Saturday, February 28, 2026

T and A

 Tolerance and Acceptance in the Vision of Swami Vivekananda

When we speak of tolerance and acceptance in modern spiritual discourse, we often unknowingly echo the thunderous yet compassionate voice of Swami Vivekananda. For him, these were not social courtesies — they were spiritual imperatives rooted in the very heart of Sanatana Dharma.

The Chicago Declaration

At the historic Parliament of Religions in 1893 at World's Parliament of Religions in Chicago, Vivekananda proclaimed:

“We believe not only in universal toleration, but we accept all religions as true.”

This was not a diplomatic statement. It was a philosophical revolution.

Tolerance says:

“I allow you to exist.”

Acceptance says:

“I recognize truth in your path.”

Vivekananda moved the world from the first to the second.

Tolerance: A Beginning, Not the Goal

Tolerance is often passive. It can carry an undertone of superiority — I am right, but I will let you be wrong.

Vivekananda saw this limitation. In his interpretation of the Vedas and the Upanishads, Truth is vast, infinite, and many-sided.

He repeatedly cited the Vedic spirit:

“Ekam sat vipra bahudha vadanti”

Truth is One; sages call It by various names.

Thus, diversity of faiths is not a problem to solve — it is a manifestation of Divine abundance.

Acceptance: A Spiritual Vision

For Vivekananda, acceptance flows from the Advaitic understanding that the same Divine Reality dwells in all beings. If all existence is pervaded by the same Brahman, how can one path monopolize truth?

Acceptance means:

Seeing sincerity as sacred.

Recognizing that different temperaments require different approaches.

Understanding that religion evolves according to culture, time, and psychology.

He did not dilute his own faith. He stood firmly rooted in Hindu philosophy — yet his roots were so deep that they nourished universality.

Strength, Not Weakness

Vivekananda never equated tolerance with weakness. In fact, he declared strength to be the core of spirituality. Only a strong mind can truly accept another without fear.

He said:

“We must not only tolerate other religions, but positively embrace them.”

Acceptance arises when insecurity ends.

A Message for Our Times

In a world often divided by identity and belief, Vivekananda’s distinction remains profoundly relevant:

Tolerance prevents conflict.

Acceptance builds harmony.

Tolerance is coexistence.

Acceptance is reverence.

Tolerance stops hatred.

Acceptance awakens unity.

When we tolerate, we stand apart.

When we accept, we stand together.

Swami Vivekananda did not merely ask humanity to “live and let live.”

He invited us to see the Divine shining through every sincere seeker.

That vision — bold, inclusive, rooted in Vedantic wisdom — remains one of India’s greatest spiritual gifts to the world.

Again inspired. 4 N,s

 Let my life move in Niyath.

Let my heart remain in Nishtha.

Let my being discover its Nidhi.

Let my soul arrive at Nirnay.

And when that Nirnay dawns,

May it not be loud,

May it not be dramatic,

But like the quiet sunrise —

Certain, steady, and filled with light.

1. Niyath – Living in Sacred Order

The word Niyata means regulated, governed, aligned with dharma.

In the Bhagavad Gita, Lord Krishna instructs:

“Niyatam kuru karma tvam” (3.8)

Perform your prescribed duty.

Niyath is not rigidity; it is rhythm.

It is rising before sunrise.

It is lighting the lamp whether the mind feels inspired or not.

It is chanting the Divine Name even when the heart feels dry.

The sun rises in Niyath.

The tides move in Niyath.

The seasons rotate in Niyath.

When we align our life to sacred order, we begin to participate in cosmic harmony.

Without Niyath, devotion becomes mood.

With Niyath, devotion becomes foundation.

2. Nishtha – The Flame That Does Not Flicker

If Niyath is structure, Nishtha is strength.

Nishtha means unwavering steadiness — remaining anchored despite storms. In the Gita’s description of the sthita-prajña, we see Nishtha embodied — a mind undisturbed by sorrow, unexcited by pleasure.

Nishtha is:

Continuing prayer in times of doubt.

Choosing truth when compromise seems easier.

Remaining grateful even when life rearranges our plans.

In the Srimad Bhagavatam, devotion matures only when it remains steady through trials. Love that survives testing becomes luminous.

Nishtha transforms practice into character.

3. Nidhi – The Inner Treasure

When discipline ripens and steadiness deepens, a quiet wealth begins to appear. This is Nidhi — the treasure within.

Not gold.

Not recognition.

Not accumulation.

But contentment.

Fearlessness.

Clarity.

Remembrance of the Divine even amidst worldly duties.

The saints call devotion itself the highest treasure. In the Tiruppavai, Andal sings not for ornaments or comfort, but for union with the Lord — that alone is wealth.

True Nidhi is when the heart no longer feels impoverished.

4. Nirnay – The Final Resolve

At the summit stands Nirnay — decisive clarity.

It is the moment when the soul says,

“I choose the Eternal.”

In the climactic teaching of the Gita (18.66), the Lord gives the ultimate Nirnay:

“Sarva-dharman parityajya…”

Surrender unto Me alone.

Nirnay is not impulsive decision.

It is distilled understanding.

It is surrender born from insight.

After Niyath disciplines the body,

After Nishtha strengthens the mind,

After Nidhi enriches the heart —

Nirnay liberates the soul.

The Silent Progression

These four are not separate steps; they are a living flow:

Niyath gives rhythm.

Nishtha gives resilience.

Nidhi gives richness.

Nirnay gives release.

Like preparing the soil, tending the plant, harvesting the fruit, and offering it at the Lord’s feet — the journey completes itself in surrender.

Inspired by the 5th N Namo. 

Thursday, February 26, 2026

Haridwar

 The Mahimai of the Gateway to the Divine

There are cities that live in history.

There are cities that live in memory.

And there are cities that live in the pulse of eternity.

Haridwar is one such sacred doorway.

The very name means “Gateway to Hari” (Lord Vishnu) and also “Gateway to Hara” (Lord Shiva). Thus, in one single word, Vaishnava and Shaiva traditions embrace each other. It is not merely a geographical location—it is a spiritual threshold.

The Descent of the Ganga

Haridwar’s glory begins with the sacred river Ganges River.

Here, the mighty Ganga leaves the Himalayas and enters the plains. The river that flowed through celestial realms, touched the locks of Lord Shiva, and descended through the penance of King Bhagiratha, becomes accessible to humanity at Haridwar.

To stand at its banks is to feel the quiet authority of timeless purification.

The waters whisper:

Of tapas.

Of liberation.

Of cycles of birth and death dissolving into the infinite.

Har Ki Pauri – The Lord’s Footstep

The spiritual heart of Haridwar is Har Ki Pauri.

Tradition says Lord Vishnu left his footprint here. The evening Ganga Aarti performed at this ghat is not a ritual—it is a cosmic offering. Lamps rise like stars from human hands, reflecting in the flowing river.

Fire and water meet. Devotion and eternity converse.

When thousands chant together, the individual voice disappears into collective surrender.

That is Haridwar’s mahimai—ego melts effortlessly.

Kumbh Mela – The Ocean of Faith

Haridwar is one of the four sacred cities that host the grand Kumbh Mela.

Millions gather, saints emerge from caves and akharas, renunciates walk barefoot in dignity, and the river becomes a moving ocean of humanity.

It is not organization alone that sustains it—it is faith.

Where else can humanity assemble in such magnitude for purification rather than entertainment?

The Kumbh reminds us that civilization once revolved around spiritual aspiration.

Land of Rishis

Haridwar has echoed with the chants of sages for millennia. It is closely associated with:

Maya Devi Temple – One of the Shakti Peethas.

Mansa Devi Temple

Chandi Devi Temple

These hilltop shrines remind the pilgrim that ascent—physical and spiritual—go together.

Haridwar is not noisy spirituality. It is layered spirituality. Behind the bazaar and bells lies an ancient silence.

Gateway to the Himalayas

From Haridwar begins the sacred journey toward:

Rishikesh

Badrinath

Kedarnath

It is the first step into the higher realms of tapas.

Pilgrims pause here not merely to bathe, but to prepare. The river cleanses the body; the resolve cleanses the mind.

Haridwar stands at the meeting point of:

River and land

Mountain and plain

Ritual and realization

Beginning and transcendence

The Inner Haridwar

But the greatest mahimai of Haridwar is symbolic.

Each heart has a “gateway to the Divine.”

Each life has a moment when the river of grace enters the plains of daily living.

When devotion descends into action, When remembrance flows into conduct, When ego dissolves into surrender—

That inner opening is Haridwar.

A Devotional Reflection

To visit Haridwar is not tourism.

It is return.

Return to simplicity.

Return to sacred rhythm.

Return to the awareness that life flows, purifies, and moves toward the ocean.

As the Ganga flows without pause, so too does grace.

Haridwar stands eternally, reminding humanity:

The gate is open.

The river is flowing.

Enter.

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

significance and universality.

Under many skies we rise,

In many colours we renew,

Through countless lamps we seek the light,

Yet the human longing is one and true.

One sun moves above all lands,

One earth turns through night and day,

Many festivals, many flames,

Yet one hope lights every way.

Sky, Colour, and Light

Shared Festival Symbols Across Civilizations

Across continents and centuries, humanity has celebrated in remarkably similar ways. We light lamps. We throw colour. We fly objects into the sky. We gather at seasonal turning points. We rejoice when light conquers darkness.

Are these similarities accidental?

When we observe Indian festivals such as Makar Sankranti, Holi, and Diwali, and then look outward to other regions of the world, something deeply moving emerges:

Civilizations celebrate the same inner truths.

This is not imitation. It is shared human experience.

The Sky — The Significance of Ascent

During Makar Sankranti, the Indian sky fills with kites. The festival marks the Sun’s northward journey — Uttarayana — symbolizing movement toward light, longer days, and renewed energy. It is also a harvest thanksgiving, expressing gratitude for nature’s abundance.

But why the sky? Why kites?

The upward motion carries meaning:

Aspiration

Transcendence

Rising above limitation

Connection between earth and infinity

In China, spring kite festivals accompany seasonal renewal. In Iran and parts of Central Asia, Nowruz celebrates the cosmic new year with outdoor festivity symbolizing rebirth and balance. In Japan, carp streamers flutter in the wind, representing strength and the will to rise.

Across cultures, height symbolizes hope.

The sky represents vastness.

Ascent represents inner elevation.

The thread that holds the kite reminds us: rise — but remain anchored.

Colour — The Significance of Renewal

Holi announces spring in India with a joyful explosion of colour. Rooted in devotion and divine play, it celebrates victory of faith and the renewal of life after winter’s stillness.

But beyond story lies symbolism:

Emotional cleansing

Dissolving social barriers

Releasing accumulated tension

Reaffirming community bonds

When colours cover everyone alike, hierarchy fades. Laughter replaces division. Society resets.

Elsewhere, similar expressions appear.

In Thailand, Songkran uses water to wash away the old year and bless the new. In Spain’s La Tomatina, playful colour-filled celebration creates collective joy. In Brazil’s Carnival, vibrant festivity precedes a reflective spiritual season.

Different forms — same significance:

Human beings require renewal.

Just as trees shed leaves and blossom again, societies too need moments of joyful release.

Light — The Significance of Hope

Among the most universal symbols across civilizations is light.

In India, Diwali celebrates the triumph of righteousness and the return of light. Lamps glow in homes and temples, declaring:

Light over darkness.

Knowledge over ignorance.

Hope over despair.

In Jewish tradition, Hanukkah commemorates sacred light enduring against adversity. In Christian lands, Christmas is marked by illumination during the darkest days of winter, symbolizing divine light entering the world. Across East Asia, lantern festivals guide communities forward.

Why does every civilization cherish light?

Because darkness is universal:

Long nights

Uncertainty

Fear

Moral confusion

Lighting a lamp becomes humanity’s gentle declaration:

Darkness will not prevail.

A small flame is enough.

The Shared Foundation — Nature and the Human Heart

Agricultural rhythms shaped ancient societies everywhere. Harvest festivals, solstice celebrations, and spring renewals appear in Africa, Asia, Europe, and the Americas.

We live under the same sun.

We experience the same seasons.

We confront the same cycles of loss and return.

From these shared experiences arise shared symbols.

Across civilizations we see three recurring themes:

Ascent — the longing to rise.

Renewal — the need to begin again.

Light — the search for meaning.

Indian civilization articulated these through profound philosophical frameworks — linking them to dharma, cosmic order, and liberation. Yet the emotional core is universal.

Human beings everywhere:

Look upward and feel wonder.

Witness spring and feel hope.

Face darkness and long for light.

Festivals are collective meditations enacted in public space.

They are humanity remembering itself.

A Reflection on Measured Words

This reflection itself was inspired by a speech delivered by the Prime Minister of India in Israel.

What made that address memorable was not grand rhetoric, but restraint. The language was simple. Every word seemed carefully measured. Beneath that simplicity lay depth — history acknowledged, sensitivity maintained, shared bonds articulated with quiet dignity.

To speak in a land shaped by ancient memory requires thoughtfulness. To refer to civilizational connections demands balance. And to do so in plain, accessible language reflects confidence and clarity.

Measured speech reflects disciplined thought.

Simplicity reflects strength.

Clarity reflects conviction.

Just as a lamp does not shout but gently illumines, thoughtful words illuminate without overwhelming. They create connection.

From that moment arose this meditation — on how cultures across the world, though separated by geography and history, light lamps, release colours, and lift their eyes to the same sky.

Different nations.

Different traditions.

One human heart.

The Hidden Infinite

Akrura’s Awakening on the Road to Mathura

(From the Tenth Skandha of the Srimad Bhagavatam)

When Akrura set out from Mathura under the command of Kamsa, his task was administrative.

Bring the sons of Nanda.

He had heard accounts of Krishna — remarkable tales, yes — but tales nonetheless. Villages are fertile ground for exaggeration.

Akrura was not naïve.

He was thoughtful. Observant. Measured.

He did not travel to meet God.

He traveled to fetch a youth.

The Veil of the Ordinary

Vraja did not shimmer with celestial signs.

It breathed simplicity.

And Krishna — far from resembling a conqueror — seemed at ease in that simplicity. No self-conscious grandeur. No insistence on authority.

Yet Akrura noticed something subtle.

The boy did not seek attention.

Nor did He avoid it.

He moved as though the world adjusted naturally around Him.

There are personalities that dominate a room.

There are others around whom the room rearranges itself quietly.

Akrura could not articulate it —

but something about Krishna felt… foundational.

The Silence Before Revelation

On the journey, conversation flowed easily.

Krishna asked questions.

Listened.

Smiled.

Nothing mystical.

And yet Akrura sensed a curious stillness beneath the surface of events — as though the ordinary was only a thin layer over something immeasurable.

Philosophy later names this paradox:

the unbounded appearing bounded.

But Akrura had no such language at that moment.

He only felt a widening.

The River That Dissolved Categories

At the Yamuna, Akrura entered the waters expecting refreshment.

Instead, perception fractured.

Within the river, Krishna appeared in a form no categories could contain — majestic, radiant, immeasurable.

This was not a larger version of the boy.

It was something qualitatively different.

Not expanded personality —

but cosmic substratum.

Akrura rose in shock.

The chariot remained.

The boy remained.

The sky unchanged.

He questioned his senses.

He descended again.

The vision intensified.

The same Krishna — yet no longer confined to human proportion. Presence extended beyond locality. The sense of “here” and “there” dissolved.

In that moment, Akrura did not merely see grandeur.

He experienced collapse of limitation.

The Philosophical Undercurrent

Later thinkers would say:

The Infinite does not become finite.

It appears as finite.

The Absolute does not transform into the world.

It expresses without diminishing.

But Akrura did not analyze.

He trembled.

Because what stood before him was not contradiction —

but coexistence.

The cowherd and the cosmic.

The particular and the universal.

Form and boundlessness.

Simultaneously true.

The Greatest Surprise

When Akrura returned to the chariot, Krishna did not explain.

No discourse.

No declaration of divinity.

The ordinary resumed.

This was perhaps the most destabilizing revelation of all.

If the vision had replaced the boy permanently, categories would remain intact:

“Now I see the true form.”

But instead, both persisted.

The Infinite did not cancel the intimate.

The Absolute did not discard the accessible.

The Supreme did not abandon the simple.

Akrura’s understanding shifted irreversibly.

Not because he was told a doctrine.

But because experience dismantled limitation.

Wonder as Knowledge

True knowledge, the sages say, is not accumulation — but expansion.

Akrura’s mind did not gain information.

It lost confinement.

He began the journey believing he was escorting a person of unusual ability.

He continued the journey knowing he was in the presence of that which contains all ability.

Yet Krishna remained as before.

Laughing softly.

Seated calmly.

Dust upon His feet.

The Infinite concealed within intimacy.

A Quiet Reflection

Perhaps the deepest Vedantic insight is not abstract at all.

It is this:

What appears limited

may not be limited.

What seems ordinary

may conceal totality.

Akrura’s awakening was not dramatic theology.

It was progressive astonishment.

And perhaps that is how truth often arrives —

not by argument,

but by widening perception

until the familiar reveals the unfathomable.


Garland of Timeless Wisdom”

 108 is not merely a count; it is fullness, completion, the rhythm of japa and the measure of devotion.

108 SUBHĀṢITAS 

1–20: Knowledge (Vidya)

विद्या ददाति विनयं ।

न चोरहार्यं न च राजहार्यं विद्याधनम् ।

सा विद्या या विमुक्तये ।

अल्पविद्या भयङ्करी ।

अनभ्यासे विषं शास्त्रम् ।

श्रद्धावान् लभते ज्ञानम् ।

विद्या मित्रं प्रवासेषु ।

न हि ज्ञानेन सदृशं पवित्रम् ।

आचार्यात् पादमादत्ते ।

क्षणशः कणशश्चैव विद्याम् ।

बहुश्रुतोऽपि मूर्खः स्यात् ।

अध्ययनं तपः ।

ज्ञानं भारः क्रियाविना ।

पुस्तकेषु च या विद्या… (not useful if not applied)

विद्यया अमृतमश्नुते ।

विद्वान् सर्वत्र पूज्यते ।

नास्ति विद्यासमं चक्षुः ।

ज्ञानं परं बलम् ।

शास्त्रं प्रमाणम् ।

शिक्षया शोभते मानवः ।

21–40: Dharma & Conduct

धर्मो रक्षति रक्षितः ।

सत्यं वद धर्मं चर ।

अहिंसा परमो धर्मः ।

आत्मनः प्रतिकूलानि परेषां न समाचरेत् ।

लज्जा मनुष्यस्य भूषणम् ।

क्षमा वीरस्य भूषणम् ।

परोपकाराय फलन्ति वृक्षाः ।

दानं भोगो नाशः ।

यथा राजा तथा प्रजा ।

सत्येन धार्यते पृथ्वी ।

धर्म एव हतो हन्ति ।

धर्मेण जयति लोकः ।

सदाचारः परमः धर्मः ।

नास्ति धर्मसमं मित्रम् ।

शीलं परमं भूषणम् ।

सेवा परमोधर्मः ।

वाणी रत्नम् ।

मधुरं वद ।

कर्तव्यं योगिनः कर्म ।

शुद्धान्तःकरणः सुखी ।

 41–60: Mind & Character

मन एव मनुष्याणां कारणं बन्धमोक्षयोः ।

संतोषः परमं सुखम् ।

क्रोधो हि शत्रुः ।

लोभः पापस्य कारणम् ।

अति सर्वत्र वर्जयेत् ।

धैर्यं सर्वत्र साधनम् ।

नास्ति तृष्णासमं दुःखम् ।

शुभस्य शीघ्रम् ।

संयमः परमं बलम् ।

स्वभावो दुरतिक्रमः ।

विचारः परमं शस्त्रम् ।

निन्दकः नियन्ता ।

मौनं सर्वार्थसाधनम् ।

स्नेहः बन्धनम् ।

विवेकः दीपः ।

मैत्रीं भज ।

उदारचरितानां तु वसुधैव कुटुम्बकम् ।

आत्मवशः सुखी ।

गुणाः पूजास्थानम् ।

न हि गुणानां वृद्धिः छिप्यते ।

 61–80: Effort, Time & Life

उद्यमेन हि सिद्ध्यन्ति कार्याणि ।

न हि सुप्तस्य सिंहस्य मुखे मृगाः ।

कालः क्रीडति गच्छत्यायुः ।

आयुषः क्षण एकोऽपि न लभ्यः ।

उद्योगिनं पुरुषसिंहमुपैति लक्ष्मीः ।

कर्मण्येवाधिकारस्ते ।

न कश्चित् क्षणमपि अकर्मकृत् ।

आजन्म शिक्षेत् ।

प्रारब्धं फलति ।

यद्भावं तद्भवति ।

प्रयत्नं कुरु ।

जागरूकः भव ।

धैर्येण सर्वं साध्यते ।

श्रमेण सिद्धिः ।

यथा बीजं तथा फलम् ।

कालस्य कुटिला गतिः ।

चिन्ता चिता समानम् ।

धैर्यं सर्वत्र रक्षकम् ।

यत्नेन विना न सिद्धिः ।

उत्साहः बलवान् आर्यः ।

 81–108: Bhakti & Spiritual Wisdom

हरिः सर्वत्र ।

वासुदेवः सर्वम् ।

रामो विग्रहवान् धर्मः । (From Valmiki Ramayana)

न मे भक्तः प्रणश्यति । (From Bhagavad Gita)

योगक्षेमं वहाम्यहम् ।

तत्त्वमसि ।

अहं ब्रह्मास्मि ।

सर्वं खल्विदं ब्रह्म ।

ईशावास्यमिदं सर्वम् ।

भज गोविन्दम् । (From Bhaja Govindam)

शिवोऽहम् ।

आनन्दो ब्रह्मेति ।

ब्रह्म सत्यं जगन्मिथ्या ।

आत्मा वा अरे द्रष्टव्यः ।

सत्संगत्वे निःसंगत्वम् ।

श्रद्धा मूलम् ।

भक्तिः मार्गः सरलः ।

नामस्मरणात् मुक्तिः ।

गुरुर्ब्रह्मा गुरुर्विष्णुः ।

ध्यानं निर्वाणमार्गः ।

समत्वं योग उच्यते ।

नित्यं हरिस्मरणम् ।

अनन्याश्चिन्तयन्तो माम् ।

शरणं व्रज ।

लोकाः समस्ताः सुखिनो भवन्तु ।

करुणा धर्मस्य हृदयम् ।

आत्मज्ञानं परमं धनम् ।

शान्तिः शान्तिः शान्तिः ॥

“108 Beads of Wisdom – A Subhāṣita Japa Mālā” 

The First Bead – Invocation

शान्तिः शान्तिः शान्तिः ॥

Before the mālā begins, there is silence.

From silence arises remembrance.

From remembrance — light.

🌿 Beads 1–12: The Dawn of Knowledge

विद्या ददाति विनयं —

Knowledge bows before humility.

न चोरहार्यं विद्याधनम् —

This wealth cannot be stolen.

सा विद्या या विमुक्तये —

Learning that frees — that alone is true.

क्षणशः कणशश्चैव —

Grain by grain the granary fills.

श्रद्धावान् लभते ज्ञानम् —

Faith waters the seed of wisdom.

विद्या मित्रं प्रवासेषु —

When alone, learning walks beside you.

अल्पविद्या भयङ्करी —

Half-light casts long shadows.

ज्ञानं परं बलम् —

Strength is born of clarity.

नास्ति विद्यासमं चक्षुः —

Knowledge is the eye of the soul.

विद्वान् सर्वत्र पूज्यते —

Wisdom is honoured everywhere.

अनभ्यासे विषं शास्त्रम् —

Unlived truth becomes poison.

सा विद्या या विमुक्तये —

Again the bead returns — liberation.

Beads 13–24: Dharma — The Steady Path

धर्मो रक्षति रक्षितः —

Guard dharma; it guards you.

सत्यं वद धर्मं चर —

Speak truth. Walk righteousness.

अहिंसा परमो धर्मः —

The softest heart is the highest law.

आत्मनः प्रतिकूलानि… —

Do not wound another.

शीलं परमं भूषणम् —

Character shines brighter than jewels.

लज्जा मनुष्यस्य भूषणम् —

Modesty is quiet radiance.

क्षमा वीरस्य भूषणम् —

Forgiveness crowns the brave.

सत्येन धार्यते पृथ्वी —

Truth holds the earth steady.

दानं भोगो नाशः —

Wealth either serves, delights, or disappears.

परोपकाराय फलन्ति वृक्षाः —

Trees give without asking.

धर्म एव हतो हन्ति —

Betray dharma, and it departs.

सेवा परमोधर्मः —

Service is worship in action.

Beads 25–36: The Inner Battle

मन एव मनुष्याणां कारणं बन्धमोक्षयोः —

The mind binds. The mind frees.

क्रोधो हि शत्रुः —

Anger burns its own house.

लोभः पापस्य कारणम् —

Greed hollows the heart.

संतोषः परमं सुखम् —

Contentment is hidden nectar.

अति सर्वत्र वर्जयेत् —

Excess disturbs balance.

विवेकः दीपः —

Discernment is the lamp.

मौनं सर्वार्थसाधनम् —

Silence ripens understanding.

आत्मवशः सुखी —

Self-mastery brings joy.

नास्ति तृष्णासमं दुःखम् —

No sorrow equals craving.

मैत्रीं भज —

Choose friendship over fear.

उदारचरितानां तु वसुधैव कुटुम्बकम् —

The world is one family.

गुणाः पूजास्थानम् —

Virtue alone deserves reverence.

 Beads 37–54: Time & Effort

उद्यमेन हि सिद्ध्यन्ति —

Effort awakens destiny.

न हि सुप्तस्य सिंहस्य —

The sleeping lion remains hungry.

कालः क्रीडति गच्छत्यायुः —

Time plays while life slips.

आयुषः क्षण एकोऽपि —

One moment is priceless.

उद्योगिनं पुरुषसिंहमुपैति लक्ष्मीः —

Fortune seeks the courageous.

कर्मण्येवाधिकारस्ते —

Act — leave the rest.

श्रमेण सिद्धिः —

Labour ripens fruit.

यथा बीजं तथा फलम् —

As the seed, so the harvest.

प्रयत्नं कुरु —

Try again.

उत्साहः बलवान् —

Enthusiasm is strength.

धैर्येण सर्वं साध्यते —

Patience builds mountains.

आजन्म शिक्षेत् —

Remain a student till the end.

Beads 55–72: Bhakti Blossoms

हरिः सर्वत्र —

The Lord is everywhere.

वासुदेवः सर्वम् —

All is Vasudeva.

रामो विग्रहवान् धर्मः —

Rama is righteousness embodied.

(From Valmiki Ramayana)

न मे भक्तः प्रणश्यति —

My devotee never perishes.

(From Bhagavad Gita)

योगक्षेमं वहाम्यहम् —

“I carry their burden.”

भज गोविन्दम् —

Sing Govinda’s name.

(From Bhaja Govindam)

तत्त्वमसि —

Thou art That.

अहं ब्रह्मास्मि —

I am Brahman.

सर्वं खल्विदं ब्रह्म —

All this is sacred.

ईशावास्यमिदं सर्वम् —

The Lord pervades everything.

समत्वं योग उच्यते —

Equanimity is yoga.

नामस्मरणात् मुक्तिः —

Remembrance liberates.

 Beads 73–107: The Great Recognition

गुरुर्ब्रह्मा गुरुर्विष्णुः —

The Guru is the bridge.

शरणं व्रज —

Take refuge.

अनन्याश्चिन्तयन्तो माम् —

Think of Me alone.

भक्तिः मार्गः सरलः —

Devotion is the simple path.

आत्मज्ञानं परमं धनम् —

Self-knowledge is supreme wealth.

आनन्दो ब्रह्मेति —

Bliss is Brahman.

शिवोऽहम् —

I am Shiva.

श्रद्धा मूलम् —

Faith is the root.

समत्वं योग उच्यते —

Balance is liberation.

करुणा धर्मस्य हृदयम् —

Compassion is dharma’s heart.

लोकाः समस्ताः सुखिनो भवन्तु —

May all beings be happy.

 The 108th Bead – Return to Silence

शान्तिः शान्तिः शान्तिः ॥

The mālā completes its circle.

The fingers stop.

The mind rests.

What began as words

ends as stillness.



Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Cuneform.

What Is Cuneiform?

Cuneiform is one of the earliest known systems of writing in human history. It was developed around 3400–3200 BCE in ancient Mesopotamia, especially by the Sumerians.

The word cuneiform comes from Latin cuneus, meaning “wedge,” because the symbols were made by pressing a wedge-shaped stylus into soft clay.

It began as a system of accounting and record-keeping — for goods, grain, trade, and administration — and eventually became complex enough to write laws, letters, myths, hymns, astronomy records, and literature.

Cuneiform was used for millennia across various cultures, including the Akkadians, Babylonians, and Assyrians.

One of the most famous works in cuneiform is the epic of Epic of Gilgamesh, a foundational piece of world literature. Another is the law code of Hammurabi. 

🧠 Early Precursors to Writing: New Cave Discoveries

Recently, scientists have re-examined prehistoric symbols carved into objects from ancient caves in Europe and found something remarkable: these markings may represent an early step toward writing long before cuneiform.

🔍 Key findings from four cave sites in southwestern Germany

Researchers analyzed over 3,000 carved geometric signs (notches, dots, crosses, lines) on about 260 objects dating back roughly 34,000–45,000 years — far earlier than the Mesopotamian invention of writing. These came from caves including:

Geissenklösterle Cave

Hohle Fels

Vogelherd Cave

Hohlenstein-Stadel Cave

Together, these caves — part of the Swabian Jura archaeological region — have produced some of humanity’s oldest figurative art, engraved signs, and portable carved objects associated with the Aurignacian culture of early Homo sapiens. 

Scientific American +1

The patterns on these objects — made from mammoth ivory, bone, and antler — show consistent use of sign types and sequences. Statistical analyses show that although these markings are not a full writing system, they share important formal traits with the earliest known proto-writing systems, such as the proto-cuneiform of ancient Mesopotamia that evolved into true writing around 3300 BCE. 

Why This Matters

These findings suggest that symbolic communication and information encoding were present among early humans tens of thousands of years before formal writing systems emerged.

The signs were repeated selectively and likely carried meaningful information, hinting at the intellectual complexity of Ice Age cultures.

This research pushes back the roots of writing-like cognition, showing a deep prehistoric legacy for how humans began representing ideas in visual form. 

How This Connects to Cuneiform

Cuneiform is a formalized script tied to economic, legal, and literary record-keeping in early civilizations.

The cave sign systems pre-date cuneiform by tens of thousands of years, yet the statistical structure of their symbols resembles early proto-writing.

These discoveries help fill the gap between simple markings and full writing systems, offering insight into humanity’s long cognitive journey to literacy.