning.
The navel carries profound Vaishnava symbolism — vitality, expansion, creative emergence.
Tirumangai Āzhwār embodies precisely such spiritual dynamism.
Temple pilgrimages.
Sacred geography.
Passionate devotion.
Expansive celebration of Divya Desams.
A powerful devotional energy radiates outward from him.
The symbolism feels wonderfully appropriate.
Tiruppāṇ Āzhwār — The Hand of Loving Nearness
Tiruppāṇ Āzhwār, the supreme Thiruvaranga-premi, finds placement in the hand.
His devotion to Lord Ranganatha is intimate, absorbed and deeply personal.
His Amalanādipirān gazes upon the divine form with astonishing tenderness.
The hand symbolizes:
offering,
service,
loving closeness,
reaching toward the Beloved.
How beautifully fitting for the devotee of Arangan.
Kulasekhara Āzhwār — The Royal Limb of Protective Devotion
The royal imagery naturally points toward Kulasekhara Āzhwār, the king-saint.
Kingship implies guardianship, responsibility and action.
His devotion is noble, protective and emotionally charged.
He does not merely admire the Divine.
He longs to serve, defend and participate.
The royal limb reminds us that devotion can wear a crown and still kneel.
Madhurakavi Āzhwār — The Feet of Discipleship
Some placements feel spiritually inevitable.
This is one of them.
For Madhurakavi Āzhwār, the spiritual universe centred entirely around Nammāzhwār.
His devotion to the Acharya became legendary.
The feet therefore symbolize:
refuge,
learning,
discipleship,
surrender.
Sri Ramanuja — The Continuation of the Tradition
Though not one of the twelve Āzhwārs, Sri Ramanuja often appears in such sacred mappings.
If Madhurakavi represents devotion to the teacher, Ramanuja represents the preservation, interpretation and transmission of that teaching.
The tradition walks forward through him.
Andal — Beautifully Beyond the Arrangement
Some versions note that Āṇḍāḷ is not included in this bodily arrangement.
The reason is profound.
Tradition often reveres her not merely as another saintly component but as Bhūdevi herself — Divine Mother incarnate.
Her place is unique.
Not absent.
Beautifully beyond categorization.
One Sacred Body of Devotion
Seen deeply, this diagram becomes far more than devotional artistry.
It becomes a spiritual anatomy of bhakti.
The eyes awaken vision.
The neck reveals the indwelling Divine.
The face expresses loving intimacy.
The chest blossoms into service.
The navel radiates expansive devotion.
The hand reaches toward Arangan in love.
The feet ground everything in discipleship and transmission.
And through all these varied moods and expressions, Nammāzhwār stands as the living whole.
Perhaps that is the hidden lesson of the image.
The Āzhwārs differ in temperament, poetry and devotional mood.
Yet together they form one mystical body of realized devotion — luminous, many-sided and profoundly alive.

Yet again we reflect.

Is Truth Eternal Because It Exists Independently of Minds… or Because Reality Itself Has an Eternal Structure?

When we say “truth is eternal,” what exactly do we mean?

Do truths exist somewhere, untouched by human opinions, discoveries, and forgetfulness?

Or is truth eternal because reality itself is built upon an enduring order that gives rise to truth?

These are not merely abstract philosophical puzzles. They touch religion, science, ethics, mathematics, and even our daily understanding of life.

Let us examine both possibilities.

1. Truth Exists Independently of Minds

This view says:

Truth does not depend on whether anyone believes it, knows it, or understands it.

Human minds discover truth; they do not create it.

A mountain existed before humans named it.

Gravity operated before physicists described it.

Two plus two equalled four before schools taught arithmetic.

In this understanding, truth is like a hidden continent. Human thought is the explorer.

The earth revolved around the sun long before human beings accepted it. For centuries people believed otherwise. Yet popular opinion did not alter celestial reality.

Truth, then, appears independent of minds.

This idea is often called realism in philosophy.

Even if every person forgot a mathematical theorem, the theorem would still remain true.

Even if nobody admired beauty, symmetry would still exist in crystals, snowflakes, galaxies, and flowers.

Truth here resembles sunlight behind clouds — unseen perhaps, but unchanged.

The Spiritual Echo

Many spiritual traditions resonate strongly with this idea.

The Vedic vision often speaks of Satyam — truth not as a human invention but as a fundamental reality.

The Upanishadic expression “Satyam Jnanam Anantam Brahma” points toward truth, knowledge, and infinitude being woven into ultimate existence itself.

The Rishis did not claim to invent truth.

They claimed to see it.

That is why Vedic wisdom is often described as “revealed” or “heard” (Shruti) rather than manufactured.

Truth was waiting.

The seer became quiet enough to perceive it.

2. Truth Is Eternal Because Reality Has an Eternal Structure

A second, subtler possibility asks:

Perhaps truth is eternal not because truths float independently somewhere, but because reality itself possesses a stable underlying order.

Truth would then be the faithful description of that order.

This idea appears in science.

Why does science work at all?

Because nature behaves according to consistent patterns.

Water boils according to definite principles.

Planets follow mathematical regularities.

Seeds grow according to biological laws.

If reality were pure chaos changing every second without structure, truth would be impossible.

Science silently assumes that the universe possesses intelligibility.

The ancient Greeks called this Logos — rational order.

Indian thought often speaks of Rta (ऋत) — the cosmic principle of order sustaining the universe.

Before the word Dharma became prominent, Rta represented cosmic harmony — seasons, sacrifice, moral order, celestial motion, truthfulness.

The sun rises.

Rivers flow.

Actions yield consequences.

The cosmos is not random confusion but ordered meaningfulness.

Truth becomes possible because reality itself has reliable structure.

3. Are These Two Ideas Different — or Secretly Connected?

Here lies the deeper question.

Maybe the two views are not rivals at all.

Perhaps truth exists independently of minds because reality possesses enduring order.

Suppose reality has an eternal structure.

Then truths about it would naturally remain independent of human thinking.

In that sense:

Mathematics reflects deep patterns.

Science uncovers lawful regularities.

Ethics searches for enduring principles.

Spiritual inquiry seeks the ground of being itself.

Truth becomes not an isolated object but a relationship between mind and reality.

A true statement aligns understanding with what is.

Falsehood arises when thought departs from reality's structure.

4. Can Truth Exist Without Any Mind at All?

This question takes us into even deeper waters.

Imagine a universe with no conscious beings.

Would truth still exist?

Some philosophers answer yes.

The stars would still move according to physical laws.

Geometric relations would still hold.

Reality would remain what it is.

Others argue that truth requires at least the possibility of a knowing mind.

After all, truth usually involves propositions, judgments, descriptions.

Without consciousness, can there be “truth” — or only brute existence?

This debate remains unresolved.

Yet spirituality offers an intriguing response.

What if ultimate reality itself is conscious?

If consciousness is fundamental — as many Vedantic traditions maintain — then truth and awareness may never be separable.

Truth would not require human minds.

But it would exist within Cosmic Consciousness.

5. The Vedantic Possibility: Truth as Being Itself

Vedanta takes a bold step beyond ordinary philosophy.

It suggests that truth is not merely a correct statement about reality.

Truth is reality.

Hence expressions like:

“Brahman alone is real.”

Truth is not just accuracy.

Truth is Being.

Human falsehood arises from limited perception, ignorance (avidya), fragmentation of understanding.

Spiritual life therefore becomes not merely acquiring information but aligning oneself with what eternally is.

Truth becomes something to live, not merely define.

A Simple Illustration

A child draws the sun with a smiling face.

Astronomy describes nuclear fusion.

Poetry calls the sun a golden chariot.

Different minds produce different descriptions.

Yet the underlying reality remains.

Descriptions vary.

Reality persists.

Truth, perhaps, lies in the continual movement toward closer alignment with what truly is.

So we return to the original question:

Is truth eternal because it exists independently of minds… or because reality itself has an eternal structure?

Perhaps the answer is:

Truth appears eternal because reality is not arbitrary.

There is order.

There is intelligibility.

There is something stable enough to be known.

Human minds do not manufacture this entirely; they participate in uncovering it.

And for spiritual traditions, the deepest possibility is even more profound:

Truth is eternal because ultimate reality itself is eternal.

Not merely facts.

Not merely logic.

But Being, Order, Consciousness, and Truth — woven together.

Or, in a Vedic spirit:

Truth is not a lamp lit by human minds.

It is the sun by whose light minds themselves awaken.

We shall continue the reflection in stages  again and again. It would be more intriguing if readers posed questions.

This is dignity of( purposeful )work.

 When you switch on your mobile pictures of award winners flash please do read about them it's truly grounding to know about their great contribution. They will be awarded on 25th .

https://www.youtube.com/live/52P3hks-Ub4?si=ISE9yIlz4WFZRrY8

Unsung Yet Unforgettable: Ordinary Indians Who Received the Nation’s Highest Honours.



https://youtu.be/F5egt529nUQ?si=O30cldJHG4lYQbIp

Every year, around Republic Day, our mobile phones begin to glow with familiar headlines: Padma Awards announced.

We expect to see famous names — celebrated artists, scientists, industrialists, sportspersons, public figures.

But increasingly, another kind of face appears on our screens.

An elderly woman in a simple saree who planted trees for decades.

A fruit seller who built a school.

A tribal grandmother who knows forests better than textbooks.

A temple singer who spent a lifetime preserving ancient hymns.

A bus conductor who created a library.

For a moment, one pauses and wonders: Who are these people? How did they reach the nation’s highest honours?

The answer is both simple and profound.

They did not chase fame.

They simply did their work — quietly, steadily, often for decades.

And eventually, the nation noticed.

India’s Padma Awards — Padma Shri, Padma Bhushan, and Padma Vibhushan — were instituted in 1954 to honour exceptional service in diverse fields. Traditionally, public imagination associated these honours with eminent personalities.

Yet in recent years, something remarkable has happened.

The spotlight has widened.

India has increasingly begun recognising “unsung heroes” — ordinary citizens whose extraordinary dedication transformed lives, protected traditions, nurtured communities, or preserved knowledge.

This shift says something important not only about awards, but about the changing definition of greatness itself.

Consider Harekala Hajabba, a modest orange seller from Karnataka.

He did not possess wealth, influence, or advanced education. But he carried a quiet pain: many children in his village lacked access to schooling.

Using humble earnings from selling oranges, he worked towards establishing a school.

Imagine the scale of that dream.

Not a corporation building an institution.

Not a wealthy donor endowing a campus.

A fruit seller.

One man.

One stubborn conviction that children deserved education.

And the nation honoured him.

Then there is Saalumarada Thimmakka, affectionately known as the “Tree Mother.”

With little formal education and limited resources, she and her husband planted hundreds of banyan trees along barren roadsides.

They watered them, protected them, nurtured them.

Today those trees stand not merely as vegetation, but as living monuments of patience and ecological care.

Long before environmentalism became fashionable vocabulary, she was quietly practising it.

Another unforgettable figure is Tulsi Gowda, often called the “encyclopedia of forests.”

A tribal woman from Karnataka, she may not possess academic degrees, yet her understanding of plants, soil, and ecosystems commands respect from scientists and forest officials alike.

Her life reminds us that wisdom does not always emerge from lecture halls.

Sometimes it grows barefoot in forests.

Sometimes knowledge is carried not in certificates, but in memory, observation, and lived experience.

India’s highest honours have also reached guardians of culture hidden from mainstream visibility.

A traditional temple singer preserving sacred musical heritage.

A village puppeteer keeping ancient storytelling alive.

A folk performer safeguarding regional traditions that might otherwise disappear into silence.

In an age of digital noise and fleeting trends, such individuals serve as bridges between generations.

They protect cultural memory without headlines, publicity teams, or commercial sponsorship.

Their stage may be a temple courtyard, a village square, or a modest community gathering.

Yet their contribution is immense.

One of the most moving examples is Karimul Haque, known widely as the “Motorcycle Ambulance Man.”

Living in a remote region with inadequate medical access, he transformed his motorcycle into an emergency vehicle, carrying patients to hospitals — often at personal cost.

He did not wait for ideal infrastructure.

He responded to human need with the tools available to him.

That instinct — simple, practical compassion — became his life’s work.

Equally inspiring is Jadav Payeng, the celebrated “Forest Man of India.”

What began as one person planting trees eventually grew into an entire forest ecosystem.

At a time when environmental degradation concerns the entire planet, his story feels almost mythic.

Yet it was achieved not through speeches or global campaigns, but through consistent labour over many years.

The lesson is striking.

Extraordinary change often begins invisibly.

Not every national builder occupies parliament, television studios, or corporate boardrooms.

Some build silently.

Some plant.

Some teach.

Some sing.

Some preserve.

Some heal.

Some simply refuse to abandon responsibility.

The recognition of such people carries a deeper social message.

Modern societies often reward visibility.

We are conditioned to equate importance with popularity, wealth, influence, follower counts, or media presence.

But awards bestowed upon grassroots heroes challenge that assumption.

They suggest another possibility:

That greatness may wear worn sandals.

That service may happen far from cities.

That knowledge may reside in villages, forests, workshops, temples, classrooms, roadside stalls, and ordinary homes.

These honours also perform another invaluable function.

They widen the imagination of younger generations.

When children see only celebrities being celebrated, success acquires a narrow definition.

But when they see a librarian, a tribal conservationist, a temple singer, a village teacher, or a humble social worker receiving national recognition, an entirely different lesson emerges.

A meaningful life does not require glamour.

It requires commitment.

Perhaps that is why these stories touch us so deeply when they appear unexpectedly on our phone screens.

They restore faith.

They remind us that the moral imagination of a nation is still alive.

That somewhere, unnoticed by cameras, people continue to work with sincerity, endurance, and quiet courage.

And that sometimes — thankfully — society remembers to say thank you.

In the end, these awardees represent more than individual achievement.

They represent a profound truth:

Civilizations are not sustained by famous people alone.

They are sustained by countless ordinary individuals who keep knowledge alive, preserve beauty, serve communities, protect nature, educate children, and perform their duties without applause.

When such people walk onto a national stage to receive one of the country’s highest honours, something larger than an award ceremony takes place.

The nation is not merely honouring them.

It is honouring the timeless dignity of quiet work itself.