Sunday, December 14, 2025

My Thoughts .............. 92

 


1) Be a camphor, burn and dissolve in the flame of HER bhakti!

2) Remember: The collapse of a false world is the birth of a true one.

3) The loudest word ever shouted is QUIET

4) Do not be loyal to the pain that shaped you. Let it flow off.

5)  “Your heart is not a container. It is an ocean — let everything dissolve in it.”

6) “Unity is not sameness — it is the music of differences moving together.” 

7) Remember, when you don't succumb to pressure, they negotiate with you!

8 ) “You are a flame pretending to be a candle.” Come out of the shackles!

9) “Let what you know become what you do.”

10 ) Remember, “You are the river, not the silt it carries.”

Sunday, December 7, 2025

The Pañcakanyā

 

The Pañcakanyā


In Hindu tradition, the Pañcakanyā – the five maidens – are remembered daily as purifying forces:

अहल्याद्रौपदीकुन्ती तारा मन्दोदरी तथा ।
पञ्चकन्या स्मरेन्नित्यं महापातकनाशिनी ॥


ahalyā–draupadī–kuntī tārā mandodarī tathā |
pañca–kanyā smaren nityaṁ mahā–pātaka–nāśinī ||


Remembering the five holy maidens – Ahalyā, Draupadī, Kuntī, Tārā and Mandodarī – destroys even the greatest sins.

These five women are:

Ahalyā, Tārā and Mandodarī – from the Rāmāyaṇa
Draupadī and Kuntī – from the Mahābhārata


Some local traditions include Sītā instead of Kuntī, but the most widely accepted form in popular recitation includes Kuntī as part of the Pañcakanyā.

Here, “kanyā” does not mean physical virginity. All five are married women, mothers, and women whose lives involved complex, even scandalous, situations. Kanyā here means one whose inner purity continually renews itself, who remains spiritually unbroken despite outer turmoil.

The Power of Remembering the Pañcakanyā

The verse calls them “mahā–pātaka–nāśinī” – destroyers of even the greatest sins.

This can be understood in two ways:

Purification of past actions

Meditating on them, chanting their names with devotion and understanding, softens the impressions (saṁskāras) of guilt, shame, and inner hardness. We see in them that even deeply tangled karma can be illumined by grace, courage and surrender.

Protection from future wrongdoings

The mantra does not just “clean up after” sinful acts. Repeated remembrance creates a subtle inner compass. Their lives start to live inside us:

Ahalyā’s humility,
Draupadī’s uncompromising sense of justice,
Kuntī’s surrender and responsibility,
Tārā’s wisdom,
Mandodarī’s clarity in a corrupt environment.


These qualities gently divert the mind away from adharma. So “pātaka–nāśinī” includes preventing sin by reshaping our inner tendencies.

1) Ahalyā – From Stone to Grace

Ahalyā, wife of the sage Gautama, is often considered the “head” of the Pañcakanyā.

Traditions differ slightly about her origin:

In some tellings, she is created by Brahmā as the most beautiful woman in the universe. In others, she is a princess of the Lunar Dynasty, later married to Gautama.

Indra, the king of the gods, is overcome by desire for her. When Gautama is away:

In some versions, Indra comes disguised as Gautama. Ahalyā, unable to see through the disguise, is deceived.

In other words, she recognises him but gives in out of curiosity or confusion.

In all versions:

Gautama discovers the act and curses both Ahalyā and Indra. Ahalyā is condemned to severe penance and isolation:

Sometimes she becomes a stone. Sometimes she remains invisible, living unnoticed and fasting. Some regional retellings say she becomes a dry stream, destined to be purified when she joins the Godāvarī (Gautamī).

Indra too is cursed: Either to be castrated or to be covered with a thousand marks of shame (vulvae), which later transform into a thousand eyes.

The turning point:

When Rāma visits Gautama’s hermitage, he touches or steps upon the stone. Ahalyā instantly regains her form, purified by the presence of Rāma and accepted again.

Why is Ahalyā a kanyā?

Ahalyā stands for: The fallibility of human desire,

The pain of being cursed and ostracised, and the healing power of grace.

She becomes a “maiden” again, not in body, but in inner freshness: her ego is broken, guilt burned, and she stands as pure receptivity before Rāma.

When we remember Ahalyā, we touch that part of ourselves that feels “turned to stone” by past mistakes, and we invite Rāma’s touch of forgiveness.

2) Draupadī – Fire That Refuses to Be Covered

Draupadī, the heroine of the Mahābhārata, is born from the sacrificial fire of her father, Drupada, king of Panchāla. She is destined to be the instrument of the downfall of the Kauravas and Droṇa.

At her svayaṁvara: Arjuna, disguised as a brāhmaṇa, wins her hand.

Due to a fateful misunderstanding, Kuntī instructs her sons to share what Arjuna has brought, and Draupadī becomes the wife of all five Pāṇḍavas.

She is not a timid wife: She rejects Karṇa in the svayaṁvara, calling him unworthy. She laughs at Duryodhana in Indraprastha’s magic palace, wounding his ego deeply.

This fuels the later humiliation:

In the dice game, Yudhiṣṭhira loses everything – kingdom, brothers, and finally Draupadī herself. In the royal court, Duḥśāsana attempts to disrobe her before the assembly. Draupadī calls upon Kṛṣṇa, and her sari becomes endless. The attempt fails; her dignity remains untouched.

Her vow: She vows not to tie up her hair until it is wet with the blood of Duḥśāsana.

Her terrible oath propels the future war.

In exile: For 12 years in the forest and 1 year incognito, she endures hardship, repeated harassment (by Jayadratha, Kīcaka), and humiliation. Bhīma repeatedly protects her at her plea.

She instructs Satyabhāmā, Kṛṣṇa’s queen, on the deeper duties of a wife.

After the war: She regains her status as empress but loses her father, brothers, and all her sons. At the end of her life, ascending the Himalayas with the Pāṇḍavas, she falls first. Yudhiṣṭhira says this is due to her subtle partiality for Arjuna.

Many traditions view her as: An aspect of Kālī (fierce goddess), Or an aspect of Lakṣmī (fortune and royal majesty).

Why is Draupadī a kanyā?

She is called a kanyā not because she is untouched, but because her inner fire (agni) never cooperates with adharma: She questions, she refuses to be silenced, she claims justice even when abandoned. Even after humiliation, she does not become morally crooked or vengeful in a petty way; her wrath is tied to dharma, not personal greed.

Remembering Draupadī protects us from the sin of cowardly silence and from the habit of accommodating injustice for comfort.

3) Kuntī – The Mother Who Says “Yes” to Destiny

Kuntī, queen of Pāṇḍu and mother of the three elder Pāṇḍavas, is born as Pṛthā, the daughter of the Yādava king Śūrasena. She is adopted by the childless king Kuntibhoja, hence called Kuntī.

As a girl, she serves the irritable sage Durvāsā with great devotion: Pleased, he grants her a mantra by which she can invoke any deity to obtain a child. Out of curiosity, she tests the mantra and Invokes Sūrya, the Sun-god.

Bound by the power of the mantra, he grants her a son, Karna, born with divine armour and earrings. Unwed and afraid of social disgrace, Kuntī places the infant in a basket and abandons him in the river. He is later raised by a charioteer. Later, she marries Pāṇḍu, who is cursed that union with his wives will cause his death. To continue the lineage:

At Pāṇḍu’s request, she uses Durvāsā’s boon to invoke:

Dharma (Yama) – and bears Yudhiṣṭhira,
Vāyu – and bears Bhīma,
Indra – and bears Arjuna.

Her co-wife Mādrī uses the mantra (with Kuntī’s permission) to invoke the Aśvins, bearing Nakula and Sahadeva.

After Pāṇḍu and Mādrī’s death, Kuntī returns to Hastināpura with the five sons. She: Endures repeated conspiracies by the Kauravas to kill her sons. Advises Bhīma to marry Hiḍimbā, the rākṣasī, to form alliances and protect the future. Orders Bhīma to kill demons like Baka to protect the people. Famously orders the brothers to share Draupadī, binding her destiny to theirs.

Before the war, she reveals to Karna that she is his mother and asks him to spare her other sons, even if he must fight Arjuna. He promises not to kill any Pāṇḍava except Arjuna.

After the war, Kuntī retires to the forest with Dhṛtarāṣṭra and Gāndhārī and ultimately dies in a forest fire, ascending to higher worlds.

Why is Kuntī a kanyā?

Kuntī’s life is woven of hidden pain and public duty: She bears heavy guilt over abandoning Karna, carries the burden of protecting her sons in a hostile court, and accepts intense suffering without demanding a more comfortable fate.

In the Bhāgavata Purāṇa, her prayer to Kṛṣṇa – asking that calamities recur so that she may never forget Him – shows the peak of her surrender.

She is “maiden-like” in the sense that her heart remains turned towards God and dharma, no matter how old, burdened, or broken she is.

Remembering Kuntī guards us from the sin of self-pity and teaches the strength of responsibility and surrender.

4) Tārā – Wisdom in the Midst of Power

Tārā is the queen of Kiṣkindhā, wife of the mighty Vānara king Vāli, and later wife of his brother Sugrīva.

In the Rāmāyaṇa, She is usually described as the daughter of the Vānara physician Suṣeṇa; later traditions also call her an apsarā who emerged from the churning of the ocean.

She marries Vāli and bears him a son, Aṅgada. When Vāli vanishes in battle with a demon, Sugrīva assumes he is dead, becomes king, and takes Tārā into his household. Vāli returns, defeats Sugrīva, reclaims Tārā, and takes Sugrīva’s wife Ruma, accusing Sugrīva of betrayal.

Later, when Sugrīva challenges Vāli again, Tārā warns Vāli not to accept the challenge, sensing Rāma’s presence and alliance with Sugrīva. Vāli ignores her and is fatally struck by Rāma’s arrow during the duel.

In his final moments, Vāli reconciles with Sugrīva and entrusts Tārā and Aṅgada to his care, telling Sugrīva to always follow Tārā’s counsel.

In some vernacular versions, Tārā, in grief, curses Rāma by the power of her chastity, or Rāma consoles and enlightens her, praising her wisdom and devotion.

After Sugrīva becomes king, He neglects his promise to assist Rāma in finding Sītā, absorbed in pleasure. When Lakṣmaṇa arrives in anger, Tārā skillfully pacifies him, prevents disaster, and brings Sugrīva back to his duty.

Why is Tārā a kanyā?

Tārā embodies viveka (discernment) in the middle of rajasic, political power: She sees clearly what others refuse to see, speaks truth to Vāli even when he is blinded by pride, and prevents Sugrīva’s foolishness from destroying Kiṣkindhā.

She is “maiden-like” in that her wisdom remains untouched by the turbulence of her surroundings. Her fidelity is not blind; it is intelligent and dharmic.

Remembering Tārā protects us from the sin of stubborn pride and short-sighted decisions, and cultivates the courage to speak wise counsel even when it may be ignored.

5) Mandodarī – Purity in the Heart of Laṅkā

Mandodarī, queen of Rāvaṇa, is one of the most dignified and tragic figures in the Rāmāyaṇa.

Her origin: She is the daughter of Maya, the Asura architect, and the apsarā Hema. Some stories narrate that an apsarā named Madhurā was cursed to become a frog, later transformed into a maiden and adopted by Maya as Mandodarī.

Rāvaṇa visits Maya’s home, sees Mandodarī, falls in love, and marries her. She bears him three sons: Meghanāda (Indrajit) – the great warrior who defeats Indra and later fights Rāma, Atikāya, and Akṣayakumāra.

Some later adaptations add a tradition in which Sītā is actually born as Mandodarī’s daughter and abandoned, but this is not part of Vālmīki’s core text and remains a regional/later development.

Mandodarī is: Beautiful, intelligent, and profoundly righteous at heart. She repeatedly advises Rāvaṇa to return Sītā to Rāma and avoid ruin. Rāvaṇa, however, is intoxicated with power and desire and does not heed her words.

Some versions recount: How Vānara generals misinterpret or violate her personal space during the search for Rāvaṇa’s vulnerabilities, how Hanumān tricks her into revealing the secret of a protective arrow or boon that sustains Rāvaṇa’s life, indirectly aiding his destruction.

After Rāvaṇa’s death, Rāma, wishing to stabilise Laṅkā under a dharmic ruler, advises Vibhīṣaṇa (Rāvaṇa’s righteous brother) to marry Mandodarī. This union preserves her status and honours her virtue.

Some retellings say that in her sorrow, Mandodarī curses Sītā that she too will suffer separation from Rāma – a way of explaining Sītā’s later exile.

Why is Mandodarī a kanyā?

Mandodarī is the lotus in the swamp: She is pure and wise, living in the very centre of Rāvaṇa’s arrogance, lust, and adharma. She neither supports his crime nor abandons her dharma as a wife; she counsels, warns, weeps, but does not bend to his value system.

Her “maidenhood” is the untouched clarity of her conscience. Laṅkā burns around her, but her inner sense of right and wrong remains steady.

Remembering Mandodarī guards us from the sin of being corrupted by our environment. She teaches that one can remain clean in a dirty world.

The Inner Meaning of the Pañcakanyā

When we chant:

अहल्याद्रौपदीकुन्ती तारा मन्दोदरी तथा ।
पञ्चकन्या स्मरेन्नित्यं महापातकनाशिनी ॥


We are not just reciting names; we are invoking five inner forces:

Ahalyā – the part of us that seeks forgiveness and rebirth after confusion and wrong choices.

Draupadī – the fire in us that refuses to accept humiliation and injustice.

Kuntī – the heart that carries heavy karma but stays turned to God.

Tārā – the intelligence that sees consequences and speaks wise counsel.

Mandodarī – the conscience that remains pure even in corrupt surroundings.

Chanting their names with understanding can indeed be “pātaka–nāśinī”:

It loosens the knots of old guilt.
It strengthens the inner voice before a new mistake is made.
It replaces crude moral fear with refined, living dharma.


Five Elements:

Ahalyā – Ākāśa (Space)
Draupadī – Agni (Fire)
Kuntī – Pṛthvī (Earth)
Tārā – Vāyu (Air)
Mandodarī – Āpas (Water)

My Thoughts .............. 91

 



1) As they can't control you, they dislike you. Are they worth your attention?

2)  Be Careful, don't get carried away by applause, they divert your attention from your Goal!

3) When your own don't support you, God sends strangers!

4) Develop the highest form of intelligence, the ability to observe without any evaluation!

5) A cigarette pack comes with a warning, "Smoking is injurious to health". In the same way, the life manual says, "Ego and Greed" are injurious to Life!

6) Be no one and no one to NO ONE!

7) What you truly are cannot be destroyed. Everything that can be destroyed is not you.

8) Do not shrink. Expand. The Self within you is a lion — let it roar.

9) A boundary is not a wall — it is self-respect made visible.

10) Do not fear the fire within you. It is your own Self awakening.

Wednesday, December 3, 2025

Guru Dattatreya

 




Guru Dattatreya

In ancient times, when Dharma flourished in its purity, there dwelt the exalted Sage Atri and his radiant consort Anasūyā, whose name itself became the measure of chastity and devotion. By serving her husband, who was ever absorbed in tapas, Anasūyā attained a brilliance of spiritual power that illumined the three worlds. Beholding her purity, the celestial Goddesses grew apprehensive and sought to test her. Thus, they approached the Holy Trinity—Brahmā, Viṣṇu and Śiva—and requested their descent for the trial of her virtue.


According to the law of the householder, a guest is to be received with food and honour. On a certain day, when Atri had gone to bathe in the river, the Trinity came to Anasūyā’s hermitage in the guise of wandering ascetics and asked for alms. As no food was prepared, she sought a little time. The ascetics agreed but declared a severe condition: the meal must be served without any garment upon her body. To refuse a saint is sinful; to violate modesty is unrighteous. Standing at the junction of dharma and dharma, Anasūyā invoked her inner purity. Taking consecrated water in her palm, she sprinkled it upon the three ascetics, whereupon they became three infants. Lifting them to her lap, she fed them milk from her own breast, thus fulfilling the condition without impurity. Delighted, the Gods resumed their forms and offered her a boon. She prayed, “May You three become one and be born of my womb as my son.” Blessing her, they entered her womb as one essence, and thus Dattātreya took birth. When Atri returned, he perceived all by his inward vision and rejoiced.

Lord Dattatreya is classically depicted with one body, three heads, and six hands, accompanied by four dogs, the divine cow Kāmadhenu, and the wish-fulfilling Kalpavṛkṣa or Audumbara tree. The four dogs symbolise the four Vedas—Ṛg, Yajur, Sāma, and Atharva—while Kāmadhenu and the Kalpavṛkṣa represent the fulfilment of sincere devotees’ wishes. In His six hands, He holds a rosary, drum, discus, conch, trident, and water-pot, each representing an aspect of the Trinity.

As Shiva, He holds the śūla, the trident that destroys the ego, and the ḍamaru, the drum that awakens beings from the deep sleep of ignorance. These are Shiva’s emblems, and through them Datta calls souls onward on the path.

As Vishnu, He bears the śaṅkha, whose sound is the primordial Om—the fusion of A (creation), U (preservation) and M (dissolution). Every breath silently chants this mantra as “So’ham,” the recognition “I am the Universe; I am the Divine.” When the conch resounds, ignorance is dispelled. On another hand, He carries the chakra, symbol of the endless cycle of karma, which Vishnu removes from devotees who surrender to Him.

As Brahma, He holds the japa-mālā, whose beads symbolise countless universes under His governance and also signify His perpetual meditation on Om. The kamaṇḍalu He carries contains not ordinary water but the nectar of wisdom through which beings attain exalted states.

As Kṛṣṇa was the Yuga-Ācārya for Dvāpara Yuga, so Dattātreya became the Supreme Teacher of Treta Yuga. At His birth, He manifested the three faces of Brahmā, Viṣṇu, and Śiva. At the request of His mother, these three condensed into one, yet the essence of all three remained within Him. Thus, He stands as the embodiment of the Absolute, which transcends, yet contains, the powers of creation, preservation, and dissolution.

Though accounts of His birth vary, the scriptures speak with one voice regarding His life: Dattātreya was the wandering Avadhūta, naked of possessions, roaming the regions between the Narmadā and the southern lands, absorbed solely in the search for the Supreme. Near the place now called Ganagapur and upon Mount Girnar, He attained full realisation; His sacred footprints remain there even now.

When the era of Kali was about to begin, and Śrī Kṛṣṇa prepared to withdraw His manifested body, He foresaw that Dharma would wane and beings would fall into violence, greed and lust. Desiring a lineage that would preserve wisdom in the dark age, He consulted Dattātreya. Then, at Datta’s behest, the Nava Nārāyaṇas, the nine Nath Siddhas, descended from the celestial realms to take birth on Earth. Thus was established the Nātha Sampradāya, bearing Datta’s seal of liberation.

The Avadhūta Tradition, sprung from Dattātreya, remains formless, uncodified, and free of all binding structure. Its Masters—each an emanation of Datta—teach without pattern, speak without doctrine, and respond only to the inner need of those who approach them. Empty of self, they are vessels of the Eternal, and through them the living presence of Dattātreya continues to flow upon the Earth.

24 Gurus of Lord Dattatreya

One prominent story associated with Lord Dattatreya is his preaching to his disciple King Yadu about his twenty-four Gurus of nature, from whom he learned profound lessons about spirituality and life.

These Gurus include:


1. Prithvi (Earth): Patience and doing good to others in one's entire life can be learnt from Mother Earth.

2. Vaayu (Air): Air is symbolic of the qualities of non-attachment and stainlessness.

3. Akasha (Sky): Sky represents the all-pervading nature and about the Self that remains uncontaminated by the qualities that arise in the elements forming the body.

4. Jala (Water): Water represents purity, smoothness and sweetness, so one should have a pure heart, speak sweet words and be full of love for all beings.

5. Agni (Fire): Even though fire consumes all things indiscriminately, it does not become unholy, so too, one should have knowledge, should be a tapasvin, be undesirable and remain unaffected by what others offer him.

6. Chandra (Moon): Waxing and waning are only for Moon's lustre; likewise, the delinquencies of the six senses are of the body only and not of the Atman.

7. Surya (Sun): Sun absorbs water from Earth with its rays and returns the water to Earth at an appropriate time. Similarly, one should accept the objects of the senses without any enthusiasm for them.

8. Kapota (Pigeon): A pigeon develops too much attachment or friendship and ends up in affliction. So, attachments lead to one's downfall and waste of precious lifespan.

9. Ajagara (Python): Like a python, one should forego even sleep and food, and remain firmly devoted to the Self.

10. Samudra (Ocean): An ocean does not let even a small leaf land on its surface, so too one should not allow even the smallest desire or agitation to enter into the mind. Moreover, many rivers flow into an ocean, yet it does not overflow. Likewise, one should not be overjoyed when desires are fulfilled or be depressed when they do not materialise.

11. Moth: Deluded by the flames of fire and expecting to enjoy comforts, the moth rushes towards the flames and gets burnt. So, man must be careful not to fall victim to the attractions of a woman or to the delusion caused by the sense organs.

12. Bhramara (Bee): A bee gathers nectar from almost every flower, so too one should study all scriptures, skilfully grasp the essence and adapt it in the search for the Self.

13. Gaja (Elephant): Although the elephant is very strong and intelligent, it gets trapped due to its lustfulness. So too, one should know that lust is dangerous.

14. Honey-thief: The honey-thief contrives and steals the honey that is hoarded by honey bees. Therefore, if a person is stingy and hides his wealth without enjoying it himself or allowing others to share it, he risks being robbed by someone.

15. Deer: The hunter's music makes the innocent deer stand still and listen with closed eyes. Sage Rushyashrunga became a victim of a dancing girl attracted to her music and dance. So too, one should not be beguiled by music or dancing.

16. Fish: The uncontrolled tongue of a fish makes it the prey of the fisherman's hook. Therefore, a fish teaches that controlling and conquering the tongue is very important.

17. Harlot named Pingala: Pingala, a harlot, attained marvellous tranquillity, peace of mind and a sound sleep by giving up the desire for wealth and lustful pleasures. So, desire is sorrow, and the absence of wants is the highest happiness.

18. Osprey: A little bird holding a bit of meat gets attacked by a bigger and stronger bird. When the bird drops the meat, the other bird follows to get the meat piece. So too, if one keeps a thing coveted by others, one will be subjected to severe anguish, and therefore it is wise to give up such things voluntarily.

19. Child: A little child is worry-free and is always happy playing by himself. One should also remain happy like a child.

20. Maiden: When a maiden pounds the paddy, her bangles make a jingling sound. To avoid any sound, she retains only one bangle on each wrist. Likewise, quarrels ensue when too many people gather in one place.

21. Arrow-maker: An arrow-maker has utmost concentration in making arrows. Likewise, one should sit with total focus and practice Yoga.

22. Snake: A serpent is always vigilant and is never absent-minded. Unlike a man, a snake does not waste its time building a shelter and happily lives in an ant-hill deserted by ants.

23. Spider: A spider stirs the threads in its stomach and with that material weaves its web, plays with it and finally swallows it. The process of creation is also akin to a spider's web.

24. Insect: Like how the form of an insect that stares hard at a dragon-fly undergoes a change, so too, one attains the form of those on whom one concentrates the mind completely. If a small insect can transform its body, even a man possessing intellect and the faculty of meditation and concentration can certainly be liberated.

Lord Dattatreya's teachings promote detachment from material desires and ego, emphasising the path of self-realisation and the realisation of the divine presence within oneself and all beings. He encourages seekers to learn from nature, observing the qualities and lessons it offers, and recognising the divinity inherent in all aspects of creation. The ultimate teaching of Lord Dattatreya is to transcend dualities and merge with the eternal consciousness, realising the oneness of all existence.