Saturday, April 11, 2026

Govinda: Lessons for Life’s Inner Battles

Part 1 — When Confusion Itself Becomes Grace

Govinda and the Trembling Heart

The Bhagavad Gita does not begin with certainty.

It begins with trembling.

This itself is Govinda’s first great lesson.

Before the immortal truths, before the soaring philosophy, before the revelations of the Self, there is a warrior whose hands shake, whose throat dries, whose bow slips, and whose mind can no longer hold itself together. The first chapter itself is called Arjuna Vishada Yoga — the Yoga of Arjuna’s despair, where grief becomes the doorway to wisdom. 

How compassionate that the Lord allows the highest wisdom to begin not from perfection, but from collapse.

This is where the human heart recognizes itself.

The battlefield within

Kurukshetra is not merely an ancient war field.

It is the place each one of us reaches when life places us between two impossibilities.

A duty we cannot avoid.

A relationship we cannot bear to hurt.

A truth we know, yet hesitate to act upon.

Arjuna looked at the armies and suddenly no longer saw enemies.

He saw:

grandfather

teacher

cousins

beloved kin

The abstract battle turned personal, and the mind became overwhelmed. 

How often does this happen in our own lives?

A decision seems easy until faces, memories, attachments, and emotions enter.

Then even the strongest mind trembles.

This trembling is not failure.

This is the beginning of grace.

Why confusion is sacred

Most people think spirituality begins when the mind is calm.

Govinda shows the opposite.

Sometimes spirituality begins when the mind finally admits:

I do not know.

This honesty is holy.

Arjuna’s greatness was not that he never broke.

His greatness was that he broke in the presence of the Lord.

He did not hide his confusion behind false strength.

He allowed it to become prayer.

This is why despair itself becomes yoga.

The very thing that seems like weakness becomes the path.

When the Gandiva slips

One of the most unforgettable moments is when the Gandiva slips from Arjuna’s hand.

What a profound symbol.

The bow is not merely a weapon.

It is confidence.

Role.

Identity.

The story we tell ourselves about who we are.

Sometimes life makes our own Gandiva slip:

a role we can no longer play

certainty we no longer possess

strength that suddenly deserts us

answers that stop coming

And yet, this is often the moment Govinda begins speaking most clearly.

The silence after our confidence falls is often where divine guidance enters.

The grace hidden in not knowing

The world glorifies instant answers.

Govinda glorifies the sincerity of bewilderment.

If Arjuna had remained proud, the Gita would never have been spoken.

Wisdom entered because certainty left.

This is the secret for our own lives too.

When we no longer know:

what to do

whom to trust

what the right path is

why the heart feels heavy

that very confusion can become sacred if offered at the feet of the Lord.

Not all confusion is darkness.

Some confusion is the breaking open of a deeper light.

The first lesson of Govinda

So the first lesson in this series is deeply comforting:

Do not fear the trembling heart. Sometimes Govinda chooses that very moment to begin teaching.

Your confusion may be the threshold.

Your tears may be the invocation.

Your inability to proceed may be the place where grace enters.

For what is Arjuna’s battlefield, if not the human condition itself?

And somewhere within every trembling heart, Govinda still waits as charioteer. 

a beautiful opening to the full Govinda series to follow.

Friday, April 10, 2026

When the Sea Made Space for Krishna’s Compassion.

The Dwarka That the Dwarkadhish Built

Among all the sacred cities of Bharat, few shine in the imagination like Dwarka — the city built by the Lord who needed no kingdom, yet created one for the safety of his people.

This was not merely architecture.

It was compassion taking the form of a city.

When repeated wars from Jarasandha made Mathura unsafe, Sri Krishna did not allow heroism to become recklessness. He chose preservation over pride and led the Yadavas westward to the shores of Saurashtra, where tradition says the sea itself yielded land. Dwarka was then raised by the divine architect Vishvakarma as a fortified, radiant city. 

What a thought: a city born not from conquest, but from care.

That is why it remains unlike every other royal capital in our epics.

A city built from divine foresight

Dwarka was not simply beautiful.

It was strategically perfect.

The sea stood as its natural defense.

Its gates opened to trade, prosperity, and movement.

Its walls protected not just soldiers, but families, elders, children, cows, temples, and culture itself.

Krishna understood something that even modern civilization struggles to grasp:

the first duty of leadership is not display, but protection.

This is why Dwarka feels so advanced, even today.

Urban planning, maritime advantage, collective relocation, and psychological safety—all are hidden in this one divine act. Tradition even remembers that the city arose on land reclaimed from the ocean, a stunning image of turning danger into shelter. 

This is not merely mythology.

It is a profound lesson in how wisdom builds environments where life can flourish.

Why he is called Dwarkadhish

The wonder deepens when we remember that Krishna did not cling to kingship.

Though Ugrasena remained the formal king, the city itself was Krishna’s vision, protection, and living presence.

That is why the world lovingly calls him Dwarkadhish — the Lord of Dwarka.

He did not need a crown to become the heart of a kingdom.

He was:

the mind behind the city

the shield around its people

the dharma within its walls

the love that made it home

A throne can be inherited.

But Dwarkadhish is a title earned through guardianship.

The inner Dwarka

This is where the story becomes deeply personal.

Each of us has a Mathura under siege somewhere in life: a repeated hurt, an old conflict, a thought pattern that keeps attacking.

Krishna does not always ask us to keep fighting there.

Sometimes he asks us to build an inner Dwarka.

A safer space within:

stronger boundaries

calmer routines

sacred reading

better company

protected silence

remembrance of the Lord

A place where recurring negativity cannot easily enter.

That inner fortress is also Krishna’s gift.

The Dwarkadhish still builds.

Not always in stone, sometimes in consciousness.

The city that still lives

The outer Dwarka on Gujarat’s shore continues to draw pilgrims with the same magnetic love, and tradition still remembers it as Krishna’s own city. 

But the greater Dwarka is timeless.

It is the place the Lord creates whenever devotion needs protection.

Perhaps that is why the name itself means gateway.

Dwarka is the gateway from fear to safety, from siege to serenity, from repeated conflict to divine order.

And the Dwarkadhish who built it still teaches us: true greatness lies in building spaces where souls can breathe.

The repeted attacks.

The Death of Jarasandha and the Breaking of Repeating Vengeance

Among the many formidable kings who opposed Sri Krishna, Jarasandha stands apart as a tragic symbol of vengeance that refused to end.

He was no ordinary enemy.

He was powerful, disciplined, relentless, and driven by a deeply personal wound.

His daughters, Asti and Prapti, had been married to Kamsa, the tyrant of Mathura. When Krishna slew Kamsa and restored justice, Jarasandha did not see dharma restored—he saw his daughters turned into widows.

A father’s anguish, mixed with imperial pride, hardened into fury.

That fury marched toward Mathura again and again.

Tradition remembers that he attacked seventeen times, unable to accept what fate and dharma had already decided.

This is where Jarasandha’s story becomes more than history.

It becomes a mirror.

How often does the human mind also return seventeen times to the same hurt?

The same insult.

The same loss.

The same humiliation.

We revisit it, relive it, and rearm ourselves for another inner war.

Jarasandha is that tendency within us: the refusal to let pain complete its journey into wisdom.

When grief becomes repeating vengeance

At the root of Jarasandha’s war was something deeply human.

He could not bear the sight of his daughters’ widowhood.

His pain was real.

But pain unillumined by wisdom becomes obsession.

Instead of allowing grief to mature into understanding, Jarasandha fed it with power, armies, and revenge.

Each march to Mathura was not merely against Krishna.

It was another march of the wounded ego toward the same unresolved memory.

This is why the story remains timeless.

The mind too attacks in cycles.

It returns to old wounds, each time thinking, this time I will conquer what hurt me.

But repeating vengeance never heals.

It only strengthens the chain.

His birth held the secret of his death

The Mahabharata gives Jarasandha one of the most symbolic births in epic memory.

He was born in two separate halves, which were joined together by the rakshasi Jara.

Thus he became Jarasandha — the one joined by Jara.

This strange birth is spiritually profound.

He represents everything in us that is stitched together unnaturally:

hurt and pride

grief and ego

memory and rage

loss and identity

Such formations appear powerful, but they are fundamentally unstable.

When Yudhishthira later sought to perform the Rajasuya Yajna, Jarasandha stood as the final obstacle.

Sri Krishna, Bhima, and Arjuna approached him in disguise.

As honor demanded, Jarasandha accepted Bhima’s challenge.

The duel raged for days.

Bhima’s immense strength could tear him apart, but each time the two halves joined again.

What a stunning image of the mind.

We may temporarily break an old pattern, yet if the two halves of memory and ego remain near, they reunite.

The wound returns.

The anger returns.

The vengeance reforms.

Krishna’s silent teaching

Then came Krishna’s unforgettable gesture.

Without speaking, he split a blade of grass into two pieces and threw them in opposite directions.

Bhima understood.

He seized Jarasandha, tore him apart, and flung the halves away from each other so they could never reunite.

Only then did Jarasandha die.

This is one of Krishna’s deepest teachings.

Some inner patterns cannot be healed by merely suppressing them.

They must be separated at the root.

The pride must be separated from the pain.

The memory must be separated from the identity.

The loss must be separated from the ego that keeps retelling it.

Only then does the repeating cycle stop.

The breaking of inner vengeance

Jarasandha’s death is the death of repetitive mental warfare.

It is Krishna showing us that some thoughts survive because we keep their broken halves close: the event and the story, the pain and the self-image, the wound and the pride.

Spiritual maturity means throwing them apart.

Not denial.

Not forgetfulness.

But refusal to let them reunite into a living enemy within.

That is the breaking of repeating vengeance.

And perhaps this is why Krishna let Bhima be the instrument.

Strength is needed—not merely physical strength, but the courage to stop feeding old wounds.

Only then can the mind perform its own Rajasuya: the sovereignty of peace.

Stategic withdrawal.

Why Krishna Chose Dwarka: The Dharma of Strategic Withdrawal

Among the countless acts of Sri Krishna, one decision shines with extraordinary wisdom: He chose to move an entire civilization rather than allow it to be consumed by repeated conflict.

At first glance, it may seem like a military retreat.

But the more one reflects, the more one realizes that this was not withdrawal from courage, but movement toward a higher intelligence.

When Jarasandha attacked Mathura again and again—tradition says seventeen times, with the eighteenth danger joined by Kalayavana—Krishna saw beyond the battlefield. 

A lesser leader would have continued fighting for prestige.

Krishna fought for people, continuity, and dharma.

He knew that victory in battle means little if the people live in perpetual fear.

So he did what only a true protector can do: He changed the very ground of destiny.

From besieged Mathura to invincible Dwarka

Instead of exhausting the Yadavas in endless war, Krishna led them westward to the coast of Gujarat, to the ancient region of Kushasthali, where the sea itself became an ally. Tradition holds that the ocean yielded land and Vishwakarma, the divine architect, raised the magnificent fortified city of Dwarka. 

This is where Krishna’s genius feels far ahead of its age—even today beyond easy human thinking.

He understood:

safety is also dharma

foresight is greater than reaction

survival of culture matters more than heroic display

a secure society can flower into prosperity

Dwarka was not merely a city.

It was civilization redesigned through divine intelligence.

A port city, sea-protected, prosperous, and nearly unassailable, it transformed vulnerability into abundance.

Even modern urban planners would admire the principle: move before collapse, build before crisis, protect before loss.

How advanced this thought is, even in our times.

Krishna and the throne he never claimed

What makes this episode even more moving is Krishna’s complete freedom from ego.

Though he created Dwarka and became its soul, he did not hunger for the crown.

He restored and honored Ugrasena as the formal king, preserving order, lineage, and dignity. 

Yet everyone knew who the real strength behind the kingdom was.

That is why the world remembers him not merely as prince or warrior, but as Dwarakadhish — Lord of Dwarka.

He ruled not by title, but by trust.

Not by throne, but by presence.

Not by authority, but by love.

This itself is leadership of the highest order.

The lesson for our lives

This is why the Dwarka decision feels so modern.

Even today, we often keep fighting the same battles in the same mental Mathura.

The same conflict.

The same argument.

The same emotional siege.

Krishna’s wisdom whispers: do not merely resist—relocate inwardly.

Move your mind to a place where recurring negativity cannot easily reach.

Build your own Dwarka:

stronger boundaries

wiser choices

calmer responses

a more protected inner world

Sometimes the greatest strength lies not in standing where you are attacked, but in choosing a better place from which to live and serve.

This is not escape.

This is enlightened strategy.

And perhaps that is why, after thousands of years, Krishna’s decision still feels way beyond the easy approach of ordinary human thinking.

It remains a timeless masterclass in divine leadership.

Thursday, April 9, 2026

Capable.

 Gods love is always with you; if then you do not feel it, it is because you are not capable of receiving it. It is your receptivity that is lacking and should be increased; for this you must open yourself, and one opens oneself only if one gives oneself. Surely you are trying more or less consciously to draw the forces and the divine love towards you. The method is bad. Give yourself without calculating and without expecting anything in return, and then you will become capable of receiving.

The M.

Finest tribute to reading.

 


Read Even If You Are Drowning
A meditation on learning, endurance, and the soul’s lifeline
There are some images that do not merely please the eye—they awaken a truth sleeping within us. The statue of a man immersed in water, his body nearly swallowed by the river, yet his hands firmly holding a book, belongs to that rare kind of vision.
At first glance, it appears almost ironic. One may even smile at the absurdity: who reads while drowning? And yet, the longer one gazes, the deeper the message becomes.
The waters around him are the waters of life itself.
They are the floods of responsibility, grief, aging, uncertainty, worldly noise, emotional upheaval, and the thousand demands that rise around every human being. No one passes through life untouched by these waters. At times they remain at our feet; at other times they rise to the chest, the throat, and almost over the head.
And still, the statue reads.
That is the lesson.
The book in his hand is not merely paper. It is clarity, memory, wisdom, refuge, and continuity of the inner life. When circumstances threaten to pull us under, the instinctive reaction is often panic. But this image teaches another response: hold on to what nourishes the mind and steadies the soul.
For some, that book may be literature.
For others, scripture.
For yet others, the diary of one’s own reflections, written over years of growth and devotion.
The act of reading in the midst of drowning becomes a metaphor for not surrendering one’s inner discipline to outer chaos.
Our rishis called this svādhyāya—sacred self-study, the repeated return to wisdom texts, mantras, remembered truths, and contemplative thought. Life never waits for a convenient moment to grant peace. If we postpone study until every storm has passed, we may never begin. The real seeker learns to read within the storm.
This is why so many saints, poets, and seekers turned to words in times of crisis. A verse from the Gita, a line from the Ramayana, an Upanishadic mahavakya, a bhajan heard in childhood—these become the floating logs that keep consciousness above despair.
In another sense, the image also reminds us of our own beautiful way of living knowledge. You hear something profound, let it stir devotion within, then write about it, reflect on it, and revisit it again. That itself is reading while the world rushes around you. The outer river may never become still, but the mind learns to remain anchored.
Perhaps that is the true greatness of books.
They do not remove the water.
They teach us how not to drown in it.
A life without study is easily consumed by circumstance. But a life that remains in conversation with wisdom develops a strange strength—a calm center that no storm can fully shake.
So the statue seems to whisper to every seeker:
When life rises to your neck, raise your mind higher.
Let wisdom become the breath above the waters.
And maybe that is the finest tribute to reading—not as hobby, not as pastime, but as a sacred act of survival for the soul.

33 koti.

 The beautiful Vedic idea of 33 koti devatas, where “koti” means types or categories, not crores. 

The traditional composition is:

8 Vasus – the elemental supports of existence

(earth, water, fire, air, ether/space, moon, sun, stars) 

12 Adityas – the twelve solar principles, often linked to the 12 months and the flow of time 

11 Rudras – the life-forces (pranas) and the indwelling self, the powers that make embodied life possible 

2 Ashvini Kumaras – the twin divine physicians, healers of the devas, symbols of restoration and vitality 

So the total is:

8 + 12 + 11 + 2 = 33

This is why the expression became “33 koti devatas.”

these are not merely “many gods,” but 33 ways in which the One Supreme Bhagavan expresses cosmic order, life, healing, time, and the elements.

33 koti uchita Bhagavan consists of 8 Vasus, 12 Adityas, 11 Rudras and 2 Ashvini Kumaras.