Tuesday, April 28, 2026

Dham akshara.

Akshardham, Gandhinagar – Where Silence, Story, and the Self Meet

There are temples we visit…

and there are temples that continue to live within us long after we return.

My recent visit to Akshardham Temple was one such experience—layered, profound, and quietly transformative.

“At the threshold of Akshardham Temple — before the eyes see, before the mind quietens, before the journey truly begins.”


With me are nephew his darling and my sister.

 The Threshold of Stillness

At first, the temple greets you with grandeur—intricate carvings in pink sandstone, symmetry that feels almost meditative, and an atmosphere of quiet discipline.

The security checks, the absence of phones, the orderly movement—these may seem like formalities.

But slowly, they reveal their purpose.

They are not restrictions.

They are preparations.

For once, the mind is gently guided away from distraction… and towards presence.

The Darshan That Softens Time

Seated before the serene murti of Swaminarayan, something within began to quieten.

There was no urge to ask.

No restless movement of thought.

Just a still awareness.

The radiance of the murti does not overwhelm—it draws you inward. One does not stand there as a visitor, but as a seeker who has, even if briefly, stopped searching.

A subtle feeling arose:

“This is not a place to speak…

this is a place to listen.”

 Beyond Stone – A Living Space of Reflection

Walking through the gardens, the pathways, the open spaces—one senses that Akshardham is not confined to its sanctum.

It breathes through:

the gentle movement of nature

the quiet footsteps of devotees

the shared stillness of strangers

Everywhere, there is a silent teaching:

Live gently. Live consciously. Live with awareness.

Nachiketa – When a Story Becomes a Mirror

Among all the experiences, one moment stood out with striking clarity—the sound and light presentation of Nachiketa.

Here, the ancient wisdom of the Katha Upanishad came alive—not as philosophy, but as lived experience.

The young Nachiketa, calm and unwavering, stands before Yama and asks the question most of us quietly avoid:

“What lies beyond death?”

The interplay of light, shadow, and voice made the moment deeply immersive. The silence between the dialogues seemed to echo within.

When offered wealth, pleasures, and long life, Nachiketa refuses them all.

In that instant, the experience turned inward:

How often do we choose the temporary over the eternal?

How easily are we distracted from what truly matters?

The teaching emerged with quiet power:

The wise choose Shreya (the good),

not Preya (the merely pleasant).

As the show ended, there was applause around.

But within, there was stillness.

Because Nachiketa does not remain on the stage.

He walks with you.

His question lingers:

What am I truly seeking?

What do I consider lasting?

Am I ready to choose truth over comfort?

In that sense, Akshardham Temple offers something rare—it does not just inform or impress.

It awakens inquiry.

What stayed with me after leaving was not just the beauty of the temple.

It was a quiet calm—subtle, steady, and deeply reassuring.

Like a soft chant beneath the movements of daily life.

Perhaps that is the true prasadam of this sacred space:

Not something you carry in your hands…

but something that quietly settles in your being.

Temples like Akshardham do not demand devotion.

They create the space where devotion naturally arises.

And perhaps that is why, even now, a part of me remains there—

in that silent hall,

before that serene presence,

with Nachiketa’s question gently echoing within…

doing nothing,

yet feeling complete.

The word Akshardham carries a profound resonance.

Akshara means the imperishable, the unchanging reality—that which neither time erodes nor circumstances alter. Dham is the abode.

Thus, Akshardham is not merely a physical temple.

It is a reminder of the inner space where the eternal resides.

The dialogue of Nachiketa with Yama in the Katha Upanishad points precisely to this truth:

That beyond the changing body, beyond fleeting pleasures and fears,

there exists something unchanging… aware… eternal.

And perhaps, that is what this visit gently revealed:

Not just the grandeur of a temple,

but a glimpse of that Akshara within.

We travel to sacred places thinking we are going for darshan.

But sometimes, if grace allows,

we return with a quiet awareness that

the true Akshardham is not somewhere we go…

it is something we slowly discover within ourselves.

Sunday, April 26, 2026

M at D

 When Song Becomes Silence: Meera Bai at Dwarka

There are journeys that move across land, and there are journeys that move through the soul. The life of Meera Bai belongs to the latter. From the palaces of Mewar to the dust-laden paths of devotion, from the playful memories of Vrindavan to the sacred echoes of Mathura, her heart sought only one presence—the dark, enchanting Lord she called her own.

And that journey finds its quiet, luminous culmination in Dwarka—the city of Dwarkadhish.

From Longing to Arrival

In her earlier songs, Meera is aflame with viraha—the sweet pain of separation. Every line trembles with yearning:

Where are You? Why do You not come? How shall I endure this distance?

But something changes in Dwarka.

Here, the questions fall away.

There is no more searching in the corridors of the heart. No restless wandering from shrine to shrine. Before Dwarkadhish, Meera stands not as a seeker—but as one who has arrived.

“Mere To Giridhar Gopal” — The Final Certainty

Mere to Giridhar Gopal, doosro na koi…

This well-known declaration of Meera is often sung as devotion. But in Dwarka, it becomes something deeper—identity.

There is no assertion here, no effort to convince the world. It is a quiet truth that has settled within her being. The one with the peacock feather, the flute-bearer, the Lord of her breath—He alone remains.

All other relationships fade like shadows at dawn.

The Treasure That Cannot Be Lost

Paayo ji maine Ram ratan dhan paayo…

What was once sought has now been found.

This “Ram” is her Krishna—the indwelling presence she had pursued across lifetimes. The bhajan speaks of a treasure that cannot be stolen, spent, or diminished. In Dwarka, this is not poetry—it is experience.

The restless hunger of the heart has turned into quiet contentment.

One senses that Meera is no longer singing to Krishna.

She is singing from within Him.

Dyed in the Color of the Divine

Main to saanware ke rang rachi…

There is a beautiful finality in this expression. Meera does not say she loves Krishna. She says she is colored by Him.

Just as a cloth dipped in dye loses its original shade, her individuality has dissolved into His presence. The world may speak, judge, or question—but such voices no longer reach her.

In Dwarka, devotion is no longer an act.

It has become her very nature.

The Soft Dissolving of the Self

There is a gentle, almost imperceptible shift in Meera’s Dwarka bhajans. The earlier defiance—the courage that rejected worldly norms—now melts into surrender.

Tan man arpan sab kuch diya…

(Body and mind, I have offered everything.)

Nothing is held back.

No trace of “I” remains to claim devotion.

There is only offering.

The Legend of the Final Union

Tradition holds that one day, as Meera sang before Dwarkadhish, something extraordinary occurred.

Her voice, filled with love and completion, flowed toward the deity—and did not return.

When the temple doors were opened, Meera was not to be seen.

She had merged into the idol.

Whether we receive this as history or as sacred metaphor, its meaning is unmistakable: the devotee and the Lord are no longer two.

An Echo Across Traditions

This moment finds a profound resonance in the experience of Tiruppaan Alvar at Srirangam. When he beheld the Lord, he sang:

“These eyes, having seen Him, need see nothing else.”

The sentiment is the same.

Vision itself finds fulfillment.

There is nothing more to seek.

Dwarka — Where Song Becomes Silence

If we listen carefully, Meera’s bhajans in Dwarka carry a different texture.

In Vrindavan, her songs are like a flowing नदी—restless, searching.

In Mathura, they become a मार्ग—seeking direction.

In Dwarka, they are the सागर—still, vast, complete.

Here, song moves toward silence.

Not the silence of emptiness, but the silence of fulfillment.

A Closing Reflection

In the end, Meera does not “attain” Krishna.

She simply ceases to experience herself as separate from Him.

Standing before Dwarkadhish in Dwarka, her life becomes a quiet teaching:

The highest devotion is not in calling out to the Divine,

but in discovering that there is no distance left to call across.

And when that happens—

Even song is no longer necessary.

Saturday, April 25, 2026

Through the ages.

 Dwarkadhish Through the Ages

Time does not pass over the Lord; it gathers around Him.

When we say Dwarkadhish—the King of Dwarka—we are not merely invoking Krishna as a historical figure seated upon a golden throne. We are invoking a presence that has moved across yugas, through civilizations, into temples, songs, and the quiet chambers of human devotion.

The Age of Living Presence

In the Dvapara Yuga, Dwarkadhish was not an idol. He was seen, heard, approached. He walked among His people—guiding, protecting, sometimes smiling enigmatically. The city of Dwarka was said to be radiant, built upon the sea, filled with wealth, order, and dharma.

Here, Krishna was not just God—He was king, friend, strategist, and beloved. His court was not distant; it was alive with laughter, counsel, and divine play.

Yet even in that fullness, there was an undercurrent: everything that appears must one day withdraw.

The Age of Withdrawal

With the passing of Krishna and the end of the Mahabharata War, Dwarka itself receded into the ocean. The physical city dissolved, as if reminding the world that no external form, however divine, is meant to be permanent.

But something remarkable happened.

Though the city disappeared, Dwarkadhish did not.

He moved—from presence to remembrance, from remembrance to worship.

The Age of Temple and Tradition

Centuries later, Dwarkadhish re-emerged in murti form, most prominently at the sacred Dwarkadhish Temple.

Here, He stands—not as the playful cowherd of Vrindavan, but as the regal Lord of Dwarka.

Adorned daily, worshipped with precision, celebrated through festivals—He became the axis of a living tradition. Dynasties rose and fell, but the darshan continued uninterrupted.

Saints, poets, and devotees came:

Mirabai saw Him as her eternal beloved.

Vallabhacharya established traditions of seva rooted in intimate devotion.

Countless unnamed devotees stood before Him, offering not wealth, but longing.

Each saw a different Dwarkadhish—yet all saw the same truth.

The Age of Inner Dwarka

Today, Dwarkadhish lives not only in Gujarat, but in the hearts of those who call His name.

The grand temple still stands. The conch still blows. The aarti still rises like a tide of light.

But something subtle has changed.

We no longer see Him walk among us as before. Instead, we feel Him—through:

a verse remembered suddenly,

a moment of stillness,

a tear that comes without reason during darshan.

The outer Dwarka may have submerged, but the inner Dwarka has risen.

The Eternal Dwarkadhish

Across the ages, His form has shifted:

From visible king to remembered Lord

From historical presence to eternal consciousness

From Dwarka the city to Dwarka the القلب—the heart

And perhaps this is His greatest leela.

He allows time to transform everything around Him—so that we may discover what in Him does not change.

Dwarkadhish is not confined to a yuga, a temple, or even an image.

He is the sovereign of a kingdom that does not sin.

the kingdom within.

Magic script.


The Hidden Magic of Devanagari & Ancient Indigenous Scripts.

A mind-blowing revelation that connects ancient knowledge, forgotten scripts & tribal heritage-and why Devanagari is more powerful than you think.

Let’s dive into this mystical script's legacy

Magic of Devanagari 

Devanagari is an ancient script that has been used for writing several languages, used as primary or one of the scripts in multiple languages across India and Nepal. 

This implies a large set of languages can be read (although not necessarily) understood by a person who can read Devanagari. 

The languages include Sanskrita ( primary script was Brahmi), Hindi (also written in Arabic script), Nepali, Konkani, Awadhi, Bhojpuri, Maithili, Braj Bhasha, Sindhi, Haryanvi, Newar, Kashmiri, Magadhi/Magahi, Sadri etc.

Devanagari is also related to Nandinagari script used in southern India, and therefore, a person who can read Devanagari may also be able to read Nandinagari.

Here are some reasons why Devanagari script is considered special:

 Devanagari script has a rich history that dates back to the 7th century AD. It has been used for writing some of the oldest languages in India, such as Sanskrit.

Devanagari script is known for its phonetic accuracy, meaning that the script accurately represents the sounds of the languages it is used for. Each character in Devanagari represents a specific sound, which makes it a phonetic script.

Devanagari is a versatile script that can be adapted to write various languages with different phonetic structures. It is used for languages from different language families, such as the Indo-Aryan languages like Hindi and Marathi, as well as the Tibeto-Burman languages like Nepali.

 The script is known for its clarity and elegance. The characters are distinct and well-defined, making it visually appealing.

 Devanagari script is deeply intertwined with the culture and identity of India. It is not just a writing system but also a symbol of Indian heritage and tradition.

Devanagari script is traditionally used for writing sacred texts in Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism. It has a spiritual significance and is associated with religious practices.

 Devanagari script has been adapted to modern technology, and it has Unicode support, which allows it to be displayed correctly on digital platforms.

While spoken Sanskrit language is divine, The devanagari script is fantastic.

The letter ग represents गणेश (Ganesha).

The letter च is derived from चञ्चुका (beak of a bird), and the च is of the shape of the bird’s beak.

The letter ja (ज ) is shaped like a lamp and is used in words such as जय (victory).

The letter ह has a tail and this letter is the first letter of हनुमान, represented as a monkey, thus the tail.

Also there are two letters which are not part of the Varnamala (the alphabet sequence) but are important part of the language:

ऋ only used to denote a ऋषि, a person who is realized.

ॐ is used to denote the fundamental primordial sound.

Overall, Devanagari script is continues to play a vital role in the linguistic and cultural landscape of South Asia.






Friday, April 24, 2026

Dissolved.

When Devotion Dissolves: Meera in Dwarka, Andal in Srirangam, and the Vision that Became the Lord

There are moments in the sacred traditions of Bharat that defy the boundaries of history and enter the realm of the eternal. They are not merely events to be recorded, but experiences to be felt. Among such luminous moments are the final unions of great devotees with their Lord—Meera in Dwarka, Andal in Srirangam—and the transforming vision of Tiruppaan, where seeing itself became surrender.

Meera: The Bride Who Walked Into Eternity

Meera’s life was a single, unbroken song addressed to Krishna. From her childhood in Mewar to her final days, she saw herself not as a devotee, but as His bride.

Drawn by an irresistible inner call, she journeyed to Dwarka, the abode of Dwarkadhish. There, standing before the Lord who ruled Dwarka yet held the flute of Vrindavan in His heart, Meera poured out her soul in song.

Tradition tells us that one day, lost in divine ecstasy, she entered the sanctum singing. The doors closed. Time stood still.

When they opened again, Meera was no longer there.

Only her sari remained—wrapped around the Lord.

Was it a miracle? Was it a metaphor? Or was it the natural culmination of a love so complete that no separation could remain?

For Meera, there was never a “merging”—for she had never felt separate.

Andal: The Bride Who Became the Divine

Centuries earlier, in the sacred land of Tamil Nadu, another young girl had dared to dream the same dream.

Andal, the only woman among the Alvars, grew up immersed in love for the Lord. She did not merely worship Him—she adorned herself for Him, sang to Him, and claimed Him as her eternal consort.

Her heart was set on the reclining Lord of Srirangam.

When the time came, Andal was brought to Srirangam for her divine wedding. Clad as a bride, she entered the sanctum.

And there, before the eyes of those gathered, she is believed to have merged into the deity—becoming one with Him whom she had loved with unwavering intensity.

Tiruppaan: The Eyes That Became Worship

If Meera and Andal show us love that dissolves distance, Tiruppaan shows us vision that dissolves the self.

Carried on the shoulders of a priest into the temple at Srirangam, Tiruppaan did not see the world—he saw only the Lord.

From the divine feet upward, his gaze rose slowly, reverently, until it reached the Lord’s face. What followed were ten verses—each one a step, each one a surrender. By the time he completed them, there was nothing left of “him” as separate.

He had become what he beheld.

In Srirangam, seeing itself becomes merging. The eyes are not instruments—they are offerings.

The Offering of Eyes: A Dwarka Remembrance

There is also a tender tradition associated with Dwarka—of a devotee whose offering was not wealth, nor words, but sight itself.

Moved by overwhelming devotion, it is said that he offered his very eyes to the Lord. In response, the Lord accepted not the act of loss, but the depth of love behind it.

Even today, a subtle memory of this devotion is preserved in the way the Lord’s eyes are treated—left unadorned, as though to remind us that true seeing is not decoration, but surrender.

In Srirangam, Tiruppaan’s eyes rose from the Lord’s feet to His face and dissolved in vision. In one of his culminating expressions (traditionally understood from his ninth verse), he declares in essence: “These eyes that have seen You need not see any other view.”

(From Amalanadipiran: “kaNNan kazhalinai kaNDa kaNgaL maRRonRinai kaaNave” — a poetic sense conveying that the eyes which have beheld the Lord seek nothing else.)

The Dwarka tradition of offering one’s eyes echoes this same bhava—not as the source of the line, but as its living reflection.

One Truth, Many Expressions

Meera dissolves in love.

Andal unites in bridal longing.

Tiruppaan transforms sight into realization.

The unnamed devotee in Dwarka offers even his vision.

Different paths—yet one truth:

When devotion becomes total, the boundary between devotee and Divine fades.

We may not enter sanctums and disappear. We may not sing ten verses that carry us beyond ourselves. We may not offer our very senses at the altar of the Divine.

But each moment of true devotion brings us closer.

In every sincere prayer, in every tear shed in longing, in every name uttered with love—

something within us softens, something dissolves.

And perhaps, quietly, without spectacle, we too begin to merge.

For in the end, there is no distance to cross— only a love to recognize.


Wisdom meets grace.

Gargi’s Test of Sita: Wisdom Meets Grace

After the return of Rama and Sita to Ayodhya, word of Sita’s steadfastness during her stay in Lanka spread far and wide. Her purity had already been proven through the Agni Pariksha, yet among the learned circles, there arose a deeper curiosity:

Was Sita only the embodiment of chastity? Or was she also rooted in the highest knowledge of Brahman?

Among those who wished to know this was the great philosopher-sage Gargi, famed from the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad for her fearless questioning.

She arrived in Ayodhya—not to challenge Sita out of doubt, but to reveal her true stature to the world.

The Meeting

Sita received Gargi with humility, offering her due respect.

Gargi observed her closely and said:

“O Sita, the world praises your virtue. But tell me—does your strength lie only in devotion to your husband, or in knowledge of the eternal truth?”

Sita smiled gently. Her reply was calm:

“Mother, devotion without knowledge is blind, and knowledge without devotion is dry. Where the two unite, there the Lord resides.”

Gargi nodded. The test had begun.

The Questions and Answers

1. What is the highest dharma for a woman?

Gargi asked:

“What is the supreme dharma a woman must follow?”

Sita replied:

“To see the Divine in all roles she performs—

as daughter, as wife, as mother.

Not bondage to a person, but alignment with dharma through those relationships—this is her highest path.”

2. Who is the true husband?

Gargi pressed deeper:

“Is Rama your husband merely by worldly relation?”

Sita answered:

“He whom the world sees as my husband is none other than the indwelling Self.

To serve him is to serve the Supreme within all beings.”

3. What is purity?

Gargi asked:

“You are called pure. What is true purity?”

Sita responded:

“Purity is not of the body, which is of earth.

It is the unwavering mind that does not stray from truth, even in adversity.”

4. What sustains the world?

Gargi, echoing her Upanishadic style, asked:

“On what does the world stand?”

Sita replied:

“On dharma.

And dharma rests on truth.

Truth rests on the Self.

And the Self rests on nothing—it is self-luminous.”

Gargi recognized the echo of Brahmavidya.

5. What is suffering?

Gargi asked:

“You have endured exile and captivity. What is suffering?”

Sita answered:

“Suffering is not in circumstances, but in separation from one’s true nature.

He who knows the Self remains untouched—even in sorrow.”

6. Who is truly strong?

Gargi questioned:

“Is strength in endurance or resistance?”

Sita replied:

“Strength lies in steadfastness to dharma, without hatred toward those who oppose it.”

The Revelation

At this point, Gargi rose, deeply moved.

She declared before the assembly:

“Sita is not merely the ideal wife.

She is a knower of Brahman.

Her silence holds the Vedas; her conduct reveals the Upanishads.”

She then bowed to Sita—an extraordinary gesture, for Gargi herself was among the greatest philosophers.

The Deeper Meaning

This episode conveys a profound idea:

Sita is not only pativrata

She is jnana swaroopini (embodiment of wisdom)

She represents the union of Bhakti and Jnana

In her, the household becomes a path to liberation.

If Rama is dharma in action,

Sita is dharma in realization.

Where Rama teaches through life,

Sita teaches through being.

Thursday, April 23, 2026

The missing thridandam.

 https://www.facebook.com/share/r/1D6j94AbQx/

Velai Tirukkolam — When Service Hides Even Greatness

In the living tradition of Ramanujacharya, nothing is casual. Every alankāram, every gesture, every variation in appearance is guided by śāstra and carries a message meant for the devotee’s inner growth.

Among these, the “Velai Tirukkolam” (வேளை திருக்கோலம்) stands out for its quiet subtlety and profound teaching.

At first glance, one may think that in this form, Sri Ramanuja does not bear the tridandam. But as explained in traditional upanyāsams, this is not correct.

Śāstra is Never Violated

A sanyasi does not abandon his tridandam.

It is inseparable from his very āśrama.

So in this Tirukkolam:

The tridandam is not removed

It is not discarded

It is very much present

But…

It is hidden from our sight.

The Acharya is draped in such a way that the tridandam is concealed—not visible to the devotee.

This is not a lapse.

This is śāstra in action.

Why Hide What Must Always Be Carried?

Here lies the beauty of the explanation.

The tridandam represents:

The discipline of body, speech, and mind

The authority and identity of a yati

The visible sign of renunciation

But in Velai Tirukkolam, the focus shifts.

Ramanuja is in “Velai”—in kainkaryam, in active service.

And when service takes over:

Identity recedes

Symbols withdraw

Greatness refuses to announce itself

As conveyed in the discourse tradition, the message is not that the Acharya has set aside his sanyāsa—but that he does not wish it to stand in front of his service.

The Acharya Who Refuses to Stand Apart

Ramanujacharya, even while being Jagadacharya, chooses in this form to appear:

Not as one to be revered from a distance

But as one immersed among those who serve

The tridandam is there—firm, unbroken, true.

Yet it is hidden, as if to say:

“Let not my position come in the way of my participation.”

A Lesson Wrapped in Alankāram

This Tirukkolam gently instructs every devotee:

Do your duty without displaying your stature

Hold your discipline without seeking recognition

Let your kainkaryam be seen—not your credentials

It is a call to inwardness.

Because what is concealed is not absent—

it is simply not offered for display.

The Inner Meaning of “Velai”

“Velai” is not mere work.

It is loving, conscious, surrendered service.

In this form, Ramanuja is envisioned:

Engaged in the Lord’s work

Absorbed in divine duty

Unmindful of how he appears

And therefore, even the sacred staff chooses to remain unseen.

The tridandam is carried—yet hidden.

The sanyāsa is intact—yet unannounced.

For in the moment of true service,

even greatness steps aside.

And in that quiet concealment,

Ramanuja teaches us—

that the highest dharma is not to be seen as elevated,

but to be lost in kainkaryam.