Monday, March 9, 2026

Double AA.

Ajay–Atul: When Music Becomes Prayer, Power, and Poetry

Among modern Indian composers, few have touched both devotion and popular imagination as deeply as the brothers Ajay Gogavale and Atul Gogavale, known together as Ajay-Atul. Their music carries a rare combination—classical depth, emotional intensity, and a grand orchestral sweep that lifts even simple lyrics into something almost spiritual.

Their songs often feel larger than cinema itself. Whether devotional, philosophical, or celebratory, they speak directly to the heart.

Two of their most admired compositions beautifully illustrate this power.

1. The Inner Temple – Man Mandira

One of their most beloved spiritual songs is Man Mandira from the film Katyar Kaljat Ghusli.

The very title contains the philosophy of the song:

“Man” – the mind or heart

“Mandira” – the temple

The message is simple yet profound:

the true temple is not built of stone but formed within the human heart.

The song suggests that devotion is not merely ritual. When the mind becomes pure, calm, and compassionate, it itself becomes a sacred space where the divine can dwell.

This thought echoes the teachings of saints like Tukaram and Purandara Dasa, who often reminded devotees that God lives in the heart more than in temples.

Ajay-Atul’s composition deepens this idea through classical ragas and soaring orchestration, making the listener feel as if the temple doors within are slowly opening.

2. The Cosmic Play – Khel Mandala

Another powerful composition is Khel Mandala from the film Natarang.

While Man Mandira speaks about inner devotion, Khel Mandala speaks about life itself.

The phrase “Khel Mandala” roughly means:

“The divine game has begun.”

Life, the song says, is like a grand stage where destiny, struggle, joy, and sorrow all play their roles. Human beings are participants in this cosmic drama.

The song carries a philosophical acceptance of fate while still celebrating human courage.

Its rhythm feels almost like the beating of life itself—relentless, energetic, unstoppable.

3. The Emotional Power of Their Music

What makes Ajay-Atul special is the scale of their music.

Instead of relying only on electronic arrangements, they often use full orchestras, sometimes recording with dozens of musicians. Their compositions blend:

Indian classical traditions

folk rhythms from Maharashtra

Western symphonic arrangements

This gives their songs both soul and grandeur.

4. Some of Their Most Loved Songs

Listeners across India cherish many of their compositions, including:

• Abhi Mujh Mein Kahin from Agneepath – a deeply emotional song about rediscovering hope within oneself.

• Zingaat from Sairat – a wildly energetic celebration of youthful love that became a cultural phenomenon.

• Jai Shri Ram from Adipurush – a powerful devotional anthem invoking the majesty of Lord Rama.

• Deva Shree Ganesha from Agneepath – a majestic Ganapati song that is now heard in festivals across India.

Each of these songs reveals a different dimension of their musical genius—devotion, celebration, philosophy, and emotional depth.

5. Music that Inspires

Because of their powerful rhythm and emotional resonance, Ajay-Atul’s songs are often played at public gatherings, festivals, and even marathon events. Their music energizes people while also touching something deeper within.

That is perhaps the secret of their success:

their songs do not merely entertain—they move the spirit.

In many ways, Ajay-Atul continue a very old Indian tradition.

From the bhakti saints to modern composers, music has always been a path to something higher. When melody carries devotion, philosophy, and emotion together, it becomes more than sound—it becomes experience.

And in that moment, as the music rises and fills the air, one realizes something beautiful:

Sometimes a song can turn the heart itself into a temple.

Ten Powerful Songs of Ajay–Atul and the Ideas They Carry

The music of Ajay–Atul has a remarkable ability to combine grandeur with deep emotion. Their compositions often feel like waves—sometimes devotional, sometimes philosophical, sometimes bursting with youthful energy. Behind the rhythm and orchestration lies a thought, a feeling, a message.

1. Man Mandira

(Katyar Kaljat Ghusli)

This song speaks of the heart as a temple. The idea is simple yet timeless: before seeking the divine outside, one must purify the mind within. When the mind becomes calm and compassionate, it itself becomes a sacred shrine.

2. Khel Mandala

(Natarang)

Life is presented as a divine play. Joy, sorrow, victory, and defeat are all part of the same cosmic drama. The song reminds us that every individual is both a participant and a witness in this great game of existence.

3. Abhi Mujh Mein Kahin

(Agneepath)

This deeply emotional song expresses the discovery that hope still lives somewhere within us. Even after hardship and struggle, a spark of life remains, waiting to rise again.

4. Deva Shree Ganesha

(Agneepath)

One of the most powerful modern Ganapati songs. The composition combines devotion with grandeur, portraying Lord Ganesha not only as the remover of obstacles but also as a majestic cosmic presence.

5. Zingaat

(Sairat)

Pure youthful energy explodes through this song. It celebrates freedom, friendship, and the fearless joy of young love. The rhythm itself feels like the heartbeat of celebration.

6. Sairat Zaala Ji

Another beloved song from the same film, it captures the innocence and wonder of love. The melody flows gently, like the first realization of affection.

7. Mauli Mauli

(Lai Bhaari)

This devotional song dedicated to Vithoba carries the energy of pilgrimage. It evokes the spirit of the devotees walking to Pandharpur with unwavering faith.

8. Jai Shri Ram

(Adipurush)

A powerful invocation of Lord Rama. The music carries the feeling of reverence and courage, reminding listeners of dharma, righteousness, and divine protection.

9. Chikni Chameli

(Agneepath)

Though lively and dramatic, this song demonstrates Ajay–Atul’s mastery over rhythm and orchestration. Their ability to create irresistible energy is evident here.

10. Apsara Aali

(Natarang)

A vibrant dance number inspired by Marathi folk traditions. It celebrates beauty, art, and performance with infectious enthusiasm.

Music that Touches Many Worlds

What is striking about Ajay–Atul is their ability to move effortlessly between very different moods:

devotion

philosophy

celebration

romance

folk tradition

orchestral grandeur

They often record with full orchestras, blending Indian melodies with symphonic arrangements. This gives their music a sweeping emotional scale rarely heard in modern cinema.

Indian culture has always believed that music can uplift the mind and purify the heart. The saints sang their devotion; poets turned philosophy into song; musicians carried these ideas across generations.

Ajay–Atul stand in that living tradition. Their compositions may belong to films, but their melodies often travel far beyond the screen—into festivals, temples, concerts, and everyday life.

And perhaps that is why their music continues to resonate:

because within their songs one hears not only rhythm and melody,

but also the timeless pulse of human feeling.



First things first.

 Eating Dessert First – A Meditation on Life’s Sweetness

“Life is uncertain. Eat dessert first,” said the American humorist Ernestine Ulmer. What sounds like a playful remark carries a quiet wisdom about the way we live.

Most of us are trained to postpone joy. We tell ourselves that pleasure must come after duty: first the work, then the reward; first the struggle, then the celebration. Childhood prepares us for adulthood, adulthood prepares us for the future, and the future often slips away while we are still preparing for it. In this endless habit of delay, the sweetness of life sometimes remains untouched.

To “eat dessert first” is not a call to abandon discipline. Rather, it reminds us that joy need not always wait patiently at the end of effort. Life is uncertain and beautifully unpredictable. A moment of delight—a conversation, a melody, the fragrance of a flower, the quiet peace of prayer—should not always be postponed until every obligation is completed.

The ancient Roman poet Horace expressed the same insight in the phrase Carpe Diem—“seize the day.” Do not postpone the sweetness of the present moment. Like a flower that blooms only for a brief morning, every moment has a freshness that may not return.

Nature itself lives this way. Birds sing at dawn without worrying about tomorrow. Flowers release their fragrance freely, even though the wind may carry it away. The river sparkles in sunlight without saving its brightness for another day. In their own way, they are all “eating dessert first.”

A child understands this instinctively. Place a sweet beside the meal and the child reaches for it with immediate delight. The child is not calculating rules or etiquette. The child simply responds to joy. Perhaps wisdom lies not in losing this instinct entirely, but in refining it with awareness.

The poet Rabindranath Tagore once wrote that the butterfly “counts not months but moments, and has time enough.” The butterfly does not delay its visit to the flower. It goes straight to the nectar.

So the saying is less about food and more about awareness. It reminds us to taste life while it is before us—to savor kindness, laughter, beauty, and devotion without always postponing them for a later time.

For in the end, the meal of life may pass quickly.

Those who wait too long for dessert may discover that the plate has already been cleared.


Better, then, to taste a little sweetness whenever it appears—

and to thank life for it while it lasts.



How.

 When the Big Things Weigh one Down, focus on the little things that bring you joy.

Life often feels overwhelming not because of a single storm, but because many clouds gather at once. Responsibilities, worries about the future, the weight of expectations, or the sadness of events beyond our control can make the heart heavy. In such moments, the mind keeps circling the big things—the problems that seem too large to solve.

Yet wisdom across cultures reminds us of a simple secret: when life becomes heavy, turn your attention to the small things that bring quiet joy. These small moments are like little lamps in the darkness. One lamp may not remove the night, but many lamps together make the path visible.

The great poet Rabindranath Tagore beautifully captured this idea:

“The butterfly counts not months but moments,

and has time enough.”

The butterfly does not measure life by grand achievements or distant worries. It lives in moments—sunlight on wings, the fragrance of flowers, the gentle breeze. Humans, too, regain balance when they return to the simple experiences of living.

A small cup of tea in the morning.

The laughter of a child.

The call of birds at dawn.

The smell of rain on dry earth.

A verse remembered from scripture.

These are not insignificant. They are anchors that steady the mind.

The naturalist John Muir, who spent much of his life among mountains and forests, wrote:

“In every walk with nature one receives far more than he seeks.”

When worries crowd the mind, stepping outside—even briefly—can restore perspective. The rustle of leaves, the movement of clouds, or the quiet persistence of a flower growing through stone reminds us that life continues with patience and grace.

Similarly, Henry David Thoreau observed:

“Enjoy the little things, for one day you may look back and realize they were the big things.”

The mind often chases grand happiness: success, recognition, wealth, or victory over obstacles. But the heart is nourished by something quieter—the ordinary blessings that surround us daily.

Indian wisdom traditions also echo this truth. The sages repeatedly advised cultivating santosha—contentment with what is present. Even in the midst of life's trials, one can notice small joys: the rhythm of breath, the presence of loved ones, the opportunity to chant a divine name.

Swami Vivekananda once said:

“Learn to be calm and you will always be happy.”

Calmness grows not by solving every problem immediately, but by allowing the mind to rest in small islands of peace. When the mind rests there, strength slowly returns.

In many ways, this practice is like collecting drops of nectar. One drop may seem small, but drop by drop a vessel fills. Small joys accumulate quietly until they become resilience.

So when life’s large burdens feel unbearable, gently shift your gaze. Do not search immediately for grand solutions. Instead, notice the humble gifts already present around you.

A prayer softly whispered.

A page of a beloved book.

The warmth of sunlight on the floor.

A familiar song remembered from childhood.

These are not distractions from life. They are reminders of life.

The great struggles will pass in time. But the small joys we gather along the way become the threads that weave strength, gratitude, and hope.

And perhaps that is the deeper wisdom:

When the big things seem too heavy to carry,

let the small beautiful things carry you.

Sunday, March 8, 2026

3 bound.

 


What is beautiful about those three lines is their simplicity. In just a few words they capture a very deep discipline of life:

Clarity of mind (recognizing truth)

Dedication to action (focusing on work)

Balance of heart (not being trapped by emotions)

When such ideas are expanded, they naturally echo the wisdom of texts like the Bhagavad Gita, where the same three strands appear again and again—viveka (discernment), karma (right action), and samatva (equanimity).

1. “सच को पहचानो, दूसरों की opinions पर मत फँसो”

Recognize the truth; do not get trapped in the opinions of others.

Truth has a quiet strength. It does not shout, nor does it demand approval. Yet the world around us is full of voices—opinions, judgments, criticisms, and praise. If one spends life reacting to every opinion, one loses the ability to see clearly.

The wise learn to discern truth from noise. Opinions often arise from personal biases, limited understanding, or fleeting emotions. What someone thinks today may change tomorrow. Truth, however, stands steady.

This idea echoes the spirit of the Bhagavad Gita, where Lord Krishna reminds Arjuna to act according to dharma and clarity, not according to the shifting voices of society.

When we cultivate inner clarity:

criticism does not disturb us,

praise does not inflate us,

and truth quietly guides our decisions.

Recognizing truth requires inner honesty, reflection, and courage. It means asking:

Is this right? Is this beneficial? Is this aligned with my values?

When we learn to answer these questions sincerely, the weight of other people’s opinions becomes much lighter.

2. “काम पर ध्यान दो, approval की चिंता मत करो”

Focus on your work; do not worry about approval.

One of the greatest traps in modern life is the constant hunger for validation. We often work not because the work itself is meaningful, but because we hope someone will appreciate it.

But approval is uncertain. It depends on people’s moods, expectations, and interests.

The ancient wisdom of Karma Yoga, taught in the Bhagavad Gita, gives a timeless instruction:

“You have the right to action, but not to the fruits of action.”

This does not mean we ignore results. Rather, it teaches us to anchor our joy in the effort itself.

When we focus deeply on the work:

the mind becomes calm,

skill improves,

creativity flows naturally.

Ironically, true excellence often attracts recognition, but the person who works with dedication does not depend on it.

A craftsman absorbed in his craft, a writer immersed in thought, a musician lost in melody—these people experience a deeper satisfaction than mere applause.

Work done with sincerity becomes its own reward.

3. “केंद्रित रहो, भावनाओं के जाल में मत फँसो”

Stay centered; do not get caught in the web of emotions.

Emotions are part of being human. Joy, anger, fear, attachment, pride—all arise naturally. But problems begin when emotions take control of our judgment.

Like a spider’s web, emotions can entangle the mind:

anger clouds reason,

attachment blinds discernment,

fear prevents action.

Indian philosophical traditions often speak of equanimity—a balanced state where emotions arise but do not overpower the mind.

The Gita describes such a person as a sthita-prajña—one whose wisdom is steady.

To remain centered means:

observing emotions without being ruled by them,

pausing before reacting,

letting clarity guide decisions instead of impulse.

When the mind is centered, life becomes less turbulent. Situations may still change, but our inner stability remains intact.

These three teachings together form a powerful life discipline:

Seek truth instead of chasing opinions.

Work sincerely instead of craving approval.

Stay centered instead of being carried away by emotions.

When practiced together, they create inner freedom. One becomes less dependent on the world’s noise and more connected to the quiet strength within.

Truth

Seek the quiet light of truth.

Let the world speak as it wishes—

praise today, criticism tomorrow.

Opinions rise and fall like waves,

but truth is the shore that does not move.

 Work

Do the work that is before you.

Pour your mind and heart into it.

Let the joy be in the doing,

not in the applause that may or may not come.

The flower blooms not for approval,

but because blooming is its nature.

 Balance

Guard the stillness within.

Emotions will visit like passing clouds—

anger, excitement, sorrow, delight.

Watch them, learn from them,

but do not let them carry you away.

This is almost like the four way testof Rotary. 



Saturday, March 7, 2026

Migration.

 A satellite-tagged bar-tailed godwit set the record for the longest nonstop bird migration, flying about 13,560 km (8,425 miles) from Alaska to Tasmania in roughly 11 days without stopping for food, water, or rest.


To power the journey, godwits build massive fat reserves before departure and even shrink some internal organs during flight to reduce weight and energy use, an extreme adaptation for long-distance migration across the Pacific.



Friday, March 6, 2026

The telling.

 “Leave this chanting and singing and telling of beads!

Whom dost thou worship in this lonely dark corner of a temple?”

The spirit of the poem from Gitanjali becomes even deeper when we place it beside the teachings of Swami Vivekananda, the Bhakti saints, and the philosophy of the Bhagavad Gita. All of them echo a single profound truth: God is not distant from life — He lives in life.

1. Tagore’s Call: Leave the Closed Temple

In the poem, Rabindranath Tagore asks a piercing question:

“Whom dost thou worship in this lonely dark corner of a temple?”

He then reveals where God truly resides:

with the tiller turning the soil,

with the pathmaker breaking stones,

with those who labour in sun and rain.

This is not a rejection of devotion, but a transformation of devotion. Worship must move from ritual to participation in the world.

2. Vivekananda’s Vision: Daridra Narayana

This thought resonates powerfully with the teaching of Swami Vivekananda.

Vivekananda often said:

“Serve man as God. That is the essence of religion.”

He used the phrase Daridra Narayana — meaning God appearing in the form of the poor and suffering.

For him:

feeding the hungry

educating the ignorant

helping the suffering

were not merely acts of charity. They were direct worship of God.

Tagore’s poem is almost a poetic version of this idea:

God is not waiting for incense — He is waiting to be served through humanity.

3. The Bhagavad Gita: God in Action

The Bhagavad Gita teaches the same truth through karma yoga.

Krishna tells Arjuna:

“He who sees Me in all beings and all beings in Me never becomes separated from Me.”

Here the Divine is not confined to sacred places.

He is present in all life and all work.

Thus:

Work becomes worship.

Duty becomes devotion.

Service becomes prayer.

Tagore’s line:

“Meet him and stand by him in toil and in sweat of thy brow.”

is almost a poetic echo of this teaching.

4. The Bhakti Saints: God in the Everyday

Many Bhakti saints carried the same vision.

Saints like:

Kabir

Tukaram

Purandara Dasa

all reminded people that God is not trapped in temples.

Kabir said:

“Where do you search me?

I am with you.”

Purandara Dasa sang of Krishna walking among ordinary people, sharing their joys and sorrows.

The divine, in their eyes, lived in:

the marketplace

the village field

the household

the human heart.

5. The Spiritual Revolution of the Poem

What makes Tagore’s poem so powerful is that it quietly overturns a misunderstanding.

It tells us:

Meditation is good.

Prayer is good.

Ritual is meaningful.

But if they separate us from the world, they lose their purpose.

True spirituality is not escape.

It is participation in the divine life of the world.

6. A Beautiful Way to Read the Poem

The poem becomes even more luminous if we read it like this:

The temple door is closed.

The seeker chants in darkness.

But outside:

the sun shines,

the earth is tilled,

stones are broken to build roads,

life is moving.

And there — in dust and sweat — God is walking among His children.

Tagore gently opens the door and says:

“Go there.”

If you wish, I can also show you something even more fascinating:

how this poem connects to the Upanishadic idea that the entire universe is the body of God. That makes Tagore’s insight even more profound.

1. John Muir – Nature as a Living Temple

The Scottish-American naturalist John Muir wrote words that sound almost like Tagore’s poem.

“The clearest way into the Universe is through a forest wilderness.”

For Muir, forests were cathedrals and mountains were altars.

Another famous line:

“Climb the mountains and get their good tidings.

Nature’s peace will flow into you as sunshine flows into trees.”

He believed that God speaks through wind, waterfalls, birds and clouds, not only through scripture.

He once wrote that:

“Every natural object is a conductor of divinity.”

This thought is very close to the Upanishadic vision that the whole universe is filled with the Divine.

2. William Wordsworth – Prayer in Nature

The English poet William Wordsworth also believed nature itself teaches spirituality.

In one poem he writes:

“Come forth into the light of things,

Let Nature be your teacher.”

And in another reflection:

“One impulse from a vernal wood

May teach you more of man,

Of moral evil and of good,

Than all the sages can.”

Wordsworth believed a forest could teach more than books — a sentiment very close to the Indian rishis.

3. Henry David Thoreau – The Forest as Scripture

The American philosopher Henry David Thoreau, author of Walden, lived in a forest for two years to experience life close to nature.

He wrote:

“Heaven is under our feet as well as over our heads.”

This sentence completely overturns the idea that heaven is far away.

Another line:

“I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately.”

For Thoreau, the woods were a place of awakening, not escape.

4. St. Francis of Assisi – Brother Sun, Sister Moon

Even earlier, the Christian mystic Francis of Assisi spoke to nature as if it were a family.

In his famous hymn he addressed creation as:

Brother Sun

Sister Moon

Brother Wind

Sister Water

To him the entire world was God’s living household.

5. A Common Spiritual Insight

Across these voices we see a remarkable unity.

Thinker

Insight

Tagore

God among workers and life

John Muir

Forest as cathedral

Wordsworth

Nature as teacher

Thoreau

Heaven under our feet

Francis of Assisi

Creation as divine family

Different cultures, but the same realization:

The Divine is not confined to temples — the whole universe is a temple.

A Beautiful Way to Summarize

One might say:

The priest rings a bell in the temple.

But outside,

the wind chants a hymn,

the birds sing the morning prayer,

the clouds carry incense across the sky,

and the mountains stand like silent sages.

Many poets of the world have heard this unwritten scripture of nature.

Of course you can see him everywhere. Pause and reflect. 

Hari Hari.

The Eclipse that Welcomed Chaitanya

When the World Chanted Without Knowing

History sometimes records events that appear ordinary, yet when viewed through the lens of devotion they reveal a quiet divine orchestration. One such moment surrounds the birth of Chaitanya Mahaprabhu, the great apostle of bhakti who transformed the spiritual life of eastern India.

Chaitanya was born in 1486 in Nabadwip, on the full moon day of the month of Phalguna. That night, according to traditional accounts recorded in the Chaitanya Bhagavata and later in the Chaitanya Charitamrita, a lunar eclipse was taking place.

In those days, whenever an eclipse occurred people hurried to sacred rivers to bathe and purify themselves. While bathing, it was customary to chant the names of the Lord aloud—especially the name of Hari. Thus the banks of the Ganga were alive with a chorus of sacred sound:

“Hari! Hari! Krishna! Krishna!”

Men, women, and children were all chanting as the eclipse shadow passed across the moon.

And at that very moment, the child who would become Chaitanya Mahaprabhu was born.

The Vaishnava tradition delights in this detail. It says that the Lord chose this moment deliberately. Normally, people chant the name of God only occasionally. But during an eclipse everyone chants together, spontaneously and loudly. Thus when Chaitanya appeared, the whole town was unknowingly singing the name of the Lord in welcome.

It was as if the world itself had been prepared for a grand reception.

Devotees see a deeper symbolism in this event. An eclipse temporarily darkens the moon, and the darkening is often taken to represent the spiritual confusion of the age. Into this shadowed world came Chaitanya, bearing the simple yet powerful path of nama-sankirtana—the joyful chanting of the divine name.

His message was uncomplicated and profound: in an age burdened with distraction and doubt, the remembrance of God through His name becomes the most direct path to spiritual awakening.

The sound that filled the air at his birth would soon become the very heart of his movement.

Chaitanya’s kirtans spread across Bengal and beyond, carrying waves of devotion that resonated with other bhakti traditions of India, including those flourishing in Maharashtra through saints such as Sant Tukaram, Sant Namdev, and Sant Eknath. In different regions and languages, the same current of devotion flowed—singing the name of God with love.

Centuries later, Bengal’s cultural renaissance would still feel the echo of this devotional tradition. Thinkers and artists from the illustrious Tagore family, including Rabindranath Tagore and Gaganendranath Tagore, grew up in a cultural world deeply nourished by the poetic and musical heritage that the bhakti movement had shaped.

Thus a moment that began on a riverbank during an eclipse continued to ripple through centuries of spiritual and cultural life.

Whenever we witness an eclipse today, we may remember that remarkable night in Nabadwip. While the moon was shadowed, the air was filled with the bright sound of the divine name.

Sometimes the universe itself seems to arrange a celebration.

And sometimes, without realizing it, humanity welcomes the divine with its own voice.

Hari! Hari!