Friday, July 10, 2026

Maori.

 The Māori ceremonial welcome is called a Pōwhiri. It is a traditional ceremony used to welcome visitors onto a marae (meeting place) or to mark important occasions. It is  performed by the local Māori community.

A typical pōwhiri includes:

Karanga – the ceremonial call of welcome, usually by women. It invites visitors onto the marae and acknowledges both the living and those who have passed away.

Waiata – songs sung to support the speakers and express unity.

Whaikōrero – formal speeches of welcome and response.

Hongi – the touching of noses and foreheads. It symbolizes the sharing of the "breath of life" and signifies that visitors are no longer strangers but part of one community.

Haka (sometimes included) – a powerful posture dance expressing strength, respect, and emotion. It is not always a challenge; it can also be a sign of welcome and honor.

The overall meaning of the ceremony in English is something like:

"We welcome you. We acknowledge our ancestors and yours. We come together in peace and friendship. By sharing our breath and our words, we become one people for this gathering."

Although the words vary with each ceremony, the central message is always one of peace, respect, hospitality, and the forging of a lasting relationship between the hosts and the visitors.

In a ceremonial welcome or haka:

Open hands, sweeping motions, and rhythmic gestures emphasize the meaning of the chant or song.

The movements express mana (dignity, authority, spiritual presence), respect, and welcome.

The synchronized hand actions help tell a story, much like gestures in classical Indian dance traditions such as Bharatanatyam or Kathakali, where hand movements reinforce the meaning of the lyrics.

Facial expressions, eye movements, and body posture are equally important. Wide eyes and expressive movements convey sincerity, strength, and deep emotion.

Choti si aasha

That is a beautiful way to put it, and there is a deep traditional truth behind it.

In the Indian understanding, Sāma Veda is the Veda of melody, intonation, and musical rendering. The Ṛg Vedic mantras become sung in the Sāma tradition, so it is often seen as the fountainhead of Indian music. That is why many people say all music has its seed in the Sāma Veda.

What you are saying about taking a verse and fitting it into rāga and tāla also points to something very real: Sanskrit verse, especially Vedic and classical verse, already carries an internal rhythm—syllabic balance, cadence, pauses, stress of sound, and flow. When that is placed against a rāga and beat cycle, it often settles naturally into musical form rather than sounding forced. In that sense, the verse is not being “made musical” from outside; its music is being uncovered.

At the same time, if one were to be technically strict, modern Carnatic and Hindustani rāga systems evolved over centuries, so not every present-day rāga can be directly traced in a one-to-one way to the Sāma Vedic chants. But the larger statement still stands beautifully:

Indian music does not begin with entertainment; it begins with sacred sound.

The Veda was not merely recited—it was intoned, measured, breathed, and lived. From that came the instinct that sound itself can carry devotion, order, memory, and transcendence.

In our tradition, music is not an invention added later to prayer; it is woven into sacred utterance itself. The Sāma Veda stands as the great testimony to this truth. It reveals that sound, when rightly intoned, is not merely pleasing to the ear but elevating to the spirit.

It is often said that all songs originate from the Sāma Veda. The statement is not merely poetic; it points to the intimate relationship between mantra and melody in the Indian tradition. If one takes a verse and gently places it within the framework of rāga and rhythm, one often discovers that it fits with surprising naturalness. The verse already carries within it a pulse, a cadence, and a hidden musical architecture. The rāga does not impose music upon it; it reveals the music that was always there.

This is perhaps the distinctive genius of our civilization: sound was never treated as a casual ornament. It was sacred, measured, and transformative. Before music became performance, it was prayer. Before it became art, it was worship. In that sense, the roots of Indian music lie not in the concert hall but in the Vedic vision of sound, with the Sāma Veda shining as one of its most luminous sources.

Example. 

Krishnastakam can be set to this verse. From samaveda. Pancha chamaram Chanda. 

Aye ho mere zindagime bollywood song too.

Another choti si aasha can be set to the verse below

From bhjaga prayatam Chanda.

Mango mania.

 India is home to roughly 1,500 varieties of mangoes, with key regional cultivars dominating different parts of the country. Prime varieties include the fragrant Alphonso from Maharashtra, the sweet Kesar from Gujarat, and Banganapalli (or Safeda) from Andhra Pradesh. 

The most popular mango varieties found across India, broken down by their primary growing regions.

West India:Alphonso (Hapus): Grown primarily in the Ratnagiri and Sindhudurg districts of Maharashtra. Known as the "King of Mangoes," it features smooth, golden-yellow skin, fiberless saffron flesh, and a rich, sweet taste.Kesar: Primarily cultivated in the Junagadh district of Gujarat. These bright orange-yellow mangoes have a distinct floral aroma and are incredibly sweet. South India:Banganapalli (Benishan): Hailing from Andhra Pradesh, this large, obliquely oval mango has smooth, pale-yellow skin and a sweet, meaty texture with no fiber.Totapuri: Known for its distinct parrot-like, curved beak tip. Grown heavily in Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh, it has a tangy flavor and is excellent for processing and salads.Badami (Karnataka Alphonso): Grown in Bagalkot and other parts of Karnataka, this variety shares the rich, sweet flavor and smooth, buttery texture of the Alphonso.Imam Pasand: A highly sought-after, premium fruit from the southern states, famous for its large size and rich, citrusy sweetness. North India:Dasheri: Originating from Malihabad in Uttar Pradesh. It is long, slightly curved, and features smooth skin and intensely sweet, aromatic flesh.Langra: Cultivated largely around Varanasi. This green-skinned mango retains its green hue even when fully ripe and is prized for its fiberless pulp and strong, spicy-sweet flavor.Chausa: Grown in North Indian regions like Punjab and Haryana. These large mangoes are incredibly soft, juicy, and sweet. East & Northeast India:Himsagar: A popular variety from West Bengal. It is medium-sized, yellowish-green, and known for its thick, extremely sweet pulp.Jardalu: A delicate, light-yellow mango native to Bihar with a very distinct and pleasant honey-like aroma. 

Mango Mania: 40 Mango varieties that define the flavors of India

Mango Mania: 40 Mango varieties that define the flavors of India. When it comes to mangoes, India is the land of · Alphonso. Let's start with the crème de la cr...

Alphonso the coastal king from Maharashtra sun kissed royalty. Intensely sweet with rich honey and citrus notes, smooth creamy and fiber free, thick  saffron hued pulp with iconic aroma.

Malgova the royal indulgence from Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh, luscious sweet with creamy flavour, smooth rich pulp, completely fiberless thick rich mango.

Sandhura the honey pot from Maharashtra, Kerala and Karnataka,ultra juicy soft pulp, honey like sweetness with gentle tang, smooth fiber free texture.

Badami the golden twin from Kerala and Karnataka. Rich sweetness with honey and apricot notes, creamy buttery pulp, low fiber melt in mouth texture, fragrant and delightfully smooth.

Raspuri/ pairi the noble prince from Karnataka. Bold sweet tangy tropical flavour, extremely juicy soft pulp, strong unmistakable mango aroma favorite of juice lovers.

Banganapalli the crown jewel from Andhra Pradesh. Smooth sweet and endlessly snackable, thick golden yellow juicy pulp, naturally sweet with mild tangy undertones, soft bite and fiber free texture.

Imam pasand the nawabs secret from Tamil Nadu. Complex  fragrant and unforgettable, buttery silk flavour, deep sweetness with lime coconut and spice notes, thin skin but abundant pulp.

Kesar the saffron soul from Maharashtra. Fragrant rich and beautifully balanced, smooth velvety pulp, honey sweet flavour with citrus lift, intensely aromatic.

Mallika the maharani from Karnataka. Soft indulgent and quietly luxurious, honeyed sweetness with citrus twist, creamy dense pulp, completely fiberless.

Kesar kutch the golden oasis from Gujarat.  Same kesar charm, slightly sharper personality, dense yet juicy bite,intensely sweet with gentle tang, creamy buttery pulp.

Langra the emerald emperor from Uttar Pradesh. Green outside sweet inside, sweet tangy and deeply aromatic, creamy juicy pulp, thin seed generous flesh.

Neelam the seasons after party, late summer legend from Tamil Nadu.  Intensely sweet with floral notes smooth dense pulp, completely fiber free texture.

Dasheri the court favorite from Malihabad. Elegant fragrant and perfectly juicy, soft buttery pulp, honey sweet flavour with floral aroma, smooth fiberless texture.

Chausa the monsoon magician from Malihabad. Squeeze slurp repeat, deep honey sweetness, ultra juicy pulp, smooth buttery bite.

Himsagar the eastern star from west Bengal. No fiber no fuss, rich custard like texture, intensely sweet honey flavour.



Divya Desam Vimanams 


Chola Nadu Tirupatis – 40

Thiruvarangam — Pranavakara Vimanam

Thirukkozhi (Uraiyur / Nichulapuri) — Kalyana Vimanam

Thirukarambanur — Udyoga Vimanam

Thiruvellarai — Vimalakruti Vimanam

Anbil — Taraka Vimanam

Thiruppernagar (Koviladi / Appakudathan) — Indra Vimanam

Thirukkandiyur — Kamalakruti Vimanam

Thirukkoodalur (Aaduthurai Perumal Koil) — Suddha Satva Vimanam

Thirukkavithalam (Kapisthalam) — Gaganaakruti Vimanam

Thiruppullabhoothangudi — Sopanam Vimanam

Thiru Aadhanur — Pranavakara Vimanam

Thirukkudanthai (Kumbakonam) — Vaideeka Vimanam

Thiru Vinnagar (Oppiliappan Koil) — Shuddhananda Vimanam

Thirunaraiyur (Nachiyar Koil) — Hema Vimanam

Thirucherai — Sara Vimanam

Thirukkannamangai — Utpala Vimanam

Thirukkannapuram — Utpalaavataka Vimanam

Thirukkannangudi — Utpala Vimanam

Thirunagai (Nagapattinam) — Soundarya Vimanam

Thanjai Mamani Koil — Soundarya Vimanam,manikooda vimanam,

Vedasundara vimanam.

Nandipura Vinnagaram (Nathan Koil) — Mandara Vimanam

Thiruvelliyankudi — Pushkalaavartaka Vimanam

Therazhundur — Garuda Vimanam

Thiruchirupuliyur — Nanda Vardhana Vimanam

Thalaichanga Nanmathiyam — Chandra Vimanam

Thiruindhalur — Veda Chakra Vimanam

Thirukkavalampadi — Vedaamoda Vimanam

Kazhi Cheerama Vinnagaram (Sirkazhi) — Pushkalaavartaka Vimanam

Thiru Arimeya Vinnagaram — Ucchisringa Vimanam

Thiruvan Purushottamam — Sanjivi Vigraha Vimanam

Thiruchsemponsei Koil — Kanaka Vimanam

Thirumanimadakkoil — Pranava Vimanam

Thiruvaikuntha Vinnagaram — Ananda Satya Vartaka Vimanam

Thiruvali – Thirunagari — Ashtakshara Vimanam

Thiruthevanarthogai — Sopana Vimanam

Thiruthetriambalam — Veda Vimanam

Thirumanikkoodam — Kanaka Vimanam

Thiruvellakulam (Annan Koil) — Tattvadyotaka Vimanam

Thiruparthanpalli — Narayana Vimanam

Chidambaram – Thiruchitrakoodam — Satvika Vimanam

Nadu Nadu Tirupatis – 2

Thiruvahindrapuram — Chandra Vimanam

Thirukkovilur — Srikara Vimanam

Thondai Nadu Tirupatis – 22

Thirukachchi Athigiri — Punyakoti Vimanam

Thiru Ashtabhujam (Attabuyakaram) — Gaganakruti Vimanam

Thiruththanka — Srikara Vimanam

Thiruvelukkai — Kanaka Vimanam

Thiru Neeragam — Jagadeeswara Vimanam

Thiruppadagam — Patra Vimanam

Nilathingal Thundam — Purusha Sukta Vimanam

Thiru Ooragam — Sarasrikara Vimanam

Thiruvekka — Vedasara Vimanam

Thirukkaragam — Vamana Vimanam

Thirukkarvanam — Pushkala Vimanam

Thirukalvanur — Vamana Vimanam

Thiruppavalavannam — Pravala Vimanam

Parameswara Vinnagaram — Mukunda Vimanam

Thiruputkuzhi — Vijayakoti Vimanam

Thirunindravoor — Utpala Vimanam

Thiruevvul — Vijayakoti Vimanam

Thiruvallikeni — Ananda Vimanam

Thiruneermalai — Thoyagiri Vimanam

Thiruvidandai — Kalyana Vimanam

Thirukadalmallai (Mahabalipuram) — Gaganakruti Vimanam

Thirukkadigai (Sholingur) — Simha Ghoshtakruti Vimanam

Malai Nadu Tirupatis – 13

Thirunaavaay — Veda Vimanam

Thiruvithuvakkodu — Tatvakanchana Vimanam

Thirukkatkarai — Pushkala Vimanam

Thirumoozhikkalam — Soundarya Vimanam

Thiruvallavazh (Srivallabha Kshetram) — Chaturanga Kola Vimanam

Thirukkadithanam — Punyakoti Vimanam

Thiruchitraru — Jagajyothi Vimanam

Thiruppuliyur (Kuttanadu Thiruppuliyur) — Purushottama Vimanam

Thiruvaranvilai (Aranmula) — Vamana Vimanam

Thiruvanvandur — Vedalaya Vimanam

Thiruvananthapuram — Hema Kuta Vimanam

Thiruvattaru — Ashtanga / Ashtakshara Vimanam

Thiruvanparisaram (Tirupatisaaram) — Indra Kalyana Vimanam

Pandya Nadu Tirupatis – 18

Thirukkurungudi — Panchaketaka Vimanam

Sri Varamangai (Vanamamalai / Nanguneri) — Nandavardhana Vimanam

Nava Tirupati

Srivaikuntham — Chandra Vimanam

Thiruvaragunamangai — Vijayakoti Vimanam

Thirupuliyangudi — Vedasara Vimanam

Thirutholaivillimangalam (Irattai Tirupati) — Kumuda Vimanam

Thirukulandai (Perungulam) — Ananda Nilaya Vimanam

Thirukolur — Srikara Vimanam

Then Thirupperai — Patra Vimanam

Thirukkurugur (Azhwar Tirunagari) — Govinda Vimanam

Other Pandya Nadu Divya Desams

Srivilliputhur — Vimalaakruti Vimanam

Thiruthangal — Deva Chandra Vimanam

Thirukkoodal (Madurai) — Ashtanga Vimanam

Thirumaliruncholai — Somasundara Vimanam

Thirumogur — Ketaki Vimanam

Thirukkottiyur — Ashtanga Vimanam

Thiruppullani — Kalyana Vimanam

Thirumeyyam — Satyagiri Vimanam

Vada Nadu Tirupatis – 12

Thiru Ayodhi — Pushkala Vimanam

Naimisharanyam — Srihari Vimanam

Thiruprithi (Joshimath) — Govardhana Vimanam

Kandamennum Kadinagar (Devaprayag) — Mangala Vimanam

Thiruvadari (Badrinath) — Tapta Kanchana Vimanam

Salagramam — Gagana Vimanam

Vadamadurai (Mathura) — Govardhana Vimanam

Thiruaaypaadi (Gokulam) — Hema Kuta Vimanam

Dwaraka — Hema Koota Vimanam

Singavelkundram (Ahobilam) — Guhai Vimanam

Thiruvenkatam (Tirumalai) — Ananda Nilaya Vimanam

Thiruparkadal — Ashtanga Vimanam

Paramapadam

Paramapadam (Thirunadu)

Total structure

Chola Nadu – 40

Nadu Nadu – 2

Thondai Nadu – 22

Malai Nadu – 13

Pandya Nadu – 18

Vada Nadu – 12

Paramapadam – 1

Grand Total: 108 Divya Desams.

Thursday, July 9, 2026

Vimanas.

Temple Vimānas: The Sacred Crowns of Hindu Temples

When we stand before a great temple, our eyes are often drawn first to its towering gopuram, the bustling entrance, the sculpted pillars, and the movement of worshippers. But in the language of temple architecture, the most sacred vertical element of the temple is not always the outer gateway tower. It is the vimāna—the structure that rises directly above the garbhagṛha, the sanctum sanctorum where the deity resides.

The vimāna is not merely an architectural cap placed above the sanctum. In temple tradition it is the crown of the Lord’s abode, the visible sign of the invisible mystery within. It marks the precise place where the deity is enshrined. If the sanctum is the heart of the temple, the vimāna is its luminous crest.

Vimāna and Gopuram: Not the Same

In ordinary conversation, these terms are often confused. The gopuram is the gateway tower at the entrance of the temple complex. In many South Indian temples, especially from the medieval period onward, the gopurams became massive and visually dominant. Yet the vimāna is something different. It stands above the sanctum itself, directly over the deity.

This distinction is not merely architectural. It reflects the inner hierarchy of sacred space. The gopuram welcomes the world into the temple. The vimāna rises over the innermost chamber, silently proclaiming the presence of the divine. However tall the gateway may be, the vimāna remains spiritually central because it shelters and identifies the sanctum.

The Sacred Meaning of the Vimāna

The Hindu temple is not conceived as a random collection of halls and towers. It is a sacred organism, a body of meaning shaped by theology, ritual, proportion, and symbolism. Every part of it speaks. The sanctum is the still center. The deity is the indwelling life. The circumambulatory paths draw the devotee into a rhythm of approach. The halls allow the community to gather in worship. And above the sanctum rises the vimāna, as though the mystery enclosed below seeks expression in form.

The vimāna can therefore be seen in many ways. It is a marker of the deity’s presence, a symbol of ascent, a sacred canopy over the Lord, and an architectural bridge between earth and heaven. In many old temple traditions, the sight of the vimāna from afar itself stirred devotion. It meant one had entered the orbit of the divine.

The Temple as a Sacred Body

Traditional temple thought often sees the temple as a cosmic body. The garbhagṛha is its innermost heart or womb-space. The deity is the life within. The vimāna then becomes the head, crest, or upward-rising crown of that sacred body. It is not an afterthought added for grandeur; it is part of the temple’s theological grammar.

That is why vimānas are often treated with reverence in their own right. In many shrines, one does not think of the sanctum and the vimāna as separate entities. The deity below and the sacred form above belong together. The vimāna is, in a sense, the sanctum made visible from the outside.

Why Vimānas Have Names

One of the beautiful features of Hindu temple tradition is that the vimāna is often not left unnamed. It may carry a specific sacred name, and that name becomes part of the identity of the temple. In Sri Vaishnava tradition especially, the identity of a temple is often remembered through a triad: the deity, the sacred tank, and the vimāna. These are not incidental details. They are part of the temple’s spiritual biography.

Thus one hears of names such as Pranavākāra Vimāna, Aṣṭāṅga Vimāna, Suddha Satva Vimāna, Veda Chakra Vimāna, Pushkala Varta Vimāna, and others. These names may arise from shape, symbolism, Agamic classification, mythological association, or a long-preserved temple tradition. Their significance is not always reducible to a simple modern architectural label. They belong to a world in which architecture and theology speak to one another.

Pranavākāra Vimāna: The Form of the Pranava

Among the best known of these names is Pranavākāra Vimāna. The term joins Pranava, the sacred syllable Om, with ākāra, meaning form or shape. A vimāna described as Pranavākāra is thus linked, in form or symbolism, to the Pranava.

This is a profoundly suggestive name. In Hindu thought, Om is not merely a sound uttered at the beginning of prayer. It is the seed of the Vedas, the sound-symbol of the Absolute, and the condensed expression of the Supreme. To associate a vimāna with the Pranava is to imply that the sanctum beneath it houses the One who is the meaning of the Vedas and the ground of all existence.

The most celebrated example is the Pranavākāra Vimāna of . In Sri Vaishnava tradition, this is deeply fitting. , reclining in majesty at Srirangam, is not merely a temple deity among many. He is revered as the Lord who embodies the essence of the Vedas themselves. The vimāna above His sanctum, associated with the Pranava, reinforces this theological truth in architectural form.

Aṣṭāṅga Vimāna and Other Sacred Forms

Another important traditional name is Aṣṭāṅga Vimāna. The term suggests an eightfold sacred arrangement or structure. In temple tradition, such a vimāna is not understood as a neutral design category but as a sanctified form governed by scriptural and ritual significance. The very name tells the devotee that the structure belongs to a sacred pattern of worship and meaning.

Similarly, names such as Suddha Satva Vimāna evoke not geometry but theology—the idea of pure spiritual substance. Veda Chakra Vimāna brings together scriptural revelation and the symbolism of the divine discus. Pushkala Varta, Kanaka, Hema, and other names preserve either sacred imagery, splendour, shape, or local tradition.

In all these cases, the vimāna is not merely a roofline. It is a bearer of memory.

Architecture as Theology in Stone

Perhaps this is the most fruitful way to approach temple vimānas. They are not just “types of towers.” They are theology in stone. Through them, the temple speaks of truths that words alone cannot easily hold. The vimāna tells us that the sanctum is not an enclosed room but a cosmic center. It tells us that the deity within is not merely an idol but the axis of worship, the still point around which the temple breathes.

When a devotee learns that a shrine bears a Pranavākāra Vimāna or an Aṣṭāṅga Vimāna, it changes the way the temple is seen. One begins to realize that every part of the shrine has been imagined not only by builders but by worshippers, theologians, ritualists, and generations of faith.

More Than Architecture

To study temple vimānas is therefore to enter a meeting place of art, ritual, symbolism, and devotion. Their forms may be measured in stone, but their meaning lies beyond stone. They rise above the sanctum as if to declare that the divine presence within cannot be contained, only hinted at. The vimāna is one such hint—an upward gesture, a crown, a sign, a sacred reminder that the Lord dwells here.

The next time one visits a temple, it may be worth pausing not only before the deity, but also before the vimāna above. For the temple does not speak only through the image in the sanctum. It also speaks through the forms that shelter that image. And among those forms, the vimāna is one of the most eloquent.


Sacred Vimānas in Temple Traditio

 Pranavākāra, Aṣṭāṅga and Other Celebrated Vimāna Types

In the sacred geography of Hindu temples, the identity of a shrine is shaped not only by the deity enshrined within and the legends attached to the place, but also by the vimāna that rises above the sanctum. Temple traditions, especially within the Sri Vaishnava world, preserve the names of these vimānas with remarkable care. They are remembered as part of the temple’s spiritual inheritance, almost as one remembers the name of a sacred river or the title of a revered hymn.

These names are not ornamental labels. They often preserve theology, symbolism, myth, and architectural memory. To speak of a Pranavākāra Vimāna or an Aṣṭāṅga Vimāna is to enter a world where the temple is not merely built space but revealed meaning in stone.

What follows is not an exhaustive architectural catalogue, but a devotional and traditional introduction to some of the celebrated vimāna types associated with temples, especially in the Divya Desam tradition.

1. Pranavākāra Vimāna

The Pranavākāra Vimāna is among the most revered in temple tradition. The term combines Pranava, the sacred syllable Om, with ākāra, meaning form. A vimāna bearing this name is thus associated with the shape, essence, or symbolism of the Pranava.

This is a name of profound theological depth. In Vedic and Vedantic thought, Om is the seed of all sacred utterance, the sound-symbol of the Supreme, and the condensed essence of the Vedas. A shrine crowned by a Pranavākāra Vimāna therefore proclaims that the Lord enshrined within is the very truth to which the Vedas point.

The most famous example is the vimāna of , the great abode of . The association is entirely fitting, for Srirangam stands in Sri Vaishnava tradition as the foremost of shrines, and the Lord of Srirangam is celebrated as the very essence of the Vedas. The vimāna above Him, linked to the Pranava, makes theology visible.

2. Aṣṭāṅga Vimāna

The Aṣṭāṅga Vimāna is another celebrated name. The word aṣṭāṅga literally means “eight-limbed” or “eightfold.” In temple tradition, this does not simply refer to a numerical detail but to a sacred architectural order, one endowed with scriptural and ritual significance.

Among the temples associated with the Aṣṭāṅga Vimāna, the most famous is . This temple is particularly remarkable because it houses the Lord in different postures in different levels of the sanctified structure, a feature that adds to the spiritual distinction of the shrine. The very name of the vimāna invites the devotee to see the temple as a carefully ordered sacred cosmos rather than a mere building.

The Aṣṭāṅga Vimāna reminds us that in temple architecture, structure itself can become worship.

3. Suddha Satva Vimāna

The phrase Suddha Satva belongs more to theology than to architecture. In Sri Vaishnava thought, suddha satva refers to the pure, luminous, spiritual substance associated with the divine realm, untouched by the impurities of material existence. When a vimāna is named Suddha Satva Vimāna, the emphasis is not merely on physical form but on transcendence.

Such a name suggests that the shrine is conceived as a reflection of the Lord’s own pure abode, a fragment of Vaikuntha made accessible on earth. The vimāna in such a case is not only a superstructure; it becomes a symbolic declaration that the sanctum below is a point where the earthly and the transcendental meet.

4. Veda Chakra Vimāna

The name Veda Chakra Vimāna is rich with Vaishnava resonance. Veda points to revealed knowledge, while chakra evokes the divine discus of Vishnu, the Sudarshana Chakra. A vimāna by this name binds together two of the Lord’s attributes—His identity as the source and meaning of the Vedas, and His sovereignty as the wielder of the discus.

A temple with such a vimāna would naturally be understood as a place where scriptural revelation and divine protection converge. Even when one does not know the exact architectural reason behind the name, the theological atmosphere it creates is unmistakable.

5. Pushkala Varta Vimāna

The name Pushkala Varta Vimāna has an older, more poetic ring. Traditional temple names often preserve terms whose nuances are not easily captured in a single English equivalent. Pushkala may suggest abundance, fullness, or richness, while varta can imply circularity, turning, or formation depending on context and textual tradition.

Such names remind us that vimānas are not always named in the straightforward manner modern readers might expect. Some names preserve ancient classifications; some preserve local legend; some retain symbolic resonances that have lived in oral and ritual memory long after their exact technical origins became obscure.

6. Kanaka or Hema Vimāna

Words such as Kanaka and Hema both point to gold. A Kanaka Vimāna or Hema Vimāna suggests splendour, radiance, and auspicious brilliance. Gold in temple symbolism is never merely ornamental wealth. It is associated with purity, majesty, and the offering of one’s best to the deity.

When a vimāna bears such a name, it may indicate either a visual association with golden brilliance, a tradition of gilding, or a symbolic emphasis on the shining glory of the Lord’s abode. Such names bring before the mind not just structure, but sacred luminosity.

7. Vimāna Names as Temple Identity

One of the most beautiful aspects of the Sri Vaishnava temple tradition is the care with which such details are remembered. A Divya Desam is not known only by its deity and location. The tīrtham, the vimāna, the sthala purāṇa, and the Mangalāsāsanam of the Āzhvārs all become part of its living identity.

This means that a vimāna name is not a dry appendix in a temple manual. It is a devotional marker. To know that Srirangam bears the Pranavākāra Vimāna, or that Koodal Azhagar is associated with the Aṣṭāṅga Vimāna, is to know something intimate about the inner personality of those shrines.

8. Beyond Form: The Inner Meaning of Vimāna Types

It is tempting for a modern reader to ask whether these names refer only to shape. Sometimes they may indeed have architectural implications. But very often their significance is wider. A vimāna name can preserve:

  • a theological idea
  • a symbolic resemblance
  • an Agamic classification
  • a local legend
  • a ritual memory
  • a poetic description of the deity’s abode

This is why vimāna names deserve to be approached with both curiosity and reverence. They stand at the intersection of architecture and devotion.

A Temple Speaks Through Its Vimāna

When we hear the phrase Pranavākāra Vimāna, we are not merely hearing an architectural term. We are hearing the temple speak of Om. When we hear Aṣṭāṅga Vimāna, we are hearing of sacred order and spiritual structure. When we hear Suddha Satva Vimāna, we are being reminded that the sanctum is imagined as a point where the purity of the divine world touches the earth.

This is the wonder of Hindu temple tradition. Stone is never only stone. Shape is never only geometry. Architecture is never only engineering. The temple is a language of devotion, and the vimāna is one of its most eloquent words.

The study of vimāna types opens a fascinating doorway into the world of temple symbolism. Their names carry theology, memory, poetry, and reverence. They tell us how deeply our ancestors thought about the temple—not simply as a building for worship, but as a sacred cosmos in miniature.

To look at a vimāna, then, is to look at more than a tower above a sanctum. It is to look at an idea, a tradition, and a form of worship cast into enduring shape. And when one learns the names of these vimānas, one begins to hear the temple speak with greater intimacy.

Wednesday, July 8, 2026

The Secret Carnival Within

 I am walking down a path today

And suddenly somebody taps me and asks
How are you today?
I,like say I am as joyous as the waves of the ocean.
Because I have the grace of nature's hand on my head.
Mystics bring you to this place of such an expansive sense of self
Where you are filled with love
It's no more even about gender
It's It's the energy that's just flowing
It doesn't even need a direction.
In my tattered pocket
I hide overflowing waves of joy
I may be alone
And yet at all moments of the day
I feel like I am in a carnival
On a treasure chest so small
That you can't even fit a lock on it
My treasure is perfectly in tact.
And then he says water..
Will come to these eyes and it will go
But the moisture or the mistress
In my heart my soul never diminishes.
Let the shores keep account of less and more
Good fortune and bad fortune I got so much
Let the shores keep account of such petty accounts.
The sun may rise and the sun may set
But the sky above me is just where it is.

I don't know from where I got this. 

Found it in my old diary.


Some pages in an old diary do not feel as though they were written by us at all. We find them after years and wonder: When did I feel this? From where did these words come? They seem to have arrived from some inward chamber that opens only once in a while, and then quietly closes again. This little piece has that feeling. It is not polished poetry, nor is it an argument or an essay. It is simply a moment of inner weather—caught and preserved before it could vanish. Probably one that impressed me. 

The lines begin so simply. One is walking down a path, and someone casually asks, “How are you today?” Most of us would answer in the ordinary way and move on. But here the answer comes from another plane altogether: I am as joyous as the waves of the ocean. What a reply! Not “I am fine,” not “I am managing,” but joyous like the sea itself—moving, alive, restless, overflowing. Such joy is not the result of one good day or one happy event. It sounds like the joy of someone who has touched, however briefly, an inner spring.

And then comes the reason: Because I have the grace of nature’s hand on my head. That image stayed with me. It is so gentle and so full. We often speak of grace as though it must descend in some dramatic spiritual moment. But here grace is like a hand resting on the head—a quiet blessing, almost maternal, almost unnoticed, and yet enough to change the colour of the whole day. One feels sheltered by something larger than oneself. Nature is no longer outside us; it has become companion, witness, and benediction.

The poem then enters the country of the mystics. Mystics bring you to this place of such an expansive sense of self / where you are filled with love. That is exactly what great souls do. They do not merely instruct the mind; they widen the heart. They loosen the narrow little fence around “me” and “mine,” and for a few blessed moments one feels larger than one’s own biography. Love then is no longer confined to one role, one identity, one relationship. It simply flows. The poem says beautifully that it is no longer even about gender; it is only energy, moving and shining, not needing a direction. That line has the ring of real experience. In moments of spiritual fullness, one does not feel like a separate, defended self at all. One feels more like a current.

One of the loveliest images in the whole piece is this: In my tattered pocket I hide overflowing waves of joy. The outer pocket is tattered, perhaps worn by time and life, perhaps carrying the marks of all that has been endured. But inside it is not poverty. Inside it is abundance. How true this is of so many lives. We meet people whose outer circumstances are modest, even frayed, and yet they carry within them a richness that cannot be counted. The world sees the tattered pocket; only the soul knows what treasure is hidden there.

The poem says, I may be alone / and yet at all moments of the day / I feel like I am in a carnival. That line touched me deeply. It captures something that spiritual people often know but rarely describe. Solitude is not always emptiness. Sometimes it is fullness. Sometimes one sits alone in a room, or walks alone in the evening, and yet there is such inward movement, such quiet celebration, such secret companionship, that loneliness has no place to enter. It is as if the heart itself has become a fairground of lights and music. Nothing visible has changed, and yet everything is festive within.

Then comes the image of the tiny treasure chest—so small that one cannot even properly lock  it, and yet the treasure remains perfectly intact. That little chest is perhaps the heart itself. The deepest treasures of life do not occupy much visible space. They do not announce themselves. They cannot be displayed on a shelf or measured in public view. They are held in silence, guarded in the inward being, and because they are hidden there, they remain untouched by the world’s rough handling.

The lines about tears are among the most tender in the poem. Water will come to the eyes and water will go. Sorrow is not denied here. This is not the joy of someone untouched by life. Tears have their place. They arrive, they overflow, they pass. But the poem makes a subtle distinction: the moisture in the heart and soul never diminishes. What a beautiful thought. The eyes may dry, but the inward tenderness does not. The soul retains its softness, its capacity for feeling, its hidden reservoir. This is not sentimentality; it is spiritual resilience. It is the assurance that grief may visit, but it need not impoverish the inner being.

And then comes a line that feels almost like a smile directed at the world: Let the shores keep account of less and more, good fortune and bad fortune. How marvellous. The shore is where measurements happen. The shore counts what has come in and what has gone out. It records loss and gain. But the ocean does not count its waves. It simply moves in its own vastness. So too with the spirit. When one is truly touched by inner abundance, the endless arithmetic of worldly life begins to look strangely small. Why keep tally of every slight, every success, every deprivation, every stroke of luck? Let the shore do its accounting. The sea has no time for such things.

The closing image is one of the finest in the piece: The sun may rise and the sun may set / but the sky above me is just where it is. Everything changes—day and night, gain and loss, tears and laughter, companionship and solitude. But something remains. The sky does not chase the sun, nor does it collapse when evening falls. It simply is. Perhaps that is what this whole diary fragment is trying to say: there is a place within us, touched by grace, widened by love, instructed by mystics, where one becomes less like the changing weather and more like the sky that holds it.

When I read these lines, I do not feel that they are speaking of happiness in the ordinary sense. They are speaking of a hidden sufficiency, of an inward festival, of the soul’s refusal to become poor even when life itself may look threadbare. They speak of tears without despair, solitude without loneliness, and wealth without display. Above all, they speak of grace—the mysterious grace that can place an ocean inside a human heart and make even a solitary walker feel as though he carries a carnival within him.

Perhaps that is why such lines survive in an old diary. They preserve not just a thought, but a state of being. They remind us that there have been moments in life when we were visited by a joy larger than reason, when the world’s petty bookkeeping fell away, and when we knew, if only for a little while, that our real treasure was hidden somewhere no loss could reach.