Thursday, June 4, 2026

My doodaling analysis.







Doodling is relaxing for several reasons, and this page is actually a beautiful example of many of them.

Looking at the image, I see repeated geometric diamonds in the upper section and rhythmic flower-like loops in the lower section. These patterns have three qualities that the brain tends to enjoy:

1. Repetition calms the mind

When you draw the same shape again and again, the brain doesn't need to make many difficult decisions. The analytical part can rest while the motor system settles into a steady rhythm.

It is similar to:

Knitting

Japa with a mala

Walking at a constant pace

Repeated Vedic chanting

The body finds a rhythm and the mind becomes quieter.

2. It creates a state close to meditation

Your attention is gently focused on:

the next line,

the next curve,

the spacing,

the emerging pattern.

You are not forcing concentration. Instead, concentration arises naturally. Psychologists sometimes call this a "flow state."

Many traditional Indian arts work this way:

Kolam

Rangoli

Mandala drawing

Yantra construction

Temple ornamentation

The act of making the pattern becomes more important than the finished pattern.

3. The brain loves order

Humans are naturally attracted to symmetry and pattern.

When a diamond fits neatly into another diamond, or when petals repeat uniformly, the brain experiences a small sense of completion. It is as if scattered thoughts are being gently arranged into order.

4. It occupies restless mental energy

Many thoughts are neither useful nor deep; they simply circulate.

Doodling gives that mental energy somewhere harmless to go.

That is why people often doodle:

while listening,

while talking on the phone,

during contemplation.

The hands are busy, which can help the mind become less noisy.

5. It engages both logic and creativity

Your upper pattern is quite structured and mathematical. Your lower pattern is more organic and floral.

So both sides of the mind participate:

the side that enjoys order,

the side that enjoys beauty.

That combination is particularly satisfying.

A spiritual perspective

Many traditions have noticed that repetitive sacred activity quiets the mind.

A devotee may:

repeat a divine name,

string flowers,

draw a kolam,

write a mantra,

copy verses.

The outward activity appears sim


ple, but inwardly it gathers the mind into one place.

In that sense, doodling can become a very gentle form of meditation. Not because the shapes themselves are magical, but because they encourage attention without strain.

Seeing the patience in these pages, I wonder whether the relaxation comes not only from doodling itself but also from watching a pattern slowly emerge from an empty sheet. There is something deeply satisfying about seeing order appear line by line—a small reflection of how the mind itself becomes more settled when given a simple, repetitive task.


 This second page reveals something even more interesting.

The first page looked like practicing a few repeating motifs. Here, you've created bands of patterns, almost like decorative borders one might see in:

temple carvings,

textile designs,

manuscript margins,

kolam variations,

architectural friezes.

What strikes me is the progression. Your mind seems to be exploring a visual alphabet:

flowers,

stars,

loops,

triangles,

spirals,

diamonds,

interlocking lines,

geometric lattices.

Many artists and designers do exactly this when they are not trying to "draw something." They are exploring the possibilities hidden within a few simple strokes.

There is also a cognitive reason such pages are satisfying. The brain is constantly trying to answer two competing desires:

Novelty — "Show me something new."

Predictability — "Show me something orderly."

Your doodles provide both simultaneously.

Each row follows a rule, so there is order.

But every new row introduces a different rule, so there is novelty.

The result is a pleasant balance between boredom and overload.

I also notice that some rows become darker and denser. That often happens when the hand takes over from conscious thought. The doodling becomes less about the pattern and more about the motion itself. At that point the pen is almost "thinking aloud."

This may be why many people discover ideas while doodling. The conscious mind is occupied just enough that deeper thoughts can surface.

In Indian traditions there is an interesting parallel. A devotee may repeatedly draw:

kolams,

yantras,

lotus petals,

temple motifs,

mantra letters.

The repetition is not merely decoration. It trains steadiness. Over time, the hand, eye, and attention begin moving together.

Looking at these pages, I would not call them random doodles. They resemble a personal catalogue of patterns. If you filled enough notebooks this way, you would eventually have your own library of motifs from which textile designers, rangoli artists, and geometric artists often draw inspiration.

And perhaps that points to another reason doodling is relaxing: unlike most activities, there is no demand to succeed. A line can become a flower, a flower can become a border, a border can become a lattice. Nothing is wasted. The page simply accepts whatever the hand discovers.

What you describe is actually a recognized creative experience.

You say, "I don't decide; the pen guides the design." That feeling is common among artists, musicians, poets, and even mathematicians when they enter a deep state of engagement. The conscious mind is no longer issuing detailed instructions. Instead, years of accumulated visual memory, motor habits, and intuition begin expressing themselves directly through the hand.

The satisfaction may come from several things happening at once:

The hand is moving continuously.

The eye is receiving immediate feedback.

The brain is discovering rather than planning.

There is no pressure to reach a predefined result.

In a sense, you become both the creator and the observer.

What is especially interesting is your remark that a single pattern is less satisfying than many  viewed together.

That suggests the real artwork may not be an individual pattern at all. It may be the collection.

One page shows a motif. Ten show a vocabulary. A hundred such patterns show a visual language.

When you flip through several books, your mind perceives connections that are invisible on a single page. Patterns evolve, merge, split, reappear years later in different forms. The whole collection becomes something larger than its parts.

This reminds me of how devotees sometimes describe writing the Divine Name thousands of times. One page is ordinary. A notebook full of names creates a different impression. Not because each word changes, but because repetition itself acquires a presence.

Your notebooks may be functioning similarly. They are not merely storing patterns; they are recording a long conversation between hand, eye, and attention.

There is also a mathematical aspect. The human brain is exceptionally good at detecting recurring structures. When you view many pages together, your brain unconsciously notices:

symmetries,

variations,

recurring motifs,

transformations,

rhythms.

The result is a sense of richness and completeness that a single page cannot provide.

In fact, from what you've shown, I suspect that if someone carefully catalogued all your notebooks, they would find a surprisingly small number of basic strokes generating hundreds or thousands of distinct patterns. Nature works the same way: a few simple rules create leaves, flowers, shells, rivers, and galaxies.

Perhaps that is why these books are satisfying. They reveal, page after page, how much variety can emerge from a few lines and curves. The pen appears to be leading, but it is also revealing the hidden patterns your mind has been collecting for years.

Now I can better appreciate what you meant by "plenty of books."

This is no longer just doodling in the casual sense. What I see is a systematic exploration of pattern generation. Nearly every row begins with a very simple rule:

a loop,

a petal,

a triangle,

a spiral,

a star,

a leaf,

a crossing line.

Then the rule is repeated, stretched, compressed, mirrored, linked, or rotated.

What fascinates me is that many rows appear to be variations on the same underlying gesture. A flower becomes a star. A star becomes a lattice. A lattice becomes a border. A border becomes a woven pattern.

That is exactly how many traditional art forms evolve over centuries.

Looking at these pages, I am reminded of three things:

Kolam

A kolam artist often starts with a few dots and lets the line find its own path. The final design feels discovered rather than invented.

Vedic Chanting

A mantra may use only a few syllables, yet endless melodies and recitation styles emerge from them.

Nature

A few biological rules generate millions of leaf shapes, flowers, shells, and branching forms.

Your notebooks seem to follow the same principle: simple rules, endless variation.

You mentioned that the pen guides the design. Looking at these pages, I believe that is literally true in a practical sense. After drawing thousands upon thousands of patterns, your hand has built up a vast memory of movements. The hand recognizes possibilities before the conscious mind names them.

A curve suggests another curve. A petal suggests another petal. A crossing line suggests a new symmetry.

The next pattern emerges almost automatically.

What I find most striking is that there are very few corrections or abandoned attempts. The patterns keep flowing. That suggests you are not evaluating each line critically as you draw it. You are allowing the process to unfold. That freedom is probably a large part of the pleasure.

In fact, if someone showed me these notebooks without explanation, I might think they were the sketchbooks of a textile designer, a kolam enthusiast, or someone studying ornamental geometry.

There is also something beautifully aligned with your spiritual interests. You have often spoken about rereading your blog posts and discovering new connections. These notebooks seem to do the same thing visually. A pattern drawn years ago may reappear later in a transformed form, just as a spiritual insight revisits the mind in a deeper form after time has passed.

So perhaps the satisfaction is not only in drawing the patterns.

It is in witnessing a long, ongoing dialogue between the hand and the imagination—a dialogue that has continued across many books and many years, with no need for a final destination. That is quite rare in a world where most activities are done to reach an end. Here, the journey itself seems to be the reward.



How to.

 How to Prepare for Life's Big Moments

Life's biggest moments rarely arrive with a drumroll. A wedding, the birth of a child, a new responsibility, retirement, the loss of a loved one, a spiritual awakening, or an unexpected opportunity—all these can change the course of our lives. Yet no one can prepare perfectly for them. What we can do is cultivate the qualities that allow us to meet them well.

1. Prepare the Person, Not the Event

Most people focus on the event itself.

How do I succeed?

How do I avoid mistakes?

How do I impress others?

But the deeper preparation is to become the kind of person who can face whatever arrives.

A strong tree survives storms not because it knows when the storm will come, but because its roots are deep.

Similarly, patience, integrity, humility, courage, and faith are roots that support us through life's turning points.

2. Small Duties Prepare Us for Great Duties

Great responsibilities are usually entrusted to those who have been faithful in small responsibilities.

A young man who cares for his family, keeps his word, and fulfills ordinary duties is quietly preparing for greater roles. A student who develops discipline is preparing for opportunities not yet visible.

Life often examines us through everyday tasks before presenting extraordinary ones.

3. Learn Before You Need the Knowledge

One of the wisest habits is to learn ahead of necessity.

We study health before illness. We learn values before temptation. We cultivate faith before hardship.

A reservoir is filled before the drought arrives.

The Vedic tradition places great emphasis on daily spiritual practice because moments of crisis are not the best time to begin building inner strength.

4. Accept That Uncertainty Is Part of Every Great Moment

No parent feels fully ready for a first child. No leader feels completely prepared for major responsibility. No devotee can fully anticipate a profound spiritual experience.

The desire for complete certainty often delays action.

Many of life's greatest blessings begin with stepping forward despite incomplete knowledge.

5. Keep Good Company

Before important moments, the influence of good people becomes invaluable.

Wise friends, elders, teachers, and saints can often see what we cannot. Their experience provides perspective when emotions cloud judgment.

In the Indian tradition, satsanga—the company of noble souls—is considered one of the greatest preparations for any stage of life.

6. Prepare Spiritually

Material preparation has limits.

There comes a point where planning, effort, and intelligence cannot control the outcome.

At that point, surrender becomes strength.

The devotee learns to pray:

"I will do my duty with all my ability, and I will leave the results at the feet of the Lord."

This attitude removes fear without reducing effort.

7. Remember That Every Big Moment Passes

The examination ends. The wedding day passes. The promotion becomes routine. The challenge fades.

What remains is the character that was shaped through the experience.

Life's great moments are not merely events to survive or celebrate. They are opportunities through which the Divine shapes the soul.

A Final Reflection

When we look back, we often realize that life's biggest moments were preparing us for something even greater.

The child becomes a parent. The student becomes a teacher. The seeker becomes a guide. The devotee becomes a source of inspiration for others.

Perhaps the best preparation for life's big moments is not anxiety, but readiness of heart:

Do today's duty well. Learn continuously. Keep noble company. Trust the Lord.

Then, when the great moment arrives, you may discover that life has been preparing you for it all along.

Perhaps because you are at a stage of life where you naturally look at events not merely as experiences, but as lessons.

Many people ask, "How do I get through this moment?" But your question was broader: "How do we prepare for life's big moments?" That is the question of someone reflecting on the pattern of life itself.

As we grow older, we begin to notice that the truly important moments were often not the ones we anticipated. A conversation changed a life. A book opened a new path. A saint's verse stayed in the heart for decades. A child's achievement filled us with unexpected joy. Looking back, we wonder whether we recognized those moments when they arrived.

That realization can naturally lead to the question: How should one live so as to be ready for whatever matters most?

The sages often answered this very simply:

Do not prepare for a particular moment; prepare the mind.

A well-tuned veena can play any raga. A well-prepared field can receive any season. A God-centered heart can receive joy, sorrow, success, responsibility, and grace.

 Not because there is a particular "big moment" ahead, but because  reflecting on how a lifetime of small moments prepares us for the larger ones.

As the saying goes:

"The fruit ripens quietly. The tree does not know the exact day. Yet every day of sunlight and rain has been preparing it." 

Human life may be much the same.

Wednesday, June 3, 2026

Avadhani

 Avadhāna Vidyā (अवधान विद्या) is one of the most remarkable intellectual traditions of India. The word avadhāna means attention, concentration, and mental focus.

An Avadhāni is a scholar who can simultaneously attend to multiple tasks, remember large amounts of information, compose poetry on the spot, solve linguistic challenges, and answer questions from several people at once—all without notes.

What happens in an Avadhānam?

Several questioners (pṛcchakas) challenge the Avadhāni with different tasks simultaneously. For example:

Compose a poem in a specified meter.

Use certain words in a verse.

Avoid a particular letter.

Solve riddles.

Recall a sequence of unrelated items.

Answer philosophical questions.

Keep track of interruptions and distractions.

The Avadhāni moves from one questioner to another, giving only part of the answer each round. After many rounds, he completes all tasks and then recalls everything in exact order.

Types of Avadhānam

Aṣṭāvadhānam — attention to 8 tasks.

Śatāvadhānam — attention to 100 tasks.

Sahasrāvadhānam — attention to 1,000 tasks (extremely rare).

How is it possible?

Traditional scholars explain it as the fruit of:

Deep study of Sanskrit and classical literature.

Extraordinary memory training.

Years of meditation and concentration.

Mastery of poetic forms.

Mental discipline developed through sādhanā.

In Indian thought, Avadhāna is not merely a display of memory. It demonstrates the mind's hidden capacities when disciplined and purified.

Famous Avadhānis

Among the renowned modern practitioners are Madugula Nagaphani Sharma, Garikapati Narasimha Rao, and Medasani Mohan. The tradition has flourished especially in Telugu and Sanskrit literary circles.

A Spiritual Reflection

Indian sages often distinguished between smṛti (memory) and jñāna (wisdom). Avadhāna Vidyā showcases the astonishing power of memory and concentration, but the saints remind us that the highest use of attention is fixing the mind on the Divine.

As many bhakti traditions teach, if the mind can hold a hundred tasks at once, how much more powerful it becomes when steadily absorbed in the remembrance of the Lord. In that sense, Avadhāna Vidyā is not merely a literary art—it is also a glimpse of the untapped potential of human consciousness.

Avadhānam is traditionally associated with Sanskrit, Telugu, Kannada, and other classical literary traditions. While extraordinary memory is part of it, the art also involves improvisational poetry, attention management, logic, language mastery, and composure under distraction.

Dr. R Ganesh was conferred the Padma Bhushan  recently shatavadhani.



Tuesday, June 2, 2026

Pride india.


 “Indian women who received the UN Military Gender Advocate of the Year Award”

 Indian recipients:

1. Major Suman Gawani — 2019 (co-recipient)

Suman Gawani

First Indian to receive the award.

Served with the UN Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS).

Recognized for promoting women’s participation, mentoring military observers, and integrating gender perspectives in peacekeeping. 

2. Major Radhika Sen — 2023 Award (presented in 2024)

Radhika Sen

Served with MONUSCO in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Led community engagement efforts, supported women and girls in conflict-affected areas, and helped create community alert networks for security and humanitarian concerns. 

3. Major Abhilasha Barak — 2025 Award

Abhilasha Barak

Serving with UNIFIL in Lebanon.

Honoured for outreach work with women and adolescent girls and for gender-sensitisation training of peacekeepers. She is also known as the Indian Army’s first woman combat helicopter pilot. 

 India has produced multiple UN Military Gender Advocate awardees, reflecting its long and significant role in UN peacekeeping missions.

An Indian solution.

 This image is presenting a traditional Indian large-number naming system, some of which are rarely used today.




The commonly used Indian numbering system is:

Number

Indian Name

10

Ten

100

Hundred

1,000

Thousand

10,000

Ten Thousand

1,00,000

Lakh

10,00,000

Ten Lakh (One Million)

1,00,00,000

Crore

10,00,00,000

Ten Crore

1,00,00,00,000

Arab

1,00,00,00,00,000

Kharab

1,00,00,00,00,00,000

Neel

1,00,00,00,00,00,00,000

Padma

1,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,000

Shankh

After Shankh, names such as Maha Shankh, Antya, Madhya, Parardha, etc. appear in Sanskrit mathematical and cosmological literature, but they are not part of everyday usage.

What is fascinating is that ancient Indian mathematicians were comfortable dealing with unimaginably large numbers. In Vedic, Jain, Buddhist, and later mathematical texts, names were assigned to numbers extending far beyond what most civilizations regularly used.

For example:

Lakh = 10⁵

Crore = 10⁷

Arab = 10⁹

Kharab = 10¹¹

Neel = 10¹³

Padma = 10¹⁵

Shankh = 10¹⁷

The love of large numbers appears throughout Indian literature. The Puranas describe vast cycles of time. Jain texts enumerate enormous quantities. Astronomers such as Aryabhata and Brahmagupta worked comfortably with very large calculations.

For a devotional reflection, one might say:

The sages who named numbers up to Shankh, Padma, and beyond were not merely counting wealth or objects. They were contemplating a universe so vast that ordinary counting seemed inadequate. Yet the same scriptures remind us that the Lord who sustains countless worlds also dwells within the heart of a single devotee. The infinite and the intimate meet in Him.

The Indian Number System Meets Modern Life

A foreigner asks an Indian:

“Sir, how much is your country's population?”

Indian: “Roughly one hundred and forty crore.”

Foreigner (opening calculator): “Wait… crore? Is that after million or before billion?”

Indian: “Yes.”

The Western system politely climbs:

Million.

Billion.

Trillion.

Quadrillion.

The Indian system arrives carrying a family tree.

Lakh.

Crore.

Arab.

Kharab.

Neel.

Padma.

Shankh.

By this point the calculator has developed spiritual detachment.

A child in school asks:

“Papa, what comes after crore?”

Papa: “Arab.”

“After Arab?”

“Kharab.”

“After Kharab?”

“Neel.”

“After Neel?”

“Padma.”

“After Padma?”

“Shankh.”

“After Shankh?”

Papa becomes philosophical.

“Beta, after that marks don't matter. Character matters.”

Ancient Indian sages apparently looked at numbers and thought:

“One million? Cute. Continue.”

The rest of humanity was busy counting goats.

India was naming quantities large enough to count stars, kalpas, karmas, and perhaps the number of times relatives ask: “Beta, when are you visiting?”

Bank balance:

₹ 842.75

Imagination:

“One day… crores.”

Indian optimism has always skipped comfortably from hundreds to crores without consulting mathematics.

The Puranic rishi announces:

“There are countless universes.”

Disciple asks nervously:

“How many, Gurudeva?”

Rishi replies calmly:

“Bring a larger palm leaf.”

Modern office conversation:

“How much stress do you have?”

Employee: “Approximately one kharab emails, three neel deadlines, and a padma level meeting scheduled for Monday.”

And somewhere in eternity, Numbers themselves are talking.

Million says proudly, “I am huge.”

Crore smiles gently.

Shankh does not even attend the meeting.

Moral:

In India, even numbers refuse to remain ordinary.

They meditate, expand, acquire Sanskrit names, and eventually wander into cosmology.

If Indian Numbers Ran Family WhatsApp Groups

One Thousand enters politely.

“Good morning everyone.”

Lakh forwards 27 messages before breakfast.

Crore owns three businesses, two investment plans, and still sends:

“Share this with 11 people for blessings.”

Arab has stopped counting unread notifications.

Kharab runs the family wedding budget.

Wedding discussion:

“How many sweets shall we order?”

Normal family: “Five hundred.”

Indian family: “Better keep extra.”

“How extra?”

“One lakh.”

“There are only 300 guests!”

“Still… keep extra.”

Indian parents discussing marks:

“Out of 100?”

“98.”

Expression: mild disappointment.

Expectation: one crore percent performance.

Indian mythology and numbers.

Ordinary storyteller:

“There were many stars.”

Indian sage:

“There were countless worlds across vast cycles of time.”

Disciple: “How many exactly?”

Sage: “Sit down. This will require Arab–Kharab–Padma vocabulary.”

Meanwhile the calculator app says:

“I signed up for grocery totals and electricity bills.”

Indian civilization:

“Excellent. Today we calculate cosmic time cycles.”

Conversation between modern banker and ancient rishi.

Banker: “How much wealth do you possess?”

Rishi: “Nothing.”

Banker: “Nothing?”

Rishi: “Also, I contemplate universes measured in numbers beyond Shankh.”

Banker quietly closes laptop.

Indian imagination has a unique habit.

Salary: modest.

Dreams: crore-sized.

Faith: shankh-sized.

Hospitality: immeasurable.

And perhaps this is the hidden charm of the Indian number system.

We did not stop at “million” and “billion.”

We continued naming vastness itself — as if the mind refused to accept that infinity should remain anonymous.

When Ancient India Refused Small Numbers

Most people use numbers for practical things.

“Three mangoes.”

“Five cows.”

“Ten pots.”

Ancient Indian thinkers looked at the night sky and apparently said:

“Not enough challenge.”

“How many grains of sand on a beach?”

“Too many.”

“How many stars in the heavens?”

“Too many.”

“How many years in cosmic cycles?”

“Too many.”

Indian mathematicians:

“Good. We shall need additional vocabulary.”

Someone invents Lakh and Crore.

A sage raises his hand.

“We are going to need bigger containers.”

Enter:

Arab.

Kharab.

Neel.

Padma.

Shankh.

At this point ordinary counting has resigned from the job.

Modern computer:

“Error: number too large.”

Ancient imagination:

“Please continue.”

Disciple asks:

“Master, why invent such enormous numbers?”

Master replies:

“To discuss stars, universes, kalpas… and perhaps the number of grains of sand on all beaches combined.”

Disciple:

“Could we not simply say ‘very many’?”

Master:

“Where is the intellectual joy in that?”

A machine tries counting sand particles.

Halfway through the first desert:

Battery low.

Ancient cosmological literature:

“Now let us begin discussing the lifespan of Brahma.”

Calculator quietly seeks enlightenment.

One suspects ancient civilizations occasionally competed.

Civilization A: “We counted armies.”

Civilization B: “We counted wealth.”

Indian sage:

“We attempted numbers suitable for galaxies and cosmic time.”

Everyone else slowly puts away their abacus.

And perhaps that is the hidden beauty.

These huge numbers were not invented merely for bookkeeping.

They emerged from minds trying to think about the almost uncountable — stars, ages, worlds, atoms, grains of sand, vastness itself.

When reality became too large for ordinary language, new names were created.

A rather Indian solution.

Don't you think :

This is delightfully offbeat — humor mixed with mathematics, cosmology, and a touch of civilizational wonder.

Sunday, May 31, 2026

God in the Monsoon

 “God in the Monsoon.” It can be seen through nature, poetry, devotion, and philosophy.





When summer burns the earth into silence, the monsoon arrives not merely as weather but as grace made visible.

The first cloud gathers on the horizon. The wind changes its voice. The smell of wet earth rises — that mysterious fragrance (petrichor) which feels older than memory. In India, countless hearts have looked at these clouds and thought instinctively: “The Lord is coming.”

The dark raincloud has long been a symbol of divinity. Lord Krishna himself is described as श्याम — cloud-dark, beautiful like a fresh monsoon cloud. The poets did not choose this image casually.

Why a raincloud?

Because the cloud:

draws water from the sea but gives freely to all;

expects no repayment;

nourishes fields, forests, rivers, birds, animals, and human beings alike.

So too, the Divine gathers the hidden tears, prayers, and karmas of beings and returns them as unseen sustenance.

The monsoon teaches dependence and abundance simultaneously.

The farmer watches the sky. Seeds wait underground. Peacocks dance before the rain arrives, sensing what humans cannot yet see. The entire natural world lives in expectation.

Is this not also the condition of the devotee?

The heart prepares, waits, longs.

Then grace falls.

Not always as thunderous revelation. Sometimes softly — like steady rain entering thirsty soil.

Indian saints repeatedly saw spiritual meanings in the rains.

Kalidasa in Meghaduta made a cloud into a messenger of longing.

Narsinh Mehta sang of the Lord moving among ordinary lives with tenderness that often feels monsoon-like — intimate, fertile, overflowing.

Mirabai turned longing for Krishna into an inner rainy season where separation itself nourishes devotion.

The monsoon also reveals another face of God: power.

Lightning, swollen rivers, roaring skies — these remind us that nature is not merely gentle beauty. Creation is vast, untamed, beyond human scheduling. Ancient people looked at storm and rain and sensed divine majesty.

Yet after the storm comes renewal.

Dry wells fill.

Dust disappears.

Trees recover their forgotten green.

One understands why rain became a symbol of compassion in so many traditions.

Perhaps “God in the monsoon” is not only God in the rain.

It is God in:

the waiting before the rain,

the scent of first wet earth,

the farmer’s relief,

the child splashing in puddles,

the temple bell sounding through mist,

the peacock opening its feathers to a darkening sky.

The monsoon reminds us of a spiritual truth: life is not sustained by human effort alone.

Something descends.

Something is given.

And when it comes, the world becomes green again.

God in the Monsoon

Before the rain,

the earth waits —

cracked lips turned upward,

like a silent prayer.

Far away,

a dark cloud gathers,

soft as compassion,

vast as eternity.

The wind arrives first,

carrying secret news

through neem leaves, temple flags,

and restless peacocks.

Then —

the fragrance of first rain.

Who taught dry soil

to remember heaven?

Drops begin to fall.

On tiled roofs,

on sleeping seeds,

on wandering cattle,

on shrines hidden beneath banyan trees.

No door is asked to open.

No name is checked.

The rain gives

as the Lord gives.

The river awakens.

Dust loosens its grip.

Fields whisper green promises.

And somewhere,

a flute seems hidden

inside the sound of water.

O Lord of monsoon clouds,

dark as gathered rain,

pour also upon the heart

that grace

which turns hard ground

into flowering devotion.

Let my mind become

a waiting field.

Let Your mercy fall

without measure.

And let something long asleep within me

rise singing

like the earth

after rain.

Cloud-dark Lord,

You walk hidden in the monsoon sky.

Your footsteps are thunder,

Your glance — lightning,

Your kindness — rain.

The peacock dances before You arrive;

the thirsty earth knows Your name.

Pour once upon my heart

as You pour upon the waiting fields.

Make devotion grow there —

green, fragrant, endless.



Saturday, May 30, 2026

The saint who widens the path

What do we notice in great souls like Narsi Mehta, Ramanujacharya, Mirabai, and Kalidasa?

Not merely that they sought God — but that they never walk alone.

Each opened a door.

Many spiritual seekers may quietly pursue personal liberation. But some rare souls seem unable to keep spiritual treasure confined to themselves.

Narsi Mehta sang in the language of ordinary villagers. He brought Krishna into homes, streets, marriages, tears, and festivals. His bhajans made devotion singable by everyone.

Ramanujacharya did something revolutionary. Tradition recounts that he publicly shared the sacred mantra despite warnings to keep it restricted — because if a teaching could save souls, how could compassion allow secrecy? Whether scholar or servant, everyone was invited into divine grace.

Mirabai dissolved social barriers. A royal woman walked among saints, singers, and common devotees, declaring that Krishna belonged not to status, caste, learning, or privilege — but to love.

Kalidasa, though not usually called a bhakti saint, filled his poetry with accessible beauty. Through nature, love, longing, seasons, and cosmic wonder, he taught people to perceive the sacred texture of existence.

Their methods differed, but their instinct was similar:

“Come. Walk with me.”

God and the gathered devotee

The Lord is pleased when He sees the devotee accompanied by the masses.

Bhakti literature repeatedly hints at this.

The saint often does not pray merely:

"Grant me liberation."

Instead, one hears:

"May all beings remember You."

"May Your name spread."

"May no one be left outside."

In many traditions, God is portrayed as especially delighted not only by devotion, but by shared devotion.

Why?

Because divine love, by its nature, overflows.

A lamp naturally lights other lamps.

A realized soul often becomes restless until others also taste what they have tasted.

From personal realization to shared awakening

Perhaps this is one of the great lessons from the saints:

Spiritual realization is not only ascent; it is inclusion.

The true devotee does not climb the mountain and pull the ladder away.

They sing loudly enough for people in the valley to hear.

Ramanuja opens temple doors.

Narsi Mehta sings in the marketplace.

Mirabai sings in the streets.

Many saints translate the inaccessible into the intimate.

The movement is always toward widening circles.

Why the Lord may delight in this

If one views the Divine as the indwelling Self of all beings, then every soul's awakening is precious.

The saint's compassion begins to mirror divine compassion.

The devotee slowly begins to desire what God desires — not merely “my salvation” but the flowering of all souls.

This is close to the spirit of lokasangraha in the Bhagavad Gita — acting for the welfare, cohesion, and upliftment of the world.

One could even say:

The highest devotees do not stand before God saying, “Here I am.”

They arrive saying,

“Lord, I have brought others with me.”

That may be one of the hidden signatures of greatness.