We began with colours that delighted our eyes. Along the way, they became teachers. Green taught us renewal. Blue showed us infinity. Yellow reminded us of joy. Red inspired courage. White whispered peace. Black revealed depth. Silver reflected quiet achievement. Grey offered balance. Brown grounded us in the earth. Pink softened us with compassion. Purple lifted our spirit. And the rainbow reminded us that life's greatest beauty lies not in one colour but in the harmony of many.
Nature has never painted the world in a single shade. Every sunrise, every flower, every bird, every mountain and every human heart carries a different colour. Together they create the masterpiece called life.
May we learn not only to admire colours but to live their values—bringing hope where there is despair, kindness where there is hurt, wisdom where there is confusion, and love wherever we go. For the truest rainbow is not in the sky, but in the character we build and the lives we brighten.
Light – The Mother of All Colours
Not white. Not colourless.
Light.
Why?
Because every colour we've explored—blue, white, yellow, green, red, saffron, orange, gold, black, purple, pink, brown, grey, silver, and the rainbow—exists only because of light.
When light passes through a prism, it reveals the spectrum. When there is no light, colours disappear. Every colour is distinct, yet none exists independently of light.
Spiritually, this is a beautiful metaphor.
The Vedas speak of the Divine not merely as an object to be seen, but as Light itself.
"Tamaso mΔ jyotir gamaya."
Lead me from darkness to light.
The Upanishads speak of the light that illumines the sun, the moon, and the stars—the light of consciousness itself.
In the Bhagavad Gita, Sri Krishna says:
"Among luminous things, I am the radiant sun."
And in our temples, every worship concludes with Δrati—the offering of light. We don't merely look at the flame; we receive it with reverence, drawing it to our eyes as a reminder that the highest light must also illuminate our hearts.
We began by admiring colours in nature.
We discovered that each colour carries a lesson.
But now we realise that behind every colour is one light.
Just as humanity appears in countless languages, cultures, and traditions yet shares one common humanity, creation appears in countless colours yet springs from one source.
Thus ends the colour series.
"May we learn to see beyond the colours that distinguish us and recognise the one Light that unites us all."







